1926

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Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 19th century
  • 20th century
  • 21st century
Decades:
  • 1900s
  • 1910s
  • 1920s
  • 1930s
  • 1940s
Years:
  • 1923
  • 1924
  • 1925
  • 1926
  • 1927
  • 1928
  • 1929
1926 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1926
MCMXXVI
Ab urbe condita2679
Armenian calendar1375
ԹՎ ՌՅՀԵ
Assyrian calendar6676
Bahá'í calendar82–83
Balinese saka calendar1847–1848
Bengali calendar1333
Berber calendar2876
British Regnal year16 Geo. 5 – 17 Geo. 5
Buddhist calendar2470
Burmese calendar1288
Byzantine calendar7434–7435
Chinese calendar乙丑(Wood Ox)
4622 or 4562
    — to —
丙寅年 (Fire Tiger)
4623 or 4563
Coptic calendar1642–1643
Discordian calendar3092
Ethiopian calendar1918–1919
Hebrew calendar5686–5687
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1982–1983
 - Shaka Samvat1847–1848
 - Kali Yuga5026–5027
Holocene calendar11926
Igbo calendar926–927
Iranian calendar1304–1305
Islamic calendar1344–1345
Japanese calendarTaishō 15 / Shōwa 1
(昭和元年)
Javanese calendar1856–1857
Juche calendar15
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4259
Minguo calendarROC 15
民國15年
Nanakshahi calendar458
Thai solar calendar2468–2469
Tibetan calendar阴木牛年
(female Wood-Ox)
2052 or 1671 or 899
    — to —
阳火虎年
(male Fire-Tiger)
2053 or 1672 or 900

1926 (MCMXXVI) was a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar, the 1926th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 926th year of the 2nd millennium, the 26th year of the 20th century, and the 7th year of the 1920s decade.

Events[]

January[]

  • January 1 – The Rhine River floods; 50,000 are forced to evacuate their homes in Cologne.[1]
  • January 3Theodoros Pangalos declares himself dictator in Greece.
  • January 6 – Airline Deutsche Luft Hansa is founded in Berlin.
  • January 8
  • January 12Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll premiere their radio program Sam 'n' Henry, in which the two white performers portray two black characters from Harlem looking to strike it rich in the big city (it is a precursor to Gosden and Correll's more popular later program, Amos 'n' Andy).
  • January 16 – A BBC comic radio play broadcast by Ronald Knox, about a workers' revolution, causes a panic in London.[2]
  • January 21 – The Belgian Parliament accepts the Locarno Treaties.
  • January 26 – Scottish inventor John Logie Baird demonstrates a mechanical television system at his London laboratory for members of the Royal Institution and a reporter from The Times.
  • January 29Eugene O'Neill's The Great God Brown opens at the Greenwich Theatre in New York City.
  • January 31 – British and Belgian troops leave Cologne.

February[]

  • February 1 – Land on Broadway and Wall Street in New York City is sold at a record $7 per sq inch; it is only affordable for four more years.
  • February 8Seán O'Casey's The Plough and the Stars opens at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin.
  • February 12 – The Irish minister for Justice, Kevin O'Higgins, appoints the Committee on Evil Literature.
  • February 20 – The Berlin International Green Week debuts in Germany.
  • February 25Francisco Franco becomes General of Spain.

March[]

March 16: Goddard with rocket in 1926.
  • March 6
    • The Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon (England) is destroyed by fire.
    • The first commercial air route from the United Kingdom to South Africa is established by Alan Cobham.
  • March 14 – The El Virilla train accident occurs in Costa Rica killing 248 and injuring 93.
  • March 16Robert H. Goddard launches the first liquid-fuel rocket, at Auburn, Massachusetts.
  • March 23Éamon de Valera organises the political party Fianna Fáil in Ireland.

April[]

  • April 4 – Greek dictator Theodoros Pangalos wins the presidential election, with 93.3% of the vote; turnout is light, as the result is considered a foregone conclusion.[3]
  • April 7 – An assassination attempt against Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini fails.
  • April 12 – By a vote of 45–41, the United States Senate unseats Iowa Senator Smith W. Brookhart and seats Daniel F. Steck, after Brookhart has already served for over one year.[why?] [4]
  • April 17Zhang Zuolin's army captures Beijing.[5]
  • April 21 – Princess Elizabeth Alexandra Mary of York, later Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, is born in Mayfair, London.
  • April 24Treaty of Berlin: Germany and the Soviet Union each pledge neutrality, in the event of an attack on the other by a third party, for the next five years.
  • April 25Rezā Khan is crowned Shah of Iran, under the name "Pahlevi".
  • April 30 – African-American pilot Bessie Coleman is killed, after falling 500 feet (150 m) from an airplane.

May[]

  • May 3 – Coal miners are locked out in Britain.
  • May 4 – The United Kingdom general strike begins at midnight, in support of the coal strike.
  • May 9
    • Martial law is declared in Britain, because of the general strike.
    • The French navy bombards Damascus, because of Druze riots.
    • Explorer Richard E. Byrd and co-pilot Floyd Bennett claim to be the first to fly over the North Pole in the Josephine Ford monoplane, taking off from Spitsbergen, Norway and returning 15 hours and 44 minutes later. Both men are immediately hailed as national heroes, though some experts have since been skeptical of the claim, believing that the plane was unlikely to have covered the entire distance and back in that short an amount of time.[6] An entry in Byrd's diary, discovered in 1996, suggested that the plane actually turned back 150 miles short of the North Pole, due to an oil leak.[7]
  • May 10
    • Talks between the government and strikers begin in the U.K.
    • Planes piloted by Major Harold Geiger and Horace Meek Hickam, students at the United States Air Corps Tactical School, collide in mid-air at Langley Field, Virginia (Hickam parachutes to safety).
  • May 12
    • Roald Amundsen and his crew fly over the North Pole, in the airship Norge.
    • UK General Strike 1926: In the United Kingdom, a general strike by trade unions ends (the strike began on May 3).
  • May 1214May Coup: Józef Piłsudski takes over in Poland.
  • May 18 – Evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson disappears, while visiting a Venice, California beach.
  • May 20 – The United States Congress passes the Air Commerce Act, licensing pilots and planes.
  • May 23 – The first Lebanese constitution is established.
  • May 25 – At least 165 persons (144 confirmed) die in the Mount Tokachi volcano eruption in Hokkaido, Japan, according to the Japanese government official report.[page needed]
  • May 26 – The Rif War ends, when Rif rebels surrender in Morocco.
  • May 28 – The 1926 coup d'état, commanded by Manuel Gomes da Costa in Portugal, installs the Ditadura Nacional (National Dictatorship), followed by António de Oliveira Salazar's Estado Novo.

June[]

  • June 4Ignacy Mościcki becomes president of Poland.
  • June 7 – Liberal politician Carl Gustaf Ekman succeeds Rickard Sandler, as Prime Minister of Sweden.
  • June 19DeFord Bailey is the first African-American to perform on Nashville's Grand Ole Opry.
  • June 29Arthur Meighen briefly returns to office as Prime Minister of Canada during the King-Byng Affair.

July[]

  • July 1
    • The Kuomintang begins the Northern Expedition, a military unification campaign in northern China.
    • The Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky is authorized by the United States Congress.
  • July 3 – A Caudron C.61 aircraft, operated by Compagnie Internationale de Navigation Aérienne, crashes in Czechoslovakia.
  • July 9 – In Portugal, General Óscar Carmona takes power in a military coup.
  • July 10 – A bolt of lightning strikes Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey; the resulting fire causes several million pounds of explosives to blow up in the next 2–3 days.
  • July 15Bombay Electric Supply and Transport Company in India introduces motor buses.
  • July 23Fox Film buys the patents of the Movietone sound system for recording sound onto film.
  • July 26 – The National Bar Association incorporates in the United States.

August[]

  • August 1 – In Mexico, the entry into force of anticlerical measures stipulated in the Constitution of 1917 causes the Cristero War.
  • August 5 – In New York, the Warner Brothers' Vitaphone system premieres, with the movie Don Juan, starring John Barrymore.
  • August 6Gertrude Ederle becomes the first woman to swim the English Channel, from France to England.
  • August 18
    • The British miners' union begins negotiations with the government.
    • A weather map is televised for the first time, sent from NAA Arlington to the Weather Bureau office in Washington, D.C.
  • August 22 – In Greece, Georgios Kondylis ousts Theodoros Pangalos.
  • August 23 – The sudden death of popular film actor and sex symbol Rudolph Valentino, at age 31, causes mass grief and hysteria around the world.
  • August 25Pavlos Kountouriotis announces that dictatorship has ended in Greece, and he is now the president.

