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1935 (MCMXXXV) was
a common year starting
on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar,
the 1935th year of the Common Era (CE)
and Anno Domini (AD)
designations, the 935th year of the 2nd millennium, the 35th year of
the 20th century,
and the 6th year of the 1930s decade. Contents · 1Events · 2Births · 3Deaths Events[edit] January[edit] Main article: January 1935 ·
January
– Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia creates a military school
at Holeta.[1] ·
January 1 – The Italian colonies
of Tripoli and Cyrenaica are joined together as Libya. ·
January 3 – The trial of Bruno Richard
Hauptmann, accused of the kidnapping and
murder of Charles Lindbergh, Jr., begins in Flemington, New
Jersey. ·
January 4 – Dry Tortugas National Park
is established. ·
January 7 – Italian premier Benito Mussolini and French Foreign
Minister Pierre Laval conclude an
agreement in which each power agrees not to oppose the
other's colonial claims. ·
January 11 – Amelia Earhart becomes the
first person to fly solo from Hawaii to California. ·
January 13 – A plebiscite in the Territory of the
Saar Basin shows that 90.3% of those voting wish to join
Germany. ·
January 16 – The FBI kills
the Barker Gang, including Ma Barker, in a shootout. ·
January 19 – Coopers Inc. sells the world's first
men's briefs, as "jockeys", in Chicago. ·
January 24 – The first canned beer is
sold in Richmond, Virginia,
United States, by Gottfried
Krueger Brewing Company.[2] ·
January 28 – Iceland legalizes abortion
on medical grounds. February[edit] Main article: February 1935 ·
February 6 – Parker Brothers begins selling
the board game Monopoly in the United States.[3] ·
February 13 – Richard Hauptmann is
convicted and sentenced to death for the kidnapping and murder of Charles
Lindbergh, Jr., in the United States ·
February 15 – The discovery and
clinical development of Prontosil, the first
broadly effective antibiotic, is published
in a series of articles by Gerhard Domagk and others in Germany's
pre-eminent medical journal, Deutsche
Medizinische Wochenschrift. ·
February 22 – Airplanes are banned from
flying over the White House in Washington, D.C. ·
February 23 – The classic Mickey Mouse cartoon The Band Concert is released
by United Artists in
the United States. ·
In Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler orders reinstatement of
the air force, the Luftwaffe, in
violation of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles. ·
Robert Watson-Watt first
demonstrates the use of radar to detect
aircraft at Daventry in
England. ·
February 28 – Ladby ship: Viking ship grave discovered in
Denmark. March[edit] Main article: March 1935 ·
March 1 ·
1935 Greek
coup d'état attempt: Nikolaos Plastiras, Anastasios Papoulas and
other Venizelists lead
a coup against the People's Party government
in Greece. The attempt is suppressed by March 11 and the leaders condemned to
death for treason. ·
İsmet
İnönü forms the new government in Turkey. (8th government; During Atatürk's presidency, İnönü has served
seven times as a prime minister.) ·
March 2 – King Prajadhipok (Rama VII) of Siam abdicates the throne. He is
succeeded by his 9-year-old-nephew Ananda Mahidol (Rama VIII). ·
March 8 – Faithful dog Hachikō dies on the spot where he
had awaited his dead owner for nine years in Japan. ·
March 9 – Porky Pig makes his debut as the first
major Looney Tunes character
in I Haven't Got a Hat. ·
March 16 – Adolf Hitler announces German re-armament in
violation of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles. ·
March 19 – Harlem riot of 1935:
A race riot breaks out in Harlem (New York City) after a rumor
circulates that a teenage Puerto
Rican shoplifter in
the S. H. Kress &
Co. department store has been brutally beaten. ·
March 21 – Iran requests
that this name be internationally adopted for the country in place of
"Persia". ·
March 22 – The world's first television
program by Fernsehsender
Paul Nipkow is transmitted from the Funkturm in Berlin, Germany. April[edit] Main article: April 1935 Dust storm approaching Spearman, Texas ·
April
1 – The North American NA-16,
prototype of the North American
T-6 Texan or Harvard flying trainer, flies for the first
time.[4] ·
April 14 – Dust Bowl: The great dust storm in the
United States hits eastern New Mexico and Colorado, and western Oklahoma the hardest. It will be made
famous by Woody Guthrie in
his "dust bowl ballads". ·
April 15 – Roerich Pact, a Pan-American treaty on the
protection of cultural artefacts, is signed in Washington D.C. ·
April 16 – Fibber McGee and
Molly debuts on NBC Radio
in the United States. ·
April 17 – Sun Myung Moon, a teenage Presbyterian convert in Korea under
Japanese rule, claims to have a revelation from Jesus telling him to complete his
mission from almost 2,000 years ago. ·
April 24 – William
Christian Bullitt, Jr., the United
States Ambassador to the Soviet Union, hosts the elaborately prepared Spring
Ball of the Full Moon which is said to have surpassed all
other embassy parties in Moscow's history. ·
April 27 – FA Cup (Association football): Sheffield
Wednesday F.C. beat West Bromwich Albion 4–2
at Wembley Stadium in
England. ·
April 29 – The first edition of
the Vuelta a España is
raced and goes on to become one of the 3 Grand Tours of
road bicycle racing. May[edit] Main article: May 1935 ·
May 6 – New Deal: Executive Order 7034 creates
the Works
Progress Administration (WPA) in the United States. ·
May 14 – Northamptonshire gains
(over Somerset at
Taunton by 48 runs) what proves to be their last victory for 99 matches,
easily a record in the County Championship.
Their next Championship win is not until 29 May 1939. ·
May 15 – Joseph Stalin opens the Moscow Metro to the public. ·
May 19 – T. E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of
Arabia") dies as the result of a motorcycle accident in Dorset, England. ·
May 21 – In Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler announces the
reintroduction of conscription to
the Wehrmacht in violation of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles. ·
May 24 – The first nighttime Major League
Baseball game is played between the Cincinnati Reds and Philadelphia
Phillies at Crosley Field in Cincinnati, Ohio. ·
May 27 – Schechter
Poultry Corp. v. United States (the "Sick Chicken
Case"): The Supreme
Court of the United States declares that the National
Industrial Recovery Act, a major component of the New Deal, is unconstitutional. ·
May 29 – The French Compagnie
Générale Transatlantique ocean liner SS Normandie sets out on
her maiden voyage from Le Havre to New York, which she will
reach in 4 days, 3 hours and 14 minutes, taking the Blue Riband; she gains the eastbound record
on her return passage. ·
May 30 – Eventual Baseball Hall of
Famer Babe Ruth appears
in his last career game, playing for the Boston Braves in Philadelphia against the Phillies. ·
May 31 ·
1935 Quetta
earthquake: A 7.1 magnitude earthquake destroys Quetta in modern-day Pakistan, killing
40,000. ·
20th Century Pictures, Inc., and Fox Film Corporation becomes 20th
Century Fox Film Corporation. June[edit] Main article: June 1935 ·
June 9 – He–Umezu Agreement:
China's Kuomintang government
concedes Japanese military control of north-eastern China. ·
June 10 – Alcoholics Anonymous is
founded in Akron, Ohio by William G. Wilson and
Dr. Robert Smith. ·
June 12 – Senator Huey Long of Louisiana makes the longest speech on
Senate record, taking 15½ hours and containing 150,000 words.[5] ·
June 12 – End of the Chaco War, a war between Paraguay and Bolivia. ·
June 13 – James J. Braddock defeats Max Baer at Madison Square
Garden Bowl to win the heavyweight boxing championship of the world. ·
June 18 – Anglo-German
Naval Agreement: Britain agrees to a German navy equal to 35% of
her own naval tonnage. ·
June 24 – Carlos Gardel, the legendary
Franco-Argentine "Father of Tango", dies in a plane crash in Medellín, Colombia. July[edit] Main article: July 1935 ·
July 4 – RMS Mauretania sails
from Southampton to Jarrow. ·
July 16 – The world's first parking meters are installed in Oklahoma City. ·
July 17 – Cudjoe Lewis, the last known surviving
victim of Clotilda,
the last ship of the Atlantic slave trade,
dies. ·
July 25– August 20 – The seventh and last
congress of the Comintern is
held. August[edit] Main article: August 1935 ·
August 5 – The Leo Burnett Advertising Agency opens in
Chicago. ·
August 14 – United States
President Franklin D.
Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act into
law. ·
August 15 – Humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post are killed when Post's plane
crashes shortly after takeoff near Barrow, Alaska. September[edit] Main article: September 1935 ·
September 2 – 1935 Labor Day
hurricane: The strongest hurricane ever to strike the United
States landfalls in the Upper Florida Keys as a Category 5 storm with
185 mph winds, killing 423. ·
September 3 – Sir Malcolm Campbell becomes the first
person to drive an automobile at 300 miles per hour in Blue Bird,
establishing a new absolute land speed
record of 301.337 mph (484.955 km/h) on the Bonneville Salt
Flats in Utah.[6] ·
September 8 – Carl Weiss kills Huey Long, U.S. Senator from Louisiana, in the Louisiana Capitol Building
in Baton Rouge. ·
September 13 – Howard Hughes, flying the Hughes H-1 Racer, sets an airspeed record of
352 mph (566 km/h). ·
September 15 – The Nuremberg Laws go into effect in
Germany, removing citizenship from Jews. ·
September 17 – Manuel L. Quezon is the 2nd President of
the Philippines. ·
September 24 – Earl W. Bascom and his brother Weldon
produce the first night rodeo held outdoors
under electric lights at Columbia,
Mississippi. ·
September 29 – The London
and North Eastern Railway's first A4 Class streamlined steam
locomotive A4
2509 Silver Link makes her inaugural journey
from London
King's Cross. ·
U.S.
President Franklin D.
Roosevelt dedicates Hoover Dam. ·
The London
and North Eastern Railway commences the Silver Jubilee,
Britain's first streamline train service. October[edit] Main article: October 1935 October 22 page from a Soviet
revolutionary calendar with six-day weeks. ·
October 2 – October 3 – The Second
Italo-Ethiopian War begins as General Emilio De Bono of Italy invades
Ethiopia. ·
October 10 – A tornado destroys the 160
metre tall wooden radio tower in Langenberg,
Germany. As a result of this catastrophe, wooden radio towers are phased out. ·
October 14 – In the Canadian
federal election, the Liberal Party of William Lyon
Mackenzie King wins a majority government,
defeating the Conservative
Party of Prime Minister R. B. Bennett. November[edit] Main article: November 1935 ·
November 3 – A Greek
monarchy referendum is held by self-proclaimed Regent Georgios Kondylis.
Almost 98% of the votes favor restoration of the monarchy, although the
referendum's integrity is dubious.[7] ·
November 8 – A dozen labor leaders come together to announce
the creation of the Congress
of Industrial Organizations(CIO), an organization charged with
pushing the cause for industrial unionism in
North America. ·
November 14 – In the United
Kingdom general election, Prime
Minister Stanley Baldwin returns to office at
the head of a National Government led by the Conservative
Party with a large but reduced majority. ·
November 22 – The flying boat China Clipper takes off from Alameda, California to
deliver the first airmail cargo
across the Pacific Ocean; on November 29 the aircraft reaches its
final destination, Manila, and delivers over
110,000 pieces of mail. ·
November 23 – Jacques and Thérèse
Tréfouël, Daniel Bovet and
Federico Nitti, in the laboratory of Ernest Fourneau at the Pasteur Institute in
Paris, discover that sulfanilamide is the active component
of Prontosil.[8] ·
November 25 – After 11 years in
exile, George II returns
to Greek soil as King of the Hellenes at
Corfu from London. ·
November 30 – The 1935 British-made
film Scrooge,
the first all-talking film version of the Charles Dickens classic A Christmas Carol,
opens in the U.S. after its British release. December[edit] Main article: December 1935 ·
December 5 – Mary McLeod Bethune founds
the National
Council of Negro Women in the United States. ·
December 9 – American newspaper
editor Walter Liggett is
killed in a gangland murder plot. ·
December 10 – Hanshin Tigers, as well known for
professional baseball club of Japan, founded in Osaka.[citation needed] ·
Lebensborn program in support of Nazi eugenics is founded by Heinrich Himmler in Germany. ·
Opening
of the De La Warr Pavilion at Bexhill-on-Sea, designed by Erich Mendelsohn and Serge Chermayeff, a pioneering example
of International
Style architecture in the British Isles.[9][10][11][12] ·
December 17 – Douglas DST,
prototype of the Douglas DC-3 airliner,
first flies, in the United States. More than 16,000 of the model will
eventually be produced. ·
Samuel
Hoare resigns as British foreign secretary and is replaced
by Anthony Eden. ·
The socialist party of Sri Lanka, the Lanka Sama Samaja
Party, is founded. ·
December 27 – Mao Zedong issues the Wayaobu Manifesto, On
Tactics Against Japanese Imperialism, calling for a National United Front
against the Japanese
invasion. ·
December 28 – Pravda publishes a letter
from Pavel Postyshev,
who revives the New Year tree tradition
in the Soviet Union. Date unknown[edit] ·
The
house Fallingwater in
southwestern Pennsylvania,
designed by Frank Lloyd Wright,
is completed. ·
Lectorium
Rosicrucianum is founded. ·
The Melody Inn opens
as a piano bar in Indianapolis.[13] Births[edit]
January[edit] ·
Alfredo del Águila,
Mexican footballer (d. 2018) ·
Millard Fuller, American lawyer and founder
of Habitat for Humanity (d. 2009) ·
January 4 – Floyd Patterson, American boxer (d. 2006) ·
Li Shengjiao, Chinese diplomat and
international jurist (d. 2017) ·
Kenny Davern, American jazz clarinetist
(d. 2006) ·
Valeri Kubasov, Russian cosmonaut (d. 2014) ·
January 8 – Elvis Presley, American rock & roll
singer, guitarist and film actor (d. 1977) ·
Bob Denver, American actor (d. 2005) ·
Dick Enberg, American sportscaster (d. 2017) ·
Earl G. Graves, Sr. African-American
publisher ·
Eddy Clearwater, American musician (d. 2018) ·
Ronnie Hawkins, American musician ·
Sherrill Milnes, American baritone ·
Teresa del Conde, Mexican art critic and
historian (d. 2017) ·
The
Amazing Kreskin, American mentalist ·
Gumercindo
España Olivares, Mexican artisan (d. 2018) ·
Didi, Brazilian comedian actor, producer and
writer ·
Rip Taylor, American comedian ·
January 14 – Lucile Wheeler, Canadian skier ·
January 15 – Luigi Radice, Italian football player and
manager (d. 2018) ·
Russ McCubbin, American actor (d. 2018) ·
A. J. Foyt, American race car driver ·
