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1939 (MCMXXXIX) was
a common year starting
on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar,
the 1939th year of the Common Era (CE)
and Anno Domini (AD)
designations, the 939th year of the 2nd millennium, the 39th year of
the 20th century,
and the 10th and last year of the 1930s decade. This year also marks the
start of the Second World War,
the largest and deadliest conflict in human history. Contents · 1Events · 2Births · 3Deaths Events[edit] Below, events of World War II have the WWII prefix. January[edit] Further Information: January 1939 ·
January 3 – EFE,
a news agency, based in Madrid, Spain, is officially founded as a limited
company.[1] ·
January 5 – Amelia Earhart is officially declared
dead after her disappearance. ·
January 6 – Naturwissenschaften publishes
evidence that nuclear fission has
been achieved by Otto Hahn. ·
January 13 – Black Friday:
71 people die across Victoria in
one of Australia's worst ever bushfires. ·
January 14 – Norway claims Queen Maud Land in Antarctica. ·
January 23 – "Dutch War
Scare": Admiral Wilhelm Canaris of
the Abwehr leaks misinformation to the
effect that Germany plans to invade the Netherlands in February, with the aim
of using Dutch air-fields to launch a strategic bombing offensive against
Britain. The "Dutch War Scare" leads to a major change in British
policies towards Europe. ·
January 24 – 1939 Chillán earthquake: An earthquake in Chile kills 30,000 and razes about
50,000 sq mi (130,000 km2). ·
January 25 – Refik Saydam forms
the new (11th) government of Turkey. ·
Spanish Civil War:
Spanish Nationalist troops, aided by Italy, take Barcelona. ·
In
Paris, French Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet, in response to rumours (which are true) that he is seeking to end the
French alliance system in Eastern Europe, gives a speech highlighting his
government's commitment to the cordon sanitaire. ·
January 27 – Adolf Hitler orders Plan Z, a 5-year naval expansion programme intended to provide for a huge German fleet
capable of crushing the Royal Navy by 1944. The Kriegsmarine is given the first
priority on the allotment of German economic resources. ·
January 30 – Hitler gives a speech
before the Reichstag calling for an "export
battle" to increase German foreign exchange holdings. The same speech
also sees Hitler's "prophecy" where he warns that if "Jewish
financers" start a war against Germany, the...result will be the
annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe". February[edit] Further Information: February 1939 February 21: Golden
Gate International Exposition opens. ·
February 2 – Hungary joins the Anti-Comintern Pact. ·
British
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain states
in the House of Commons that any German attack on France will be
automatically considered an attack on Britain. ·
In
a response to Georges Bonnet's
speech of January 26, German Foreign Minister Joachim von
Ribbentrop, referring to Bonnet's alleged statement of December 6,
1938, accepting Eastern Europe as being in Germany's exclusive sphere of
influence, protests that all French security commitments in that region are
"now off limits". ·
Spanish
Nationalists complete their offensive in Catalonia. ·
Pope Pius XI dies of a heart attack in
Rome. ·
February 15 – Stagecoach premieres
in New York City and Los Angeles. ·
February 18 – The Golden
Gate International Exposition opens in San Francisco. ·
The
United Kingdom and France recognize Franco's government. ·
Borley Rectory in England is destroyed by
fire. ·
Sit-down strikes are outlawed by
the Supreme
Court of the United States. March[edit] Further Information: March 1939 ·
March
– The 1936–39
Arab revolt in Palestine ends. ·
March 1 – An Imperial Japanese
Army ammunition dump explosion on the outskirts of Osaka kills 94. ·
March 2 – Pope Pius XII (Cardinal Pacelli)
succeeds Pope Pius XI as
the 260th pope. ·
March 3 ·
In Bombay, Mahatma Gandhi begins a fast protesting
against British rule in India. ·
Students
at Harvard University demonstrate
the new tradition of swallowing goldfish to reporters. ·
In Durban, South Africa the Timeless Test begins between England
and South Africa, the longest game of cricket ever played. It is abandoned
twelve days later when the English team has to catch
the last ferry home. ·
March 13 ·
Adolf Hitler advises Jozef Tiso to declare Slovakia's
independence in order to prevent its partition by Hungary and Poland. ·
Irish
writer Flann O'Brien's
comic metafiction At Swim-Two-Birds is
published in London but attracts little attention at this time. ·
March 14 – The Slovak provincial assembly proclaims
independence; priest Jozef Tiso becomes
the president of the independent Slovak government. ·
March 15 – German troops occupy the
remaining part of Bohemia and Moravia; Czechoslovakia ceases to exist. The
Ruthenian region of Czechoslovakia declares independence as Carpatho-Ukraine. ·
March 16 ·
Princess Fawzia Fuad of Egypt marries Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi of Iran. ·
Hungary
invades Carpatho-Ukraine; final resistance ends
on March 18. ·
March 17 ·
British
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain gives
a speech in Birmingham, stating
that Britain will oppose any effort at world domination on the part of
Germany. ·
The
nationalist governments of Spain and Portugal sign the Iberian Pact in Lisbon, pledging mutual
defence of the Iberian Peninsula and neutrality in
the event of a general European war. ·
March 18 – "Romanian War
Scare": Virgil Tilea, the Romanian Minister in
London, spreads false rumours that Romania is on the verge of a German
attack. ·
March 19 – Hitler sends a registered
letter to the government of Lithuania stating that Germany intends to annex
the port of Memel. ·
March 20 – At an emergency meeting in
London to deal with the Romanian crisis, French Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet suggests to Lord
Halifax that the ideal state for saving Romania from a German
attack is Poland. ·
March 21 – In London: the Ordo Templi Orientis publish Aleister Crowley's Eight Lectures on Yoga. ·
March 22 ·
After
an ultimatum
of March 20, Nazi Germany takes Memelland from Lithuania. ·
In
the U.S., undefeated LIU tops
undefeated Loyola of Chicago in
the championship game of the second annual National
Invitation Tournament, 44–32. LIU's 24–0 final record is the
first perfect season of college basketball's
postseason tournament era. ·
March 23 – The Slovak–Hungarian War begins. ·
March 24 – Marks the seventh successive
year of the worldwide boycott of all German exports initiated by front page
declarations in Britain and the U.S. 'Judea declares war on Germany' ·
March 27 – The University of Oregon defeats Ohio State
University 46–33 in Evanston, Illinois,
to win the championship of the first NCAA men's basketball tournament. ·
March 28 ·
Dictator Francisco Franco assumes power in Madrid, remaining in power until his death
in 1975. ·
American
adventurer Richard Halliburton delivers
a last message from a Chinese junk, before he disappears on a voyage across
the Pacific Ocean. In 1945, some wreckage identified as a rudder and believed
to belong to the junk, washed ashore in San Diego, California. ·
March 31 – Neville Chamberlain gives a
speech in the House of Commons offering the British "guarantee" of
the independence of Poland. April[edit] Further Information: April 1939 ·
April 1 ·
The Spanish Civil War comes
to an end when the last of the Republican forces surrender. ·
The
rumor that Hitler is
dead sweeps the United States as millions of CBS radio
listeners hear the Führer cut off in mid-speech during a shortwave relay of
his address at the dedication of the Tirpitz in Wilhelmshaven.[2] ·
April 3 ·
Adolf Hitler orders the German military
to start planning for Fall Weiß, the codename for the invasion of Poland. ·
Refik Saydam forms
the new government in Turkey (12th
government; Refik Saydam
had served twice as a prime minister). ·
April 4 ·
Faisal II becomes
King of Iraq at age 3 following the death of
his father, Ghazi, in an
automobile incident. ·
The Slovak–Hungarian War ends
with Slovakia ceding eastern territories to Hungary. ·
Polish
Foreign Minister Colonel Józef Beck, in London, signs a treaty
designed to bilateralize Neville Chamberlain's
"Polish Guarantee" of March 31. ·
April 7 ·
Italy
invades Albania; King Zog flees. ·
Joseph Lyons, 10th Prime
Minister of Australia, dies in office from a heart attack at the
age of 59. He was briefly replaced by his deputy Earle Page, who served as the 11th Prime
Minister until a UAP leadership election is held to replace
Lyons. ·
April 9 – African-American singer Marian Anderson performs before 75,000
people at the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington, D.C., after having been denied the use both of Constitution Hall by
the Daughters
of the American Revolution, and of a public high school by the
federally controlled District of Columbia. First
Lady of the United States Eleanor Roosevelt resigns
from the DAR because of their decision. ·
April 11 – Hungary leaves the League of Nations. ·
April 13 – Britain offers a
"guarantee" to Romania and Greece. ·
April 14 ·
John Steinbeck's novel The Grapes of Wrath is
first published, in the United States. ·
At
a meeting in Paris, French Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet meets with Soviet
Ambassador Jakob Suritz, and suggests that a
"peace front" comprising France, the Soviet Union, Great Britain,
Poland and Romania would deter Germany from war. ·
April 18 ·
The
Soviet Union proposes a "peace front" to resist aggression. ·
Robert Menzies is elected leader of the United Australia
Party and consequently becomes the 12th Prime
Minister of Australia, defeating former Prime Minister Billy Hughes. However, he would not be sworn
in until April 26th due
to Earle Page and his Country Party refusing
to serve under him. ·
April 20 – Billie Holiday records "Strange Fruit", the first anti-lynching
song. ·
April 25 – The Federal Security
Agency (FSA) is founded in the United States, along with
the Civilian
Conservation Corps and Public
Health Service. ·
April 27 – Ely Racecourse in Cardiff closes. ·
April 28 – In a speech before the Reichstag, Adolf Hitler renounces the Anglo-German
Naval Agreement and the German–Polish
Non-Aggression Pact. ·
April 30 – The 1939 New York
World's Fair opens. May[edit] Further Information: May 1939 ·
May 1 – Batman, created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, makes his first appearance
in Detective Comics #27. ·
May 2 – Major League
Baseball's Lou Gehrig, the
legendary Yankee first baseman known as "The Iron Horse", ends his
2,130 consecutive games-played streak, after being diagnosed with amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis. The record stands for 56 years before Cal Ripken, Jr. plays 2,131 consecutive