September[]

  • September 1Lebanon under the French Mandate gets its first constitution, thereby becoming a republic. Charles Debbas is elected president.
  • September 8 – The German Weimar Republic joins the League of Nations.
  • September 11
    • Aloha Tower is officially dedicated at Honolulu Harbor, in the Territory of Hawaii.
    • In Rome, Italy, Gino Lucetti throws a bomb at Benito Mussolini's car, but Mussolini is unhurt.
  • September 14 – The Locarno Treaties of 1925 are ratified in Geneva, and come into effect.
  • September 16 – Philip Dunning and George Abbott's play Broadway premieres in New York City.
  • September 18Great Miami Hurricane: A strong hurricane devastates Miami, leaving over 100 dead and causing several hundred million dollars in damage (equal to nearly $100 billion in the modern day).
  • September 19Giuseppe Meazza (San Siro) Stadium, well known among sports venues in Italy, officially opens in Milan.[8]
  • September 20 – The North Side Gang attempts to assassinate Al Capone, at the apex of his power at this time, spraying his headquarters in Cicero, Illinois with over a thousand rounds of machine gun fire in broad daylight, as Capone is eating there. Capone escapes harm.[9][10]
  • September 21 – French war ace René Fonck and three others attempt to fly the Atlantic, in pursuit of the Orteig Prize. Before the newsreel cameras at Roosevelt Field New York, the modified Sikorsky S-35 crashes on take-off and bursts into flames. Fonck survives, but two of his men are killed.
  • September 23Gene Tunney defeats Jack Dempsey to become heavyweight boxing champion of the world.
  • September 25
    • The League of Nations Slavery Convention abolishes all types of slavery.
    • William Lyon Mackenzie King returns to office as Prime Minister of Canada, after winning the Canadian federal election.
    • The Detroit Cougars, a professional ice hockey club (National Hockey League) and predecessor to the Detroit Red Wings, is founded.[11]

October[]

  • October 2Józef Piłsudski becomes prime minister of Poland.
  • October 12 – British miners agree to end their strike.
  • October 14A. A. Milne's children's book Winnie-the-Pooh is published in London, featuring the eponymous bear.
  • October 16 – An ammunition explosion on troopship Kuang Yuang explodes near Kiukiang, China, killing 1,200.[12]
  • October 19 – The 1926 Imperial Conference opens in London.
  • October 20 – A hurricane kills 650 in Cuba.
  • October 23
    • Leon Trotsky and Lev Kamenev are removed from the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
    • A decree in Italy bans women from holding public office.
    • The Fazal Mosque, the first purpose-built in London and the first Ahmadiyya mosque in Britain, is completed.
  • October 31 – Magician Harry Houdini dies of gangrene and peritonitis, that has developed after his appendix ruptured.

November[]

  • November 8 – The APOEL FC is founded in Cyprus.
  • November 10 – In San Francisco, a necrophiliac serial killer named Earle Nelson (dubbed "Gorilla Man") kills and then rapes his 9th victim, a boarding house landlady named Mrs. William Edmonds.
  • November 11 – The United States Numbered Highway System, including U.S. Route 66, is established.
  • November 15
    • The NBC Radio Network opens in the United States with 24 stations (formed by Westinghouse, General Electric and RCA).
    • The Balfour Declaration is approved by the 1926 Imperial Conference, making the Commonwealth dominions equal and independent.
  • November 24
    • The village of Rocquebillier, in the French Riviera, is almost destroyed in a massive hailstorm.
    • Sri Aurobindo retires, leaving "The Mother" to run the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Puducherry, India.
  • November 25 – The death penalty is re-established in Italy.
  • November 26 – All Italian Communist deputies are arrested.
  • November 27 – The restoration of Colonial Williamsburg begins in Williamsburg, Virginia.

December[]

December 25: Emperor Hirohito
  • December 2 – British prime minister Stanley Baldwin ends the martial law that had been declared due to the general strike.
  • December 3Agatha Christie disappears from her home in Surrey; on December 14 she is found at a Harrogate hotel.
  • December 7 – The Council for the Preservation of Rural England (CPRE) is founded (later the Campaign to Protect Rural England).
  • December 13Miina Sillanpää becomes Finland's first female government minister.
  • December 171926 Lithuanian coup d'état: A democratically elected government is overthrown in Lithuania; Antanas Smetona assumes power.
  • December 18Turkey converts to the Gregorian calendar, making the next day January 1 1927.
  • December 23 – Nicaraguan President Adolfo Díaz requests U.S. military assistance in the ongoing civil war. American peacekeeping troops immediately set up neutral zones in Puerto Cabezas and at the mouth of the Rio Grande to protect American and foreign lives and property.[13][14]
  • December 26 – In the history of Japan, the Shōwa period begins from this day, due to the death of Emperor Taishō on the day before. His son Hirohito will reign as Emperor of Japan until 1989. Showa 1 in the Japanese calendar is just six days long, prior to January 1 Showa 2 (1927).[citation needed]

Date unknown[]

  • Dr Muthulakshmi Reddi becomes the first woman to be appointed to a legislature in India, the Madras Legislative Council.
  • Stephen H. Langdon begins excavations in Jemdet Nasr, finding proto-cuneiform clay tablets (3100–2900 BCE).
  • Phencyclidine (PCP, angel dust) is first synthesized.
  • Widows' pensions are introduced in New South Wales, Australia.
  • The short-lived Western Australian Secession League is founded.
  • Earl W. Bascom, rodeo cowboy and artist, designs and marks rodeo's first high-cut rodeo chaps at Stirling, Alberta, Canada.
  • The International African Institute is founded in London.
  • Raymond Pearl publishes his landmark book, Alcohol and Longevity.
  • American microbiologist Selman Waksman publishes Enzymes.
  • The Pike School of Andover, Massachusetts is founded.
  • Industrial output surpasses the level of 1913 in the USSR.[clarification needed][citation needed]

Births[]

Births
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December

January[]

George Martin
Kim Jong-pil
Ahmad Fuad Mohieddin
Patricia Neal
Steve Reeves
Abdus Salam
  • January 1
  • January 2Toshirō Daigo, Japanese judoka
  • January 3
    • W. Michael Blumenthal, German-American economist and politician
    • Murray Dowey, Canadian ice hockey goaltender (d. 2021)
    • Felicitas Kuhn, Austrian children's illustrator
    • Mohamed Yaacob, Malaysian lawyer, judge and Menteri Besar of Kelantan (d. 2009)
    • Sir George Martin, English record producer (d. 2016)
  • January 6Mickey Hargitay, Hungarian actor, bodybuilder (d. 2006)
  • January 7Kim Jong-pil, South Korean politician (d. 2018)
  • January 8
    • Evelyn Lear, American soprano (d. 2012)
    • Hanae Mori, Japanese fashion designer
  • January 10Júlio Pomar, Portuguese painter (d. 2018)[15]
  • January 11
    • Lev Dyomin, Soviet cosmonaut (d. 1998)
    • Ahmad Fuad Mohieddin, 42nd Prime Minister of Egypt (d. 1984)
  • January 12
    • Ray Price, American country music singer and songwriter (d. 2013)
    • Morton Feldman, American composer (d. 1987)
  • January 13Michael Bond, English fiction writer, creator of Paddington Bear (d. 2017)
  • January 14Tom Tryon, American actor, novelist (d. 1991)
  • January 15Maria Schell, Austrian actress (d. 2005)
  • January 16 – , American actor
  • January 17
    • Antonio Domingo Bussi, Argentine Army general, former Governor of Tucuman (d. 2011)
    • Newton N. Minow, American attorney
    • Moira Shearer, Scottish actress, dancer (d. 2006)
  • January 18
    • Hannie van Leeuwen, Dutch politician (d. 2018)
    • Salah Zulfikar, Egyptian Actor and film producer (d. 1993)
  • January 19Fritz Weaver, American actor (d. 2016)
  • January 20
    • Patricia Neal, American actress (d. 2010)
    • David Tudor, American pianist, composer (d. 1996)
  • January 21
    • Steve Reeves, American actor (d. 2000)
    • Roger Taillibert, French architect (d. 2019)
  • January 23Bal Thackeray, Indian politician (d. 2012)
  • January 25Dick McGuire, American basketball player and coach (d. 2010)
  • January 26Franco Evangelisti, Italian composer (d. 1980)
  • January 27
    • Fritz Spiegl, Austrian journalist (d. 2003)
    • Ingrid Thulin, Swedish actress (d. 2004)
  • January 28Amin al-Hafez, 22nd Prime Minister of Lebanon (d. 2009)
  • January 29
    • Bob Falkenburg, American tennis player and entrepreneur
    • Abdus Salam, Pakistani physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1996)
  • January 31Chuck Willis, American singer, songwriter (d. 1958) (some sources give his year of birth as 1928)

February[]

