April 1930


The following events occurred in April 1930:

Tuesday, April 1, 1930

Wednesday, April 2, 1930

  • Ras Tafari Makonnen Woldemikael, more popularly known as Haile Selassie, became the new Emperor of Ethiopia upon the death of Empress Zewditu. He would reign for 44 years before being deposed in a military coup in 1974.
  • Almost 100 passengers and crew on the Japanese ferry ship Wakato Maru died when the vessel capsized in a gale off Kyushu. The small ferry was overcrowded beyond its normal capacity.

Thursday, April 3, 1930

Friday, April 4, 1930

Saturday, April 5, 1930

Sunday, April 6, 1930

Monday, April 7, 1930

Tuesday, April 8, 1930

Wednesday, April 9, 1930

Thursday, April 10, 1930

Friday, April 11, 1930

  • The Tokyo Stock Exchange was suspended early for the day due to a selling panic.
  • Rioting was reported from Taranto, Italy due to economic conditions.
  • American scientists predicted that man would land on the Moon by 2050.

Saturday, April 12, 1930

Sunday, April 13, 1930

  • Inspired by Gandhi's Salt March, 500,000 people in British India held an orderly demonstration in Bombay, defying the colonial law against private gathering of salt and throwing a monstrous effigy, representing the salt tax, into the Indian Ocean.

Monday, April 14, 1930

Tuesday, April 15, 1930

Wednesday, April 16, 1930

  • Britain and the Soviet Union signed a new trade pact granting each other most favoured nation status.
  • First Lady Lou Henry Hoover suffered a back injury in a fall at the White House. The injury was serious enough to require her to use a wheelchair during her recovery.
  • Wilhelm Frick of the Nazi Party, the Interior Minister of the German state of Thuringia, introduced nationalistic new prayers to be recited in elementary schools. Liberals objected to the propagandistic content of the prayers and challenged their constitutionality in court. One line read, "I believe that thou wilt punish the betrayal of Germany and bless the actions of those who seek to free the Fatherland."
  • Born: Herbie Mann, jazz flautist, in Pecos, New Mexico

Thursday, April 17, 1930

  • Twenty-seven Indian independence demonstrators were sentenced for breaking the salt laws, including Mahatma Gandhi's son Devdas, who received three months imprisonment. Mahatma Gandhi urged his followers to continue nonviolent forms of protest, saying that riots like the one in Calcutta "will harm our struggle."
  • The Paraguayan soccer football club Club Sportivo San Lorenzo was founded.

Friday, April 18, 1930

  • The BBC Radio news bulletin from London stated: "Good evening. Today is Good Friday. There is no news." Piano music followed for roughly 15 minutes.
  • A typhoon swept through Leyte in the Philippines, causing extensive damage.
  • The Chittagong armoury raid occurred when Indian revolutionaries led by Surya Sen raided an armoury in the Bengal province of British India, seizing it and setting it on fire. Martial law was proclaimed and troops were called out to quell the uprising.
  • A fire killed 118 people at a wooden church in the small Romanian town of Costești, most of them schoolchildren, after starting during Good Friday services. Candles being used in the service brushed against drapery and set it ablaze.

Saturday, April 19, 1930

Sunday, April 20, 1930

Monday, April 21, 1930

Tuesday, April 22, 1930

  • The London Naval Treaty was signed by representatives of the United Kingdom, Japan, France, Italy and the United States, limiting the tonnage of warships until 1936. France and Italy were exempted from the section that set limitations on total tonnage, but it was hoped that they would sign on to the full treaty at a later date.
  • Sixty-four British and Indian troops were killed in a battle to capture a group of revolutionaries who had participated in the Chittagong raid, while only 11 of the rebels died. The fight began after a group of 57 outlaws were surrounded at the Jalalabad mountain range by British Indian forces.
  • Died: Jeppe Aakjær, 63, Danish poet and novelist

Wednesday, April 23, 1930

Thursday, April 24, 1930

Friday, April 25, 1930

Saturday, April 26, 1930

Sunday, April 27, 1930

  • For the first time in history, an international radiotelephone call was made from a speeding train. Canadian National Railway President Sir Henry Worth Thornton phoned the U.S. commerce secretary Robert P. Lamont in Washington, then his Canadian counterpart James Malcolm, and finally made a call to the vice president of the company in London during the inauguration of a new train service from Montreal to Chicago.
  • Nine spectators were killed and 20 injured at an air show in the U.S. at Fayetteville, Tennessee, after a plane crashed onto a railroad embankment and veered into the crowd. The pilot, Milton P. Covert, survived.

Monday, April 28, 1930

Tuesday, April 29, 1930

Wednesday, April 30, 1930

  • Italy decreed that its naval construction program for the next year would consist of 29 new ships totalling 42,900 tons, an increase of 12,000 tons over the previous year.
  • The Dutch football club Ter Leede was founded.