January 1928


The following events occurred in January 1928:

Sunday, January 1, 1928

Monday, January 2, 1928

Tuesday, January 3, 1928

Wednesday, January 4, 1928

  • Half of England was under water due to flooding.

Thursday, January 5, 1928

Friday, January 6, 1928

Saturday, January 7, 1928

Sunday, January 8, 1928

Monday, January 9, 1928

  • A council in Rome declared that the city's new coat of arms would include a fasces along with the Savoy cross.
  • Charles Lindbergh flew to Panama where President Rodolfo Chiari presented him with a medal and praised him for "establishing a basis of fraternity, and bringing together all of the American countries on a basis of real understanding."
  • Born: Domenico Modugno, Italian singer, songwriter, actor and politician, in Polignano a Mare

Tuesday, January 10, 1928

Wednesday, January 11, 1928

  • A U.S. Senate committee released its findings of an inquiry into alleged documents charging that Mexican President Plutarco Elías Calles was conspiring against the United States by secretly funding anti-American revolutionary activities in Nicaragua as well as bribing senators to support Mexico-friendly policies. The investigation concluded that the documents were forged, which came as a blow to the reputation of William Randolph Hearst who had broken the story in his newspapers. Pennsylvania Senator and committee leader David A. Reed said that "in dealing with the reputations of four senators it was incumbent upon Mr. Hearst to exhaust every avenue in seeking to verify the documents before printing them."
  • Voters in Haiti overwhelmingly approved thirteen amendments to the Constitution in a national referendum, 1928|referendum].
  • Born: David L. Wolper, American television and film producer, in New York City
  • Died: Thomas Hardy, 87, English novelist and poet

Thursday, January 12, 1928

Friday, January 13, 1928

  • General Electric demonstrated the potential of television by broadcasting into three homes in Schenectady, New York. Company officials, engineers and journalists gathered in each of the three locations were able to see and hear a radio announcer on a 2-inch x 2 inch screen.
  • The New York Daily News published a surreptitiously-taken photograph of the Ruth Snyder execution in an extra edition and reprinted it the following day. Together, the two editions sold an extra 1.5 million copies, despite an uproar.

Saturday, January 14, 1928

Sunday, January 15, 1928

Monday, January 16, 1928

Tuesday, January 17, 1928

Wednesday, January 18, 1928

Thursday, January 19, 1928

Friday, January 20, 1928

Saturday, January 21, 1928

  • County court judges in Pittsburgh ruled that Sunday symphony concerts did not violate the local blue laws, explaining that such laws were "evidently intended to forbid actual physical, material interference with the quiet rest of the Sabbath day, and not to forbid the obviously harmless and even ancient custom of the rendition of music on that day."
  • Al Capone announced that he would accept the request of Miami authorities to leave the city, in response to protests from civic organizations. "If I am not wanted here I will leave immediately", Capone said. "Where I will go from here I have not decided."
  • Born: Gene Sharp, American political theorist of nonviolent action; in North Baltimore, Ohio
  • Died:
  • *Nikolai Astrup, 47, Norwegian painter
  • *George Washington Goethals, 69, American army officer and civil engineer
  • *John de Robeck, 65, British naval officer

Sunday, January 22, 1928

Monday, January 23, 1928

Tuesday, January 24, 1928

Wednesday, January 25, 1928

Thursday, January 26, 1928

Friday, January 27, 1928

Saturday, January 28, 1928

Sunday, January 29, 1928

Monday, January 30, 1928

Tuesday, January 31, 1928