games. ·
May 3 ·
Vyacheslav Molotov succeeds Maxim Litvinov as Soviet Foreign
Commissar. ·
The All India Forward
Bloc is formed by Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. ·
May 6 – Carl Friedrich Goerdeler tells the British government
that the German and Soviet governments are secretly beginning a rapprochement
with the aim of dividing Eastern Europe between them. Goerdeler
also informs the British of German economic problems which he states threaten
the survival of the Nazi regime, and advises that if
a firm stand is made for Poland, then Hitler will be deterred from war. ·
May 9 – Spain leaves the League of Nations. ·
May 14 – Lina Medina, a 5-year-old Peruvian girl,
gives birth to a baby boy, becoming the youngest confirmed mother in medical
history. ·
May 17 ·
King George VI and Queen
Elizabeth arrive in Quebec City to begin the first-ever
tour of Canada by Canada's monarch. ·
The
British government issues the White Paper of 1939,
sharply restricting Jewish immigration to Mandatory Palestine. ·
Sweden, Norway, and Finland refuse Germany's offer of
non-aggression pacts. ·
May 18 – The Hòa Hảo religious
sect is established by Huỳnh Phú Sổ. ·
May 20 – Pan American Airways begins
transatlantic mail service with the inaugural flight of its Boeing 314 flying boat Yankee Clipper from Port
Washington, New York, to Marseille. ·
May 22 – Germany and Italy sign
the Pact of Steel. ·
May 24 – First issue of Fashizmi is
published in Tirana. ·
May 29 – Albanian fascist leader Tefik Mborja is
appointed as member of the Italian Chamber of Fasces and Corporations. June[edit] Further Information: June 1939 June 24: Siam is renamed "Thailand". ·
June 3 – The Soviet government offers
its definition of what constitutes "aggression", upon which the
projected Anglo-Soviet-French alliance will come into effect. The French
Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet accepts
the Soviet definition of aggression at once. The British reject the Soviet
definition, especially the concept of "indirect aggression", which
they feel is too loose a definition and phrased in such a manner as to imply
the Soviet right of inference in the internal affairs of nations of Eastern
Europe. ·
June 4 – The St. Louis, a ship carrying a cargo of
907 Jewish refugees, is denied permission to land in Florida after already having been
turned away from Cuba. Forced to return to
Europe, many of its passengers later die in Nazi death camps during The Holocaust. ·
June 6 – The first Little League
Baseball game is played in Williamsport,
Pennsylvania. ·
June 10 – MGM's first successful
animated character, Barney Bear, makes
his debut in The Bear
That Couldn't Sleep. However, he didn't have a name until
1942. ·
June 12 – The National
Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum is officially dedicated
in Cooperstown, New
York. ·
June 14 – Tientsin Incident:
The Japanese blockade the British concession in Tianjin, China, beginning a crisis which almost
causes an Anglo-Japanese war in the summer of 1939. ·
June 17 – In the last public guillotining in France, murderer Eugen Weidmann is
executed. ·
June 21 – New York Yankees announce Lou
Gehrig's retirement after doctors reveal he has amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis. ·
June 23 – Talks are completed in Ankara between French Ambassador René Massigli and
Turkish Foreign Minister Şükrü Saracoğlu, resolving the Hatay dispute in Turkey's favor. Turkey annexes Hatay. ·
June 24 – The government of Siam
changes its name to Thailand, which means
'Free Land'.[3] ·
June 29 – Ford 9N tractor with Ferguson hydraulic three-point hitch first
demonstrated at Dearborn, Michigan.[4] July[edit] Further Information: July 1939 ·
July 2 ·
The 1st
World Science Fiction Convention opens in New York City. ·
Theodore Roosevelt's
head is dedicated at Mount Rushmore. ·
July 4 ·
Lou Gehrig gives his last public
speech, following a diagnosis of amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS). In it, he says, "Today, I
consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth." ·
The Neuengamme
concentration camp becomes autonomous. ·
July 6 – The last remaining Jewish
enterprises in Germany are closed by the Nazis. ·
July 8 – The Pan American Airways Boeing 314 flying boat Yankee Clipper inaugurates
the world's first heavier-than-air North Atlantic air
passenger service between the United States (Port
Washington, New York) and Britain. ·
July 23 – Mahatma Gandhi the spiritual leader
from India writes a personal letter to Adolf Hitler addressing him "My
friend", requesting to prevent any possible war. ·
July 27 – The first recorded snowfall
in Auckland, New Zealand since records began in
1853. August[edit] Further Information: August 1939 ·
August 2 – The Einstein–Szilárd letter is signed, advising President
of the United States Franklin D.
Roosevelt of the potential use of uranium to construct an atomic bomb. ·
August 4 – Neville Chamberlain dismisses
Parliament until October 3. ·
August 15 – MGM's classic musical
film The Wizard
of Oz, based on L. Frank
Baum's famous novel, and starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, premieres at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. ·
August 19 – Adolf Hitler, after evaluating the pace of
the non-aggression
negotiations with the Soviet Union, orders the Kriegsmarine to begin the opening
operations for Fall Weiss,
the invasion of Poland. The German
pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee,
along with the German
pocket battleship Deutschland, as well as dozens of u-boats, cast off for their advance positions. According
to William L. Shirer,
Hitler spends the next few days worrying that the Russians will not come to
terms in time for the rest of the invasion plans to unfold as scheduled. ·
August 20 – Armored forces under the
command of Soviet General Georgy Zhukov deliver a decisive defeat
to Imperial Japanese
Army forces in the Japanese-Soviet border war in Inner Mongolia. ·
August 23 – Molotov–Ribbentrop
Pact signed between Germany and the Soviet Union, a
neutrality treaty that also agreed to division of spheres of influence
(Finland, Estonia, Latvia, eastern Poland and Bessarabia
(today Moldova), north-east province of Romania to the Soviet Union; Lithuania and western Poland to
Germany). Its annex reassigns Lithuania to the Soviet Union. ·
August 24 – As details of the Molotov–Ribbentrop
Pact become public, Neville Chamberlain recalls
the Parliament of the United Kingdom several weeks early. In a burst of
legislation, a War Powers Act is approved; and HMG order the Royal Navy to be put on a war footing,
all leaves to be cancelled, and the Naval and coast defense reserves to be
called up, especially radar and anti-aircraft units. In addition, the last
British and French private citizens in Germany are ordered home by their
respective Governments. ·
The
German Foreign Ministry cuts off all telegraph and telephone communication
with the outside world in accordance with the plan for Fall Weiss.
At approximately 1830 Central European time, Adolf Hitler postpones Fall
Weiss for 5 days, after receiving a message from Benito Mussolini that he will not honor
the Pact of Steel if Germany attacks Poland, and because Chamberlain's
government has not fallen as a result of the German-Soviet Non-Aggression
Pact. Some units already in their forward positions (the attack is scheduled
for 0430 the next day) do not get the word in time and attack various targets
along the border. That same day, Neville Chamberlain gives Edward Rydz-Śmigły his "ironclad
guarantee" of assistance if Poland is attacked by Germany. ·
An Irish
Republican Army bomb explodes in the centre
of Coventry, England, killing 5 people. ·
MGM's
classic musical film The Wizard
of Oz, based on L. Frank
Baum's famous novel, and starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, is released in
theaters everywhere. ·
The
first televised Major League
Baseball games were shown on experimental station W2XBS: a double-header between the Cincinnati Reds and the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field. ·
Division
of Grazing renamed United
States Grazing Service. ·
The Kriegsmarine orders all German-flagged
merchant ships to head to German ports immediately in anticipation of the
invasion of Poland. ·
August 27 – A Heinkel He 178, the first turbojet-powered
aircraft, flies for the first time with Captain Erich Warsitz
in command. ·
August 28 – The SS Normandie heads
into New York Harbor where
she will be interned on 3 September and cut up for scrap beginning in 1946. ·
August 30 – Poland begins a mobilization against Nazi Germany. ·
August 31 – Operation Himmler:
Nazi German troops posing as Poles stage a series of false flag operations on the border
(including the Gleiwitz incident) giving a pretext for the
invasion of Poland. September[edit] Further Information: September 1939 September 1: Wieluńdestroyed by Luftwaffebombing. Common parade of Wehrmacht and Red Army in
Brest at the end of the Invasion of Poland. At the center Major General Heinz Guderian and
Brigadier Semyon Krivoshein. ·
September 1 – Beginning of WWII: ·
Opening
shots of World War II and Invasion of Poland:
At 4:45am Central European Time, under cover of darkness, the German WW1-era
battleship Schleswig-Holstein quietly
slips her moorings at her wharf in Danzig harbor, drifts into the center of
the channel, and commences firing on the fortress Westerplatte, a Polish army installation
at the northeastern mouth of the port of the internationalized Free City of Danzig.
Five minutes previously the bombing of Wieluń in the western part of Poland
had begun. Shock-troops of the German Wehrmacht begin crossing the border
into Poland. Bombing of Wieluń (two air-raids) follows. ·
The Reichstag passes
a statement stating that Adolf Hitler's second-in-command Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring should be appointed as Hitler's
successor as Führer should Hitler
die during the War. Rudolf Hess is
to be appointed in Göring's place should anything
befall Göring. ·
Norway,
Finland, Sweden and Switzerland declare their neutrality. ·
September 1 - General George C. Marshall becomes Chief of Staff of the United States
Army. ·
September 2 – WWII: ·
Following
the invasion of Poland, the Free City of Danzig (modern-day Gdańsk,
Poland) is annexed to Nazi Germany. ·
Spain
and the Irish Free State declare their neutrality. ·
September 3 – WWII: ·
The
United Kingdom, France, New Zealand, Australia and India (by its Viceroy)
declare war on Nazi Germany. Prime Minister
of Canada Mackenzie King, in English, and Justice
Minister Ernest Lapointe, in French, give an
international radio address stating the Dominion's intention to declare war
also.[5][6] ·
United
States President Franklin D.
