The following events occurred in February 1928:
Wednesday, February 1, 1928
Thursday, February 2, 1928
Friday, February 3, 1928
Saturday, February 4, 1928
- Charles Lindbergh flew to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on his twenty-sixth birthday where he was given the key to the city before attending a reception by President Horacio Vásquez.
- Communists in Berlin stormed a movie theatre showing the American war film The Big Parade where they tore up the screen and tried to burn the film.
- The silent film The Garden of Eden starring Corinne Griffith was released.
- Born: Kim Yong-nam, former North Korean Foreign Minister, 1983 to 1998, Chairman of the Presidium, 1998 to 2019; in Heijo, Japanese Korea (now Pyongyang) (d. 2025)
- Died:
- Hendrik Lorentz, 74, Dutch physicist and Nobel Prize laureate
- Manche Masemola, 14, South African convert to Christianity, who was murdered by her parents for her faith.
Sunday, February 5, 1928
Monday, February 6, 1928
- Prominent Americans and Frenchmen held a celebration in Paris commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Franco-American Treaty of Alliance of 1778.
- Actress Mae Clark married the dancer and comedian Lew Brice in Chicago.
Tuesday, February 7, 1928
Wednesday, February 8, 1928
Thursday, February 9, 1928
Friday, February 10, 1928
Saturday, February 11, 1928
Sunday, February 12, 1928
- French playwright Pierre Veber challenged author Maurice Rostand to a duel with pistols after Rostand wrote a negative review of Veber's latest play, En Bordée. Rostand declined the challenge.
Monday, February 13, 1928
Tuesday, February 14, 1928
Wednesday, February 15, 1928
Thursday, February 16, 1928
- In the U.S., Indiana Governor Edward L. Jackson was found not guilty of trying to bribe Warren T. McCray, the governor at the time, in 1923.
- Canadian Minister of Finance James Robb presented the government's budget for the next year, projecting a surplus of over $45.8 million. The income tax, cut 10 percent last year, was cut an additional 10 percent, and the sales tax was cut from 4 percent to 3 percent.
- Born:
- Willi Dreesen, Swiss painter and sculptor, in Essen-Werden, Germany (d. 2013)
- Porfi Jiménez, Dominican-born Venezuelan musician (d. 2010)
- Died:
- Eddie Foy, Sr., 71, American stage entertainer
- Reggie Morris, 41, American film actor, director and screenwriter, died from a heart attack
Friday, February 17, 1928
Saturday, February 18, 1928
- A light plane crashed in downtown Macon, Georgia. Both pilots were killed when one of the bombs they were tossing out of the plane as part of a carnival exhibition caught in the wings and exploded, causing the plane to plummet 7,000 feet. A third person was killed and two injured as the plane crashed into the street.
- The King Vidor-directed silent film The Crowd premiered at the Capitol Theatre in New York City.
- When the cornerstone of the demolished Eastland County Courthouse was opened in Eastland, Texas, among the memorabilia found in the time capsule was alleged to be a horned lizard hibernating inside for 31 years. Whether the story was true or not, the animal became a celebrity known as Ol' Rip the Horned Toad.
- Born: John Ostrom, paleontologist, in New York City (d. 2005); Tom Johnson, ice hockey player and executive, in Baldur, Manitoba (d. 2007)
Sunday, February 19, 1928
- It was announced that the tooth attributed to the prehistoric primate species Nebraska Man (Hesperopithecus haroldcookii) was positively identified as belonging to an extinct wild pig.
- The Paraguayan Communist Party was founded.
Monday, February 20, 1928
- Japan held elections for its House of Representatives on a Monday, the first since the General Election Law was passed.
- The ruling SeiyÃ
«kai Party, led by Prime Minister Tanaka Giichi, edged out the Minsei Party, led by Hamaguchi Osachi, by a single seat in the 466 member lower house of parliament, 217 to 216.
- The sixth Pan-American Conference ended.
- The U.S. Supreme Court decided the case of Miller v. Schoene, holding that a government could, without a hearing, exercise its police power over property "by deciding upon the destruction of one class of property in order to save another which, in the judgment of the legislature, is of greater value to the public" without violating the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle published a 19-page essay, "A Word of Warning", recommending that Christianity be abandoned and replaced by a new religion based on spiritualism.
- Born: Roy Face, American baseball player and relief pitcher; in Stephentown, New York
Tuesday, February 21, 1928
- Industrialist Harry Ford Sinclair and three associates were found guilty of criminal contempt of court for jury shadowing in the Teapot Dome scandal trial. Sinclair was sentenced to six months in prison.
- The United States Department of War announced that tank development in the past several years had made it a far more effective weapon than it was a decade earlier. "The tank of the World War was formerly regarded as an auxiliary of the infantryman", the department said. "Today it has undergone a complete transformation and while it will still, in certain circumstances, continue its role in aiding the doughboy, the future will find it utilized as the nucleus of the army's mechanized units."
- Born: Larry Pennell, American motion picture and television actor, born in Uniontown, Pennsylvania (d. 2013)
Wednesday, February 22, 1928
Thursday, February 23, 1928
Friday, February 24, 1928
Saturday, February 25, 1928
Sunday, February 26, 1928
Monday, February 27, 1928
- The controversial British war film Dawn was discussed on the floor of the House of Commons. Foreign Affairs Secretary Austen Chamberlain had not viewed the film and did not plan to, but objected to a scene depicting Edith Cavell's execution which had reportedly been embellished for dramatic effect. "I believe that account of the execution to be wholly apocryphal, and I hold it is an outrage on a noble woman's memory to turn into melodrama, for the purposes of commercial gain, so heroic a story", Chamberlain said, though he did not propose to censor the film as had been suggested.
Tuesday, February 28, 1928
Wednesday, February 29, 1928
- A French court refused to grant American lawyer and politician Bainbridge Colby a divorce, declaring itself "incompetent" to do so because both parties involved were foreigners and Mrs. Colby was not present. The ruling was viewed as an end to the practice of Americans coming to France for easy dissolutions of marriage in the country's "divorce mills".
- Born: Tempest Storm, burlesque performer, in Eastman, Georgia (d. 2021)
- Died: Adolphe Appia, 65, Swiss architect and stage set designer
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