1925 Events: A Complete Timeline - Historic Newspapers (2024)

How much do you know about the big events in 1925? Find out all about them in our day-by-day timeline. It’s so interesting to see exactly what was happening at significant moments in history, such as when The Great Gatsby was published for the first time and the SS was established in Germany.

You can read about the key events in 1925 and more in a 1925 newspaper.

1925 Timeline

Turn the page to:

  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
  • The New Yorker
  • The Treaty of Locarno

January

January 1: The capital of Norway changes its name from Christiania to Oslo.

January 1: Notre Dame wins the 11th Rose Bowl.

January 2: The Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region is established.

January 3: Benito Mussolini proclaims himself Il Duce (Dictator).

January 5: Nellie Taylor Ross becomes the first female Governor in the US.

January 6: Mikhail Frunze becomes People’s Commissioner of Military and Native Affairs.

January 8: A Supreme Court of entirely female members is appointed in Texas.

January 10: The Allies refuse to leave Cologne.

January 11: Frank Kellogg becomes Secretary of State in the US.

January 15: Hans Luther forms a government in Germany.

January 20: A convention is signed by Japan and the USSR.

January 21: Albania becomes a Republic.

January 24: A solar eclipse is captured over Long Island.

January 24: Rickard Sandler becomes Premier in Sweden.

January 29: David Lloyd George becomes the leader of the Liberal Party in Great Britain.

January 31: Ahmed Zogu becomes President of Angola.

January 31: Daphne Akhurst wins the Australasian Women’s Tennis Championship.

January 31: James Anderson wins the Australasian Men’s Tennis Championship.

1925 Events: A Complete Timeline - Historic Newspapers (1)

David Lloyd George

Image: Wikimedia Commons

February

February 8: Marcus Garvey is imprisoned in Atlanta.

February 9: A treaty between France and Germany is proposed by Gustav Stresemann.

February 12: The Law on Cultural Self-Government for National Minorities is passed in Estonia.

February 13: Congress makes appeals more difficult in the Supreme Court.

February 14: A state of emergency comes to an end in Bavaria.

February 21: New Yorker is published for the first time.

February 25: The Glacier Bay National Monument is established in Alaska.

February 25: Beatrix Loughran wins the US Women’s Figure Skating Championship.

February 25: Nathaniel Niles wins the US Men’s Figure Skating Championship.

February 27: Hitler reestablishes the NSDAP in Munich.

March

March 2: Socialists demand disarmament in the Netherlands.

March 2: Male suffrage is recognized in Japan.

March 4: The inauguration of President Coolidge is broadcasted live on 21 radio stations.

March 4: The US annexes Swain’s Island.

March 12: The British government refuses to ratify the Geneva agreement.

March 21: Teaching evolution is outlawed in Tennessee.

March 24: Double Chance wins the 84th Grand National.

April

April 3: Gold Standard is reinstated in Britain.

April 3: The Accord of Westerschelde is signed by Belgium and the Netherlands.

April 5: The Belgian Workers Party wins the election.

April 6: A film is shown on an airplane for the first time.

April 9: Babe Ruth is rushed to hospital after collapsing.

April 10: Tsaritsyn is renamed Stalingrad.

April 10: The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald is published.

April 16: 150 people are killed and 500 wounded in an attack in Sofia.

April 17: Babe Ruth has surgery on an ulcer.

April 17: Paul Painlevé becomes Premier in France.

April 18: The World’s Fair opens in Chicago.

April 20: Charles Mellor wins the 29th Boston Marathon.

April 23: The Riffi turn on the French in Morocco.

April 25: Paul von Hindenburg becomes President of Germany.

April 26: Edna Ferber’s So Big wins the Pulitzer Prize.

April 28: The Netherlands goes back to Gold Standard.

April 30: Dillon, Read & Company buys Dodge Brothers Inc for $146 million.

May

May 1: Cyprus becomes a British Colony.

May 2: Kezar Stadium opens in San Francisco.

May 4: A League of Nations conference takes place.

May 5: Teacher John T Scopes is arrested for teaching evolution in Tennessee.

May 5: Afrikaans is established as the official language of South Africa.

May 8: The French army prevails in Morocco.

May 12: Kirgizistan and Uzbekistan become autonomous Soviet Republics.

May 14: Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf is published.

May 21: Baron Lloyd of Dolobran becomes British High Commissioner in Egypt.

May 30: Protests begin in China.

May 30: Peter DePaolo wins the Indianapolis 500.

June

June 5: Willie Macfarlane wins the US Men’s Golf Open.

June 6: Walter Chrysler founds Chrysler Corporation.

June 6: Rene Lacosté wins the French Men’s Tennis Championship.

June 6: Suzanne Lenglen wins the French Women’s Tennis Championship.

June 10: The United Church of Canada holds its inaugural service in Toronto.

June 23: A British warship fires on striking harbor workers in Hong Kong.

June 26: Jim Barnes wins the British Men’s Golf Open.

June 26: Charlie Chaplin’s The Gold Rush is released.

June 29: Canada House opens in London.