Roosevelt advocates neutrality in a nationwide radio address. ·
Ocean liner SS Athenia becomes
the first British civilian casualty of the war when she is torpedoed and sunk by German
submarine U-30 in the eastern Atlantic. Of the
1,418 aboard, 98 passengers and 19 crew are killed. ·
September 4 – WWII: ·
First bombing
of Wilhelmshaven in World War II by the British Royal Air Force. ·
Nepal declares war on Germany. ·
September 5 – WWII: The United States
declares its neutrality in the war. ·
September 6 – WWII: South Africa
declares war on Germany. ·
Little Sisters of
Jesus founded in Algeria by Little Sister Magdeleine. ·
WWII:
Forward elements of General Hoeppner's XVI Panzerkorps take up positions outside Warsaw. The world is stunned by the rapidity
of the German advance and the Polish High Command is effectively isolated,
but lack of infantry support and effective civilian resistance cause Hoeppner to halt outside the city itself. ·
WWII:
Polish troops on the Westerplatte are forced, due to
lack of food and ammunition, to surrender. The garrison of about two hundred
had held out against thousands of German forces (many of them naval officer
cadets from Schleswig-Holstein)
for seven days. September: Siege of Warsaw. ·
September 9 – WWII: Troops of the
Polish Poznań Army under
the command of General Kutrzeba open the Battle of the Bzura, the largest and best organized
counter-attack mounted by the Polish forces in the campaign of 1939. For
the first few days all goes well and the Germans are forced to retreat; but
quick reaction by mechanized units and the Luftwaffe soon take their toll and
the operation bogs down. ·
September 10 – WWII: Canada declares
war on Germany, the only
declaration of war by Canada. ·
September 15 – WWII: Diverse elements
of the German Wehrmacht surround Warsaw and demand its surrender. The
Poles refuse and the siege begins
in earnest. ·
September 16 – A ceasefire ends the
undeclared Border War between
the Soviet Union (and Mongolian allies) and Japan. ·
September 17 – WWII: ·
The Soviet Union invades Poland and
then occupies eastern Polish territories. ·
Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Courageous is
torpedoed and sunk by German
submarine U-29 in the Western Approaches with
the loss of 519 crew, the first British warship loss of the War. ·
September 18 – WWII: Orzeł incident: The Polish submarine
ORP Orzeł escapes internment
from Tallinn harbour, Estonia, leading both the Soviet Union and Germany to question Estonia's
neutrality. ·
September 19 – WWII: The Poznan pocket
collapses, and the Germans capture, according to many sources, over 150,000
men. Many elements of General Tadeusz Kutrzeba's forces work their way into Warsaw under extreme
difficulty. ·
Reinhard Heydrich,
chief of the Security Police, sends a directive, the Schnellbrief,
explaining that Jews living in towns and villages in the Polish occupation
zones are to be transferred to ghettos, and Jewish councils, Judenräte, will
be established to carry out the German authorities’ orders.[7] ·
Radio
station WJSV in Washington, D.C. records
an entire broadcast day for
preservation in the National
Archives. ·
September 22 – WWII: Joint victory parade of Wehrmacht and Red Army in Brest-Litovsk at the end of the Invasion of Poland. ·
September 24 – WWII: The Soviet Union issues an ultimatum
to Estonia to allow Soviet military bases
on its territory, which Estonia accepts on September 28. Similar ultimatums
are issued to Latvia on October 5
and to Lithuania on
October 10, who are forced to accept them as well. ·
September 28 – WWII: ·
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union agree on a division of
Poland after their invasion. ·
Warsaw surrenders to Germany; Modlin surrenders
a day later; the last Polish large operational unit surrenders near Kock 8
days later. ·
September 29 – Gerald J. Cox, speaking
at an American
Water Works Association meeting, becomes the first person to
publicly propose the fluoridation of
public water supplies in the United States. ·
September 30 – General Władysław Sikorski becomes Prime Minister of
the Polish government-in-exile. October[edit] Further Information: October 1939 ·
October 6 – WWII: Poland Battle of Kock
ends the Polish Campaign. Polish
resistance moves underground. ·
WWII: Germany annexes Western
Poland. ·
The Holocaust: Piotrków Trybunalski Ghetto, the first
Jewish ghetto in
Nazi-occupied Europe, is proclaimed in German-occupied
Poland. ·
October 11 – The Einstein–Szilárd letter is delivered to President
of the United States Franklin D.
Roosevelt advising of the potential use of uranium to construct an atomic bomb, leading to the Manhattan Project. ·
October 14 – The German
submarine U-47 sinks the British battleship HMS Royal Oak at
anchor in Scapa Flow (Scotland)
with the loss of 833 crew. ·
October 15 – The New York Municipal
Airport (later renamed LaGuardia Airport)
is dedicated. ·
October 17 – Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington premieres in Washington, D.C. ·
October 21 – First meeting of the
U.S. Advisory Committee
on Uranium under Lyman James Briggs,
authorized by President Roosevelt to oversee neutronexperiments, a precursor of
the Manhattan Project. ·
October 22 – In the first
televised NFL football game, the Brooklyn Dodgers
(NFL) defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 23-14
at Ebbets Field. ·
October 24 – Nylon stockings go on sale for the
first time anywhere in Wilmington, Delaware. ·
October 25 – The Time of Your
Life, a drama by William Saroyan, debuts in New York City. ·
October 31 – The Hollywood Tower Hotel closes down after
a huge lightning incident, killing 5 people in an elevator. November[edit] Further Information: November 1939 ·
November 1–2 – WWII: Physicist Hans Ferdinand Mayer writes
the Oslo Report on
German weapons systems and passes it to the British Secret
Intelligence Service. ·
November 4 – WWII: U.S. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt orders the United States
Customs Service to implement the Neutrality Act
of 1939, allowing cash-and-carry purchases of weapons to
non-belligerent nations. ·
November 4 – Stewart Menzies is appointed head of
the British Secret
Intelligence Service. ·
Hedda
Hopper's Hollywood debuts on radio
with gossip columnist Hedda Hopper as host (the show runs
until 1951, making Hopper a powerful figure in the Hollywood elite). ·
WWII: Sonderaktion Krakau: Germans take action against
scientists from the University of Kraków and
other Kraków universities. ·
WWII:
In Munich, an attempt to kill Adolf Hitler is made by Georg Elser while
Hitler is celebrating the 16th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch. ·
CBS television
station W2XAB resumes test transmission with an
all-electronic system broadcast from the top of the Chrysler Building in New York City.[8] ·
November 9 – WWII: Venlo Incident: Two British agents of SIS are
captured by the Germans. ·
November 15 – In Washington, D.C., U.S.
President Franklin D.
Roosevelt lays the cornerstone of the Jefferson Memorial. ·
November 16 – Al Capone is released from Alcatraz, due to deteriorating health caused
by syphilis. ·
November 17 – WWII: To punish protests
against the Nazi occupation of the Czech homeland, the Nazis storm the
University of Prague and murder nine Czech graduate students, send over 1,200
to concentration camps, and close all Czech universities, an event which will
be commemorated as International
Students' Day. ·
November 23 – WWII: British armed merchantman HMS Rawalpindi is sunk in
the GIUK gap in an action against the
German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. ·
November 26 – Shelling of Mainila: The Soviet Union's Red Army shells the Russian village of Mainila, then claims that the fire originated from Finland, giving a casus belli for the Winter War. ·
November 30 – WWII: ·
Winter War: Soviet forces attack Finland and
reach the Mannerheim Line,
starting the war. ·
Sweden
declares itself a non-belligerent in
the Winter War. December[edit] Further Information: December 1939 ·
December 2 – LaGuardia Airport opens
for business in New York City. ·
December 4 – WWII: ·
British
battleship HMS Nelson strikes
a mine (laid by U-31)
off the coast of Scotland and is laid up for repairs until August 1940. ·
German
submarine U-36 is torpedoed and sunk by British
submarine HMS Salmon off Stavanger, the first enemy submarine lost to
a British one during the War. ·
WWII:
First soldier of the British
Expeditionary Force killed: Corporal Thomas Priday triggers a French land mine. ·
Hugh
Harman's animated short Christmas film Peace on Earth is
released by MGM in the United States. ·
December 12 – WWII: HMS Duchess sinks
after a collision with HMS Barham off the coast of
Scotland with the loss of 124 men. ·
December 13 – WWII – Battle of the
River Plate: The German
heavy cruiser Admiral Graf Spee is
trapped by cruisers HMS Ajax, HMNZS Achilles, and HMS Exeterafter a running battle off the coast of Uruguay. Graf Spee is scuttled by its crew off Montevideo harbor on December 17. ·
December 14 – WWII – Winter War: The League of Nations expels
the USSR for attacking Finland. ·
December 15 – The epic historical
romance film Gone with the
Wind, starring Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable, Olivia de Havilland and Leslie Howard,
premieres at Loew's Grand Theatre in Atlanta. Based on Margaret Mitchell's best-selling
novel of 1936, it is the longest American film made up to
this date (at nearly four hours) and rapidly becomes the highest-grossing
film up to this time. ·
December 18 – WWII – Battle
of the Heligoland Bight: RAF Bomber Command,
on a daylight mission to attack Kriegsmarine ships in the Heligoland Bight, is repulsed by Luftwaffe fighter aircraft. ·
December 22 – The second cel-animated feature film and the
first produced by an American studio other than Walt Disney
Productions, Gulliver's
Travels by Fleischer Studios and
very loosely based upon the book by Jonathan Swift, is released. ·
December 26 – Miners strike in Borinage, Belgium. ·
December 27 – The 7.8 Mw Erzincan
earthquake shakes eastern Turkey with a maximum Mercalli
intensity of XII (Extreme), causing $20 million in
damage, and leaving 32,700–32,968 dead. Date unknown[edit] ·
Kirlian photography is
invented by Semyon Kirlian. ·
A
logging crew sets off a second forest fire in the Tillamook Burn of Oregon, which
destroys 190,000 acres (770 km2). ·
Sandia View Academy,
a private Adventist school,
is founded in Corrales, New Mexico, ·
General Motors introduces the Hydra-Matic drive, the first
mass-produced, fully automatic
transmission, as an option in 1940 model year Oldsmobile automobiles. ·
Enzo Ferrari founds Auto Avio Construzioni, the company
that became Ferrari in 1947. Births[edit]
January[edit] ·
January 1 – Ali Mahdi Muhammad,
Somali entrepreneur and politician, 4th President of Somalia ·
Bobby Hull, Canadian hockey player ·
Ruben Reyes, Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of the Philippines ·
Gene Summers, American rock 'n roll singer
(member of Rockabilly Hall of
Fame) ·
Valeriy Lobanovskyi,
Ukrainian footballer and manager (d. 2002) ·
Murray Rose, Australian swimmer (d. 2012) ·
Jimmy Boyd, American singer, musician and
actor (d. 2009) ·
Rik Kemp, Australian cartoonist ·
Tadahiro Matsushita, Japanese politician (d. 2012) ·
Susannah York, British actress (d. 2011) ·
David Horowitz, American conservative writer ·
Sal Mineo, American
actor (d. 1976) ·
Bill Toomey, American athlete ·
January 11 – Anne Heggtveit,
Canadian skier ·
January 12 – William Lee Golden,
American country and gospel singer, member of the Oak Ridge Boys ·
January 15 – Per Ahlmark,
Swedish politician and writer (d. 2018) ·
January 16 – Mac Curtis, American singer (d. 2013) ·
Archbishop
Christodoulos of Athens (d. 2008) ·
Maury Povich, American talk show host ·
January 18 – Bo Gritz, U.S.