Udo Lattek, German football coach (d. 2015) ·
January 17 – Ruth Ann Minner, Governor of Delaware ·
Jon Stallworthy, English poet (d. 2014) ·
Albert Millaire, Canadian actor and theatre
director (d. 2018) ·
Robin Birley,
British archaeologist (d. 2018) ·
Soumitra Chatterjee,
Indian actor ·
January 20 – Dorothy Provine, American singer, dancer,
actress and comedian (d. 2010) ·
Felipe Tejeda García,
Mexican Roman Catholic prelate (d. 2018) ·
Jack Tunney, Canadian professional wrestling
promoter (d. 2004) ·
Raye Montague, American naval engineer
(d. 2018) ·
January 23 – Rose Schwarz, German missionary (d. 2017) ·
Shivabalayogi, Yogi (d. 1994) ·
Gaqo Çako, Albanian opera singer (d. 2018) ·
J. G. Farrell, English novelist (d. 1979) ·
António Ramalho
Eanes, 16th President of
Portugal ·
Richard M. Pollack,
American mathematician (d. 2018) ·
January 26 – Henry Jordan, American football player
(d. 1977) ·
January 29 – Roger Payne, American biologist ·
Richard Brautigan,
American writer (d. 1984) ·
Elsa Martinelli, Italian film actress
(d. 2017) ·
Hal Lear, American basketball player
(d. 2016) ·
Kenzaburō
Ōe, Japanese writer, Nobel Prize laureate ·
Lorenzo Calafiore,
Italian wrestler (d. 2011) February[edit] ·
February 2 – Dariush Shayegan, Iranian cultural theorist
and philosopher (d. 2018) ·
Doreen Kartinyeri,
Ngarrindjeri elder and historian (d. 2007) ·
Jody
Williams, American blues musician (d. 2018) ·
February 4 – Martti Talvela, Finnish bass (d. 1989) ·
Johannes Geldenhuys,
South African military commander (d. 2018) ·
Alex Harvey,
Scottish rock singer (d. 1982) ·
February 7 – Cliff
Jones, Welsh footballer ·
February 9 – Ron Attwell, Canadian ice hockey player
(d. 2017) ·
Eddie Foy III, American actor and film director
(d. 2018) ·
Mark Irwin,
New Zealand rugby union player (d. 2018) ·
February 11 – Gene Vincent, American guitarist and
vocalist (d. 1971) ·
February 12 – Gene McDaniels, African-American
singer-songwriter (d. 2011) ·
February 13 – Jacob Tanzer, American attorney (d. 2018) ·
Rob McConnell, Canadian jazz musician
(d. 2010) ·
Arnold Kopelson, American film producer
(d. 2018) ·
February 16 – Sonny Bono, American singer, actor and
politician (d. 1998) ·
Chabelo, Mexican actor and TV host ·
Lucky Varela, American politician (d. 2017) ·
Christina Pickles,
English-born American character actress ·
February 18 – Ciarán Bourke, Irish singer (d. 1988) ·
February 22 – Hisako Kyōda, Japanese voice actress ·
February 23 – Tom Murphy,
Irish playwright (d. 2018) ·
Mirella Freni, Italian soprano ·
Theodor
Hoffmann, German admiral (d. 2018) ·
Anne Treisman, English psychologist
(d. 2018) March[edit] ·
March 1 – Robert Conrad, American actor ·
March 3 – Zhelyu Zhelev, President of
Bulgaria (d. 2015) ·
March 4 – Bent Larsen, Danish chess player (d. 2010) ·
March 5 – Paul Sand (born Paul Sanchez), American
comedic actor ·
March 6 – Ron Delany, Irish runner ·
March 12 ·
Jacques Benveniste,
French immunologist (d. 2004) ·
Paul John Marx, French-Papua Roman Catholic
prelate (d. 2018) ·
March 15 ·
Jimmy Swaggart, American televangelist ·
Judd Hirsch, American actor ·
March 17 ·
Patrick Etolu, Ugandan high jumper (d. 2013) ·
Muhammad Ashiq, Pakistani cyclist (d. 2018) ·
Bonnie Cooper, American baseball player
(d. 2018) ·
March 18 ·
Oumarou Ganda, Nigerien director and actor
(d. 1981) ·
Ole
Barndorff-Nielsen, Danish mathematician ·
March 19 – Charlie Hennigan, American football player
(d. 2017) ·
March 20 – Arne Kotte, Norwegian footballer (d. 2015) ·
March 21 – Brian Clough, British soccer manager. ·
March 22 – M. Emmet Walsh, American actor ·
March 24 ·
Walter Moody, American convicted murderer
(d. 2018) ·
Peter Bichsel, Swiss writer ·
March 25 ·
Jim Miceli, American politician (d. 2018) ·
Gabriel Elorde, Filipino boxer (d. 1985) ·
March 26 ·
Ernesto Maceda, Filipino politician, lawyer,
and columnist (d. 2016) ·
Jiří Kormaník,
Czechoslovakian wrestler (d. 2017) ·
March 27 ·
Sir
Angus Farquharson of Finzean, British peer (d. 2018) ·
Abelardo Castillo,
Argentine writer ·
Stanley Rother, American Roman Catholic
priest (d. 1981) ·
Julian Glover, English actor ·
March 28 ·
Peter Wilmot-Sitwell,
British merchant banker and stockbroker (d. 2018) ·
Jeanie Descombes, American professional
baseball player ·
Józef Szmidt, Polish athlete ·
Michael Parkinson,
British chat show host ·
March 29 – Ruby Murray, Northern Irish singer and
actress (d. 1996) ·
March 30 ·
Willie Galimore, American football player
(d. 1964) ·
J. Willard Thompson,
American racehorse trainer (d. 2018) ·
March 31 ·
Ruth Escobar, Portuguese-Brazilian actress,
businesswoman and politician (d. 2017) ·
Herb Alpert, American trumpeter ·
Judith Rossner, American writer (d. 2005) April[edit] ·
April 4 – Kenneth Mars, American actor (d. 2011) ·
April 5 ·
Enrique Álvarez
Félix, Mexican actor (d. 1996) ·
Donald Lynden-Bell,
British astrophysicist (d. 2018) ·
Guy Lyon Playfair,
British writer (d. 2018) ·
April 8 ·
David DiChiera, American composer (d. 2018) ·
Francis D. "Bill" Moran, American
admiral, third director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration Commissioned Officer Corps ·
April 9 – Aulis Sallinen, Finnish composer ·
April 10 ·
Baltasar Corrada
del Río, Puerto Rican politician (d. 2018) ·
Ken Squier, motorsports broadcaster ·
Álvaro de Luna,
Spanish actor (d. 2018) ·
Jerzy Milian, Polish jazz vibraphonist
(d. 2018) ·
April 11 – Kazys Almenas, Lithuanian physicist,
engineer and publisher (d. 2017) ·
April 14 – Katie Horstman, American female professional
baseball player ·
April 16 ·
Ray Frenette, Canadian politician (d. 2018) ·
Mely Tagasa, Filipino actress, screenwriter
and dubbing producer (d. 2018) ·
April 17 – Walt Kowalczyk, American football player
(d. 2018) ·
April 18 – Paul A. Rothchild,
American record producer (d. 1995) ·
April 19 – Dudley Moore, English actor, comedian and
composer (d. 2002) ·
April 21 ·
Charles Grodin, American actor and
journalist ·
Thomas Kean, Governor of New Jersey and 9/11
Commission Chairman ·
Dolores Lee, American female professional
baseball player ·
April 22 ·
Paul Chambers, American jazz musician
(d. 1969) ·
Jerry Fodor, American philosopher and
cognitive scientist (d. 2017) ·
April 23 – Bunky Green, American jazz musician ·
April 25 ·