Garret FitzGerald
Leslie Nielsen
Bob Richards
Miroslava Stern
  • February 1Nancy Gates, American actress (d. 2019)
  • February 2
    • Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, President of France (d. 2020)
    • Miguel Obando y Bravo, Nicaraguan Roman Catholic prelate (archbishop of Managua, cardinal) (d. 2018)
  • February 3Hans-Jochen Vogel, German politician (d. 2020)
  • February 4Gyula Grosics, Hungarian footballer (d. 2014)
  • February 7
    • Konstantin Feoktistov, Soviet cosmonaut (d. 2009)
    • Estanislao Esteban Karlic, Argentine cardinal
    • Keiko Tsushima, Japanese actress (d. 2012)
  • February 8
    • Neal Cassady, American writer (d. 1968)
    • Birgitte Reimer, Danish actress (d. 2021)
    • Sonja Ziemann, German actress (d. 2020)
  • February 9Garret FitzGerald, Irish lawyer, politician, and 7th Taoiseach of Ireland (d. 2011)
  • February 10
    • Carmen Romano, First Lady of Mexico (d. 2000)
    • Mimi Sheraton, American food critic
    • Danny Blanchflower, Northern Irish footballer, football manager (d. 1993)
  • February 11
    • Paul Bocuse, French chef (d. 2018)
    • Leslie Nielsen, Canadian-American actor (d. 2010)
  • February 12Charles Van Doren, American professor, subject of film Quiz Show (d. 2019)
  • February 13Bill Mercer, American sportscaster
  • February 14
    • Moneta Sleet Jr., American press photographer (d. 1996)
    • Alfred Körner, Austrian footballer (d. 2020)
  • February 15Muhammad al-Badr, King of Yemen (d. 1996)
  • February 16
    • Margot Frank, German sister of Anne Frank (d. 1945)
    • John Schlesinger, British film director (d. 2003)
  • February 17
    • Peter T. Flawn, American geologist, educator (d. 2017)
    • John Meyendorff, French-born American Orthodox scholar, protopresbyter and educator (d. 1992)
  • February 18
  • February 19György Kurtág, Hungarian composer and academic
  • February 20
    • Whitney Blake, American actress (d. 2002)
    • Richard Matheson, American author (d. 2013)
    • Bob Richards, American track and field athlete
    • Gillian Lynne, English ballerina, dancer, choreographer, actress, and theatre-television director (d. 2018)
    • María de la Purísima Salvat Romero, Spanish nun, saint (d. 1998)
  • February 22
    • Kenneth Williams, English actor (d. 1988)
    • Miguel León-Portilla, Mexican anthropologist and historian (d. 2019)
  • February 23
    • Luigi De Magistris, Italian cardinal
    • Claire Shulman, American politician (d. 2020)
  • February 24Knut Kleve, Norwegian philologist (d. 2017)
  • February 26
    • Miroslava Stern, Czechoslovakian-Mexican actress (d. 1955)
    • Verne Gagne, American professional wrestler (d. 2015)
    • Henry Molaison, American memory disorder patient (d. 2008)
    • Doris Belack, American actress (d. 2011)
    • Efraín Sánchez, Colombian footballer and manager (d. 2020)
  • February 27David H. Hubel, Canadian neuroscientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 2013)
  • February 28Svetlana Alliluyeva, Russian author (d. 2011)

March[]

Andrzej Wajda
Ralph Abernathy
Jerry Lewis
Siegfried Lenz
Dario Fo
Ingvar Kamprad
  • March 1
    • Robert Clary, French-American actor, author and lecturer
    • Barbara Clegg, British actress and scriptwriter
    • Pete Rozelle, American National Football League commissioner (d. 1996)
  • March 2Murray Rothbard, American economist (d. 1995)
  • March 3
    • Craig Dixon, American athlete (d. 2021)[16]
    • James Merrill, American poet (d. 1995)
  • March 4
    • Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma, French royal, businessman (d. 2018)
    • Richard DeVos, American billionaire, co-founder of Amway (d. 2018)
    • Fran Warren, American popular singer (d. 2013)
  • March 5Joan Shawlee, American actress (d. 1987)
  • March 6
    • Alan Greenspan, American economist, Federal Reserve Chairman
    • Yoshimi Osawa, Japanese judoka
    • Andrzej Wajda, Polish film director (d. 2016)
  • March 7Chemmanam Chacko, Indian poet (d. 2018)
  • March 8 – Sultan Salahuddin of Selangor (d. 2001)
  • March 10Aleksandr Zatsepin, Soviet and Russian composer
  • March 11
    • Ralph Abernathy, African-American civil rights leader (d. 1990)
    • Thomas Starzl, American physician (d. 2017)
  • March 12
    • George Ariyoshi, American politician and lawyer
    • Helm Stierlin, German psychiatrist and family therapist
  • March 13Carlos Roberto Reina, President of Honduras (d. 2003)
  • March 14Carlos Heitor Cony, Brazilian journalist, writer (d. 2018)
  • March 15Uria Simango, Mozambican politician
  • March 16
    • Edwar al-Kharrat, Egyptian novelist, writer and critic (d. 2015)
    • Jerry Lewis, American comedian, humanitarian and philanthropist (d. 2017)
  • March 17
    • Jaynne Bittner, American female baseball player (d. 2017)
    • Siegfried Lenz, German writer (d. 2014)
  • March 18
    • Peter Graves, American actor (d. 2010)
    • Tan Chin Nam, Malaysian businessman and racehorse owner (d. 2018)
  • March 19Tony Collins, English football player and manager (d. 2021)
  • March 21
    • , Venezuelan singer, songwriter (d. 2018)
    • Heikki Hasu, Finnish Olympic cross-country skier
  • March 23Berta Loran, Brazilian-Polish actress
  • March 24
    • Dario Fo, Italian author, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2016)
    • Desmond Connell, Irish cardinal (d. 2017)
    • Ventsislav Yankov, Bulgarian pianist
  • March 25
  • March 26Aldo Tarlao, Italian Olympic rower (d. 2018)
  • March 27Harry Connick Sr., American attorney
  • March 28Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, 18th Duchess of Alba, Spanish aristocrat (d. 2014)
  • March 30
    • Ingvar Kamprad, Swedish businessman (d. 2018)
    • Peter Marshall, American singer, television host (Hollywood Squares)
    • Sydney Chaplin, American actor (d. 2009)
  • March 31John Fowles, English writer (d. 2005)

April[]

Anne McCaffrey
Gus Grissom
Roger Corman
Ian Paisley
Hugh Hefner
Elizabeth II
Harper Lee
Cloris Leachman
  • April 1
    • Charles Bressler, American tenor (d. 1996)
    • Anne McCaffrey, American-born Irish author (d. 2011)
    • Luis de la Puente Uceda, Peruvian guerrilla leader (d. 1965)
  • April 2
    • Jack Brabham, Australian race car driver (d. 2014)
    • Omar Graffigna, Argentine Air Force officer (d. 2019)
  • April 3Gus Grissom, American astronaut (d. 1967)[17]
  • April 5
    • Roger Corman, American filmmaker, producer, actor and businessman
    • Ri Kun-mo, North Korean politician (d. 2001)
  • April 6
    • Randy Weston, American jazz pianist and composer (d. 2018)
    • Jeanne Martin Cissé, Guinean teacher, nationalist politician (d. 2017)
    • Sergio Franchi, Italian tenor, actor (d. 1990)
    • Gil Kane, Latvian-born cartoonist (d. 2000)
    • Ian Paisley, Northern Irish politician (d. 2014)
  • April 8
  • April 9Hugh Hefner, American magazine editor (Playboy) (d. 2017)
  • April 10Gustav Metzger, German-born stateless auto-destructive artist (d. 2017)
  • April 12
    • Khozh-Akhmed Bersanov, Chechen ethnographer (d. 2018)
    • Jane Withers, American actress (d. 2021)
  • April 13
    • John Spencer-Churchill, 11th Duke of Marlborough, British peer (d. 2014)
    • Maximilian Raub, Austrian Olympic canoeist (d. 2019)
    • Egon Wolff, Chilean playwright, author (d. 2016)
  • April 14
    • Frank Daniel, Czech-born writer, producer, director, and teacher (d. 1996)
    • Gloria Jean, American actress and singer (d. 2018)
    • George Robledo, Chilean soccer player (d. 1989)
    • Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo, Spanish politician (d. 2008)
  • April 19Rawya Ateya, Egyptian politician, first female parliamentarian in the Arab world (d. 1997)
  • April 21
    • Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom[18]
    • Arthur Rowley, English footballer (d. 2002)
    • Alexander Lyudskanov, Bulgarian translator, semiotician and mathematician (d. 1976)
  • April 22
    • Ted Hibberd, Canadian ice hockey player (d. 2017)
    • Charlotte Rae, American actress, singer (d. 2018)
    • James Stirling, Scottish architect (d. 1992)
  • April 24
    • Marilyn Erskine, American actress
    • Thorbjörn Fälldin, 2-time Prime Minister of Sweden (d. 2016)
  • April 25
  • April 27
    • Tim LaHaye, American evangelist, speaker and author (d. 2016)
    • Vladimír Černý, Czechoslovakian modern pentathlete (d. 2016)
  • April 28
    • James Bama, American artist
    • Greg Gates, American rower (d. 2020)
    • Harper Lee, American novelist (d. 2016)
  • April 29
    • Paul Baran, American internet pioneer (d. 2011)
    • Leonard Fenton, English actor and director
  • April 30
    • Edmund Cooper, British author, poet (d. 1982)
    • Alda Neves da Graça do Espírito Santo, Santomean poet (d. 2010)
    • Cloris Leachman, American actress (d. 2021)
    • Christian Mohn, Norwegian ski jumper and sports official (d. 2019)

