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September 1925

Month of 1925 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

September 1925
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The following events occurred in September 1925:

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September 3, 1925: USS Shenandoah airship crashes, killing 14 of the 43 crew aboard.
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September 8, 1925: The first amphibious landing of tanks and troops takes place as Spanish forces come ashore on Moroccan coast.
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September 20, 1925: Comedian and stunt performer Harold Lloyd stars in hit film The Freshman.
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September 1, 1925 (Tuesday)

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September 2, 1925 (Wednesday)

  • As part of his reform of culture in Turkey, President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk issued a decree closing all politically-oriented religious lodges, including the zawiyas associated with the Muslim Sufi order and the lodges of the Suci dervishes.[14] The dervish lodges were converted into museums.
  • The Banka Kombëtare e Shqipnis (BKS), Albania's central bank, was inaugurated in Durrës after having been authorized on June 22.[15]
  • The Australian government announced new tariffs that included preferences for British goods.[16]
  • Ship owners told Australian seamen that they would face no reprisals for their outlaw strike if they returned to duty within 48 hours.[4]

Born:

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September 3, 1925 (Thursday)

September 4, 1925 (Friday)

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September 5, 1925 (Saturday)

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September 6, 1925 (Sunday)

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September 7, 1925 (Monday)

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September 8, 1925 (Tuesday)

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September 9, 1925 (Wednesday)

September 10, 1925 (Thursday)

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September 11, 1925 (Friday)

  • The British, French and German governments agreed in principle on a security pact, and began planning a conference to arrange for a formal treaty.[75]
  • Miss California, Fay Lanphier, was crowned the winner of the 5th Miss America pageant in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
  • Born:
    • Harry Somers, Canadian classical music composer; in Toronto (d.1999)[76]
    • Willi Herold, German Nazi war criminal who deserted from the German Army, then impersonated an officer and ordered the executions in the closing days of World War II of hundreds of German deserters at the Aschendorfermoor II prison camp; in Lunzenau, Saxony. Seventy years after his execution by the Allies, his story would later be dramatized in the German film Der Hauptmann (d.1946).[77]
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September 12, 1925 (Saturday)

  • The British Trades Union Congress adopted a resolution introduced by A. A. Purcell supporting "the right of all peoples in the British Empire to self-determination, including the right to choose complete separation from the Empire."[78]
  • The body of 8-year-old kidnapping victim Arthur Schumacher, was found. Nicknamed "Buddy", had last been seen on July 24 when he and his friends were running from a man pursuing them.[79]
  • Born: Stan Lopata, baseball player, in Delray, Michigan (d. 2013)

September 13, 1925 (Sunday)

September 14, 1925 (Monday)

  • Reports came from Tientsin in China that the bursting of a dike in Shandong Province had inundated villages 50 miles (80 km) from the river banks with water 30 feet (9.1 m) high, drowning an estimated 3,000 people.[87]
  • The stage production of The Jazz Singer opened on Broadway. George Jessel played the starring role which Al Jolson later made famous in the 1927 film version of the same name.[88]
  • Rif pressure on Tétouan was relieved as Spanish reinforcements broke the siege.[89]
  • On the eve of the feast of the Exaltation of the All-Honourable and Life-giving Cross of our Savior (September 1 on the Orthodox calendar), the Byzantine cross appeared in the sky over the city of Athens during an old calendar service of the Greek Orthodox Church, which at the time was being persecuted by the Greek authorities.,[90] reprinted by the Orthodox Christian Information Center. According to witnesses at the scene, "a bright, radiant Cross of light" appeared above the Church of St. John the Theologian at 11:30 at night, and even the police sent to end the service "were among those who wept" alongside about 2,000 others who witnessed the miracle. According to Eastern Orthodox tradition, this was the third appearance of the cross and the first in more than 1,580 years, with the two previous sightings being October 12, 312 AD and May 7, 346 AD.