Bob Gutowski, American athlete (d. 1960) ·
Li Ao, Chinese-Taiwanese writer, social
commentator, historian, and independent politician (d. 2018) ·
April 28 – Murray McBride, Canadian politician, Yale
graduate ·
April 29 ·
Andrey Zaliznyak, Russian linguist (d. 2017) ·
April Ashley, English model ·
Otis Rush, American blues guitarist and
singer (d. 2018) May[edit] ·
May 2 – Lance LeGault, American actor (d. 2012) ·
May 6 – Edward M. Abroms, American film editor
(d. 2018) ·
May 7 – Isobel Warren, Canadian author ·
May 8 ·
Princess
Elisabeth of Denmark, Danish princess (d. 2018) ·
Jack Charlton, British soccer player and
manager ·
May 9 - Nokie Edwards, American musician (d. 2018) ·
May 11 ·
Doug McClure, American actor (d. 1995) ·
Dick Leitsch, American LGBT rights activist
(d. 2018) ·
May 12 ·
Felipe Alou, Dominican Major League Baseball
player and manager ·
Gary Peacock, American jazz double-bassist ·
May 13 ·
Alfred Evers, Belgian politician (d. 2018) ·
Luciano Benetton, Italian entrepreneur,
owner of Benetton Group ·
May 14 – Mel Charles, Welsh footballer (d. 2016) ·
May 17 ·
Dennis Potter, English writer (d. 1994) ·
Ryke Geerd Hamer, German cancer researcher
(d. 2017) ·
May 19 – David
Hartman, American actor and television journalist ·
May 20 – José Mujica, 40th President of Uruguay ·
May 22 – Barry Rogers, American jazz and salsa
trombonist (d. 1991) ·
May 24 – Joan Micklin Silver,
American director ·
May 25 ·
Cookie Gilchrist, American football player
(d. 2011) ·
Victoria Shaw,
American actress (d. 1988) ·
May 26 – Allan Chumak, Russian faith healer (d. 2017) ·
May 27 ·
Carole Lesley, English actor (d. 1974) ·
Lee Meriwether, American beauty queen and
actress ·
Jerry Kindall, American baseball player
(d. 2017) ·
May 28 ·
Darryl Rogers, American football player and
coach (d. 2018) ·
Azizan Zainul Abidin,
Malaysian corporate figure (d. 2004) ·
May 29 – André Brink, South African writer (d. 2015) ·
May 30 ·
Bill Mallory, American football player and
coach (d. 2018) ·
Ruta Lee, Canadian-born American-based
actress ·
May 31 – Jim Bolger, 35th Prime
Minister of New Zealand June[edit] ·
June 1 – Reverend Ike, American televangelist
(d. 2009) ·
June 2 ·
Carol Shields, American-born writer
(d. 2003) ·
Dimitri Kitsikis, Greek Turkologist ·
Roger Brierley, English actor (d. 2005) ·
Wilhelm Wieben, German journalist, actor and
author ·
June 3 – Evangelia
Samiotaki [el], Greek actress (d. 2017) ·
June 4 – Shiao Yi, Taiwanese-American wuxia novelist
(d. 2018) ·
June 6 – Miriam T. Griffin,
American classical scholar (d. 2018) ·
June 7 ·
Shyama, Indian actress (d. 2017) ·
Harry Crews, American novelist, short story
writer, and essayist (d. 2012) ·
June 10 – Yoshihiro Tatsumi,
Japanese manga artist (d. 2015) ·
June 13 ·
Christo and
Jeanne-Claude, Bulgarian & Moroccan-born American installation
artists (Jeanne-Claude d. 2009) ·
Samak Sundaravej, 25th Prime Minister
of Thailand (2008) (d. 2009) ·
June 17 ·
Rudolph G. Wilson,
American professor, storyteller, writer and public speaker (d. 2017) ·
Peggy Seeger, American folk singer ·
June 19 ·
Derren Nesbitt, English actor ·
Rodrigo Borja
Cevallos, President of Ecuador ·
June 20 – Jim Barker,
American politician (d. 2005) ·
June 21 ·
Pratap Chauhan, Indian cricketer ·
Jorem Ochana, Ugandan hurdler ·
Tom Pratt,
American football coach ·
Monte Markham, American actor ·
Françoise Sagan,
French writer (d. 2004) ·
June 22 ·
Floyd Norman, American animator ·
Donald A. Bonner, American politician ·
Koro Wētere, New Zealand politician
(d. 2018) ·
June 23 ·
N. Bhaskara Rao, Indian politician ·
Maurice Ferré, American politician ·
Keith Burkinshaw, English professional
footballer and football manager ·
June 24 ·
Jean Milesi, French professional racing
cyclist ·
Charlie Dees, American professional baseball
player ·
Juan Bautista Agüero,
Paraguayan football striker ·
Pete Hamill, American journalist, novelist,
essayist, editor and educator ·
Ron Kramer, American National Football
League tight end (d. 2010) ·
Terry Riley, American composer ·
June 25 ·
Judy Howe, American artistic gymnast ·
Taufiq Ismail, Indonesian poet and activist ·
Margaret Sparrow, New Zealand medical
doctor, reproductive rights advocate, and author ·
Udey Chand, Indian wrestler and wrestling
coach ·
Don Demeter, American outfielder, third
baseman, and first baseman in Major League Baseball ·
Larry Kramer, American playwright, author,
public health advocate, and LGBT rights activist ·
June 26 ·
Carlo Facetti, Italian racing driver ·
Pete Peterson, American politician and
diplomat ·
Sandro Riminucci, Italian basketball player ·
Edwin Hodgeman, Australian actor ·
Bogdan Dochev, Bulgarian football referee ·
June 27 ·
Larry Krutko, American football player ·
Dan Currie, American football player ·
Colin Bazley, English bishop ·
Ramon Zamora, Filipino martial arts actor
(d. 2007) ·
June 28 ·
Roy
Faulkner, English footballer ·
Nicola Tempesta, Italian judoka ·
Bob Hobert, Canadian football player ·
Bob Blaylock, American professional baseball
player ·
John Inman, English comic actor (d. 2007) ·
June 29 ·
Jill Briscoe, British American author,
editor, and speaker ·
Derek Partridge, British television
presenter, spokesman and voice-over artist, formerly a film and TV actor ·
Zvonko Bezjak, Croatian hammer thrower of
Slovenian origin ·
Katsuya Nomura, Japanese baseball player and
manager ·
June 30 ·
Lola Herrera, Spanish actress ·
Valentino Gasparella,
Italian track cyclist ·
Ken
Turner, Australian rules footballer ·
Animesh Chakravorty,
Bengali Indian academic and a professor of chemistry ·
Les Savill, English cricketer ·
Shane
Alexander, 2nd Earl Alexander of Tunis, British peer July[edit] ·
July 1 ·
Geraldo Magela, Brazilian politician ·
David Prowse, English actor ·
Neal Brooks
Biggers Jr., American judge ·
July 2 ·
Guruvayur Dorai, Indian percussionist ·
Amar Singh Sokhi, Indian cyclist ·
Dick Dolman, Dutch politician ·
Philip Flood, Australian diplomat and public
servant ·
July 3 ·
Harrison Schmitt, American geologist, NASA
astronaut, professor and former senator ·
Osvaldo Bagnoli, Italian football coach and
player ·
John
Swan, Bermudian political figure; 4th Premier of
Bermuda ·
Bill Reichart, American ice hockey ·
July 4 ·
Erich Barnes, American football defensive