Presidential candidate ·
January 19 – Phil Everly, American rock 'n' roll musician
(member of Rockabilly Hall
of Fame) (d. 2014) ·
Abdullah Ensour,
Jordanian economist, 75th Prime Minister
of Jordan ·
Chandra Wickramasinghe, British astronomer and poet ·
Alfredo Palacio, 42nd President of Ecuador ·
Ray Stevens, American musician ·
Tony Green, British sportscaster ·
Germaine Greer, Australian feminist writer ·
János Zsombolyai,
Hungarian cinematographer, film director and screenwriter (d. 2015) ·
Jovan Miladinović, Serbian footballer (d. 1982) February[edit] ·
Paul Gillmor, American politician (d. 2007) ·
Ekaterina Maximova, Russian ballerina (d. 2009) ·
Maximira Figueiredo,
Brazilian actress (d. 2018) ·
Karl-Ake Asph,
Swedish Olympic cross-country skier ·
February 3 – Michael Cimino, American film director
(d. 2016) ·
Augie Garrido, American baseball player and
coach (d. 2018) ·
Mike Farrell, American actor ·
February 7 – Francisco Mendez, Guinea-Bissau politician,
1st Prime
Minister of Guinea-Bissau (d. 1978) ·
February 8 – Egon Zimmermann, Austrian Olympic alpine
skier ·
February 9 – Red Lane, American singer-songwriter
(d. 2015) ·
Tsuyoshi Yamanaka,
Japanese freestyle swimmer (d. 2017) ·
Adrienne Clarkson,
26th Governor
General of Canada ·
Peter Purves, British actor and television
presenter ·
Emilio
Álvarez, Uruguayan footballer (d. 2010) ·
Roberta Flack, American soul singer ·
Yael Dayan, Israeli writer and politician ·
Ray Manzarek,
American keyboardist (The Doors)
(d. 2013) ·
Beate Klarsfeld,
German-born Nazi hunter ·
Andrew Peacock, Australian politician ·
February 15 – Robert Hansen, American serial killer
(d. 2014) ·
Adolfo Azcuna,
Filipino Supreme
Court jurist ·
Czesław Niemen, Polish singer-songwriter & rock
balladeer (d. 2004) ·
February 18 – Abdelraouf Al-Rawabdeh, Jordanian political
figure, 65th Prime Minister
of Jordan ·
February 19 – Erin Pizzey, author and founder of the first
domestic violence shelter in the modern world[9] ·
February 20 – Frank Arundel, English footballer (d. 1994) ·
February 21 – Gert Neuhaus, German artist ·
February 23 – Rachel Elkind-Tourre, American record producer ·
Marisa Mell, Austrian actress (d. 1992) ·
February 25 – John Leonard,
American literary, television, film, and cultural critic (d. 2008) ·
Daniel C. Tsui,
Chinese-born physicist, Nobel Prize laureate ·
Tommy Tune, American dancer, choreographer,
and actor March[edit] ·
March 1 ·
Tzvetan Todorov, Bulgarian-French historian,
philosopher, structuralist literary critic, sociologist and essayis (d. 2017) ·
Leo Brouwer, Cuban composer and guitarist ·
March 2 – Manch Wheeler,
American footballer (d. 2018) ·
March 3 – Bill Frindall,
English cricket scorer and statistician (d. 2009) ·
March 4 ·
Jack Fisher, former American Major League
baseball pitcher ·
Carlos Vereza,
Brazilian actor ·
March 5 ·
Benyamin Sueb,
Indonesian actor, comedian and singer (d. 1995) ·
Chögyam Trungpa, Buddhist
meditation master (d. 1987) ·
March 8 ·
Lidiya Skoblikova, Russian speed-skater ·
Robert Tear, Welsh tenor (d. 2011) ·
March 9 – Malcolm Bricklin, American automotive
pioneer ·
March 12 – Johnny Callison,
American baseball player (d. 2006) ·
March 13 ·
Fadzil Noor, Malaysian politician (d. 2002) ·
Neil Sedaka,
American singer-songwriter ·
March 14 – Héctor Bonilla,
Mexican actor ·
March 15 – Alicia Freilich,
Venezuelan writer and novelist ·
March 16 – Carlos Bilardo,
Argentine football player and manager ·
March 17 ·
Jim Gary, American sculptor (d. 2006) ·
Giovanni Trapattoni, Italian football player and
manager ·
March 18 – Peter Kraus, German singer ·
March 20 – Brian Mulroney, 18th Prime Minister
of Canada ·
March 25 – Toni Cade Bambara,
African-American writer (d. 1995) ·
March 27 – Leila Kasra,
Iranian poet and lyricist (d. 1989) ·
March 28 – Vic Vargas, Filipino actor (d. 2003) ·
March 29 – Terence Hill, Italian actor ·
March 31 ·
Zviad Gamsakhurdia, President of Georgia (d. 1993) ·
Volker Schlöndorff, German film director ·
Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, German footballer April[edit] ·
April 1 ·
Ali MacGraw,
American model and actress ·
Spider Martin, American photographer
(d. 2003) ·
Phil Niekro, American baseball player ·
April 2 – Marvin Gaye, American singer (d. 1984) ·
April 4 – Hugh Masekela, South African trumpeter,
flugelhornist, cornetist, composer and singer (d. 2018) ·
April 7 ·
Francis Ford Coppola,
American film director ·
Sir David Frost, English television personality
(d. 2013) ·
April 8 ·
Lim Keng Yaik,
Malaysian politician (d. 2012) ·
Elizabeth Clare
Prophet, American writer (d. 2009) ·
April 9 ·
George Harrison,
American competition swimmer (d. 2011) ·
Romeo Vasquez, Filipino actor (d. 2017) ·
April 10 ·
Penny Vincenzi,
British novelist (d. 2018) ·
Claudio Magris,
Italian author ·
April 12 – Alan Ayckbourn,
American dramatist ·
April 13 ·
Seamus Heaney, Irish writer, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 2013) ·
Paul Sorvino, American actor ·
April 15 – Jaime Paz Zamora, 73rd President of Bolivia ·
April 16 – Dusty Springfield,
English singer (d. 1999) ·
April 17 – Jan Hoem, Norwegian
population scientist (d. 2017) ·
April 19 – Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran ·
April 20 – Elspeth Ballantyne,
Australian actress ·
April 22 ·
Mark Jones,
English actor (d. 2010) ·
Jason Miller,
American playwright and actor (d. 2001) ·
Ann Mitchell, English actress ·
April 23 – Lee Majors, American actor ·
April 25 ·
Ahmad Basri Akil, Malaysian football manager (d. 2008) ·
Ted Kooser, United States
Poet Laureate ·
April 27 ·
Erik Pevernagie,
Belgian painter ·
João Bernardo Vieira, President of
Guinea-Bissau (d. 2009) May[edit] Sir Ian McKellen ·
May 1 – Judy Collins, American singer and songwriter ·
May 2 – Taomati Iuta, Vice President
of Kiribati (1991–94) ·
May 4 – Paul Gleason, American actor (d. 2006) ·
May 7 ·
José Antonio Abreu,
Venezuelan orchestral conductor and music educator (d. 2018) ·
Sidney Altman, Canadian-born chemist, Nobel Prize laureate ·
Ruud Lubbers, Dutch politician, Prime
Minister of the Netherlands, 1982–94 (d. 2018) ·
May 8 – Paul Drayton,
American Olympic athlete (d. 2010) ·
May 9 ·
Ralph Boston, American athlete ·
Pierre Desproges,
French humorist (d. 1988) ·
May 10 – Wayne Cochran, American singer (d. 2017) ·
May 11 ·
Milt Pappas, American baseball player
(d. 2016) ·
Dante Tiñga,
Filipino Supreme
Court jurist ·
May 12 – Ron Ziegler, White House Press Secretary
(d. 2003) ·
May 13 – Harvey Keitel, American actor ·
May 14 ·
Troy Shondell, American singer (d. 2016) ·
Veruschka von Lehndorff,
German model, actress and artist ·
May 18 – Peter Grünberg,
German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 2018) ·
May 19 ·
Livio Berruti, Italian
athlete ·
Sonny Fortune, American jazz musician
(d. 2018) ·
Jams Fox,
English actor ·
Nancy Kwan, American actress ·
Dick Scobee,
American astronaut (d. 1986) ·
May 20 – Roman Kartsev,
Russian actor (d. 2018) ·
May 21 – Heinz Holliger,
Swiss oboist and composer ·
May 22 – Paul Winfield, American actor (d. 2004) ·
May 23 – Reinhard Hauff,
German film director ·
May 25 ·
Dixie Carter, American actress (d. 2010) ·
Sir Ian McKellen, English actor ·
May 26 – Brent Musburger, American sports announcer ·
May 27 ·
Don Williams, American musician (d. 2017) ·
Lin Rong-San, Taiwanese politician,
publisher and businessman (d. 2015) ·
May 29 – Al Unser, American race car driver ·
May 30 – Michael J. Pollard,
American actor June[edit] ·
June 1 – Cleavon Little,
American actor (d. 1992) ·
June 3 – Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, American writer (d. 2007) ·
June 4 ·
Ottavio Cogliati, Italian
cyclist (d. 2008) ·
Henri Pachard,
American film director (d. 2008) ·
June 5 ·
Ron Baensch, Australian racing cyclist ·
Joe Clark, 16th Prime Minister
of Canada ·
Margaret Drabble, English novelist ·
June 6 ·
Louis Andriessen,
Dutch composer ·
Lawrence Stephen, Nauruan politician ·
June 8 ·
Bernie Casey, American professional footballer
player and actor (d. 2017) ·
Preston Bynum, American politician (d. 2018) ·
June 9 ·
Ileana Cotrubaș, Romanian soprano ·
Dick Vitale, American basketball broadcaster ·
June 11 – Jackie Stewart, Scottish race car driver ·
June 14 ·
Jack Felder, American biochemist (d. 2017) ·
Steny Hoyer, American Democrat U.S.
