Events relating to north america
US actress Bette Davis moves to Hollywood and appears in her first film, The Bad Sister
US critic Edmund Wilson publishes Axel's Castle, a collection of essays about writers in the symbolist tradition
US film star James Cagney has a great success in the first of his many gangster roles, in The Public Enemy
Nine black teenagers, known as the Scottsboro Boys, are wrongly convicted of gang rape in a notorious US race-relations case
President Hoover switches on the lights to inaugurate the world's new tallest skyscraper, the Empire State Building in New York
The US poet Ogden Nash has an immediate success with his first volume of poems, Hard Lines
The Star-Spangled Banner is made the official US national anthem
Charlie Chaplin makes City Lights, in which the tramp befriends and helps a blind flower girl
The trilogy Mourning becomes Electra, Eugene O'Neill's transposition to New England of the Oresteia story, is performed in New York
The George Washington Bridge links New York with New Jersey, and is the world's longest suspension bridge with a main span of 3500 feet (1066m)
Harold Clurman and Lee Strasberg's Group Theatre present their first professional production, The House of Connelly by Paul Green

Boris Karloff gives a touching portrayal of the monster created by Dr Frankenstein, in the first of several screen performances in the role
The French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson has his first exhibition, in the Julien Levy Gallery in New York
Charles and Anne Lindbergh's one-year-old son, Charles Jr, is kidnapped and subsequently found murdered
Marcel Duchamp coins the term 'mobile' for Alexander Calder's new suspended art form

US aviator Amelia Earhart lands in Ireland 15 hours after leaving Newfoundland, to become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic
Presidential candidate F.D. Roosevelt pledges himself at the Democratic convention to deliver 'a new deal for the American people'
US athlete Mildred 'Babe' Didrikson breaks four world records in one afternoon in Evanston, Illinois
Ernest Hemingway, an aficionado of the sport, publishes Death in the Afternoon, a non-fiction account of bullfighting in Spain
Troops using bayonets and tear gas drive out of Washington the Bonus Army, a group of protesting unemployed war veterans
Mae West stars alongside George Raft in her first film, Night after Night
Ernst Lubitsch has a great success with Trouble in Paradise, a Hollywood comedy about villainy and romance in Paris
US novelist Erskine Caldwell publishes Tobacco Road, about white sharecroppers coping with poverty and desperation in Georgia
A deeply flawed experiment with African American syphilis patients is launched in Tuskegee, Alabama
Young Lonigan: a Boyhood in Chicago Streets is the first novel in James T. Farrell's Studs Lonigan trilogy