back ·
Alan Preen, Australian rules football ·
Roy Wilt, American politician ·
Leonid Potapov, Russian politician ·
July 5 ·
Shirley Collins, English folk singer ·
Shevah Weiss, Israeli political scientist
and politician ·
Christian Doermer,
German actor ·
Brendan McCann, American basketball player ·
Erich Barnes, American football defensive
backsional basketball player ·
Chamlong Srimuang,
Thai activist and politician ·
Van B. Poole, American politician ·
July 6 – Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, recipient of the Nobel
Peace Prize and spiritual leader of Tibet ·
July 7 ·
Chan Wing-chan, Chinese politician ·
Billy
Russell, English footballer ·
John Kingston, Australian politician ·
July 8 ·
Steve Lawrence, American singer and actor ·
Vitaly Sevastyanov,
Russian cosmonaut (d. 2010) ·
July 9 ·
Wim Duisenberg, Dutch economist and
politician (d. 2005) ·
Kevin Parks, Australian rules footballer ·
Robert Pelletreau,
American diplomat ·
Isabel Sarli, Argentine actress and glamour
model ·
Mercedes Sosa, Argentine singer (d. 2009) ·
Mighty Sparrow, Grenadian singer ·
July 10 ·
P. K. Gurudasan, Indian politician ·
Margaret McEntee, American Catholic
religious sister and educator ·
Wilson Tuckey, Australian politician ·
July 11 ·
Darrell Dess, American football offensive
lineman ·
Bobbie Sparrow, Canadian politician ·
Oliver Napier, Northern Irish politician
(d. 2011) ·
July 12 ·
Ed Rubinoff, American tennis player ·
Hans Tilkowski, German footballer ·
Satoshi Ōmura, Japanese
biochemist, Nobel
Prize laureate ·
July 13 ·
Eduardo Ermita, Filipino politician ·
Jack Kemp, American football player and U.S.
Vice Presidential candidate (d. 2009) ·
Qiu Xigui, Chinese historian, palaeographer
and professor ·
Gregorio Casal, Mexican actor (d. 2018) ·
Kurt Westergaard, Danish cartoonist ·
July 14 ·
Ei-ichi Negishi, Japanese chemist, Nobel Prize laureate ·
Durval Guimarães,
Brazilian sport shoote ·
July 15 ·
Andra Martin, American actress ·
Ken Kercheval, American actor ·
Gianni Garko, Italian actor ·
William G. Stewart,
English television producer and presenter ·
July 16 ·
Nicolae Rotaru, Romanian sport shooter ·
Tina Scala, actress, model, singer, poet and
author of Italian and Irish descent ·
Lynn Wyatt, American socialite and
philanthropist ·
Tôn Thất
Hải, Vietnamese fencer ·
July 17 ·
Diahann Carroll, American television and
stage actress and singer ·
Mohamed Mehrez, Egyptian sports shooter ·
Benjamin Civiletti,
United States Attorney General ·
Peter Schickele, American composer and
comedian ·
Donald Sutherland,
Canadian actor ·
Edward J. Nell, American economist ·
July 18 ·
Vasile Alexandru, Romanian footballer ·
Luo Gan, Chinese politician ·
Jayendra Saraswathi,
Hindu religious leader, 69th Shankaracharya Guru and head or pontiff
(Pïțhādhipati) of the Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham (d. 2018) ·
Hall Whitley, American football player ·
July 19 ·
George Breen, American competition swimmer ·
Vasily Livanov, Russian film actor,
screenwriter and animator ·
David Parry-Evans,
Royal Air Force commander ·
July 20 ·
Peter
Palumbo, Baron Palumbo, English real estate developer, art
collector and connoisseur of architecture ·
Valér Švec, Slovak football player and coach ·
July 21 ·
Jeanne Arth, American Wimbledon and US
Championships doubles tennis title holder ·
Larry
Hayes, American football player ·
Julian Pettifer, English television
journalist ·
July 22 ·
Grover Dale, American actor, dancer,
choreographer and theatre director ·
Tuppy Diack, New Zealand rugby union player ·
Steve Junker, American football player ·
July 25 ·
Adnan Khashoggi, Saudi Arabian international
arms dealer (d. 2017) ·
Larry Sherry, American right-handed relief
pitcher in Major League Baseball (d. 2006) ·
Barbara Harris,
American actress (d. 2018) ·
July 26 – Vladimir Nakoryakov,
Russian scientist (d. 2018) ·
July 27 ·
Mihalj Mesaroš,
Yugoslav/Serbian footballer (d. 2017) ·
Billy McCullough, Northern Irish footballer ·
Sarah Jane Sands, American professional
baseball player ·
July 28 – Simon Dee, English radio and television
presenter (d. 2009) ·
July 29 ·
Friday Hassler, American racing driver
(d. 1972) ·
Peter Schreier, German tenor ·
July 30 ·
Győző
Forintos, Hungarian chess master (d. 2018) ·
Prince
Moulay Abdallah of Morocco, Moroccan prince (d. 1983) ·
Nick Meglin, American magazine editor
(d. 2018) ·
July 31 ·
Mort Crim, American television newscaster ·
Geoffrey Lewis,
American actor (d. 2015) August[edit] ·
August 1 – Mohinder Pratap
Chand, Urdu poet and language advocate ·
August 2 ·
Amidou, Moroccan-French actor (d. 2013) ·
Hank Cochran, American country music singer
and songwriter (d. 2010) ·
August 3 – Georgi Shonin, Russian cosmonaut (d. 1997) ·
August 4 ·
Carol Arthur, American actress ·
Hans-Walter Eigenbrodt,
German football player (d. 1997) ·
August 7 ·
Yoná Magalhães,
Brazilian actress (d. 2015) ·
Dave Ragan, American professional golfer
(d. 2018) ·
Laurynas
Stankevičius, 7th Prime Minister of Lithuania (d. 2017) ·
Ian Stewart,
Baron Stewartby, British politician and numismatist (d. 2018) ·
Ján Popluhár,
Slovak footballer (d. 2011) ·
John Cazale, American actor (d. 1978) ·
August 13 – Rod Hull, English entertainer (d. 1999) ·
Jim Dale, English actor, singer and
songwriter ·
Lionel Taylor, American football player ·
Carlos Badion, Filipino basketball player
(d. 2002) ·
Charlie Tyra, American basketball player
(d. 2006) ·
August 17 – Oleg Tabakov, Russian actor (d. 2018) ·
Gail Fisher, American actress (d. 2000) ·
Rafer Johnson, American athlete ·
Hifikepunye Pohamba,
2nd President of Namibia ·
Tereza Rachel, Brazilian actress (d. 2016) ·
Bobby Richardson, American baseball player ·
August 20 – Ron Paul, United States Congressman ·
Bernhard Eckstein,
German cyclist (d. 2017) ·
Ahmad al-Ghashmi, Yemeni general, 4th President
of the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) (d. 1978) ·
August 22 – E. Annie Proulx, American novelist ·
Tsutomu Hata, 51st Prime Minister of
Japan (d. 2017) ·
Christian Liger, French writer (d. 2002) ·
August 25 – José Ramos Delgado,
Argentine footballer and manager (d. 2010) ·
August 26 – Geraldine Ferraro,
U.S. Congresswoman and Vice Presidential candidate (d. 2011) ·
Thomas
Stephens, American football player (d. 2018) ·
