Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: Ambrose B. Broadbent (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas: Edgar E. Witt (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Benjamin Williams (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: James H. Price (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Washington: John Arthur Gellatly (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: Henry A. Huber (Republican)
Events
January–March
January 1 – The United States Post Office Department issues a set of 12 stamps commemorating the 200th anniversary of George Washington's birth.
January 7 – The Stimson Doctrine is proclaimed, in response to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria.
January 12 – Hattie W. Caraway of Arkansas becomes the first woman elected to the United States Senate.
February 2 – The Reconstruction Finance Corporation begins operations in Washington, D.C.
February 4 – The 1932 Winter Olympics open in Lake Placid, New York.
February 15 – Clara, Lu & Em, generally regarded as the first daytime network soap opera, debuts in its morning time slot over the Blue Network of NBC Radio, having originally been a late evening program.
February 22 (Washington's Birthday) – The Purple Heart is revived by War Department General Order No. 3 as a decoration of the U.S. military awarded in the name of the president to those wounded or killed while serving with the U.S. Armed Forces; retrospective awards are made.
March 1 – Lindbergh kidnapping: Charles Lindbergh Jr., the infant son of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh, is kidnapped from the family home near Hopewell, New Jersey.
March 7 – Four people are killed when police fire upon 3,000 unemployed autoworkers marching outside the Ford River Rouge Plant in Dearborn, Michigan.
March 22 – Tarzan the Ape Man premieres, with Olympic gold medal swimmer Johnny Weissmuller in the title role; he will star in a total of twelve Tarzan films.
April–June
April 6 – U.S. president Herbert Hoover supports armament limitations.
May 2 – Comedian Jack Benny's radio show airs for the first time.
May 12 – Ten weeks after his abduction, the infant son of Charles Lindbergh is found dead just a few miles from the family home.
May 20–21 – Amelia Earhart flies from the US to Derry, Northern Ireland in 14 hours 54 minutes.
May 29 – The first of approximately 15,000 World War I veterans arrive in Washington, D.C. demanding the immediate payment of their military bonus, becoming known as the Bonus Army.
c. June – The Republican Citizens Committee Against National Prohibition is established for the repeal of Prohibition in the United States.
June 6
The Revenue Act of 1932 is enacted, creating the first gas tax in the United States at 1 cent per US gallon (0.26 ¢/L) sold.
The 6.4 Mw Eureka earthquake affects the north coast of California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). Three people are injured and one killed.
June 29 – The comedy serial Vic and Sade debuts on NBC Radio.
July–September
July 8 – The Dow Jones Industrial Average reaches its lowest level of the Great Depression, bottoming out at 41.22.
July 28 – Two people are killed when police fire upon the Bonus Army of World War I veterans gathered in Washington, D.C. U.S. President Herbert Hoover orders the U.S. Army to evict the protesters forcibly and troops disperse the last of the Bonus Army the next day.
July 30–August 14 – The 1932 Summer Olympics take place in Los Angeles.
July 30 – Walt Disney's Flowers and Trees, the first animated cartoon to be presented in full Technicolor, premieres in Los Angeles, California. It releases in theaters, along with Eugene O'Neill's experimental play Strange Interlude (starring Norma Shearer and Clark Gable), and will go on to win the first Academy Award for Best Animated Short.
August – A farmers' revolt begins in the Midwestern United States.
August 7 – Raymond Edward Welch becomes the first one-legged man to scale 6,288 feet (1,917 m) Mount Washington (New Hampshire).
August 10 – A 5.1 kg chondrite-type meteorite breaks into at least 7 fragments and strikes earth near the town of Archie in Cass County, Missouri.
August 31 – A total solar eclipse is visible from northern Canada through northeastern Vermont, New Hampshire, southwestern Maine and the Capes of Massachusetts.
October–December
October 1 – The famous Babe Ruth's called shot is made in the fifth inning of game 3 of the 1932 World Series (baseball) during the 1932 New York Yankees season.
October 2 – The New York Yankees defeat the Chicago Cubs, 4 games to 0, to win their 4th World Series title in baseball.
October 13 – Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes lays the cornerstone for a new U.S. Supreme Court building.
October 15 – The Michigan Marching Band (at this time called the Varsity band) debuts Script Ohio at the Michigan versus Ohio State game in Columbus.
October 23 – Fred Allen's radio comedy show debuts on CBS.
November 1 – The San Francisco Opera House opens.
November 7 – Buck Rogers in the 25th Century airs on radio for the first time.
November 8 – U.S. presidential election, 1932: Democratic Governor of New York Franklin D. Roosevelt defeats incumbent Republican President Herbert Hoover in a landslide victory, having promised a New Deal and repeal of Prohibition.
November 16 – New York City's Palace Theatre fully converts to a cinema, which is considered the final death knell of vaudeville as a popular entertainment in the United States.
November 18 – The 5th Academy Awards, hosted by Conrad Nagel, are presented at Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, with Edmund Goulding's Grand Hotel winning the Academy Award for Best Picture. John Ford and Brian Desmond Hurst's Arrowsmith and King Vidor's The Champ both receive the most nominations with four, while the latter film and Frank Borzage's Bad Girl both receive the most awards with two. Borzage also wins Best Director, his second overall.
November 24 – In Washington, D.C., the FBI Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory (better known as the FBI Crime Lab) officially opens.
November 30 – Exhibition American Folk Art: The Art of the Common Man in America 1750–1900 opens at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
June 27 – Francis P. Duffy, Roman Catholic priest (born 1871 in Canada)
July 7 – Henry Eyster Jacobs, Lutheran theologian (born 1844)
July 22 – Florenz Ziegfeld Jr., Broadway theatrical impresario (born 1867)
July 24 – Cynthia S. Burnett, educator, temperance reformer, and newspaper editor (born 1840)
August 2 – Dan Brouthers, baseball player (born 1858)
August 25 – Edith Rockefeller McCormick, socialite, daughter of Standard Oil co-founder John D. Rockefeller (born 1872)
September 5 – Paul Bern, screenwriter (suicide) (born 1889)
September 22 – Claude C. Hopkins, advertising executive (born 1866)
September 25 – Joel R. P. Pringle, admiral (born 1873)
September 27 – John Sharp Williams, U.S. Senator from Mississippi from 1911 to 1923 (born 1854)
October 17 – Lucy Bacon, painter (born 1857)
October 26 – Molly Brown, Denver socialite, survivor of the sinking of the RMS Titanic (born 1867)
November 4 – Belle Bennett, actress (cancer) (born 1891)
November 15 or 17 – Charles W. Chesnutt, African American author, essayist and political activist (born 1858)
November 18 – Jay Hunt, American film director (born 1855)
November 22 – William Walker Atkinson, writer and occultist (born 1862)
November 23 – Henry S. Whitehead, writer of horror fiction and fantasy (born 1882)
December 28 – Malcolm Whitman, tennis player (born 1877)
Anniversaries
February 22 marked the 200th anniversary of George Washington's birth. Saplings and scions of the Washington Elm tree were planted across the United States in his honor.
See also
List of American films of 1932
Timeline of United States history (1930–1949)
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