May[]

David Attenborough
Don Rickles
Miles Davis
Abdoulaye Wade
Katie Boyle
  • May 1Peter Lax, Hungarian-American mathematician, academic
  • May 3
    • Matt Baldwin, Canadian curler
    • Ema Derossi-Bjelajac, Croatian politician (d. 2020)
  • May 4David Stoddart, Baron Stoddart of Swindon, English politician (d. 2020)
  • May 5
    • Ann B. Davis, American actress (d. 2014)
    • Bing Russell, American actor (d. 2003)
  • May 8
    • Sir David Attenborough, British broadcaster, naturalist, and producer
    • David Hurst, German actor (d. 2019)
    • Don Rickles, American stand-up comedian, actor (d. 2017)
  • May 10
    • Hugo Banzer , 51st President of Bolivia (d. 2002)
    • Pasquale Panìco, Italian politician (d. 2018)
  • May 12Earl Hutto, American politician (d. 2020)
  • May 14Eric Morecambe, English comedian, author (d. 1984)
  • May 15
    • Anthony Shaffer, English novelist, playwright (d. 2001)
    • Sir Peter Shaffer, English playwright (d. 2016)
  • May 17
    • David Ogilvy, 13th Earl of Airlie, Scottish soldier and politician
    • Prince Dimitri Romanov, Russian prince, banker, philanthropist and author (d. 2016)
    • Franz Sondheimer, German-born British chemist (d. 1981)
    • Dietmar Schönherr, Austrian film actor (d. 2014)
  • May 18Niranjan Bhagat, Indian poet (d. 2018)
  • May 19
    • Mark Andrews, American politician (d. 2020)
    • Edward Parkes, English engineer and academic (d. 2019)
  • May 21Robert Creeley, American poet (d. 2005)
  • May 23Aileen Hernandez, African-American union organizer, civil rights activist, and women's rights activist (d. 2017)
  • May 24Stanley Baxter, Scottish actor and screenwriter
  • May 25
    • Claude Akins, American actor (d. 1994)
    • Bill Sharman, American basketball player, coach (d. 2013)
  • May 26
    • Miles Davis, African-American Jazz musician (d. 1991)
    • Desmond Davis, British film and television director (d. 2021)
  • May 27
    • Rashidi Kawawa, 1st Prime Minister of Tanzania (d. 2009)
    • Kees Rijvers, Dutch football player and manager
  • May 29
    • Abdoulaye Wade, 3rd President of Senegal
    • Katie Boyle, Italian-British actress, television personality, and game-show panelist (d. 2018)
  • May 30
    • Tony Terran, American trumpet player, session musician (d. 2017)
    • Johnny Gimble, American country musician, fiddler (d. 2015)
    • Tsuneo Watanabe, Japanese businessman

June[]

Andy Griffith
Marilyn Monroe
Allen Ginsberg
Lou Ottens
Tadeusz Konwicki
Mel Brooks
  • June 1
    • Andy Griffith, American actor, comedian, singer (d. 2012)
    • Marilyn Monroe, American actress (d. 1962)
  • June 3
    • Flora MacDonald, Canadian politician and humanitarian (d. 2015)
    • Roscoe Bartlett, Republican member of the United States House of Representatives
    • Roxcy Bolton, American feminist and civil and women's rights activist (d. 2017)
    • Allen Ginsberg, American poet (Howl) (d. 1997)
  • June 4
    • Meredith Belbin, English researcher and management consultant
    • Robert Earl Hughes, American who was the heaviest human being recorded in the history of the world during his lifetime (d. 1958)
    • Ain Kaalep, Estonian poet, playwright and critic (d. 2020)
  • June 5
    • Emile Capgras, Martinican politician (d. 2014)
    • Paul Soros, Hungarian-born American mechanical engineer, inventor, businessman and philanthropist (d. 2013)
    • Peter Peterson, American banker and businessman, American Secretary of Commerce (d. 2018)
  • June 6
  • June 7Jean-Noël Tremblay, Canadian politician (d. 2020)
  • June 8Ilie Ceaușescu, Romanian general and communist politician (d. 2002)
  • June 9
    • Georgia Holt, American singer and actress
    • Happy Rockefeller, American socialite (d. 2015)
  • June 10
    • June Haver, American actress and singer (d. 2005)
    • Lionel Jeffries, British film director and actor (d. 2010)
  • June 11
    • Carlisle Floyd, American composer and educator
    • Frank Plicka, Czech-born photographer (d. 2010)
  • June 12
    • Amadeo Carrizo, Argentine goalkeeper (d. 2020)
    • Gaspare di Mercurio, Italian doctor and author (d. 2001)
  • June 13
    • Satoru Abe, Japanese-American sculptor and painter
    • Paul Lynde, American actor and comedian (d. 1982)
    • June Krauser, American swimmer (d. 2014)
  • June 15Shigeru Kayano, Japanese Ainu activist (d. 2006)
  • June 16
    • Efraín Ríos Montt, Guatemalan career military officer and politician (d. 2018)
    • William F. Roemer, Jr., United States FBI agent (d. 1996)
    • Taketoshi Naito, Japanese actor (d. 2012)
  • June 18
    • Avshalom Haviv, (d. 1947)
    • Allan Sandage, American astronomer (d. 2010)
  • June 19
    • Erna Schneider Hoover, American mathematician and inventor
    • Arno Mayer, American historian and writer
  • June 21
    • Fred Cone, former professional American football fullback
    • Washington Malianga, Zimbabwean politician (d. 2014)
    • Lou Ottens, Dutch inventor (d. 2021)
    • Johanna Quandt, German businesswoman (d. 2015)
  • June 22
    • George Englund, American film editor, director, producer, and actor (d. 2017)
    • Elyakim Haetzni, Israeli lawyer
    • Tadeusz Konwicki, Polish filmmaker (d. 2015)
    • Rachid Solh, 2-Time Prime Minister of Lebanon (d. 2014)
  • June 23
    • Yoshihiro Hamaguchi, Japanese freestyle swimmer (d. 2011)
    • Magda Herzberger, Romanian author, poet and composer, survivor of the Holocaust (d. 2021)
    • Annette Mbaye d'Erneville, Senegalese writer
    • Arnaldo Pomodoro, Italian sculptor
  • June 24
    • Muslim Arogundade, Nigerian sprinter (d. unknown)
    • Blackie Gejeian, American race car driver, race car builder, and hot rod enthusiast (d. 2016)
    • Barbara Scofield, American tennis player
  • June 25
    • Ján Eugen Kočiš, Czech bishop (d. 2019)
    • Ingeborg Bachmann, Austrian writer (d. 1973)
    • Gordon Robertson, Canadian ice hockey player (d. 2019)
    • Stig Sollander, Swedish alpine skier (d. 2019)
  • June 26
  • June 27
    • Giambattista Bonis, Italian professional football player
    • Len Ceglarski, American hockey player (d. 2017)
    • Geza de Kaplany, Hungarian-born physician
    • Don Raleigh, American ice hockey player (d. 2012)
    • Bruce Tozer, Australian cricketer
    • Galina Vecherkovskaya, Russian rower
  • June 28
    • Elisabeta Abrudeanu, Romanian artistic gymnast
    • George Booth, American cartoonist
    • Mel Brooks, American actor, comedian, and screenwriter
  • June 29
    • Roger Stuart Bacon, American politician
    • Bobby Morgan, American professional baseball player
  • June 30
    • Peter Alexander, Austrian actor and singer (d. 2011)
    • Paul Berg, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
    • Božena Moserová, Czech alpine skier

July[]

