The 1930s Lifestyles and Social Trends: Chronology
The 1930s Lifestyles and Social Trends: Chronology
1930: Responding to the Depression, the eveningwear collections of French fashion designers include simple, low-cost cotton fabrics for the first time.
1930: Ford sells 1.15 million of its popular Model A cars.
1930: May The first airline stewardesses take to the skies with United Airlines. Job applicants had to be single women over the age of twenty-one, under five feet four inches tall, and weighing no more than 115 pounds.
1931: Lutheran churches across the country merge to form the American Lutheran Church. Congregationalists merge to form the General Council of Congregational and Christian Churches.
1931: The International Bible Students Association becomes the Jehovah's Witnesses.
1931: Nevada legalizes gambling and allows divorce for couples who have been resident in the state for only six weeks.
1931: Jane Addams wins the Nobel Peace Prize for her work with immigrants and the homeless.
1931: Schick Dry Shaver Inc. puts the world's first electric shaver on the market at $25 apiece.
1932: Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Russell Johnson introduce modern architecture to America in an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
1932: March 31 Ford introduces its new V8 engine in the same year as its workforce reaches a low of 46,282. In 1929, the company had employed more than 170,000 workers.
1932: May 1 The Catholic Worker magazine goes on sale for one cent a copy. By 1935 its circulation reaches 150,000 copies.
1933: May 27 The Century of Progress World's Fair opens on Chicago's South Side.
1933: June 6 In Camden, New Jersey, Richard M. Hollingshead Jr. opens the first drive-in movie theater.
1933: November 30 First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt sets up the White House Conference on the Emergency Needs of Women.
1934: In Germany, Adolf Hitler announces his intention to make his country as motorized as the United States.
1934: With the end of Prohibition (a ban on the sale and distribution of alcoholic beverages), sales of Coca Cola fall steadily.
1934: May 28 The Dionne quintuplets are born. Theirs is the first recorded birth of live quintuplets in the world.
1935: One in every four American households receives some form of government assistance.
1935: April Forty thousand visitors attend an exhibition in New York's Rockefeller Center of architect Frank Lloyd Wright's plan for urban architecture, Broadacre City.
1935: June 10 Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) holds its first meeting in a New York hotel. The name of one of its founders, Bill Wilson, is not discovered until his death in 1971.
1935: November 22 The first trans-Pacific air and mail service begins, flying from Alameda, California, to the Philippines. The China Clipper flying boat makes the first scheduled trip.
1936: Frank Lloyd Wright's Johnson Wax Building is designed in the style of "Streamline Moderne."
1936: The San Francisco Bay Bridge is completed.
1936: Six hundred thousand acres of land become part of state parks.
1936: Run-proof mascara is invented.
1937: Designer Muriel King introduces her work to the nation when she dresses Katharine Hepburn and Ginger Rogers in the movie Stage Door.
1937: Wallace Carothers of Du Pont invents nylon.
1937: March 26 William H. Hastie becomes the first African American federal judge.
1937: July 2 Famed aviator Amelia Earhart disappears on a solo flight from New Guinea to Howland Island.
1937: August 2 The sale and possession of marijuana is outlawed by the Marijuana Traffic Act.
1938: Chemical giant Du Pont reveals its new synthetic fabrics, including rayon, a synthetic silk, and nylon.
1938: July 3 President Franklin D. Roosevelt lights the eternal light to dedicate the Gettysburg Memorial.
1938: July 30 Adolf Hitler's Nazi government awards Henry Ford the Grand Cross of the Supreme Order of the German Eagle, the highest award available for foreigners.
1938: September 21 Some 63,000 people are made homeless and 680 are killed when a hurricane comes ashore across Long Island and southern New England.
1939: President Roosevelt moves Thanksgiving from the last Thursday in November to the fourth Thursday. The idea is to make the Christmas shopping period longer.
1939: February The Golden Gate World's Fair opens on a man-made island off San Francisco at a cost of more than $40 million dollars.