William Friedkin, American film director ·
László Garai,
Hungarian scientist, psychologist ·
Daniel L. Norris, Canadian Commissioner
of the Northwest Territories (d. 2008) ·
Felipe Fernández
García, Spanish bishop (d. 2012) ·
John Phillips,
American singer (d. 2001) ·
Eldridge Cleaver, African-American activist
(d. 1998) ·
Frank Robinson, African-American baseball
player September[edit] ·
Guy Rodgers, American basketball player
(d. 2001) ·
Seiji Ozawa, Japanese conductor ·
Mel Lopez, Filipino politician (d. 2017) ·
Chow Yei-ching, Hong Kong executive
(d. 2018) ·
September 2 – D. Wayne Lukas, American horse trainer ·
September 5 – Dieter Hallervorden,
German comedian, comic actor, singer and cabaret artist ·
September 7 – Abdou Diouf, 2nd President of Senegal ·
William Vance, Belgian comics artist
(d. 2018) ·
Teddy Mayer, American motor racing
entrepreneur (d. 2009) ·
September 9 – Chaim Topol, Israeli actor and singer ·
September 10 - Mary Oliver, who won a Pulitzer Prize for poetry ·
Károly Palotai,
Hungarian football player (d. 2018) ·
Arvo Pärt, Estonian composer ·
Gherman Titov, Russian cosmonaut (d. 2000) ·
September 12 – Al Swift, American broadcaster and
politician (d. 2018) ·
September 13 – Metin Türel, Turkish football player and
manager (d. 2018) ·
Ángel Medardo
Luzuriaga, Ecuadorian musical artist (d. 2018) ·
Fujio Akatsuka, Japanese cartoonist
(d. 2008) ·
September 15 – Dinkha, Iraqi patriarch (d. 2015) ·
Carl Andre, American artist ·
Jules Bass, American film director and
producer, co-founder of Rankin/Bass
Productions ·
Bob Kiley, American public transit planner ·
Ken Kesey, American author (d. 2001) ·
Serge and Beate
Klarsfeld, Romanian Nazi hunter ·
Dimitri, Swiss clown and mime artist
(d. 2018) ·
John
Spencer, English snooker player (d. 2006) ·
Raymond Vautherin,
French-Italian linguist, poet and playwright (d. 2018) ·
Geoff Case, Australian football player
(d. 2018) ·
Milan Antal, Slovak astronomer (d. 1999) ·
Hansjörg Wyss, Swiss businessman and
philanthropist ·
László Aradszky,
Hungarian singer (d. 2017) ·
Jim Taylor,
American football player (d. 2018) ·
Henry Gibson, American actor and songwriter
(d. 2009) ·
Jimmy Armfield, English footballer (d. 2018) ·
Benjamin Abalos, Filipino politician,
COMELEC Chairman ·
September 22 – Virgilijus Noreika,
Lithuanian tenor (d. 2018) ·
September 23 – Prem Chopra, Indian actor ·
September 25 – Adrien Douady, French mathematician
(d. 2006) ·
September 27 – Junior Rodriguez, American politician
(d. 2018) ·
September 28 – Ronald Lacey, English actor (d. 1991) ·
Thomas Lockhart, American politician
(d. 2018) ·
David Daker, English actor ·
Bruce Tulloh, British athlete (d. 2018) ·
Jerry Lee Lewis, American rock & roll
musician ·
Z. Z. Hill, American blues singer (d. 1984) ·
Johnny Mathis, African-American singer October[edit] ·
Peter Velappan, Malaysian football
administrator and manager (d. 2018) ·
Dame Julie Andrews, English singer and actress ·
Teruyoshi Nakano, Japanese special effects
director ·
October 3 – Sinikka Kurkinen, Finnish painter ·
Peter Brown,
American actor (d. 2016) ·
Tarcísio Meira,
Brazilian actor ·
Khayyam Mirzazade,
Azerbaijani composer and professor (d. 2018) ·
Bruno Sammartino, Italian professional
wrestler (d. 2018) ·
Charito Solis, Filipino actress (d. 1998) ·
Aly Lotfy Mahmoud,
Egyptian politician (d. 2018) ·
October 8 – Billy Brewer, American football player and
head coach (d. 2018) ·
October 9 – Prince
Edward, Duke of Kent, member of the British Royal family ·
October 12 – Luciano Pavarotti,
Italian tenor (d. 2007) ·
October 14 – La Monte Young, American composer ·
Barry McGuire, American musician ·
Bobby Morrow, American athlete ·
Willie O'Ree, Canadian hockey player ·
October 17 – Michael Eavis, English dairy farmer and
founder of the Glastonbury Festival ·
October 18 – Peter Boyle, American actor (d. 2006) ·
Jerry Orbach, American actor (d. 2004) ·
Roy Bailey,
English folk singer (d. 2018) ·
October 21 – Derek Bell,
Irish musician (d. 2002) ·
October 23 – JacSue Kehoe, American Neuroscientist ·
October 24 – Rosamaria Murtinho,
Brazilian actress ·
October 26 – Gloria Conyers
Hewitt, African-American mathematician ·
Ali Asghar
Khodadoust, Iranian eye surgeon (d. 2018) ·
Mauricio de Sousa,
Brazilian cartoonist ·
Frank Adonis, American actor ·
Moana Manley, New Zealand swimmer and beauty
queen (d. 2017) ·
Giancarlo Ghirardi,
Italian physicist (d. 2018) ·
October 29 – Isao Takahata, Japanese animated film
director (d. 2018) ·
Robert Caro, American biographer ·
Agota Kristof, Hungarian writer (d. 2011) ·
Michael Winner, British film director. ·
October 31 – Ronald Graham, American mathematician November[edit] ·
November 1 – Edward Said, Palestinian-born literary
critic (d. 2003) ·
November 4 – Laila Sari, Indonesian comedian and singer
(d. 2017) ·
November 5 – Nicholas Maw, English composer (d. 2009) ·
November 6 – Archduchess
Maria of Austria, German-Austrian royal (d. 2018) ·
November 7 – Elvira Quintana, Spanish-Mexican actress,
singer, and poet (d. 1968) ·
November 8 – Alain Delon, French actor ·
Jerry Hopkins,
American journalist and author (d. 2018) ·
Bob Gibson, African-American baseball player ·
November 10 – Igor
Dmitriyevich Novikov, Russian astrophysicist ·
November 12 – William Tallon, English Steward and
Page of the Backstairs; servant of 50 years to the British Royal family
(d. 2007) ·
Michael Getler, American journalist
(d. 2018) ·
George Carey, English Archbishop of
Canterbury ·
November 14 – King Hussein of Jordan (d. 1999) ·
November 15 – Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestine
National Authority ·
November 17 – Toni Sailer, Austrian skier (d. 2009) ·
November 18 – Manoharsinhji
Pradyumansinhji, Indian nobleman and politician (d. 2018) ·
November 20 – Leo Falcam, Micronesian politician (d. 2018) ·
Jean Havlish, American professional baseball
and bowling player ·
Vladislav Volkov, Russian cosmonaut
(d. 1971) ·
Pervis Atkins, American football player
(d. 2017) ·
Salim Khan, Indian Bollywood screenwriter ·
Ron Dellums, American politician (d. 2018) ·
November 25 – Edgar Bond, Filipino sports shooter ·
November 27 – Pat Fordice, First Lady of Mississippi from
1992 to 2000 (d. 2007) ·
Diane Ladd, American actress ·
Thomas J.
