February 1937

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The following events occurred in February 1937:

February 1, 1937 (Monday)[edit]

February 2, 1937 (Tuesday)[edit]

February 3, 1937 (Wednesday)[edit]

February 4, 1937 (Thursday)[edit]

February 5, 1937 (Friday)[edit]

February 6, 1937 (Saturday)[edit]

  • The Battle of Jarama began as the Spanish Nationalists and their allies crossed the Jarama River, the last line of defense on the eastern side of the Spanish capital of Madrid. The Nationalists moved toward controlling the road between Madrid and Valencia, Spain's port on the Mediterranean Sea. The battle lasted for three weeks.
  • Benito Mussolini's 20-year-old son Vittorio married Orsola Buvoli in Rome. About 1,000 people stood in the rain outside the church to view the comings and goings.[23]

February 7, 1937 (Sunday)[edit]

February 8, 1937 (Monday)[edit]

February 9, 1937 (Tuesday)[edit]

February 10, 1937 (Wednesday)[edit]

February 11, 1937 (Thursday)[edit]

February 12, 1937 (Friday)[edit]

February 13, 1937 (Saturday)[edit]

February 14, 1937 (Sunday)[edit]

  • A Nationalist warship shelled the Republican capital of Valencia for 30 minutes until counterfire from shore batteries forced its retreat.[57]
  • Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg indicated that a referendum on the question of restoring the Habsburg monarchy might be held.[58]
  • The first installment of the newspaper comic strip Prince Valiant, written and drawn by Hal Foster, was printed as a Sunday comics feature in the Hearst newspapers. The fantasy adventure, set in the Middle Ages, has continued weekly as a continuous story.[59]
  • Born: Magic Sam (stage name for Samuel G. Maghett), African-American blues musician; in Grenada, Mississippi (d. 1969)

February 15, 1937 (Monday)[edit]

February 16, 1937 (Tuesday)[edit]

February 17, 1937 (Wednesday)[edit]

February 18, 1937 (Thursday)[edit]

February 19, 1937 (Friday)[edit]

Victims of the Yekatit 12 massacre

February 20, 1937 (Saturday)[edit]

February 21, 1937 (Sunday)[edit]

February 22, 1937 (Monday)[edit]

February 23, 1937 (Tuesday)[edit]

  • Britain's battleship HMS Royal Oak (08) came under attack for a second time during the Spanish Civil War and was accidentally struck by an anti-aircraft shell fired from the Republican side that was defending Valencia from an attack by Francisco Franco's Nationalists. Captain T. B. Drew and four other men on Royal Oak were injured.[102]
  • Italy protested to Britain for inviting Haile Selassie to send an envoy to the king's coronation ceremony.[16]
  • A portion of the dismembered body of the seventh known victim of the Cleveland Torso Murderer was found on Euclid Beach at 156th Street, after having been washed up from Lake Erie. As with several of the killer's prior victims, the body of "Jane Doe #1" had been mutilated, with head and limbs removed, with only the torso remaining.[103] Another portion of the torso would be found three months later, but the identity of the victim was indeterminable.[104]
  • Murray Murdoch of the New York Rangers became the first player in NHL history to appear in 500 consecutive games.[105]
  • Born: Claude Brown, African-American author known for his 1965 autobiographical book Manchild in the Promised Land; in Harlem, New York City (d. 2002)[106]

February 24, 1937 (Wednesday)[edit]

February 25, 1937 (Thursday)[edit]

February 26, 1937 (Friday)[edit]

February 27, 1937 (Saturday)[edit]

  • The French government passed a new defense plan extending the Maginot Line.[79]
  • The Battle of Jarama ended after three weeks with the Army of the Second Republic having prevented the rebel Nationalists from seizing the road between Madrid and Valencia, but still controlling the west bank of the Jarama River. Both the Nationalists and the Republicans had sustained thousands of dead and wounded in the battle in the Spanish Civil War.[114]
  • Canada won the World Ice Hockey Championships, held in London.
  • Died: Charles Donnelly, 22, Irish poet and activist, was killed in the Spanish Civil War.

February 28, 1937 (Sunday)[edit]

  • Spanish Foreign Minister Julio Álvarez del Vayo scolded the European democracies for "lamentable weakness ... in the face of the tactics of Fascist nations to make themselves masters of the continent." Álvarez del Vayo declared that "the defense of Madrid is the defense of Paris and London tomorrow."[115]
  • Died: Harrington Mann, 72, Scottish painter

References[edit]

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