Representative for Maryland's 5th congressional district ·
June 15 – Brian Jacques, British writer (d. 2011) ·
June 18 ·
Lou Brock, American baseball player ·
Jack Herer,
American cannabis activist (d. 2010) ·
June 21 ·
William Magee,
American politician ·
Marshall Younger, Australian rules
footballer ·
Essop Pahad, South
African politician ·
Charles Jencks, American cultural theorist ·
Ken Catchpole, Australian rugby union
footballer (d. 2017) ·
June 22 ·
Heikki Sarmanto, Finnish
jazz pianist and composer ·
Ada Yonath, Israeli
crystallographer ·
June 23 ·
Ardell Brede, American politician ·
Jack MacIsaac, Canadian politician ·
Syed Shahid Hakim,
Indian former Olympic football ·
June 24 ·
Annette Andre, Australian actress ·
Brigitte Fontaine,
French singer, writer and poet ·
Henry L. Garrett III,
American politician ·
Michael Gothard,
British actor (d. 1992) ·
June 25 ·
David Ramage, Australian rower ·
Curtis McClinton, American football player ·
Barbara Montgomery,
American actress ·
Brian Lowe, Australian rules footballer ·
June 26 ·
Zainuddin Maidin, Malaysian
politician ·
Barbara Chase-Riboud, American visual artist, bestselling
novelist and award-winning poet ·
Osvaldo Hurtado, 34th President of Ecuador ·
Chuck Robb, American politician and former
officer in the United States Marine Corps ·
Bobby Henrey,
Anglo-French child actor ·
Arthur Sutton, English cricketer ·
June 27 ·
Brereton Jones, American politician ·
William
Morris, American sports shooter ·
Ilija Dimovski, Macedonian football manager and
former player ·
Antonio
Mendoza, Filipino former sports shooter ·
June 28 ·
Jack Harbaugh, American football player and
coach ·
Klaus Schmiegel,
most famous for his work in organic chemistry ·
Wally English, American football coach ·
June 29 ·
Sante Gaiardoni,
Italian cyclist ·
John Abel,
Australian politician ·
Hartmut Keyler,
German architect ·
Alan Connolly, Australian cricketer ·
Ron Headley, West Indian cricketer ·
June 30 ·
Tony Hatch, English composer for musical
theatre and television ·
Martin A. Herman, American politician ·
Renzo Rovatti,
Italian footballer July[edit] ·
July 1 ·
Kazi Zafar Ahmed, 8th Prime Minister of
Bangladesh (d. 2015) ·
Volker Kempe, German scientist, manager and
entrepreneur ·
Frank Parker,
American actor ·
July 2 ·
Ferdinand Mount, British journalist and
novelist ·
John H. Sununu, American politician ·
Mike Castle, American attorney and
politician ·
Marcy
McGuigan, American actress ·
July 3 ·
Brian Bades,
English footballer ·
Andreas Neocleous, Greek lawyer ·
Willy Vanden Berghen, Belgian road bicycle racer ·
July 4 ·
Abdelmajid Chetali, Tunisian
footballer and manager ·
Lee Folkins,
American football tight end ·
Kim Bong-hwan,
North Korean footballer ·
Thea Stabell,
Norwegian actress ·
July 5 ·
Abdelouahed Belkeziz,
Moroccan lawyer, politician and diplomat ·
Booker Edgerson,
American football player ·
Owen Gray, Jamaican singer ·
July 6 ·
Bruce Hunter,
American competition swimmer ·
Mary Peters,
British athlete ·
Sultan bin
Muhammad Al-Qasimi, sovereign ruler of
the Emirate of Sharjah ·
Jet Harris, British bassist, singer and
songwriter (The Shadows)
(d. 2011) ·
July 7 ·
Gilbert Ramano,
South African military commander ·
Stanley Henig, British academic and
politician ·
Armand Sahadewsing, Surinamese football player and
manager ·
Satya Prakash
Agarwal, Indian politician ·
Elena Obraztsova, Russian opera singer
(d. 2015) ·
July 8 ·
Likulia Bolongo,
Congolese politician and general; Prime Minister of
Zaire ·
Abdelhamid Sharaf,
Jordanian ambassador to United States and Canada, 51st Prime Minister
of Jordan (d. 1980) ·
Pavel Parasca,
historian from the Republic of Moldova ·
Rambahadur Limbu, Nepalese Gurkha recipient of the
Victoria Cross ·
July 9 – Mario Da Pozzo, Italian football goalkeeper ·
July 10 ·
Mavis Staples, American rhythm and blues and
gospel singer, actress and civil rights activist ·
Reg Stratton, English footballer (d. 2018) ·
Garry Young,
Australian rules footballer ·
July 11 ·
Larry Laoretti,
American golfer ·
Stephen Berger, American entrepreneur,
investment banker, civil servant and political advisor ·
Mick Brown,
England football scout ·
July 12 ·
Barbara Crossette, American journalist and author ·
Arlen Ness, American motorcycle designer and
entrepreneur ·
Helen Frith,
Australian athlete ·
Tamao Nakamura, Japanese actress ·
July 13 ·
Clara Leach
Adams-Ender, US Army officer ·
Daisaku Kimura, Japanese film director and
cinematographer ·
John Danielsen, Danish football midfielder ·
July 14 ·
Ayoub-Farid
Michel Saab, Lebanese banker ·
Karel Gott, Czech Schlager singer ·
Sid Haig, American actor ·
George E. Slusser,
American scholar and writer ·
July 15 ·
Abdulhussain Abdulredha,
Kuwaiti actor (d. 2017) ·
Peter Hirzel,
Swiss cyclist ·
Reg Pridmore,
English motorcycle road racing national champion ·
Aníbal Cavaco Silva, 113th Prime Minister
of Portugal and 19th President of
Portugal ·
July 16 ·
William Bell,
American soul singer and songwriter ·
Denise LaSalle, American blues and
R&B/soul singer, songwriter and record producer (d. 2018) ·
Corin Redgrave, British actor and political
activist (d. 2010) ·
Lido Vieri,
Italian football manager and player ·
July 17 ·
Spencer Davis, Welsh musician and
multi-instrumentalist ·
Norbert Felsinger, Austrian figure skater ·
Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran ·
July 18 ·
Brian Auger, English jazz and rock
keyboardist ·
Dion DiMucci, American singer-songwriter ·
Eduard Mudrik,
Soviet Russian footballer of Jewish ethnicity (d. 2017) ·
July 19 ·
Victor Kelleher, Australian author ·
Ray Turnbull,
Canadian curler (d. 2017) ·
July 20 ·
Didier Tamayo, Colombian fencer ·
Frans Fiolet,
Netherlands field hockey player ·
July 21 ·
Bogusław Hajdas, Polish
footballer and coach ·
John Negroponte, U.S. Director of National
Intelligence ·
Frank Rankmore,
Welsh footballer, Wales international ·
Barbara Scott, Australian politician ·
July 22 ·
Gila Almagor,
Israeli actress, film star and author ·
Y. Balaretnarajah,
Sri Lankan military leader ·
Robert Phelps,
British modern pentathlete ·
Raul Yzaguirre,
American civil rights activist ·
July 23 – Raine Karp, Estonian architect ·
July 26 ·
John Howard, 25th Prime
Minister of Australia ·
Bob Lilly, American football player ·
July 27 ·
William Eggleston,
American photographer ·
Michael Longley, Northern Irish poet ·
Paulo Silvino,
Brazilian actor and humorist (d. 2017) ·
July 31 ·
Susan Flannery, American soap opera actress ·
France Nuyen,
French actress August[edit] Princess
Irene of the Netherlands ·
August 1 ·
Terry Kiser, American actor ·
Jambuwantrao Dhote, Indian politician
(d. 2017) ·
Robert James Waller,
American novelist (d. 2017) ·
August 2 ·
Benjamin Barber, American political theorist
and author (d. 2017) ·
John W. Snow, 73rd United States Secretary
of the Treasury ·
Wes Craven, American film director and
writer (d. 2015) ·
August 4 ·
Mapita Cortés, Mexican actress (d. 2006) ·
Frankie Ford, American singer (d. 2015) ·
August 5 – Princess
Irene of the Netherlands ·
August 7 – Willie
Penman, Scottish footballer (d. 2017) ·
August 8 – Jana Andrsová,
