<<May 1926>>
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The following events occurred in May 1926:

May 26, 1926: Rif Republic leader Abd el-Krim surrenders to French Army
May 31, 1926: U.S. Sesquicentennial Exhibition opens in Philadelphia

Saturday, May 1, 1926 edit

  • The lockout of 800,000 British coal miners began.[1]
  • Five people were killed and 28 injured in fighting between socialists and communists during May Day events in Warsaw, Poland.[2]
  • Swinton defeated Oldham 9–3 in the Challenge Cup Final of rugby.[3]

Sunday, May 2, 1926 edit

  • Civil war broke out in Nicaragua.
  • Women in India are allowed to stand for election to public office.[4]

Monday, May 3, 1926 edit

Tuesday, May 4, 1926 edit

Wednesday, May 5, 1926 edit

Thursday, May 6, 1926 edit

  • Limited services returned around Britain as volunteers and strike-breaking workers stepped in, notably to help distribute food and provide other necessities.[8]
  • Born: Edward Clark, American painter, in Storyville, New Orleans (d. 2019)

Friday, May 7, 1926 edit

  • With peace talks having failed, French warplanes bombed Rif Republic positions as the Rif War resumed.[9]
  • In the Soviet Union, Léon Theremin demonstrated his experimental television system which electrically transmitted and then projected near-simultaneous moving images on a five-foot square screen as part of his thesis.[10]

Saturday, May 8, 1926 edit

Baldwin

Sunday, May 9, 1926 edit

Byrd and Bennett
  • Explorer Richard E. Byrd and co-pilot Floyd Bennett claimed to be the first to fly over the North Pole in the Josephine Ford monoplane, taking off from Spitsbergen, Norway and returning 15 hours and 44 minutes later. Both men were immediately hailed as national heroes, though some experts have since been skeptical of the claim, believing that the plane was unlikely to have covered the entire distance and back in that short an amount of time.[13] An entry in Byrd's diary discovered in 1996 suggested that the plane actually turned back 150 miles short of the North Pole due to an oil leak.[14]
  • Although Britain was quiet in light of the Sabbath, soldiers were becoming an increasingly common sight in the streets of London.[15]
  • Died: J. M. Dent, 76, British publisher

Monday, May 10, 1926 edit

Tuesday, May 11, 1926 edit

Wednesday, May 12, 1926 edit

The Norge
Pilsudski and his aides

Thursday, May 13, 1926 edit

  • The Polish government held negotiations with Marshal Piłsudski. No agreement was reached and fighting broke out around 19:00 hours.
  • Britain started to return to normal on the first day back from the general strike, though many transport services were late in their resumption. Voluntary workers were still keeping buses and trains running.[22] Miners remained locked out.

Friday, May 14, 1926 edit

Saturday, May 15, 1926 edit

Sunday, May 16, 1926 edit

Monday, May 17, 1926 edit

Wilhelm Marx

Tuesday, May 18, 1926 edit

Wednesday, May 19, 1926 edit

Thursday, May 20, 1926 edit

Friday, May 21, 1926 edit

Saturday, May 22, 1926 edit

Sunday, May 23, 1926 edit

Monday, May 24, 1926 edit

Tuesday, May 25, 1926 edit

Petlura

Wednesday, May 26, 1926 edit

Thursday, May 27, 1926 edit

Friday, May 28, 1926 edit

Gomes da Costa leading the uprising

Saturday, May 29, 1926 edit

  • The military coup in Braga spread to the rest of Portugal. The Ditadura Nacional (National Dictatorship) was established.
  • Born: Abdoulaye Wade, President of Senegal 2000 to 2012; in Kébémer (alive in 2024)

Sunday, May 30, 1926 edit

Monday, May 31, 1926 edit

References edit