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The following events occurred in September 1926:

September 18, 1926: Category 4 Hurricane strikes Miami and kills 372 people.
September 23, 1926: Crowd of 120,557 boxing fans pay to see the Dempsey vs. Tunney heavyweight bout at Philadelphia
German Foreign Minister Stresemann speaks to the League of Nations as Germany is admitted to the League and its Council

September 1, 1926 (Wednesday)

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  • In Spain, 100 people were killed in flooding from storms that followed a 55-day drought.[1]
  • Northwest Airlines, which would merge with Delta Air Lines in 2010, was founded as Northwest Airways by Colonel Lewis Brittin in the U.S. city of Minneapolis, to begin operations on October 1 as a mail carrier.[2]
  • The standoff continued in Wanhsien as the gunboat Widgeon arrived carrying the British Consul from Chongqing in response to HMS Cockchafer's call of the previous day.[3][4][5]

September 2, 1926 (Thursday)

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September 3, 1926 (Friday)

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September 4, 1926 (Saturday)

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September 5, 1926 (Sunday)

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  • A camouflaged and armored merchant ship, SS Kiawo, sailed into the port city of Wanxian in Sichuan province, carrying a large group of Royal Navy sailors and Marines, and, with the gunboats HMS Widgeon and Cockchafer, opened fire on Chinese troops. In the battle that followed, hostages from the ships Wahnsien and Wantung escaped and the Royal Navy ships began bombardment of Wanxian, destroying more than 1,000 buildings, and killing 250 Chinese soldiers and 100 civilians. The British sustained the loss of seven sailors and a merchant sailor.[29][30]
  • A fire killed 48 people in the Irish town of Dromcolliher when a candle ignited a reel of nitrate film stock while a crowd was watching a movie.[31] In addition to people who were killed while running for an exit, others were killed when the timber barn housing the cinema quickly burned.
  • A train wreck killed 28 people in the U.S. near the town of Granite, Colorado when the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad passenger train No. 2 derailed while taking a sharp curve at high speed.[32]
  • In Spain, the officers of the Artillery Corps staged a collective protest by shutting themselves within their barracks. They were angry about the system that promoted officers by election rather than seniority.[33] King Alfonso XIII declared martial law throughout the country and the officers were swiftly arrested.[34]
Valentino's final film
  • Rudolph Valentino's final film, The Son of the Sheik went into general release throughout the United States. It had premiered in Los Angeles on July 9 and been shown in L.A. for four weeks, and was followed by releases to first run cinemas in other major U.S. cities in conjunction with a tour by Valentino, his death on August 23 prompted a high demand for the United Artists film.[35]
  • Born:
  • Died:

September 6, 1926 (Monday)

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September 7, 1926 (Tuesday)

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  • In Raymondville, Texas, five prisoners were shot and killed after being taken by a group of five county Willacy County officers who said that the prisoners had "proffered to lead them to an arms cache" used in the shooting.[47] The five persons killed had been held on suspicion of the September 5 murder of Willacy County peace officers Lee Shaw and Ernest May. Dead in the shooting were the "Nunez boys" (Tomas Nunez and his sons Jose and Delancio) were, and Chico Gonzalez, all Hispanic Americans, died along with Matt Zailer, an Austrian immigrant, died together, while the five law enforcement officers were uninjured. Each of the officers gave sworn statements that the group of prisoners and officers "were fired upon by a party in ambush" and all the prisoners "were killed in the battle that ensued". There were no other witnesses. A grand jury investigated the incident and returned no charges against the accused officers[48]
  • Mercyhurst University, a private Roman Catholic university, opened in Erie, Pennsylvania for its first classes, operating under the name Mercyhurst Seminary.[49]
  • A second funeral Mass for Rudolph Valentino was held at the Catholic Church of the Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills, and then he was interred at the Hollywood Memorial Park Cemetery (now the Hollywood Forever cemetery) in Hollywood. Charlie Chaplin, George Fitzmaurice and Samuel Goldwyn (whose son was born the same day) were among the pallbearers.[50]
  • Born:

September 8, 1926 (Wednesday)

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September 9, 1926 (Thursday)

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September 10, 1926 (Friday)