Carl Hahn
Nuon Chea
Leopoldo Galtieri
Stef Wertheimer
Norman Jewison
James Best
  • July 1
    • Fernando J. Corbató, American computer scientist (d. 2019)
    • Robert Fogel, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2013)
    • Carl Hahn, German automotive executive, chairman of Volkswagen
    • Hans Werner Henze, German composer (d. 2012)
  • July 2
    • Liu Dajun, Chinese agricultural scientist, educator and an academician (d. 2016)
    • Alfons Oehy, Swiss swimmer (d. 1977)
    • Carlo Rolandi, Italian sailor (d. 2020)
  • July 3
  • July 4
  • July 5
    • Roy Hawes, American first baseman in Major League Baseball (d. 2017)
    • Viola Harris, American actress (d. 2017)
    • Salvador Jorge Blanco, President of the Dominican Republic (d. 2010)
    • Diana Lynn, American actress (d. 1971)
    • Mario Picone, American pitcher (d. 2013)
    • Anthony Purssell, English brewing executive and rower
  • July 6Serge Roullet, French film director and screenwriter
  • July 7
    • Yvonne Ciannella, American coloratura soprano in opera and concert
    • Armand Lemieux, Canadian professional hockey player (d. 2015)
    • Thorkild Simonsen, Danish politician
    • Nuon Chea, Cambodian politician, 31st Prime Minister of Cambodia (d. 2019)
    • Mel Clark, American Major League Baseball outfielder (d. 2014)
  • July 8
    • David Malet Armstrong, Australian philosopher (d. 2014)
    • Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, Swiss-American psychiatrist (d. 2004)
  • July 9
    • Jens Juul Eriksen, Danish cyclist (d. 2004)
    • Mathilde Krim, founding chairman of amfAR, the American Foundation for AIDS Research (d. 2018)
    • Ben Roy Mottelson, American-born physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • July 10
    • Carleton Carpenter, American actor and dancer
    • Donald Geary, American ice hockey player (d. 2015)
    • Fred Gwynne, American actor and author (d. 1993)
    • Harry MacPherson, American pitcher (d. 2017)
    • Tony Settember, American racing driver (d. 2014)
    • Aldo Tortorella, Italian journalist, former politician and partisan
  • July 11
    • Frederick Buechner, American author and theologian
    • Joe Houston, American saxophonist (d. 2015)
  • July 12
    • Abe Addams, American soccer player (d. 2017)
    • Siti Hasmah Mohamad Ali, spouse of Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad
  • July 13
    • Cheng Chi-sen, Taiwanese sports shooter
    • T. Loren Christianson, American politician (d. 2019)
    • Thomas Clark, American politician (d. 2020)
  • July 14
    • Wallace Jones, American professional basketball player (d. 2014)
    • Harry Dean Stanton, American film and television actor (d. 2017)
  • July 15
    • Sir John Graham, 4th Baronet, English diplomat (d. 2019)
    • Leopoldo Galtieri, Argentine dictator (d. 2003)
    • Raymond Gosling, English physicist (d. 2015)
  • July 16
    • Emile Degelin, Belgian film director and novelist (d. 2017)
    • Paul M. Ellwood Jr., prominent figure in American health care
    • Michael Otedola, Nigerian politician (d. 2014)
    • Irwin Rose, American biologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (d. 2015)
    • Stef Wertheimer, German-born Israeli industrialist, investor, philanthropist and former politician
  • July 17
    • Édouard Carpentier, Canadian professional wrestler (d. 2010)
    • William Pierson, American television, motion picture and stage actor (d. 2004)
    • Charles Zwick, American civil servant (d. 2018)
  • July 18
    • Maunu Kurkvaara, Finnish film director and screenwriter
    • Bernard Pons, French politician and medical doctor
    • Nita Bieber, American actress (d. 2019)
  • July 19
    • Terry Cavanagh, Canadian politician (d. 2017)
    • Helen Gallagher, American actress, dancer, and singer
    • Robert E. Lavender, American judge (d. 2020)
  • July 20
    • Charles David Ganao, Congolese politician (d. 2012)
    • Odd Kallerud, Norwegian politician (d. 2016)
  • July 21
    • Otto Beyeler, Swiss cross country skier
    • Norman Jewison, Canadian film director
  • July 22Bryan Forbes, English film director (d. 2013)
  • July 24Hans Günter Winkler, German show jumping rider (d. 2018)
  • July 25
    • Whitey Lockman, American player, coach, manager (d. 2009)
    • Beatriz Segall, Brazilian actress (d. 2018)
    • Ray Solomonoff, American inventor (d. 2009)
  • July 26
    • James Best, American actor and acting coach (d. 2015)
    • Moacir Santos, Brazilian composer, multi-instrumentalist and music educator (d. 2006)
  • July 27Doris Satterfield, American professional baseball player (d. 1993)
  • July 28Walt Brown, American presidential candidate
  • July 29Franco Sensi, Italian businessman (d. 2008)
  • July 30Nina Kulagina, Russian psychic (d. 1990)
  • July 31
    • Bernard Nathanson, American medical doctor and activist (d. 2011)
    • Hilary Putnam, American philosopher, mathematician and computer scientist (d. 2016)

August[]

Tony Bennett
Stan Freberg
Aaron Klug
Fidel Castro
Agostino Cacciavillan
Konstantinos Stephanopoulos
Jiang Zemin
  • August 1Meg Randall, American actress (d. 2018)
  • August 2
    • Sy Mah, Canadian marathoner (d. 1988)
    • George Habash, Palestinian Christian politician (d. 2008)
    • W. Carter Merbreier, American television host (Captain Noah) (d. 2016)
    • Igor Spassky, Russian scientist, engineer and entrepreneur
    • Hang Thun Hak, Cambodian radical politician, academic and playwright (d. 1975)
  • August 3
    • Rona Anderson, Scottish stage, film, and television actress (d. 2013)
    • Loris Campana, Italian road and track cyclist (d. 2015)
    • Tony Bennett, American singer
    • Shun-ichi Iwasaki, Japanese engineer
  • August 5Clifford Husbands, 6th Governor-General of Barbados (d. 2017)
  • August 6
    • Janet Asimov, American writer and psychiatrist (d. 2019)
    • János Rózsás, Hungarian writer (d. 2012)
    • Frank Finlay, English stage, film and television actor (d. 2016)
    • Elisabeth Beresford, British author (d. 2010)
    • Norman Wexler, American screenwriter (d. 1999)
  • August 7
    • John Otho Marsh Jr., American politician, 14th United States Secretary of the Army (d. 2019)
    • Stan Freberg, American author, recording artist and comedian (d. 2015)
    • Bowen Stassforth, American swimmer (d. 2019)
  • August 8
    • Silvio Amadio, Italian film director and screenwriter (d. 1995)
    • Jimmy Brown, American trumpeter, saxophonist and singer (d. 2006)
    • Angelo Bonfietti, Brazilian basketball player (d. 2004)
  • August 9Frank M. Robinson, American science fiction and techno-thriller writer (d. 2014)
  • August 10
    • Marie-Claire Alain, French organist (d. 2013)[19]
    • Carol Ruth Vander Velde, American mathematician (d. 1972)[20]
    • Arthur Maxwell House, Canadian neurologist (d. 2013)
  • August 11
    • Ron Bontemps, American basketball player (d. 2017)
    • Aaron Klug, Lithuanian-English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2018)
    • Claus von Bülow, Danish-British socialite (d. 2019)
    • John Gokongwei, Filipino billionaire businessman and philanthropist (d. 2019)
  • August 12
    • John Derek, American actor and film director (d. 1998)
    • Osamu Ishiguro, Japanese tennis player (d. 2016)
    • Hiroshi Koizumi, Japanese actor (d. 2015)
    • Wallace Markfield, American writer (d. 2002)
    • René Vignal, French footballer (d. 2016)
  • August 13
    • Fidel Castro, Cuban revolutionary and politician (d. 2016)
    • Roy Heath, Guyanese writer (d. 2008)
    • Valentina Levko, Russian opera and chamber singer (d. 2018)
    • Norris Bowden, Canadian figure skater (d. 1991)
  • August 14
    • Martin Broszat, German historian (d. 1989)
    • Agostino Cacciavillan, Italian cardinal
    • René Goscinny, French comic book writer (d. 1977)
    • Buddy Greco, American jazz and pop singer and pianist (d. 2017)
  • August 15
    • Sukanta Bhattacharya, Bengali poet and playwright (d. 1947)
    • Ivy Bottini, American activist and artist (d. 2021)
    • Julius Katchen, American concert pianist (d. 1969)
    • Sami Michael, Iraqi-Israeli author
    • Konstantinos Stephanopoulos, former President of Greece (d. 2016)
  • August 16
    • Jack Britto, Pakistani Olympic field hockey player (d. 2013)
    • Eivind Hjelmtveit, Norwegian cultural administrator (d. 2017)
    • Yu Min, Chinese nuclear physicist (d. 2019)
  • August 17
  • August 18
    • Orlando Bosch, Cuban terrorist (d. 2011)
    • Franca Marzi, Italian film actress (d. 1989)
  • August 19Luis Bordón, Paraguayan musician and composer (d. 2006)
  • August 20Hocine Aït Ahmed, Algerian politician (d. 2015)
  • August 21Marian Jaworski, Polish cardinal (d. 2020)
  • August 22Werner Spitz, German-American forensic pathologist
  • August 23Clifford Geertz, American anthropologist (d. 2006)
  • August 29
    • Helene Ahrweiler, Greek historian and academic
    • Ramakrishna Hegde, Indian politician (d. 2004)
    • Betty Lynn, American actress