O'Brien, American Roman Catholic prelate (bishop); convicted of
felony ·
November 30 – Kim Chong-hoh, South Korean politician
(d. 2018) December[edit] ·
December 1 – Woody Allen, American actor and film
director ·
December 2 – Khalsom binti
Abdullah, Malaysian Johor royal family member (d. 2018) ·
Yevgeny Titarenko,
Soviet writer (d. 2018) ·
Calvin Trillin, American writer ·
Basabi Nandi, Indian actress (d. 2018) ·
December 6 – Shan Tianfang, Chinese Pingshu performer
(d. 2018) ·
December 8 – Dharmendra, Indian film actor, producer and
politician ·
Steve Condous, Australian politician
(d. 2018) ·
Jaromil Jireš, Czechoslovak filmmaker
(d. 2001) ·
Ron Carey,
American actor (d. 2007) ·
Pranab Mukherjee, Indian politician,
13th President of India ·
December 13 – Ken Hall ("Sugar
Land Express"), American football player ·
Lee Remick, American actress (d. 1991) ·
Anthony Wilden, English author and social
theorist, noted translator of Jaques Lacan ·
Jim Iley, English football player and
manager (d. 2018) ·
Adnan Badran, Prime Minister of Jordan ·
John Taylor Gatto,
American author and school teacher (d. 2018) ·
December 17 – Cal Ripken, Sr., American baseball player
and manager (d. 1999) ·
December 19 – Bobby Timmons, American jazz pianist
(d. 1974) ·
December 22 – Pippo Caruso, Italian composer, conductor
and music arranger (d. 2018) ·
Abdul Ghani Minhat,
Malaysian footballer (d. 2012) ·
Paul Hornung, American football player ·
Johnny Kidd,
English rock and roll singer
and songwriter (d. 1966) ·
Stephen Barnett, American legal scholar (d. 2009) ·
Sadiq al-Mahdi, Prime Minister of
Sudan (1966–67, 1986–89) ·
Anne Roiphe, American author and feminist ·
Gnassingbé Eyadéma, President of Togo (d. 2005) ·
Al Jackson, American baseball pitcher ·
December 27 – Stephan Tanneberger,
German oncologist and chemist (d. 2018) ·
Omar Bongo, President of Gabon (d. 2009) ·
Sandy Koufax, American baseball player ·
December 31 – King Salman of Saudi
Arabia Date unknown[edit] ·
Félicien Kabuga,
Rwandan businessman, accused of bankrolling and participating in the Rwandan Genocide ·
Ümit
Kaftancıoğlu, Turkish writer (d. 1980) Deaths[edit] January[edit] Blessed Pietro Bonilli ·
January
– Józef
Białynia Chołodecki, Polish historian (b. 1852) ·
January 5 -- Pietro Bonilli, Italian Roman Catholic priest and blessed
(b. 1841) ·
January 10 – Edwin Flack, Australian Olympic athlete
(b. 1873) ·
Ma Barker, American criminal (b. 1873) ·
Fred Barker, American criminal, youngest son
of Ma Barker (b. 1901) ·
January 19 – Lloyd Hamilton, American actor (b. 1899) ·
January 21 – Adolf von
Brauchitsch, German general (b. 1876) ·
January 28 – Mikhail
Ippolitov-Ivanov, Russian composer (b. 1859) February[edit] ·
February 7 – Frederick Warde, English actor (b. 1851) ·
February 8 – Max Liebermann, German painter (b. 1847) ·
February 13 – Ali bin Hussein, former King of Hejaz and Grand Sharif of
Mecca (b. 1879) ·
February 15 – Harry Todd, American actor (b. 1863) ·
February 25 – Gerhard Louis De
Geer, 17th Prime Minister of Sweden (b. 1854) March[edit] Blessed Maria Karłowska ·
March 5 – Roque Ruaño, Spanish priest-civil engineer
(b. 1877) ·
March 6 ·
Oliver Wendell
Holmes, Jr., U.S. Supreme Court Justice (b. 1841) ·
Baron Max
Hussarek von Heinlein, former Prime Minister of Austria (b. 1865) ·
March 7 -- Leonid Feodorov, Soviet Orthodox priest
and saint (b. 1879) ·
March 15 – Johan Ramstedt, 9th Prime Minister
of Sweden (b. 1852) ·
March 16 – John James
Rickard Macleod, Scottish-born physician and physiologist, Nobel
Prize laureate (b. 1876) ·
March 22 – Alexander Moissi, Albanian actor (b. 1879) ·
March 23 – Florence Moore, American actress (b. 1886) ·
March 24 -- Maria Karłowska,
Polish Roman Catholic religious
professed and blessed (b. 1865) April[edit] ·
April 2 – Bennie Moten, American jazz pianist
(b. 1894) ·
April 5 – Basil Champneys, English architect (b. 1842) ·
April 6 – Edwin Arlington
Robinson, American poet (b. 1869) ·
April 8 – Adolph Ochs, American newspaper publisher
(b. 1858) ·
April 14 – Emmy Noether, German mathematician (b. 1882) ·
April 16 – Panait Istrati, Romanian writer (b. 1884) ·
April 20 – Lucy, Lady
Duff-Gordon, British fashion designer (b. 1863) ·
April 24 – Anastasios Papoulas,
Greek general (b. 1857) May[edit] ·
May 1 – Antero Rubín, Spanish general and politician
(b. 1851) ·
May 4 – Junior Durkin, American actor (b. 1915) ·
May 12 – Józef Piłsudski,
Polish politician, 2-time Prime Minister
of Poland (b. 1867) ·
May 13 – Clarence Geldart, Canadian-American actor
(b. 1867) ·
May 14 – Magnus Hirschfeld,
German sex researcher and gay rights advocate (b. 1868) ·
May 15 – Kazimir Malevich, Polish-Russian painter and
art theoretician (b. 1878) ·
May 17 ·
Paul Dukas, French composer (b. 1865) ·
Antonia Mesina, Italian Roman Catholic laywoman, martyr and
blessed (b. 1919) ·
May 19 ·
T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia), English
soldier (b. 1888) ·
Charles Martin
Loeffler, American composer (b. 1861) ·
May 21 ·
Jane Addams, American social worker,
recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (b. 1860) ·
Hugo de Vries, Dutch botanist and
geneticists (b. 1848) ·
May 29 – Josef Suk,
Czech composer and violinist (b. 1874) June[edit] ·
June 1 – Arthur Arz
von Straußenburg, Austro-Hungarian official, last Chief of the
General Staff of the Austro-Hungarian Army (b. 1857) ·
June 6 ·
Julian
Byng, 1st Viscount Byng of Vimy, British general, 12th Governor
General of Canada (b. 1862) ·
George Grossmith,
Jr., British actor (b. 1874) ·
June 24 – Carlos Gardel, Argentine tango songwriter
(b. either 1887 or 1890) ·
June 29 – Hayashi Fubo, Japanese novelist (b. 1900) July[edit] ·
July 3 – André Citroën,
French automobile pioneer (b. 1878) ·