1925 Events: A Complete Timeline - Historic Newspapers (2)

Canada House

Image: Wikimedia Commons

July

July 3: Suzanne Lenglen wins her sixth Wimbledon title.

July 4: 44 people die when the Dreyfus Hotel collapses in Boston.

July 4: René Lacoste wins the men’s title at Wimbledon.

July 10: The official news agency of the USSR is formed (TASS).

July 10: Meher Baba begins a silence that would last for 44 years.

July 11: Hendrikus Colijn is named head of the Dutch government.

July 16: King Feisal opens the first parliament in Iraq.

July 18: Mein Kampf is published.

July 19: Ottavio Bottecchia wins the 19th Tour de France.

July 21: John T Scopes is fined $100 after being found guilty of teaching evolution.

July 31: The last troops leave Ruhrgebied.

July 31: The Unemployment Insurance Act is passed in Britain.

August

August 3: The last US troops leave Nicaragua.

August 5: Plaid Cymru is formed in Wales.

August 8: The first march of the Ku Klux Klan takes place in Washington DC.

August 14: The Mount Rushmore Monument is proposed.

August 15: Spitsbergen is annexed by Norway.

August 18: A treaty is signed by Belgium and the US regarding war debts.

August 24: Helen Wills Moody wins the US Women’s National Tennis Championship.

August 25: The last Belgian troops leave Duisburg.

August 28: A meteorite falls on Devil Island.

August 29: Babe Ruth is fined $5000 and suspended for being late to batting practice.

September

September 1: Pierre de Coubertin steps down from his position as Chairman of the International Olympic Committee.

September 3: 14 people die when USS Shenandoah crashes in a storm.

September 5: Bobby Jones wins the 29th US Amateur Golf Championship.

September 12: The US wins the 20th Davis Cup.

September 12: R Norris Williams and Vincent Richards win the International Lawn Tennis Championship.

September 13: Xavier University opens in New Orleans.

September 19: Bill Tilden wins the US National Men’s Tennis Championship.

September 26: Walter Hagen wins the PGA Men’s Golf Championship.

September 26: 54 people die when the Italian submarine Sebastiano Veniero is lost.

September 30: General Pangulos disbands the parliament in Greece.

October

October 2: Josephine Baker performs for the first time.

October 5: Germany applies for the League of Nations at the Locarno Conference.

October 6: The Premier of Greece orders for General Pangulos to be arrested.

October 12: A trade agreement is reached by Germany and the USSR.

October 14: An anti-French uprising occurs in Damascus.

October 15: The Pittsburgh Pirates win the 22nd World Series.

October 16: The Peace Accord of Locarno is signed.

October 16: The Texas School Board bans the teaching of evolution.

October 19: Somalia is taken by Italy.

October 27: Fred Walker patents his water ski design.

October 31: Reza Chan becomes Shah of Persia.

1925 Events: A Complete Timeline - Historic Newspapers (3)

Josephine Baker

Image: Wikimedia Commons

November

November 5: Socialist political parties are disbanded in Italy.

November 5: Sidney Reilly is executed near Moscow.

November 9: The SS is formed.

November 9: Robert A Millikan reveals the discovery of cosmic rays at the National Academy of Sciences in Wisconsin.

November 11: The government under Colijn falls in the Netherlands.

November 12: A treaty is signed by Italy and the US regarding war debts.

November 16: The American Association for Advancement of Atheism is formed.

November 26: A trade agreement is signed by Germany and the Netherlands.

November 27: The Treaty of Locarno is ratified by the parliament in Germany.

November 28: Aristide Briand becomes Prime Minister of France.

December

December 1: The Treaty of Locarno is signed.

December 5: Hans Luther resigns as Chancellor in Germany.

December 6: The Jaghbub Accord is signed by Britain, Egypt and Italy.

December 6: 73,000 people pay to watch the Chicago Bears beat the New York Giants.

December 7: The Biltmore Theatre opens in New York.

December 10: George Bernard Shaw is awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

December 11: The Quas Primas is published by Pope Pius XI.

December 12: Arthur Heinman opens Motel Inn in California.

December 12: Rezā Shāh Pahlavi takes power in Iran.

December 12: Medina falls to Saudi forces.

December 15: The first hockey game takes place at Madison Square Garden.

December 16: Alpha Phi Omega is founded at Lafayette College.

December 17: Colonel William Mitchell is court-martialed.

December 17: A pact is signed by Turkey and the USSR.

December 17: Jeddah falls to Saudi forces.

December 21: Battleship Potemkin premieres in Moscow.

December 26: The Communist Party of India is founded.

The New Yorker

The New Yorker is now an iconic magazine – and not just in New York. Did you know that the first issue was published in 1925? It began as weekly instalments of everything from journalism to comedy. Nowadays, 47 editions are published each year. Their content has also expanded to video and podcast formats. Its illustrations are now renowned, but it all started with a sketch of a well-dressed gentleman who is now referred to as ‘Eustace Tilley’ on the cover of an August edition.

