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| 1931 |
| | Amid political crisis Labour-leader Ramsay MacDonald forms an all-party National Government in Britain | |
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| 1931 |
| | Charlie Chaplin makes City Lights, in which the tramp befriends and helps a blind flower girl | |
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| 1931 |
| | Virginia Woolf publishes the most fluid of her novels, The Waves, in which she tells the story through six interior monologues | |
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| 1931 |
| | The Japanese occupy the Chinese state of Manchuria | |
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| 1931 |
| | 16-year-old English footballer Stanley Matthews plays his first League game for Stoke City | |
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| 1931 |
| | In Pietr-Le-Letton, the first novel published under his own name, the Belgian writer Georges Simenon introduces Inspector Maigret | |
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| 1931 |
| | The trilogy Mourning becomes Electra, Eugene O'Neill's transposition to New England of the Oresteia story, is performed in New York | |
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| 1931 |
| | Pay cuts cause British sailors in the Atlantic fleet to mutiny at Invergordon, in Scotland's Cromarty Firth | |
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| 1931 |
| | Harold Macmillan recovers the parliamentary seat of Stockton-on-Tees | |
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| 1931 |
| | 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) | |
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