July 12 – Alfred Dreyfus, French military officer
(b. 1859) ·
July 17 ·
James Moore,
English winner of the first ever cycle race (b. 1849) ·
George William
Russell, Irish nationalist, poet and artist (b. 1867) ·
Daniel Salamanca
Urey, 39th President of Bolivia (b. 1869) ·
July 28 – Meletius IV
of Constantinople, Greek Patriarch of Alexandria (b. 1871) August[edit] ·
August 5 – David
Townsend, American art director (b. 1891) ·
August 9 – Edmond
Goblot [fr], French philosopher (b. 1858) ·
August 12 – Friedrich Schottky,
German mathematician (b. 1851) ·
August 14 – Léonce Perret, French film actor (b. 1880) ·
Paul Signac, French painter (b. 1863) ·
Wiley Post, American pilot (b. 1898) ·
Will Rogers, American humorist and actor
(b. 1879) ·
August 20 – Edith Roberts,
American actress (b. 1899) ·
August 21 – John Hartley,
English tennis player, double winner of Wimbledon (b. 1849) ·
Frantz Jourdain, Belgian architect (b. 1847) ·
Pavlos Kountouriotis,
Greek admiral and 1st President of Greece (b. 1855) ·
August 25 – Mack Swain, American actor (b. 1876) ·
August 27 – Childe Hassam, American painter (b. 1859) ·
August 29 – Queen Astrid of Belgium (b. 1905) ·
August 30 – Henri Barbusse, French novelist and
journalist (b. 1873) September[edit] ·
Takejirō
Tokonami, Japanese politician, Home Minister, Railway Minister,
and Minister of Communication (b. 1867) ·
Carl Weiss, American physician and murderer
of Huey Long (b. 1906) ·
September 10 – Huey Long, American politician (b. 1893) ·
September 11 – Charles
Norris, Americal medical examiner (b. 1867) ·
September 19 – Konstantin
Tsiolkovsky, Russian rocket scientist (b. 1857) ·
September 23 – DeWolf Hopper, American actor & comedian
(b. 1858) ·
September 26 – Iván Persa, Hungarian Slovene writer
and catholic priest (b. 1861) ·
September 28 – William Kennedy
Dickson, Scottish inventor, cinema pioneer, and film director
(b. 1860) October[edit] ·
October 7 – Francis Wilson,
American stage actor and comedian (b. 1854) ·
October 18 – Gaston Lachaise, French-American sculptor
(b. 1882) ·
October 20 – Arthur Henderson, Scottish politician,
recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (b. 1863) ·
October 22 – Tommy Tucker,
American baseball pioneer (b. 1863) ·
Charles Demuth, American artist (b. 1883) ·
Dutch Schultz, American gangster (b. 1902) November[edit] ·
November 2 – Jock Cameron, South African cricketer
(b. 1905) ·
November 6 – Henry Fairfield
Osborn, American geologist, paleontologist, and eugenist (b. 1857) ·
November 20 – John
Jellicoe, 1st Earl Jellicoe, British admiral (b. 1859) ·
November 25 – Iyasu V, deposed Emperor of Ethiopia (b.
1895/1896) ·
November 28 – Erich von Hornbostel,
Austrian musicologist (b. 1877) December[edit] ·
December 2 – James Henry Breasted,
American Egyptologist (b. 1865) ·
December 3 – Princess
Victoria of the United Kingdom, daughter of King Edward VII and the younger sister of
King George V (b. 1868) ·
Johan Halvorsen, Norwegian composer
(b. 1864) ·
Charles Richet, French physiologist, Nobel
Prize laureate (b. 1850) ·
December 10 – Sir John
Carden, 6th Baronet, English tank and vehicle designer (b. 1892) ·
December 13 – Victor Grignard, French chemist, Nobel Prize
laureate (b. 1871) ·
December 14 – Stanley G. Weinbaum,
American science-fiction author (b. 1902) ·
December 16 – Thelma Todd, American actress (b. 1906) ·
December 17 – Juan Vicente Gómez,
Venezuelan military dictator, 3-time President of
Venezuela (b. 1857) ·
December 20 – Martin O'Meara, Australian soldier (b. 1882) ·
December 21 – Kurt Tucholsky, German journalist and
satirist (b. 1890) ·
December 24 – Alban Berg, Austrian composer (b. 1885) ·
December 26 – Photios II,
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople (b. 1874) ·
December 30 – Hunter Liggett, American general (b. 1857) ·
December 31 – Miguel de Unamuno,
Spanish novelist and philosopher (b. 1864) Date Unknown[edit] ·
Charles Debbas, 1st President and 5th Prime
Minister of Lebanon (b. 1885) ·
Lillian
Resler Keister Harford, American church organizer, editor
(b. 1851) Nobel Prizes[edit] ·
Chemistry – Frédéric Joliot, Irène Joliot-Curie ("in
recognition of their synthesis of new radioactive elements") ·
Physiology
or Medicine – Hans Spemann ·
Literature –
not awarded References[edit] 1.
^ Ethiopia Military Tradition in National Life. Library of Congress. 2.
^ Keglined.com: An Illustrated History of the
American Beer Can 3.
^ Planes, Alex (2013-02-06). "The One Monopoly America Will Never Break
Up". Seattle
Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2015-07-24. 4.
^ Hagedorn 1997, p. 15. 5.
^ "U.S. Senate: June 12–13, 1935 – Huey Long
Filibusters". June 22, 2015. 6.
^ Mercer, Derrik
(1989). Chronicle of the 20th Century. London: Chronicle Communications
Ltd. ISBN 978-0-582-03919-3. 7.
^ "Chronology
1935". League of Nations Photo Archive. 2002.
Retrieved 2015-11-03. 8.
^ J. et T. Tréfouël, F. Nitti et D. Bovet, "Activité
du p-aminophénylsulfamide sur l'infection streptococcique
expérimentale de la souris et du lapin", C. R. Soc. Biol., 120,
23 November 1935, p. 756. 9.
^ "Modernist". Building
Opinions. Retrieved 22 September 2010. 10.
^ "Modernist style". De La Warr
Pavilion. Archived from the
originalon September 18, 2009. Retrieved September 22, 2010. 11.
^ "Modern movement". De La Warr
Pavilion. Retrieved 22 September2010. 12.
^ "De La Warr Pavilion Sussex by Mendelsohn and
Chermayeff". Retrieved 22 September 2010. 13.
^ Allan, Marc D. "Owners enjoy Melody Inn's niche as well-worn
music venue". IBJ News. Indianapolis Business Journal.
Retrieved 2013-10-06. External links[edit] ·
The 1930s Timeline: 1935 – from
American Studies Programs at the University of
Virginia |
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