September[]

Elias Hrawi
Prince Claus
Masatoshi Koshiba
Donald A. Glaser
John Coltrane
Julie London
  • September 1
    • Stanley Cavell, American philosopher (d. 2018)
    • Abdur Rahman Biswas, 11th President of Bangladesh (d. 2017)
  • September 2
    • Armando Cossutta, Italian communist politician (d. 2015)
    • Ibrahim Nasir Rannabanderyi Kilegefan, Maldivian president (d. 2008)
  • September 3
    • Joseph P. Kolter, American politician (d. 2019)
    • Uttam Kumar, Bengali actor (d. 1980)
    • Irene Papas, Albanian-Greek actresses
    • Alison Lurie, American author and academic (d. 2020)
  • September 4
    • Elias Hrawi, 14th President of Lebanon (d. 2006)
    • Ivan Illich, Austrian philosopher and Catholic priest who founded the Centro Intercultural de Documentación in Cuernavaca, Mexico (d. 2002)[21]
    • Robert J. Lagomarsino, American politician (d. 2021)
  • September 5Mishaal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Saudi prince (d. 2017)
  • September 6
    • Claus van Amsberg, German born Prince Consort of the Netherlands (d. 2002)
    • Maurice Prather, American photographer (d. 2001)
  • September 7
    • Ronnie Gilbert, American folk singer and songwriter (d. 2015)
    • Don Messick, American voice actor (d. 1997)
    • Ivone Ramos, Cape Verdean writer (d. 2018)
  • September 8Sergio Pininfarina, Italian automobile designer (d. 2012)
  • September 9
    • Charles Duncan Jr., American entrepreneur and politician
    • Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Egyptian Islamic theologian
  • September 11Gerrit Viljoen, South African government minister (d. 2009)
  • September 13Emile Francis, Canadian ice hockey player and manager
  • September 14
    • Dick Dale, American singer and musician (d. 2014)
    • Carmen Franco, 1st Duchess of Franco, Spanish noble (d. 2017)
    • John F. Kurtzke, American neurologist (d. 2015)
  • September 15Jean-Pierre Serre, French mathematician
  • September 16
    • John Knowles, American author (d. 2001)
    • Bhichai Rattakul, Thai politician
    • Robert H. Schuller, American televangelist, motivational speaker and author (d. 2015)
  • September 17
    • Bill Black, American rock and roll musician and bandleader (d. 1965)
    • Andrea Kékesy, Hungarian figure skater
  • September 18Bob Toski, American golfer
  • September 19
    • Masatoshi Koshiba, Japanese physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2020)
    • James Lipton, American television personality and writer (d. 2020)
    • Duke Snider, American baseball player (d. 2011)
  • September 21
    • Carla Calò, Italian actress (d. 2019)
    • Donald A. Glaser, American physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2013)
    • Noor Jehan, Pakistani singer and actress (d. 2000)
  • September 22Bill Smith, American clarinet player and composer (d. 2020)
  • September 23
    • Aage Birch, Danish competitive sailor and Olympic medalist (d. 2017)
    • John Coltrane, American jazz saxophonist (d. 1967)
    • Heng Freylinger, Luxembourgian wrestler (d. 2017)
  • September 25
    • Carlos Chasseing, Argentine politician (d. 2018)
    • Charles J. Colgan, American politician and businessman (d. 2017)
    • John Ericson, German-American actor (d. 2020)
  • September 26
    • Tulsi Giri, former Prime Minister of Nepal (d. 2018)
    • Julie London, American actress and singer (d. 2000)
  • September 28
    • Jerry Clower, American country comedian (d. 1998)
    • Ozzie Van Brabant, Canadian baseball player (d. 2018)
  • September 29
    • Chuck Cooper, American basketball player (d. 1984)
    • Philip Ruppe, American politician
  • September 30
    • Dave Hunt, American apologist, speaker, radio commentator and author (d. 2013)
    • Frank O'Neill, Australian swimmer

October[]

Jean Peters
Julie Adams
Chuck Berry
Necmettin Erbakan
  • October 1Max Morath, American ragtime pianist
  • October 2
    • Jan Morris, born James Morris, British travel writer (d. 2020)
    • John Ross, Austrian-born American chemist (d. 2017)
  • October 4
    • Phar Lap, New Zealand-foaled racehorse (d. 1932)
    • Senaida Wirth, American female professional baseball player (d. 1967)
  • October 7
    • Marcello Abbado, Italian composer and pianist (d. 2020)
    • Uri Lubrani, Israeli diplomat and military official (d. 2018)
    • Czesław Ryll-Nardzewski, Polish mathematician (d. 2015)
  • October 8Carmencita Lara, Peruvian singer (d. 2018)
  • October 9Ruth Ellis, British murderess (d. 1955)
  • October 10Richard Jaeckel, American actor (d. 1997)
  • October 11
    • Yvon Dupuis, Canadian politician (d. 2017)
    • Thích Nhất Hạnh, Vietnamese Thiền Buddhist monk and peace activist[22][23])
    • Zohurul Hoque, Indian Islamic scholar (d. 2017)
    • Earle Hyman, American film and television actor (d. 2017)
    • Shin Sang-ok, South Korean film producer and director (d. 2006)
  • October 12
  • October 13
    • Jesse L. Brown, first African-American aviator in the United States Navy (d. 1950)
    • Kazuo Nakamura, Japanese-Canadian painter, part of the Painters Eleven (d. 2002)
  • October 15
    • Michel Foucault, French philosopher (d. 1984)
    • Jeffrey Hayden, American television director and producer (d. 2016)
    • Jean Peters, American actress (d. 2000)
    • Karl Richter, German conductor (d. 1981)
  • October 16
    • Charles Dolan, American billionaire
    • Mikhail Soldatov, Soviet KGB officer (d. 1997)
  • October 17
    • Julie Adams, American actress (d. 2019)
    • Beverly Garland, American actress and businesswoman (d. 2008)
  • October 18
    • Chuck Berry, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 2017)
    • Klaus Kinski, German actor (d. 1991)
    • Pauline Pirok, American female professional baseball player (d. 2020)
  • October 19Marjorie Tallchief, American ballerina
  • October 20Vsevolod Murakhovsky, Ukrainian-Russian politician (d. 2017)
  • October 21
    • Waldir Pires, Brazilian politician (d. 2018)
    • Bob Rosburg, American golfer (d. 2009)
  • October 22Chan Sui-kau, Hong Kong industrialist and philanthropist (d. 2018)
  • October 25
    • María Concepción César, Argentine actress, singer and vedette (d. 2018)
    • Jimmy Heath, American saxophonist and composer (d. 2020)
    • Biff McGuire, American actor
    • Galina Vishnevskaya, Russian soprano (d. 2012)
  • October 27Henri Fertet, French Resistance fighter (d. 1943)[24]
  • October 28Bowie Kuhn, American Commissioner of Baseball (d. 2007)
  • October 29
    • Necmettin Erbakan, 25th Prime Minister of Turkey (d. 2011)
    • Jon Vickers, Canadian operatic tenor (d. 2015)

November[]