Czech actress and ballerina ·
August 9 ·
Bulle Ogier, French actress ·
Romano Prodi, Italian politician and
economist, 52nd Prime Minister of
Italy ·
August 11 – Naseem Khan,
British journalist (d. 2017) ·
Skip Caray, American baseball broadcaster
(d. 2008) ·
George Hamilton,
American actor ·
David Jacobs,
American producer and writer ·
August 13 – Howard Tate, American soul singer and
songwriter (d. 2011) ·
August 16 – Carole Shelley, English actress (d. 2018) ·
August 18 – Molly Bee, American country music singer
(d. 2009) ·
Alan Baker,
English mathematician (d. 2018) ·
Ginger Baker, English rock drummer ·
August 20 – Fernando Poe, Jr.,
Filipino actor (d. 2004) ·
August 21 – Clarence Williams
III, American actor ·
Valerie Harper, American actress ·
Carl Yastrzemski, American baseball player ·
August 27 – Bill Mulliken,
American competition swimmer (d. 2014) ·
Kang Sok-ju, North
Korean diplomat and politician (d. 2016) ·
Joel Schumacher, American film producer and
director ·
John Peel, English disc jockey (d. 2004) ·
Elizabeth Ashley, American actress September[edit] ·
September 1 – Lily Tomlin, American actress ·
George Lazenby, Australian actor ·
Clay Regazzoni,
Swiss Formula One driver
(d. 2006) ·
Brigid Berlin, American actress and artist ·
Susumu Tonegawa,
Japanese biologist, recipient of the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine ·
September 7 – Riccardo Del Turco,
Italian singer ·
September 8 – Carsten Keller, German field hockey player ·
September 9 – Ron McDole, American football player ·
Cynthia Lennon, first wife of English musician
John Lennon (d. 2015) ·
Richard Kiel, American actor (d. 2014) ·
Guntis Ulmanis,
5th President of Latvia ·
September 15 – Ron
Walker, former Lord Mayor of Melbourne and Australian businessman
(d. 2018) ·
September 16 – Breyten Breytenbach, South African writer
and painter ·
September 17 – David Souter, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States ·
September 18 – Jorge Sampaio, 17th President of
Portugal ·
September 20 – Michu Meszaros,
Hungarian-born American actor (ALF) (d. 2016) ·
September 23 – Janusz Gajos,
Polish actor ·
Mark
Elliott, voice-over artist for the Walt Disney Company ·
Patrick Kearney, American serial killers ·
Jacques Vallée, French ufologist ·
Leon Brittan, British politician (d. 2015) ·
Camilo Diaz Gregorio,
Filipino Roman Catholic bishop (d. 2018) ·
Judith Appelbaum, American editor,
consultant and author (d. 2018) ·
Ricky Tomlinson, British actor ·
September 28 – Rudolph Walker, Trinidadian actor ·
September 29 – Larry Linville, American actor (d. 2000) ·
September 30 – Jean-Marie Lehn, French chemist, Nobel Prize laureate October[edit] ·
October 1 – George Archer, American golfer (d. 2005) ·
October 4 – Ivan Mauger, New
Zealand speedway rider, 6 times World Speedway Champion (d. 2018) ·
October 5 – Consuelo Ynares-Santiago, Filipino Supreme
Court jurist ·
October 6 – Melvyn Bragg, English media arts presenter,
critic and novelist ·
John Hopcroft, American computer scientist ·
Clive James, Australian-born writer,
humorist and television personality ·
Harold Kroto,
English organic chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 2016) ·
Bill Snyder, American football coach ·
Lynne Stewart, American defense attorney
(d. 2017) ·
Paul Hogan, Australian film actor ·
Prince Bartholomew,
Trinidadian cricketer (d. 2017) ·
John Pilger, Australian-born journalist ·
October 10 – Zainal Abidin Ahmad, Malaysian politician (d. 2010) ·
Maria Bueno, Brazilian tennis player
(d. 2018) ·
Austin Currie, Irish politician ·
October 13 – T. J. Cloutier, American poker player ·
October 14 – Ralph Lauren, American fashion designer ·
Joe Dolan, Irish entertainer, recording
artist, and pop singer (d. 2007) ·
Suely Franco, Brazilian actress ·
Flavio Cotti,
Swiss Federal Councilor ·
Lee Harvey Oswald,
American assassin of President John F. Kennedy (d. 1963) ·
Joaquim Chissano, President of
Mozambique ·
George Cohen, English footballer ·
October 23 – C. V. Vigneswaran, Sri Lankan Tamil lawyer, judge
and politician ·
October 24 – F. Murray Abraham,
American screen actor ·
October 25 – Dave Simmonds, British road racer (d. 1972) ·
Gelek Rimpoche, Tibetan
Buddhist lama (d. 2017) ·
Karel Schoeman, South African novelist
(d. 2017) ·
October 26 – Barry Cunningham, Australian politician
(d. 2018) ·
John Cleese, English comic actor ·
Suzy Covey, American scholar of popular
culture (d. 2007) ·
Giulio Angioni,
Italian writer and anthropologist (d. 2017) ·
Jane Alexander, American actress ·
October 29 – Malay Roy Choudhury,
Bengali poet and novelist, creator of the Indian Hungry generation literary
and cultural movement ·
Leland H. Hartwell,
American scientist, recipient of the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine ·
Grace Slick, American rock singer ·
Ali Farka
Touré, Malian singer (d. 2006) ·
Ron Rifkin, American actor November[edit] ·
November 1 – Barbara Bosson,
American actress ·
November 2 – Richard Serra, American sculptor ·
November 5 – Cecilia Alvear,
Ecuadorian-born American journalist (d. 2017) ·
Athanasios
Angelopoulos, Greek academic ·
Carlos Emilio
Morales, Cuban jazz guitarist (d. 2014) ·
Leonardo Quisumbing, Filipino Supreme
Court jurist ·
Elizabeth Dawn, British actress (d. 2017) ·
Laila Kinnunen,
Finnish singer (d. 2000) ·
Meg Wynn Owen, English actress ·
Henning Christophersen, Danish politician (d. 2016) ·
November 9 – Paul Cameron, American psychologist ·
November 10 – Russell Means, Native American activist
(d. 2012) ·
November 13 – Will Ryan, American voice actor ·
November 14 – Wendy Carlos, American electronic composer ·
Yaphet Kotto, American
actor ·
Thalmus Rasulala,
American actor (d. 1991) ·
Dinorah Varsi,
Uruguayan classical pianist (d. 2013) ·
November 16 – Michael Billington, British drama critic ·
November 17 – Auberon Waugh, English journalist (d. 2001) ·
Margaret Atwood, Canadian novelist ·
Liz J. Patterson, American politician
(d. 2018) ·
Amanda Lear, French model and singer ·
Larry Libertore,
American football player (d. 2017) ·
Ian McCulloch,
Anglo-Scottish actor ·
Brenda Vaccaro, American actress ·
November 19 – Emil Constantinescu, President of Romania ·
Budd Dwyer, American politician (d. 1987) ·
Mulayam Singh Yadav,
Indian politician ·
November 22 – Stefan Dimitrov, Bulgarian opera basso singer ·
Bill Bissett, Canadian poet ·
Betty Everett, American soul singer, pianist
(d. 2001) ·
Shelagh Delaney, English dramatist (d. 2011) ·
Rais Khan, Pakistani sitarist (d. 2017) ·
Janette Deacon, a South African
archaeologist specialising in rock art conservation ·
Tina Turner, American singer ·
Abdullah Ahmad
Badawi, 5th Prime Minister
of Malaysia ·
Dudley Storey, New
Zealand rower (d. 2017) ·
Laurent-Désiré Kabila, 3rd President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (d. 2001) ·
Ulla Strömstedt,
Swedish actress (d. 1986) ·
November 29 – Peter Bergman,
American comedian (The Firesign Theater) (d. 2012) ·
November 30 – Chandra Bahadur Dangi, Nepalese dwarf, world's shortest man
(d. 2015) December[edit] ·
December 2 – Harry Reid, American politician and U.S.