September 15, 1925 (Tuesday)

September 16, 1925 (Wednesday)

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Charles Haughey (1925-2006)
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B. B. King (1925-2015)

September 17, 1925 (Thursday)

September 18, 1925 (Friday)

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Abd el-Krim

September 19, 1925 (Saturday)

September 20, 1925 (Sunday)

September 21, 1925 (Monday)

September 22, 1925 (Tuesday)

September 23, 1925 (Wednesday)

September 24, 1925 (Thursday)

September 25, 1925 (Friday)

  • Leonas Bistras took office as the new Prime Minister of Lithuania, replacing Vytautas Petrulis. Bistras continued in his role as Foreign Minister and made himself Defense Minister as well.
  • The Reform Council for the East, created in Turkey by President Mustafa Kemal and presided over by former army chief of staff Ismet Inonu, issued its report to the Grand National Assembly recommending that the relocation of the nation's Kurdish minority to an area east of the Euphrates River, initially referred to as the Inspectorate Generalm and to be under military rule. Within the rest of Turkey, the use of languages other than Turkish would be forbidden and Kurds would be barred from employment in higher-level offices.[154]
  • Greece's Prime Minister Theodoros Pangalos created the Republic's first spy agency, the Ypiresía Ethnikís Asfaleías (YEA), the National Special Security Service, in order to fight the Communist Party of Greece.[155]
  • The first recorded use of a machine gun in organized crime took place in the U.S. city of Chicago when an attempt was made to kill Spike O'Donnell, leader of the "Sheldon Gang", in a drive-by shooting. "Hit men", hired by Joe Saltis and Frank McErlane. O'Donnell was talking to a Chicago police officer in front of Weiss drug store at 63rd Street and Western Avenue when a car with four men drove by and fired at him with a Thompson submachine gun, soon to be nicknamed a "tommy gun" in what one writer described as "the first time the deadly weapon was used in Chicago gang warfare".[156] Because use of the weapon, previously confined to military use, was new to civilian crime, the report the next day concluded from the use of eight bullets that the hitmen had used "four shotguns", each firing "two cartridges"; nobody was injured in the shooting.[157]
  • The U.S. submarine USS S-51 was sunk off the coast of Rhode Island in a collision with a merchant steamer, killing 33 of the 36 crew aboard. The merchant ship, City of Rome, had spotted S-51 by its masthead light, but was unable to determine the sub's course or intentions, and altered its course, only to realize that it was heading toward the side of the submarine.[158]
  • Born: Samson H. Chowdhury, Bangladeshi business magnate and co-founder of Square Pharmaceuticals; in Gopalganj, Presidency of Fort William in Bengal, British India (d.2012)[159]

September 26, 1925 (Saturday)

September 27, 1925 (Sunday)

September 28, 1925 (Monday)

September 29, 1925 (Tuesday)

September 30, 1925 (Wednesday)

  • Greek dictator Theodoros Pangalos dissolved the country's Constituent Assembly, explaining that it had lost the confidence of the nation and presented an obstacle to its recovery. Pangalos said new elections would be conducted.[182]
  • A Vatican committee issued a circular to the directors of pilgrimages notifying them that women found in churches not wearing opaque clothing that covered their head, collar, legs and upper arms would be ejected.[183]
  • The Medical Mission Sisters, the first Roman Catholic medical organization to be operated by nuns, was founded in Washington, D.C. by physicians Anna Dengel of Austria and Dr. Johanna Lyons of Chicago, and by registered nurses Evelyn Flieger of Britain and Marie Ulbrich.[184]
  • Jewelry valued at $750,000 was stolen from the six-room Plaza Hotel suite of Woolworth heiress Mrs. Jessie Woolworth Donahue, daughter of F.W. Woolworth. They were stolen in broad daylight from her bedroom while she was in the bathtub a few feet away.[185]
  • Born: Arkady Ostashev, Soviet Russian scientist and rocket propulsion and control system designer who participated in the 1957 launch of the first artificial Earth satellite, Sputnik 1, and the 1961 launch of the first cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin; in village Maly Vasilyev, Moscow Oblast, Soviet Union (d. 1998)

References

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