Betsy Palmer
Valdas Adamkus
Joan Sutherland
Jeffrey Hunter
Beji Caid Essebsi
  • November 1Betsy Palmer, American actress (d. 2015)
  • November 2
    • Myer Skoog, American basketball player (d. 2019)
    • Charlie Walker, American country music singer-songwriter (d. 2008)
  • November 3Valdas Adamkus, Lithuanian politician, 3rd President of Lithuania
  • November 4
    • Carmen A. Orechio, American politician (d. 2018)
    • Laurence Rosenthal, American composer
  • November 5
    • John Berger, English art critic, novelist and painter (d. 2017)
    • Kim Jong-gil, South Korean poet (d. 2017)
  • November 7 – Dame Joan Sutherland, Australian soprano (d. 2010)
  • November 8
    • Sonja Bata, Swiss businesswoman and philanthropist (d. 2018)
    • Darleane C. Hoffman, American nuclear chemist
    • Jack Mendelsohn, American writer-artist (d. 2017)
  • November 9Stu Griffing, American Olympic rower
  • November 11
  • November 15Helmut Fischer, German actor (d. 1997)
  • November 16
    • Amy Applegren, American professional baseball player (d. 2011)
    • Ton de Leeuw, Dutch composer (d. 1996)
  • November 17Christopher Weeramantry, Sri Lankan lawyer (d. 2017)
  • November 19Jeane Kirkpatrick, American ambassador (d. 2006)
  • November 20
    • Choi Eun-hee, South Korean actress (d. 2018)
    • John Gardner, English spy novelist (d. 2007)
    • Judith Magre, French actress
  • November 23
    • Sathya Sai Baba, Indian spiritual leader (d. 2011)
    • R. L. Burnside, American musician (d. 2005)
    • Vann Molyvann, Cambodian architect (d. 2017)
  • November 24Tsung-Dao Lee, Chinese physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • November 25
    • Ivano Fontana, Italian boxer (d. 1993)
    • Jeffrey Hunter, American actor (d. 1969)
    • Terry Kilburn, American actor
    • Peter Wright, English ballet teacher, director and choreographer
    • Poul Anderson, American science fiction author (d. 2001)
  • November 26
    • Peter van Pels, German-Dutch love interest of Anne Frank (d. 1945)
    • Rabi Ray, Indian politician (d. 2017)
  • November 28Umberto Veronesi, Italian oncologist and politician (d. 2016)
  • November 29Beji Caid Essebsi, Tunisian politician, 5th President and 18th Prime Minister of Tunisia (d. 2019)
  • November 30
    • Richard Crenna, American actor (d. 2003)
    • Teresa Gisbert Carbonell, Bolivian architect and art historian (d. 2018)
    • Andrew Schally, Polish-born American endocrinologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

December[]

Joe Paterno
Alcides Ghiggia
  • December 1
    • Allyn Ann McLerie, Canadian-American actress and dancer (d. 2018)
    • Kitty Hart-Moxon, Polish-English nurse and Holocaust survivor
    • Antonio Lamela, Spanish architect
  • December 5Adetowun Ogunsheye, Nigerian academic and educator
  • December 7William John McNaughton, American bishop (d. 2020)
  • December 8Ralph Puckett, American army commander
  • December 9
    • Raif Dizdarević, Bosnian politician
    • Erhard Eppler, German politician (d. 2019)
    • Henry Way Kendall, American physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1999)
    • Lorenzo Wright, American athlete (d. 1972)[25]
  • December 10
    • Leon Kossoff, English painter and illustrator (d. 2019)
    • Guitar Slim, American New Orleans blues guitarist (d. 1959)
    • Giorgos Ioannou, Greek artist (d. 2017)
  • December 13
    • Carl Erskine, American baseball player
    • George Rhoden, Jamaican athlete
  • December 14María Elena Marqués, Mexican actress (d. 2008)
  • December 15
    • Nikos Koundouros, Greek film director (d. 2017)
    • Emmanuel Wamala, Ugandan cardinal
  • December 16
    • James McCracken, American tenor (d. 1988)
    • A. N. R. Robinson, 3rd President and 3rd Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago (d. 2014)
  • December 17Patrice Wymore, American actress (d. 2014)
  • December 19Herbert Stempel, American game show contestant (d. 2020)
  • December 20
    • Geoffrey Howe, British politician (d. 2015)
    • Otto Graf Lambsdorff, German politician (d. 2009)
    • David Levine, U.S. caricaturist (d. 2009)
  • December 21
    • Elisabeth Elliot, American Christian author and speaker (d. 2015)
    • Joe Paterno, American football player and coach (d. 2012)
  • December 22Alcides Ghiggia, Uruguayan footballer (d. 2015)
  • December 23
    • Robert Bly, American poet
    • Jorge Medina Estévez, Chilean cardinal
    • Metakse, Armenian poet, writer, translator and public activist (d. 2014)
  • December 24
    • Ronald Draper, South African cricketer
    • Maria Janion, Polish scholar, critic and politician (d. 2020)
  • December 26Gina Pellón, Cuban painter (d. 2014)
  • December 29Amelita Ramos, First Lady of the Philippines
  • December 31Billy Snedden, Australian politician (d. 1987)

Deaths[]

January–March[]

Camillo Golgi
Kato Takaaki
Jan Cieplak
Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
  • January 4Margherita of Savoy, Queen consort of Italy (b. 1851)
  • January 6John Bowers, British Anglican bishop (b. 1854)
  • January 12Sir Austin Chapman, Australian politician (b. 1864)
  • January 15
    • Giambattista De Curtis, Italian painter (b. 1860)
    • Louis Majorelle, French furniture designer (b. 1859)
    • Enrico Toselli, Italian pianist and composer (b. 1883)
  • January 21
    • Marie C. Brehm, American suffragette
    • Camillo Golgi, Italian physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1843)
  • January 23Désiré-Joseph Mercier, Belgian Catholic cardinal and philosopher (b. 1851)
  • January 26
    • Bucura Dumbravă, Hungarian-born Romanian novelist, promoter, hiker and Theosophist (b. 1868)
    • John Flannagan, American Roman Catholic priest (b. 1860)
    • Joseph Sarsfield Glass, American Roman Catholic prelate (b. 1874)
  • January 28
    • Katō Takaaki, Japanese politician, 24th Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1860)
    • Sir Ernest Troubridge, British admiral (b. 1862)
  • January 30Barbara La Marr, American film actress (b. 1896)
  • February 1Theodosius of Skopje, Bulgaria Orthodox religious leader and saint (b. 1846)
  • February 5Gustav Eberlein, German sculptor, painter and writer (b. 1847)
  • February 6Carrie Clark Ward, American stage and film character actress (b. 1862)
  • February 8William Bateson, British geneticist (b. 1861)
  • February 10Aqif Pasha Elbasani, Albanian political figure (b. 1860)
  • February 12Art Smith, American pilot (b. 1890)
  • February 13Francis Ysidro Edgeworth, Anglo-Irish philosopher and political economist (b. 1845)
  • February 14John Jacob Bausch, German-born American optician, co-founder of Bausch & Lomb (b. 1830)
  • February 17Jan Cieplak, Polish Roman Catholic priest, bishop and servant of God (b. 1857)
  • February 21Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, Dutch physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1853)
  • February 24Eddie Plank, American baseball player and MLB Hall of Famer (b. 1875)
  • March 3Eugenia Mantelli, Italian opera singer (b. 1860)
  • March 4 – Patriarch Macarius II (b. 1835)
  • March 9Usui Mikao, Japanese founder of Reiki (b. 1865)
  • March 10Belle C. Greene, American writer (b. 1842)
  • March 11Maibelle Heikes Justice, American novelist and screenwriter (b. 1871)
  • March 12E. W. Scripps, American newspaper publisher (b. 1854)
  • March 16Sergeant Stubby, World War I American hero war dog (b. 1916)
  • March 17Aleksei Brusilov, Russian general (b. 1853)
  • March 19Friedrich Brodersen, German opera singer (b. 1873)
  • March 20
    • Krishna Govinda Gupta, Indian statesman, member of Indian Civil Service (b. 1851)
    • Louise of Sweden, Queen consort of Denmark (b. 1851)
  • March 24
    • Sizzo, Prince of Schwarzburg (b. 1860)
    • Albion Woodbury Small, American sociologist (b. 1854)
  • March 26Constantin Fehrenbach, German politician and 13th Chancellor of Germany (b. 1852)
  • March 28Prince Philippe, Duke of Orleans (b. 1869)
  • March 29Charles Williamson Crook, British teacher, trade unionist and politician (b. 1862)

April–June[]