Senate Majority Leader ·
December 5 – Minita Chico-Nazario, Filipino Supreme
Court jurist ·
December 8 – James Galway, Irish flautist ·
December 11 – Thomas McGuane,
American writer ·
Ernie Davis, American football player
(d. 1963) ·
Jay Dickey, ·
December 17 – Eddie Kendricks,
American singer (The Temptations)
(d. 1992) ·
Alex Bennett,
American radio personality ·
Robert T. Bennett,
American politician (d. 2014) ·
Michael Moorcock, English science fiction
writer ·
Harold E. Varmus, American scientist,
recipient of the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine ·
December 19 – Dennis Karjala,
American law professor (d. 2017) ·
December 22 – Alfred J. Ferrara,
American baseball player ·
December 23 – La Lupe, Cuban singer (d. 1992) ·
December 24 – Dean Corll,
American serial killer, rapist, kidnapper and torturer (d. 1973) ·
December 26 – Phil Spector, American record producer and murderer ·
Hugo Judd, New Zealand diplomat and public
servant (d. 2017) ·
John Amos, American actor ·
December 28 – Michelle Urry,
American editor of Playboy (d. 2006) ·
December 31 – Idris Legbo Kutigi,
Nigerian lawyer and judge (d. 2018) Deaths[edit] January[edit] ·
January 2 – Roman Dmowski, Polish
politician (b. 1864) ·
January 5 – Léon Abrami,
French politician (b. 1879) ·
January 6 – Gustavs Zemgals,
2nd President of Latvia (b. 1871) ·
January 8 – Charles Eastman, American author, physician,
reformer, helped found the Boy Scouts of America (b. 1858) ·
January 13 – Arthur Barker, American criminal, son
of Ma Barker (b. 1899) ·
January 14 – Prince
Valdemar of Denmark (b. 1858) ·
January 18 – Ivan Mosjoukine,
Soviet actor (b. 1889) ·
January 22 – Léopold
Bernhard Bernstamm, Soviet sculptor
(b. 1859) ·
January 23 – Matthias Sindelar, Austrian footballer (b. 1903) ·
January 24 – Maximilian
Bircher-Benner, Swiss physician and nutritionist (b. 1867) ·
January 25 – Helen Ware, American actress (b. 1877) ·
January 28 – W. B. Yeats, Irish writer, Nobel Prize laureate
(b. 1865) February[edit] Venerable Janez Frančišek Gnidovec ·
February 1 – Lawrence Marston, American actor,
playwright, and film director (b. 1857) ·
February 3 – Janez Frančišek Gnidovec,
Yugoslav Roman Catholic priest
and venerable (b. 1873) ·
February 4 – Edward Sapir, German-American anthropologist
and linguist (b. 1884) ·
February 5 – Teresa Mañé Miravet,
Spanish teacher, editor and writer (b. 1865) ·
February 6 – Sayajirao Gaekwad
III, Maharada of Baroda (b. 1863) ·
February 9 – Henry Balfour, British archaeologist
(b. 1863) ·
Pope Pius XI (b. 1857) ·
Patriarch Torkom Koushagian of
Jerusalem (b. 1874) ·
Franz Schmidt, Austrian composer (b. 1874) ·
Francis Xavier
Ransdell, American politician (b. 1861) ·
Potenciano Gregorio, Filipino musician (b. 1880) ·
S. P. L. Sørensen, Danish chemist (b. 1868) ·
February 13 – Alexander Hamilton-Gordon, British general
(b. 1859) ·
February 15 – Henri Jaspar, Belgian politician, 27th Prime Minister
of Belgium (b. 1870) ·
February 17 – Fred Gamble,
American actor (b. 1868) ·
February 18 – Okamoto Kanoko,
Japanese tanka poet (b. 1899) ·
February 20 – Charles V. Blanchard,
American politician (b. 1866) ·
February 22 – Antonio Machado, Spanish poet (b. 1875) ·
February 23 – Michael
Knatchbull, 5th Baron Brabourne,
British peer and soldier (b. 1895) ·
February 26 – Ivan Fedko, Soviet
army commander (b. 1897) ·
February 27 – Nadezhda Krupskaya, Russian Marxist revolutionary, Vladimir Lenin's widow (b. 1869) March[edit] Carlos
Manuel de Cespedes y Quesada ·
March 2 – Howard Carter, British archaeologist
(b. 1874) ·
March 3 – Dimitrie Gerota,
Romanian anatomist and physician (b. 1867) ·
March 5 – Herbert Mundin,
British actor (b. 1898) ·
March 6 ·
Ginepro Cocchi,
Italian Roman Catholic priest
and Servant of God (b. 1908) ·
Patriarch Miron of Romania, Austro-Hungarian-born
Romanian cleric, politician, priest and 38th Prime Minister
of Romania (b. 1868) ·
March 7 ·
Immanuel Back, Finnish clergyman and
politician (b. 1876) ·
Matvei Berman, Soviet intelligence officer
(b. 1898) ·
March 13 – Lucien Lévy-Bruhl, French sociologist and anthropologist
(b. 1857) ·
March 14 – Agostino Borgato,
Italian actor and director (b. 1871) ·
March 19 – Lloyd L. Gaines, American civil rights
activist ·
March 21 ·
Evald Aav, Estonian composer
(b. 1900) ·
Avril de
Sainte-Croix, French author and journalist (b. 1855) ·
March 23 – Abd
al-Rahim al-Hajj Muhammad Palestinian revolt (b. 1892) ·
March 27 ·
Ferdinand von Quast,
German general (b. 1850) ·
António
Xavier Pereira Coutinho, Portuguese botanist (b. 1851) ·
March 28 ·
Carlos
Manuel de Cespedes y Quesada, Cuban diplomat, politician and
writer, 6th President of Cuba (b. 1871) ·
Francis
Matthew John Baker, Australian politician (b. 1903) ·
Mario Lertora,
Italian artistic gymnast in the 1924 Summer Olympics (b. 1897) ·
March 29 ·
Henri Bernard, French physicist (b. 1874) ·
Gerardo Machado, Cuban general, 5th President of Cuba (b. 1871) ·
March 31 – Ioannis Tsangaridis, Greek general (b. 1887) April[edit] King Ghazi of Iraq ·
April 4 ·
King Ghazi of Iraq (b. 1912) ·
Joaquín García Morato, Spanish fighter ace (b. 1904) ·
April 6 – Bennie Dickson,
American bank robber ·
April 7 – Joseph Lyons, 10th Prime
Minister of Australia, Premier of Tasmania (b. 1879) ·
April 14 – José Júlio de
Souza Pinto, Portuguese painter (b. 1856) ·
April 15 – Konstantin
Petrovich Grigorovich,
Soviet engineer and professor (b. 1886) ·
April 18 – Hugo Charlemont,
Austrian painter (b. 1850) ·
April 19 ·
Vladimir Ćopić, Yugoslav politician,
Communist leader (b. 1891) ·
Lucilio de Albuquerque, Brazilian painter (b. 1877) ·
April 20 – Archduke
Franz Salvator of Austria (b. 1866) ·
April 22 – Leandro Campanari, Italian conductor, composer and
violinist (b. 1859) ·
April 25 ·
John Foulds,
British classical music composer (b. 1880) ·
Georges Ricard-Cordingley, French painter (b. 1873) ·
April 27 – José Gola, Argentinian actor (b. 1904) ·
April 28 – Archduke Leo
Karl of Austria (b. 1893) May[edit] Saint Ursula Ledóchowska ·
May 1 – Bautista Saavedra,
35th President of Bolivia (b. 1870) ·
May 2 – Phillips Smalley, American actor and
director (b. 1875) ·
May 3 – Wilhelm Groener, German general (b. 1867) ·
May 4 – James A.
Johnson, American architect (b. 1865) ·
May 5 – José Manuel
Puig Casauranc, Mexican diplomat,
journalist and politician (b. 1888) ·
May 7 – Francesco Paleari, Italian priest and blessed (b. 1863) ·
May 9 – Mary, Lady Heath, Irish aviator (b. 1896) ·
May 10 – James Parrott, American actor (b. 1898) ·
May 13 – Victor Bernau,
Norwegian actor and director (b. 1890) ·
May 18 – Charles deForest Chandler, American military aviator
(b. 1878) ·
May 19 – Ahmet Ağaoğlu, Turkish politician, author
and writer (b. 1869) ·
May 20 ·
Joseph Carr, 2nd
president of the National
Football League (b. 1880) ·
Alexandra Čvanová, Czechoslovakian soprano
(b. 1897) ·
May 22 – Ernst Toller, German playwright and
Communist politician (b. 1893) ·
May 23 – Witmer Stone, American ornithologist and
botanist (b. 1866) ·
May 24 – Aleksander Brückner, German scholar (b. 1856) ·
May 25 – Frank Watson Dyson,
British astronomer (b. 1868) ·
May 27 – Alfred A. Cunningham,
American aviator, the first United States Marine Corps aviator (b. 1882) ·
May 29 – Ursula Ledóchowska, Polish Roman Catholic religious professed and
saint (b. 1865) ·
May 30 – Floyd Roberts, American race car driver
(b. 1900) June[edit] ·
June 4 – Tommy Ladnier,
American jazz trumpeter (b. 1900) ·
June 6 – George Fawcett, American actor (b. 1860) ·
June 9 – Owen Moore, American actor (b. 1886) ·
June 10 – Nicolae M. Condiescu, Romanian novelist (b. 1880) ·
June 13 – János Teleszky, Hungarian politician
(b. 1868) ·
June 16 – Chick Webb, American musician (b. 1905) ·
June 17 ·
Jean Boucher,
French sculptor (b. 1870) ·
Eugen Weidmann,
German serial killer, last person publicly executed in France (b. 1908) ·
June 19 – Grace Abbott, American social worker and
activist (b. 1878) ·
June 22 – Benjamin Tucker, American anarchist
(b. 1854) ·
June 23 – Ernest
Alexander Cruikshank, Canadian general (b. 1859) ·
June 25 – Richard Seaman, British motor racing driver
(b. 1913) ·
June 26 – Ford Madox Ford,
British writer (b. 1873) ·
June 27 – Margaret Campbell,
American actress (b. 1883) ·
June 28 – Bobby Vernon, American actor (b. 1898) ·
June 30 – Eduardo Lopez
Bustamante, Venezuelan poet, lawyer and journalist (b. 1881) July[edit] ·
July 3 – Juan José Gárate, Spanish painter (b. 1869) ·
July 5 – Malietoa Tanumafili I, King of Samoa (b. 1879) ·
July 7 – Deacon White, American baseball player
and MLB Hall of Famer (b. 1847) ·
July 8 ·
Havelock Ellis, British sexologist (b. 1859) ·
Anna Pappritz,
German writer and suffragist (b. 1861) ·
July 9 ·
Carlo Chiostri,
Italian painter (b. 1863) ·
Alphonse Laurencic, French painter and architect