The Treaty of Locarno

The Treaty of Locarno was one of the key events of 1925, and encompassed a series of agreements between Belgium, France, Great Britain, Germany and Britain. Its aim was to guarantee peace in western Europe. Its impact was relatively long lasting, with many attributing the relatively stable political climate for the following five years to the Treaty of Locarno. The efforts of the negotiators were formally recognized: Austen Chamberlain was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for this year, with Arsitide Briand and Gustav Stresemann jointly receiving it the following year.

1925 Events: A Complete Timeline - Historic Newspapers (2024)

FAQs

What major historical event happened in 1925? ›

March 4: The inauguration of President Coolidge is broadcasted live on 21 radio stations. March 4: The US annexes Swain's Island. March 12: The British government refuses to ratify the Geneva agreement. March 21: Teaching evolution is outlawed in Tennessee.

What was the biggest news in 1925? ›

U.S. Statistics
  • Nellie Tayloe Ross takes office as governor of Wyoming (Jan. 5). ...
  • Tennessee schoolteacher John T. ...
  • Worst tornado in U.S. history hit Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana: 689 deaths.
  • Al Capone takes over the Chicago bootlegging racket.

What happened in June 1925? ›

June 17, 1925 (Wednesday)

The Geneva Protocol was signed, prohibiting the use of chemical and biological weapons during warfare.

What major events happened in 1926? ›

1926 was a year of political unrest for many nations across the globe, with protests, invasions and coups aplenty. In Britain, the General Strike dominated the headlines for months, while over in Europe, Poland, Portugal and Lithuania all saw their governments overthrown.

Did anything happen in 1925? ›

On March 18, 1925, the Great Tri-State Tornado tore across Southeast Missouri, Southern Illinois, and Southwest Indiana. With its rapid movement, monstrous size, and long track, the tornado took hundreds of lives and injured thousands.

What happened in July 1925? ›

July 21, 1925 (Tuesday)

The Scopes Trial ended with John Scopes being found guilty of violating the Butler Act and fined $100, which both William Jennings Bryan and the American Civil Liberties Union offered to pay for him.

What happened in 1925 in U.S. history? ›

February 21 – First issue of The New Yorker magazine is published under the editorship of Harold Ross. March 4 – Calvin Coolidge becomes the first president of the United States to have his inauguration broadcast on radio. Charles G. Dawes is sworn in as the 30th vice president.

What was invented in 1925? ›

October 2 – John Logie Baird successfully transmits the first television pictures with a greyscale image, in London. October 22 – Julius Edgar Lilienfeld files the first patent for a form of field-effect transistor. November 4 – Charles F. Brannock files a patent for the Brannock Device for measuring shoe sizes.

What happened in October 1925? ›

October 14, 1925 (Wednesday)

The Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Consular Relations between Germany and the United States of America was ratified in Washington, D.C.

What happened in August 1925? ›

August 5, 1925 (Wednesday)

U.S. Marines were withdrawn from Nicaragua after a thirteen-year occupation since the country's 1912 civil war. The Grand Olympic Auditorium opened in Los Angeles, California.

What happened in November of 1925? ›

November 7, 1925 (Saturday)

Several Italian opposition leaders were arrested in connection with the assassination attempt on Benito Mussolini. It was announced that the remains of Manfred von Richthofen, "The Red Baron", would be disinterred from France and repatriated to Germany.

What happened in December 1925? ›

December 6: The Jaghbub Accord is signed by Britain, Egypt and Italy. December 6: 73,000 people pay to watch the Chicago Bears beat the New York Giants. December 7: The Biltmore Theatre opens in New York. December 10: George Bernard Shaw is awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Why is the year 1926 important? ›

Benito Mussolini increased his power in Italy, at the expense of numerous assassination attempts. 1926 also saw the births of several of the most influential and important people of the 20th century, such as Queen Elizabeth II, Fidel Castro and Marilyn Monroe.

What happened in October 1926? ›

Saturday, October 2, 1926

Air Union Blériot 155 caught fire and crashed at Leigh, Kent, killing all seven aboard. It was the first in-flight fire in airline history. Józef Piłsudski became Prime Minister of Poland. The drama film The Ice Flood opened.

What happened in September 1926? ›

Saturday, September 18, 1926

A Category 4 hurricane struck Miami in the early morning hours. An estimated $100 million damage was done and many buildings in downtown Miami were destroyed. Greece and Poland signed a Treaty of Friendship.

What did people do in 1925? ›

In 1925 the Jazz Age was in full swing. It was the year Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington made their first recordings. The Phantom of the Opera opened at movie theaters. The Ku Klux Klan marched on Washington, D.C. People sat on flagpoles, danced the Charleston, read a new novel called The Great Gatsby.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Maia Crooks Jr

Last Updated:

Views: 5583

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Maia Crooks Jr

Birthday: 1997-09-21

Address: 93119 Joseph Street, Peggyfurt, NC 11582

Phone: +2983088926881

Job: Principal Design Liaison

Hobby: Web surfing, Skiing, role-playing games, Sketching, Polo, Sewing, Genealogy

Introduction: My name is Maia Crooks Jr, I am a homely, joyous, shiny, successful, hilarious, thoughtful, joyous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.