1935: Difference between revisions

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* [[Gordon Persons]] was appointed to the [[Rural Electrification Authority]].
* [[Gordon Persons]] was appointed to the [[Rural Electrification Authority]].
* [[Capers Satterlee]] was appointed rector of [[St Andrew's Episcopal Church]].
* [[Capers Satterlee]] was appointed rector of [[St Andrew's Episcopal Church]].
* [[Charles Whelan, Jr]] was appointed to the United States Parole Commission.
* [[Charles Whelan Jr]] was appointed to the United States Parole Commission.
* [[Big Joe Williams]] signed with Bluebird Records in St Louis, Missouri.
* [[Big Joe Williams]] signed with Bluebird Records in St Louis, Missouri.


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* [[Cleveland Hammonds]], [[Birmingham City Schools]] superintendent
* [[Cleveland Hammonds]], [[Birmingham City Schools]] superintendent
* [[Rollie Hill]], mechanic and "Cookie Man"
* [[Rollie Hill]], mechanic and "Cookie Man"
* [[Roland Ingram, Jr]], physician
* [[Roland Ingram Jr]], physician
* [[Jake Reiss III]], bookseller
* [[Jake Reiss III]], bookseller
* [[Nolan Shivers]], 49-year veteran of the [[Birmingham Police Department]]
* [[Nolan Shivers]], 49-year veteran of the [[Birmingham Police Department]]
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* [[June 2]]: [[Mary Bryant|Mary Harmon Black]] to [[Bear Bryant|Paul Bryant]]
* [[June 2]]: [[Mary Bryant|Mary Harmon Black]] to [[Bear Bryant|Paul Bryant]]
* [[July 3]]: [[Vet Boswell]] to John Paul Jones
* [[July 3]]: [[Vet Boswell]] to John Paul Jones
* [[Martha Sulzby|Martha Belle Hilton]] to [[James F. Sulzby, Jr]]
* [[Martha Sulzby|Martha Belle Hilton]] to [[James F. Sulzby Jr]]


===Awards===
===Awards===
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* Architect [[Helen Davis]] graduated from the [[Auburn University|Alabama Polytechnic Institute]].
* Architect [[Helen Davis]] graduated from the [[Auburn University|Alabama Polytechnic Institute]].
* Architect [[Hugh Stubbins]] graduated from Harvard University.
* Architect [[Hugh Stubbins]] graduated from Harvard University.
* Restauranteur [[John Holcomb, Jr]] earned his bachelor of science in chemical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology
* Restauranteur [[John Holcomb Jr]] earned his bachelor of science in chemical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology


===Deaths===
===Deaths===

Revision as of 15:23, 10 September 2015

A 1935 map dividing Birmingham's neighborhoods by desirability

1935 was the 64th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Sports

Works

The Loveman's building, shortly after it was completed in 1935. Photo by O. V. Hunt. courtesy BPL Archives

.

Books

Buildings

Music

  • "The Object of My Affection" by the Boswell Sisters
  • March: Blues singer Lucille Bogan made her final recordings on the Banner label in Chicago, Illinois.

People

Births

Marriages

Awards

Graduations

Deaths

Context

Amelia Earhart became the first person to fly solo from Hawaii to California. The FBI killed the Barker Gang, including Ma Barker, in a shootout. Porky Pig made his debut in a Looney Tunes cartoon. Adolf Hitler announced German rearmament in violation of the Versailles Treaty. Persia was renamed Iran. The Dust Bowl continued to plague the western United States. The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was created. Babe Ruth appeared in his last career baseball game. Alcoholics Anonymous was founded. James J. Braddock defeated Max Baer at Madison Square Garden Bowl to win the heavyweight boxing championship of the world. The board game Monopoly was first released. The Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) was created.

Notable 1935 births include Elvis Presley, Sonny Bono, Bob Denver, Jimmy Swaggart, Dudley Moore, Lee Meriwether, Ron Paul, Geraldine Ferraro, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Julie Andrews. Notable deaths in 1935 included Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia), Will Rogers, Wiley Post, Huey Long, and Walter Liggett. The Nobel Peace Prize went to Carl von Ossietzky. The top films were Mutiny on the Bounty, Becky Sharp, Top Hat, and The Littlest Rebel. Mutiny on the Bounty was Best Picture at the Academy Awards. Top hit songs included Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers' "Cheek to Cheek", Shirley Temple's "On The Good Ship Lollipop", the Dorsey Brothers' "Lullaby of Broadway", Cole Porter's "You're the Top", and Bing Crosby's "Silent Night, Holy Night".

1930s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works