(b. 1902) ·
July 11 – Stiliyan Kovachev, Bulgarian general
(b. 1860) ·
July 14 ·
Alphonse Mucha,
Czech painter and decorative artist (b. 1860) ·
Neculai Costăchescu,
Romanian chemist and politician (b. 1876) ·
July 16 – Bartholomeus Roodenburch, Dutch swimmer (b. 1863) ·
July 17 – María
del Carmen González-Valerio, Spanish Roman Catholic saint (b. 1930) ·
July 20 – Joseph Mendes da
Costa, Dutch sculptor (b. 1863) ·
July 23 – Jack Duffy,
American actor (b. 1882) ·
July 24 – Abdul Karim Ghaznavi, Indian politician, traveler and
minister (b. 1872) ·
July 26 – William Mackay, American artist (b. 1876) ·
July 27 ·
Stanisław
Baczyński, Polish writer,
journalist and soldier (b. 1890) ·
Salvatore A. Cotillo,
Italian lawyer, politician and judge (b. 1886) ·
July 29 – Pio Laporte, Canadian physician and
politician (b. 1878) August[edit] ·
August 2 – Harvey Spencer Lewis,
American mystic (b. 1883) ·
August 6 ·
Mehmet Emin Çolakoğlu,
Turkish army general (b. 1878) ·
Monroe Dunaway
(M.D.) Anderson, Founder of Anderson, Clayton and Company;
"Father of Texas Medical Center" (b. 1873) ·
August 10 – Carlo Galimberti,
Italian Olympic weightlifter (b. 1894) ·
August 11 – Jean Bugatti, German automobile designer
(b. 1909) ·
August 12 – Eulalio Gutiérrez, President of Mexico
(b. 1881) ·
August 15 – Federico Gamboa,
Mexican diplomat and writer (b. 1864) ·
Sidney Howard, American writer (b. 1891) ·
Germán Busch, Bolivian military
officer, President of Bolivia (b. 1904) ·
August 24 – Piero Colonna, Italian politician (b. 1891) ·
August 25 – Arthur Asquith, British general (b. 1883) ·
August 26 – Rubén González
Cárdenas, Venezuelan lawyer (b. 1875) ·
August 29 – Marthe de Florian, French painter (b. 1864) ·
August 30 – Wilhelm Bölsche, German journalist and science writer
(b. 1861) ·
August 31 – Richard Bouwens van der Boijen,
French architect (b. 1863) September[edit] ·
September 6 – Arthur Rackham, British artist (b. 1867) ·
September 7 – Kyōka Izumi,
Japanese author (b. 1873) ·
September 8 – Swami Abhedananda, Indian mystic (b. 1866) ·
September 10 – Wilhelm Fritz
von Roettig, German Waffen SS general,
first general killed in action during World War II (b. 1888) ·
September 11 – Marion De Vries, American politician
(b. 1865) ·
September 12 – Eliodoro Villazón, 32nd President of Bolivia (b. 1848) ·
Ludwig R. Conradi, German evangelist and missionary
(b. 1856) ·
Józef Kustroń, Polish general (killed in
action) (b. 1892) ·
Nikolaos Triantafyllakos, Prime Minister of Greece
(b. 1855) ·
Otto Wels, German politician, Ghairman of the Social
Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) (b. 1873) ·
September 18 – Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz,
Polish writer and painter (b. 1885) ·
Paul Bruchesi,
Canadian prelate (b. 1855) ·
Hermann Brunn,
German mathematician (b. 1862) ·
Andrew
Claude de la Cherois Crommelin,
French astronomer (b. 1865) ·
Armand Călinescu, Romanian economist and
politician, 39th Prime Minister
of Romania (b. 1893) ·
Park Yeong-hyo, Korean politician and
diplomat (b. 1861) ·
Mikołaj Bołtuć, Polish army general (killed
in battle) (b. 1893) ·
Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński, Polish general
(b. 1890) ·
Werner von Fritsch,
German general (killed in action) (b. 1880) ·
Sigmund Freud, Austrian psychoanalyst
(b. 1856) ·
Eugeniusz Kazimirowski, Polish painter (b. 1873) ·
Francisco Leon
de la Barra, Mexican diplomat and political figure, 32nd President of Mexico (b. 1863) ·
James P. Boyle, American politician
(b. 1885) ·
Danilo,
Crown Prince of Montenegro (b. 1871) ·
Carl Laemmle, German film producer (b. 1867) ·
September 28 – Samuel
Dickstein, Polish mathematician (b. 1851) ·
September 30 – Yusuf Abu Durra, Palestinan
revolt leader (b. 1900) October[edit] Prince
Joachim Albert of Prussia ·
October 2 – Edgar M. Lazarus, American architect
(b. 1862) ·
October 3 – Fay Templeton, American musical comedy star
(b. 1865) ·
October 6 – Giulio Gavotti,
Italian aviator (b. 1882) ·
October 7 – Harvey Cushing, American neurosurgeon
(b. 1869) ·
October 8 – Gustav Henriksen, Norwegian executive
(b. 1872) ·
October 13 – Ford Sterling, American actor (b. 1882) ·
October 14 – Polaire, French actress (b. 1874) ·
October 22 – Bernardas Fridmanas, Lithuanian lawyer, judge,
journalist and politician (b. 1859) ·
October 23 – Zane Grey, American writer (b. 1872) ·
October 24 – Prince Joachim
Albert of Prussia (b. 1876) ·
October 28 – Alice Brady, American actress (b. 1892) ·
October 29 – Dwight B. Waldo, American educator and
historian (b. 1864) ·
October 30 – Carlos De Valdez, Peruvian actor (b. 1894) ·
Albrecht,
Duke of Württemberg, German field marshal (b. 1865) ·
Otto Rank, Austrian psychoanalyst (b. 1884) November[edit] ·
November 1 – Kálmán Darányi, 31st Prime Minister of
Hungary (b. 1886) ·
Percy Douglas, chairman of the British
Graham Land Expedition (BGLE) Advisory Committee (b. 1876) ·
Ma Xiangbo,
Chinese Jesuit priest and blessed (b. 1840) ·
November 7 – Kirsti Suonio,
Finnish actress (b. 1872) ·
Alicja Kotowska,
Polish Roman Catholic nun,
martyr and blessed (b. 1899) ·
Pedro Nolasco
Cruz Vergara, Chilean novelist and writer (b. 1857) ·
November 12 – Norman Bethune, Canadian humanitarian
(b. 1890) ·
November 13 – Lois Weber, American actress (b. 1881) ·
November 15 – Platon Ivanovich Ivanov,
Soviet-born Finnish civil servant (b. 1863) ·
November 16 – Henry, Duke of Parma (b. 1873) ·
November 17 – Aurelio Mosquera, Ecuadorian politician,
25th President of Ecuador (b. 1883) ·
November 21 – Émile Paul Amable Guépratte,
French admiral (b. 1856) ·
November 22 – King Daudi Cwa II of Buganda (b. 1896) ·
November 24 – John Harron,
American actor (b. 1903) ·
November 28 – James Naismith, Canadian inventor of
basketball (b. 1861) ·
Eugen Kolisko,
Austrian-born German physician and educator (b. 1893) ·
Józef Krasnowolski, Polish painter (b. 1879) ·
Philipp Scheidemann, German politician, 11th Chancellor
of Germany (b. 1865) December[edit] ·
December 3 – Princess
Louise of the United Kingdom, second youngest daughter of Queen Victoria (b. 1848) ·
December 5 – Santiago Iglesias,
Puerto Rican statesman (b. 1872) ·
December 8 – Alimondo Ciampi,
Italian sculptor (b. 1876) ·
December 9 – Louis de Chappedelaine, French politician (b. 1876) ·
December 12 – Douglas Fairbanks,
American actor and the father of Douglas Fairbanks
Jr. (b. 1883) ·
December 13 – Gildardo Magaña, Mexican general, politician
and revolutionary (b. 1891) ·
December 16 – Juan Demóstenes Arosemena,
18th President of Panama (b. 1879) ·
December 18 – Bruno Liljefors,
Swedish artist (b. 1860) ·
Dmitry Grave, Soviet mathematician (b. 1863) ·
Reginald F. Nicholson,
United States Navy admiral (b. 1852) ·
December 20 – Hans Langsdorff,
German naval officer (suicide) (b. 1894) ·
December 22 – Ma Rainey, American blues singer (b. 1886) ·
Anthony Fokker, Dutch-born American aircraft
manufacturer (b. 1890) ·
Maxime Laubeuf,
French maritime engineer (b. 1864) ·
December 24 – Walter Gordon,
German physicist (b. 1893) ·
December 25 – Ivan Dmitriyevich Borisov, Soviet aircraft pilot
(b. 1913) ·
Rinaldo Cuneo, American artist ("the
painter of San Francisco) (b. 1877) ·
Napoléon Turcot,
Canadian politician (b. 1867) ·
December 31 – Frank Benson,
British actor (b. 1858) Date unknown[edit] ·
Keeleri Kunhikannan,
father of the Kerala Circus Nobel Prizes[edit] ·
Chemistry – Adolf
Friedrich Johann Butenandt, Leopold Ružička ·
Physiology
or Medicine – Gerhard Domagk ·
Literature – Frans Eemil Sillanpää ·
Peace –
not awarded References[edit] 1.
^ "History | English edition | Agencia EFE". www.efe.com.
Retrieved 2018-10-08. 2.
^ Shirer, William L. The
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. 3.
^ "Thailand ( Siam ) History" (overview), CS Mngt, 2005, CSMngt.com webpage: CSMngt-Thai Archived April 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.. 4.
^ Leffingwell, Randy (1996). Classic Farm
Tractors: History of the Farm Tractor. Osceola, WI, USA: Motorbooks
International. p. 99. ISBN 978-0760302460. 5.
^ "On This Day - September 10, 1939". CBC.ca. Retrieved 2011-09-15. 6.
^ "Canada in the Second World War". Juno
Beach Centre. 7.
^ "The Conquest of Poland and the Beginnings of
Jewish Persecution". The Holocaust. Yad Vashem. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012.
Retrieved 2013-03-03. 8.
^ "Early Television Stations - W2XAB/W2XAX/WCBW -
CBS, New York". Early Television Museum. Hilliard, OH.
Retrieved 2014-11-26. 9.
^ 1990/91 (July 1, 1990). "World Who's Who Of Women
1990/91". Taylor & Francis – via Google Books. External links[edit] ·
The 1930s Timeline: 1939 – from
American Studies Programs at The University of Virginia ·
Paula Phelan,
1939 Into The Dark, 2009, ZAPmedia. |
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