March 1929


The following events occurred in March 1929:

Friday, March 1, 1929

Saturday, March 2, 1929

Sunday, March 3, 1929

  • An Italian commission released the findings of its investigation into the airship Italia disaster. The report assigned virtually all of the blame to North Pole expedition commander Umberto Nobile.
  • A death toll of 2,390 people in France was reported for the recently ended ten days of extremely cold weather.
  • William Fox of the Fox Film Corporation announced a merger with the Loew's theatre chain.
  • Mexican rebels seized Nogales and Veracruz as fighting in the Cristero War flared up again.

Monday, March 4, 1929

Tuesday, March 5, 1929

Wednesday, March 6, 1929

Thursday, March 7, 1929

Friday, March 8, 1929

Saturday, March 9, 1929

Sunday, March 10, 1929

Monday, March 11, 1929

Tuesday, March 12, 1929

  • Mexican rebels retreated from Saltillo as President Emilio Portes Gil issued a statement saying the revolution had been defeated.
  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was giving a lecture on the paranormal in Nairobi when he displayed a photograph of a supposed ghost in a haunted house in Nottingham. A well-known Nairobi dentist bolted out of his seat and identified himself as the "ghost", explaining that he had posed for the photo in a white sheet some years ago as a trick after he and other members of a party had investigated the house for two weeks and had failed to find any ghost. Doyle accepted the man's explanation, expressed regret at being hoaxed and said he would not show the photograph again.
  • The silent comedy film Why Be Good? was released.
  • Died: Asa Griggs Candler, 77, American businessman known for his invention of Coca-Cola in 1886

Wednesday, March 13, 1929

Thursday, March 14, 1929

  • Elba, Alabama, was submerged under 10 feet of flood water when the Pea River overflowed. Alabama Governor Bibb Graves delivered a radio broadcast pleading for urgent relief efforts.
  • The Fox Film Corporation, Pathé News and Paramount News unanimously declared after checking their inauguration film footage that Chief Justice William Howard Taft had misstated the Oath of Office when he called on Herbert Hoover to swear to "preserve, maintain and defend the Constitution of the United States", substituting the word "maintain" for "protect". The flub had been caught by 13-year-old student Helen Terwilliger, who had listened to the live radio broadcast of the inauguration in eighth-grade history class in Walden, New York, and politely wrote to Taft about the error. Taft later laughed off his mistake by saying, "I think you'll have to get along with what I've already said. After all, I don't think it's important."

Friday, March 15, 1929

Saturday, March 16, 1929

Sunday, March 17, 1929

Monday, March 18, 1929

Tuesday, March 19, 1929

Wednesday, March 20, 1929

Thursday, March 21, 1929

Friday, March 22, 1929

Saturday, March 23, 1929

Sunday, March 24, 1929

  • The National Fascist Party won general elections in Italy with over 98% of the vote. Opposition parties were banned and the electorate merely voted 'yes' or 'no' to a single list of candidates.
  • One hundred thousand mourners filed past the coffin of Ferdinand Foch enshrined underneath the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. One man was killed and many injured in the crush to file past the flag-draped bier.
  • The musical film Syncopation, the first movie ever released by RKO Pictures, opened.

Monday, March 25, 1929

Tuesday, March 26, 1929

Wednesday, March 27, 1929

Thursday, March 28, 1929

Friday, March 29, 1929

Saturday, March 30, 1929

Sunday, March 31, 1929

  • The second Trans-American Footrace, nicknamed the "Bunion Derby", began in New York City. 77 runners were competing for a total of $60,000 in prize money awarded to first 15 people to reach the finish line in Los Angeles.
  • The airplane Southern Cross and its crew temporarily went missing over northwest Australia, on the first leg of an attempt to fly from Sydney to England.
  • Died: Myron T. Herrick, 74, American politician and U.S. Ambassador to France