The following events occurred in January 1936:
- U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt presented the annual State of the Union address to Congress. The president spoke at length about the international situation and warned that "a point has been reached where the people of the Americas must take cognizance of growing ill-will, of marked trends toward aggression, of increasing armaments, of shortening tempers â a situation which has in it many of the elements that lead to the tragedy of general war." Roosevelt asserted that if another age of war was at hand, "the United States and the rest of the Americas can play but one role: through a well-ordered neutrality to do naught to encourage the contest, through adequate defense to save ourselves from embroilment and attack, and through example and all legitimate encouragement and assistance to persuade other Nations to return to the ways of peace and good-will."
- The Polish government freed 27,000 prisoners under a general amnesty.
- The comedy-drama film Riffraff, starring Jean Harlow and Spencer Tracy, was released.
- The Spanish Cortes Generales was dissolved and new elections called for February.
- Iran became the first Muslim country to ban the wearing of veils in public. In the years prior to the 1979 Revolution, Iran celebrated January 7 as Women's Day to mark this event.
- Ethiopia asked the League of Nations to dispatch a commission to investigate the use of poison gas by Italian troops.
- The Dominican capital city Santo Domingo was renamed Ciudad Trujilo to honor Rafael Trujilo
- Jewish booksellers throughout Nazi Germany were ordered to turn in their Reich Publications Chamber membership cards, without which no one was permitted to sell books.
- Reza Shah of Iran issued the Kashf-e hijab decree, ordering police to remove the hijab from any woman in public.
- Born: Robert May, Baron May of Oxford, Australian scientist, in Sydney (d. 2020)
- A memorial to Theodore Roosevelt was dedicated in New York City. President Franklin D. Roosevelt made a speech paying tribute to his predecessor in the office and fourth cousin, describing him as "a great patriot and a great soul."
- Albert Sarraut became the new French Prime Minister.
- President Roosevelt sent a short handwritten message saying he would not sign the Adjusted Compensation Payment Bill, explaining that it only differed in two respects from the bill he had already vetoed at the last session. Prior to this note, Theodore Roosevelt had been the last president to write a veto message by hand. The House promptly took a vote and overrode the presidential veto by a count of 324 to 61.
- The First Battle of Tembien ended in a draw.
- Died: Harry Peach, 61, English businessman and author
- Al Smith announced in a radio address that due to his opposition to the New Deal, he would not be supporting Roosevelt in the 1936 election campaign as he had in 1932.
- General Francisco Franco was selected as Spain's representative to attend the funeral of George V.
- An article "Muddle Instead of Music" was published anonymously, almost certainly with Stalin's approval, in the Soviet newspaper Pravda, denouncing Dmitri Shostakovich's opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District. Two further attacks followed and Shostakovich was persuaded not to go ahead with the premiere of his Symphony No. 4 later in the year.
- The funeral of George V was held. Britain observed 2 minutes of silence at 1:30 p.m. as he was interred at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle.
- Born:
- Alan Alda, American actor, director and screenwriter, known for the TV series M*A*S*H; in New York City
- Ismail Kadare, Albanian novelist and poet; in Gjirokastër (d. 2024)
- Died:
- Oscar K. Allen, 53, Governor of Louisiana since 1932, died of a brain hemorrhage, one week after winning the Democratic Primary to fill the U.S. Senate seat that had been held by the late Huey Long
- Richard Loeb of the notorious Leopold and Loeb murder duo was slashed to death with a razor by a fellow inmate in Stateville Penitentiary
- The Baseball Hall of Fame announced its first five inductees: Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson and Walter Johnson. The official induction ceremony was held three years later on June 12, 1939.
- The Soviet Academy of Sciences announced that it had revived insects and lobsters buried 3,000 years ago under Siberian permafrost.
- Born:
- Patrick Caulfield, British painter; in Acton, London (d. 2005)
- James Jamerson, American bass player, in Edisto, South Carolina (d. 1983)
- Walter Lewin, Dutch astrophysicist; in The Hague
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