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  • Gustav Stresemann, the Foreign Minister of Germany, led his nation's delegation as Germany took its new seat in the League of Nations at Geneva in Switzerland. Stresemann was welcomed by former French President Aristide Briand. Both Stresemann and Briand would be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize ater having negotiated the Locarno Treaty that led to Germany's entry to the League in return for its pledge to never go to war again. Stresemann said Germany had begun a policy "to follow a path of subversion of selfish nationalism, to promote international good-will and peace" and in response, Briand said that both nations would try to be "as heroic in peace as they had been in war" during the Great War from 1914 to 1918, and added, "Where, except at the League of Nations, could France and Germany so talk to one another?" A reporter for The New York Times noted "Amid scenes of highest dramatic interest which marked the great historical significance of the event, Germany took her seat in the League of Nations today. It was fitting that Germany should be welcomed by France. What a picture! The Governments of two hereditary enemies who had spilled on many battlefields the blood of millions of each other's best men pledging through their Foreign Ministers before fifty other nations their will and desire to work together for peace and repledging the promises of the Locarno Treaty now coming into effect that never would they fight again." [64]
  • Norma Smallwood of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was crowned the sixth Miss America at Atlantic City, New Jersey.A correspondent noted a change in American fashion and commented, "The new American beauty queen exemplifies the movement away from bobbed hair."[65]
  • Born: Ladislav Adamec, the last Chairman of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, and Prime Minister from 1988 to 1989; in Frenstat, Czechoslovakia (d. 2007)[66]

September 11, 1926 (Saturday)

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  • Italian anarchist Gino Lucetti, 26, threw a bomb at Benito Mussolini as his limousine passed by the Porta Pia gate in Rome. Eight people were injured, but Mussolini was unhurt and Lucetti, who had brought a loaded revolver to shoot Mussolini if the bomb failed, was quickly captured. Lucetti was sentenced to 30 years in prison, and would serve 17 years until the 1943 liberation of Naples by Allied troops, dying a few months later in the German bombing of Ischia.[67][68]
  • A 3-day event billed inaccurately as a "plebiscite" (plebiscito) by Spain's premier and dictator, General Miguel Primo de Rivera began held across the European Kingdom, with women be allowed to participate in voting for the first time in Spanish history, with the participants being allowed to say whether they endorsed Primo de Rivera's control of government.[69] The regulations that governed the "voting", however, were designed to support only one result, in that the procedure was for eligible citizens to sign registers at designated stations if they supported Primo de Rivera's government and his proposal for an appointed parliament. The only provision in the regulations for opposition was "Abstention from voting will indicate disapproval."[70] Eventually, more than 4.3 million signatures would be counted in favor of Primo de Rivera by his party, the Patriotic Union, in the non-binding referendum.[71]
  • The Aloha Tower opened in Honolulu, Hawaii.
  • Born: Evgeny Belyaev, Soviet Russian opera tenor and recording artist known as "The Russian Nightingale"; in Klintsy (d.1994)[72]

September 12, 1926 (Sunday)

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  • The Russian city of Novonikolayevsk in Siberia, originally named for the Tsar Nicholas II at its founding in 1893, was renamed Novosibirsk by the government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in the Soviet Union.
Mackaill (right) and Mulhall (center) in the popular lost film Subway Sadie

September 13, 1926 (Monday)

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  • The Northern line extension opened on the London Underground; the 27.841 kilometres (17.300 mi) from Morden to East Finchley made it the world's longest rail tunnel, and it remains the longest railway tunnel in the United Kingdom.[79][80][81]
  • A railway accident killed 26 people and injured 50 others in Australia at Murulla, New South Wales near Murrurundi, when a drawhook broke between two railroad cars on a freight train. The rear 12 cars rolled down a steep hill and into the path of a Great Northern Railway train that was carrying passengers from Moree to Sydney.[82][83]
  • The formation of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) and the NBC Radio Network was announced in a statement from the Radio Corporation of America (RCA), by the corporation's chairman of the board Owen D. Young and its president, James G. Harbord.[84] Large display advertisements were placed in newspapers around the U.S., headlined "Announcing the National Broadcasting Company, Inc." and subtitled "National radio broadcasting with better programs permanently assured by this important action of the Radio Corporation of America in the interest of the listening public." The RCA company declared that NBC would launch on November 15, the date that the company would assume active control of the New York City station WEAF, and declared that the purpose of the company "will be to provide the best program available for broadcasting in the United States," adding that besides presenting them on WEAF, it would make the programs "available to other broadcasting stations throughout the country so far as it may be practicable to do so" and that "It is hoped that arrangements may be made so that every event of national importance may be broadcast widely throughout the United States."[85] The NBC network was scheduled to begin on November 15, when RCA's acquisition of the New York City radio station WEAF was to be completed.[84]
  • Born:

September 14, 1926 (Tuesday)

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September 15, 1926 (Wednesday)

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September 16, 1926 (Thursday)

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  • La Opinión, the most-read Spanish language newspaper in the United States and second only to the English language Los Angeles Times as the best-selling L.A. daily newspaper, published its first issue.[98] and was in its 100th year of existence in 2026.
  • Asa Keyes, District Attorney of Los Angeles County in California, ordered the arrest of Aimee Semple McPherson, her mother, and three others on charges including "conspiracy to commit acts injurious to public morals".[99]
  • Broadway, a play directed by George Abbott and written by Philip Dunning, opened on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre for the first of 603 performances.[100]
  • The Italian and Romanian governments signed a Treaty of Friendship in which Italy offered Romania a large loan in return for oil and other concessions.[7]
  • Shin-Etsu Chemical, the largest chemical manufacturer in Japan, was founded in Nagano City asn Shin-Etsu Nitrogen Fertilizer Company.[101]
  • Born:
    • Robert H. Schuller, American Christian televangelist known for his syndicated Sunday program Hour of Power and for six bestselling inspirational books, including Way to the Good Life (1963), You Can Be the Person You Want to Be (1976), Tough Times Never Last But Tough People Do (Thomas Nelson Publishing, 1983); in Alton, Iowa (d. 2015)[102]
    • John Knowles, American novelist known for A Separate Peace (1959); in Fairmont, West Virginia (d. 2001)[103]

September 17, 1926 (Friday)

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September 18, 1926 (Saturday)

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September 19, 1926 (Sunday)

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September 20, 1926 (Monday)

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Capone

September 21, 1926 (Tuesday)

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  • The Miami hurricane began to dissipate as it entered Louisiana. All told, the hurricane killed at least 373 people, injured over 6,000 others, and did the equivalent of about $90 billion damage in modern dollars.[111]
  • An attempt by French aviator René Fonck to win the Orteig Prize, for the first non-stop transatlantic airplane flight, ended in disaster upon his takeoff from Long Island's Roosevelt Field near New York City.[128][129] Accompanied by a crew of three assistants, Fonck took off was racing down the runway in a redesigned tri-motor Sikorsky S-35 airplane, when the auxiliary landing gear collapsed under the weight of the four people on board. The S-35 cartwheeled off of the end of the runway and burst into flames. Captain Fonck, a French flying ace in World War One leapt to safety along with his co-pilot, U.S. Navy Lt. Lawrence W. Curtin, but French radio operator Charles Clavier and Russian mechanic Jacob Islamoff were trapped in the closed cabin and burned to death.
  • Mushy Callahan (ring name for Vincent Scheer) defeated world champion Myron "Pinky" Mitchell in a 10-round bout in Vernon, California, to win the world light welterweight boxing championship.[130][131]
  • Born:
  • Died: Léon Charles Thévenin, 59, French telegraphy engineer known for his postulation in 1883 of Thévenin's theorem to calculate currents in complex electrical circuits to reduce the current to simpler equivalent circuits.[136]

September 22, 1926 (Wednesday)

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Edison
  • Argentina's President Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear signed Law No. 11,357 granting all Argentine women of legal age, regardless of marital status, the same civil rights and functions granted to men.[137]
  • American inventor Thomas Edison declared radio broadcasting to be a commercial failure, saying, "There isn't 10 percent of the interest in radio that there was last year. It's a highly complicated machine in the hands of people who know nothing about it. No dealers have made any money out of it. It isn't a commercial machine, because it is complicated ... The phonograph is coming back into its own, because the people want good music."[138] Edison had invented the phonograph in 1877 along with cylinders designed to record sound and to play it back, but had seen a dramatic decline in the sale of disc records and phonographs in the 1920s after radio receivers and radio networks had been introduced.[139]
  • Died: María Luisa de la Riva y Callol-Muñoz, 61, Spanish painter[140]

September 23, 1926 (Thursday)

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picture1
picture2
Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey
Gene Tunney (right) throws a punch at champion Jack Dempsey (left) as referee Tommy Reilly watches

September 24, 1926 (Friday)

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September 25, 1926 (Saturday)

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September 26, 1926 (Sunday)

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September 27, 1926 (Monday)

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September 28, 1926 (Tuesday)

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September 29, 1926 (Wednesday)

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September 30, 1926 (Thursday)

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Germany's Superwal airliner

References

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  2. "Significant events in Northwest's history", Associated Press at NBC News, September 14, 2005
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