Emperor Sunjong
Sultan Mehmed VI
Mary Cassatt
  • April 1Jacob Pavlovich Adler, Russian actor (b. 1855)
  • April 4Thomas Burberry, English businessman and inventor (b. 1835)
  • April 7Giovanni Amendola, Italian journalist and politician (b. 1882)
  • April 9Henry Miller, British-born American stage actor and producer (b. 1859)
  • April 10Ōshima Yoshimasa, Japanese general (b. 1850)
  • April 11Luther Burbank, American biologist, botanist and agricultural scientist (b. 1849)
  • April 14Otto Stark, American painter (b. 1859)
  • April 17Antonio Adolfo Pérez y Aguilar, Salvadorian Roman Catholic archbishop (b. 1839)
  • April 19Alexander Alexandrovich Chuprov, Soviet statistician (b. 1874)
  • April 20Billy Quirk, American actor (b. 1873)
  • April 22Federico Gana, Chilean writer and diplomat (b. 1867)
  • April 24Sunjong, last Emperor of Korea (b. 1874)
  • April 25Ellen Key, Swedish feminist writer (b. 1849)
  • April 26Jeffreys Lewis, English-born stage actress (b. 1852)
  • April 28Kawamura Kageaki, Japanese field marshal (b. 1850)
  • April 30Bessie Coleman, American pilot (b. 1892)
  • May 3Victor, Prince Napoleon (b. 1849)
  • May 7Lillian Lawrence, American actress (b. 1868)
  • May 9J. M. Dent, British publisher (b. 1849)
  • May 10
    • Aleksei Evert, Russian general (b. 1857; may have been executed in 1918)
    • Alton B. Parker, American judge and political candidate (b. 1852)
    • Giacinto Menotti Serrati, Italian politician (b. 1874)
  • May 16Mehmed VI, Ottoman Sultan (b. 1861)
  • May 18Count Nikolaus Szécsen von Temerin (b. 1857)
  • May 22Tomás Arejola, Filipino lawyer, legislator, diplomat and writer (b. 1865)
  • May 26
    • Frank Nelson Cole, American mathematician (b. 1861)
    • Symon Petliura, Ukrainian independence fighter (b. 1879)
  • May 27Michele Comella, Italian painter (b. 1856)
  • June 4Fred Spofforth, Australian cricketer (b. 1853)
  • June 8
    • Emily Hobhouse, British welfare campaigner (b. 1860)
    • Mariam Thresia Chiramel, Indian Catholic professed religious and stigmatist (b. 1876)
  • June 9Sanford B. Dole, President of Hawaii and 1st Territorial Governor of Hawaii (b. 1844)
  • June 10Antoni Gaudí, Spanish architect (b. 1852)
  • June 13Nikolay Chkheidze, Soviet politician (b. 1864)
  • June 14
    • Mary Cassatt, American painter and printmaker (b. 1844)
    • Windham Wyndham-Quin, 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, Anglo-Irish politician (b. 1841)
  • June 18Olga Constantinovna of Russia (b. 1851)
  • June 23Jón Magnússon, Icelandic politician, 1st Prime Minister of Iceland (b. 1857)

July–September[]

Mother Mary Alphonsa
King Ugyen Wangchuck
Rudolph Valentino
  • July 1Carlo Luigi Spegazzini, Italian-born Argentine botanist and mycologist (b. 1858)
  • July 2
  • July 9Mother Mary Alphonsa, American Roman Catholic religious sister, social worker, foundress and venerable (b. 1851)
  • July 12
    • Gertrude Bell, British archaeologist, writer, spy and administrator; known as the "Uncrowned Queen of Iraq" (b. 1868)
    • John W. Weeks, American politician in the Republican Party (b. 1860)
  • July 14Roshanara, Anglo-Indian dancer (b. 1894)
  • July 17Bernard Coyne, Irish Roman Catholic clergyman (b. 1854)
  • July 18Tiburcio Arnáiz Muñoz, Spanish Roman Catholic priest and venerable (b. 1865)
  • July 22
    • Willard Louis, American actor (b. 1882)
    • Friedrich von Wieser, Austrian economist (b. 1851)
  • July 23
    • Charles Avery, American actor, director and screenwriter (b. 1873)
    • Fumiko Kaneko, Japanese anarchist and nihilist (b. 1903)
  • July 26
    • Ella Adayevskaya, Soviet composer (b. 1846)
    • Philippe Sudré Dartiguenave, Haitian political figure, 25th President of Haiti (b. 1863)
    • Robert Todd Lincoln, American statesman and businessman, son of 16th President Abraham Lincoln (b. 1843)
  • July 30Albert B. Cummins, American lawyer and politician (b. 1850)
  • July 31Bronislav Grombchevsky, Soviet army and explorer (b. 1855)
  • August 1Israel Zangwill, British novelist and playwright (b. 1864)
  • August 6Constantin Climescu, Romanian mathematician and politician (b. 1844)
  • August 14John H. Moffitt, American politician (b. 1843)
  • August 21Ugyen Wangchuck, King of Bhutan (b. 1861)
  • August 22
    • Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard University (b. 1834)
    • Joe Moore, American actor (b. 1894)
  • August 23Rudolph Valentino, Italian actor (b. 1895)
  • August 27John Rodgers, American naval officer and naval aviation pioneer (b. 1881)
  • August 30Eddie Lyons, American actor (b. 1886)
  • September – Rashid Tali’a, 1st Prime Minister of Transjordan (b. 1877)
  • September 15
    • Alexander Boyter, American stonemason (b. 1848)
    • Rudolf Christoph Eucken, German writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1846)
  • September 21Léon Charles Thévenin, French telegraph engineer (b. 1857)
  • September 25Herbert Booth, English Salvationist, third son of William and Catherine Booth (b. 1862)
  • September 26José María Orellana, Guatemalan political and military leader, 14th President of Guatemala (b. 1872)

October–December[]

Harry Houdini
Annie Oakley
Claude Monet
  • October 7Emil Kraepelin, German psychiatrist (b. 1856)
  • October 9
    • Vaso Abashidze, Georgian actor (b. 1854)
    • Sir Arthur Dyke Acland, 13th Baronet, British politician (b. 1847)
    • Josias von Heeringen, German general (b. 1850)
  • October 11
    • Hymie Weiss, American gangster (b. 1898)
  • October 12
    • Edwin Abbott Abbott, English author and theologian (b. 1838)
    • Paul Puhallo von Brlog, Croatian Austro-Hungarian general (b. 1856)
  • October 16Princess Frederica of Hanover (b. 1848)
  • October 19
    • Victor Babeș, Romanian bacteriologist (b. 1854)
    • Ludvig Karsten, German painter (b. 1876)
  • October 20Eugene V. Debs, American labor and political leader (b. 1855)
  • October 24
    • Salomon Ehrmann, Czech-born Austrian dermatologist and histologist (b. 1854)
    • Charles Marion Russell, American artist (b. 1864)
  • October 31
    • Harry Houdini, Hungarian-born American escapologist (b. 1874)
    • Charles Vance Millar, Canadian businessman (b. 1853)
  • November 3Annie Oakley, American sharpshooter and entertainer (b. 1860)
  • November 6Carl Swartz, Swedish politician, 14th Prime Minister of Sweden (b. 1858)
  • November 7Tom Forman, American actor and director (b. 1893)
  • November 10Lyubov Dostoyevskaya, Russian writer (b. 1869)
  • November 19Thomas Cusack, American entrepreneur, pioneer and politician (b. 1858)
  • November 21Joseph McKenna, American politician and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court (b. 1843)
  • November 26John Browning, American firearms inventor (b. 1855)
  • December 2Gérard Cooreman, Belgian politician, 21st Prime Minister of Belgium (b. 1852)
  • December 3Siegfried Jacobsohn, German writer and critic (b. 1881)
  • December 4Ivana Kobilca, Slovenian painter (b. 1861)
  • December 5Claude Monet, French painter (b. 1840)
  • December 10Nikola Pašić, Serbian and Yugoslav statesman, 33rd Prime Minister of Serbia and 4th Prime Minister of Yugoslavia (b. 1855)
  • December 16William Larned, American tennis champion (b. 1872)
  • December 17Lars Magnus Ericsson, Swedish inventor and founder of Ericsson (b. 1846)
  • December 20Narcisa Freixas, Spanish painter and sculptor (b. 1859)
  • December 22Mina Arndt, New Zealand painter (b. 1885)
  • December 24Johan Castberg, Norwegian Radical politician (b. 1862)
  • December 25
    • Oleksander Barvinsky, Ukrainian politician (b. 1847)
    • Emperor Taishō, Emperor of Japan, one of the leaders of World War I (b. 1879)
  • December 27Amalia Riégo, Swedish opera singer (b. 1850)
  • December 28Robert William Felkin, British-born medical missionary, explorer, anthropologist and occultist (b. 1853)
  • December 29Rainer Maria Rilke, Austrian poet (b. 1875)
  • December 30Felice Napoleone Canevaro, Italian admiral (b. 1838)

Undated[]

  • Elisabeth Cavazza, American author, journalist, and music critic (b. 1849)
  • Dimitrios Ioannou, Greek general (b. 1861)
  • Lillie Eginton Warren, American speech educator (b. 1859)

Nobel Prizes[]

Nobel medal.png
  • PhysicsJean Baptiste Perrin
  • ChemistryTheodor Svedberg
  • Physiology or MedicineJohannes Andreas Grib Fibiger[26]
  • LiteratureGrazia Deledda
  • PeaceAristide Briand, Gustav Stresemann

References[]

  1. ^ "Floods Drive 50,000 out of Homes on Rhine". Chicago Daily Tribune. January 2, 1926. p. 5.
  2. ^ "The BBC Radio Panic, 1926". Museum of Hoaxes. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  3. ^ "Pangalos Named Greek President in Poll Farce". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 5, 1926. p. 16.
  4. ^ "U.S. Senate: The Election Case of Daniel F. Steck v. Smith W. Brookhart of Iowa (1926)". www.senate.gov. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  5. ^ Dailey, Charles (April 18, 1926). "Chang's Son, at Head of Troops, Invades Peking". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 13.
  6. ^ Thompson, Andrea (April 15, 2013). "Did Admiral Byrd Fly Over The North Pole Or Not?". LiveScience. Purch. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  7. ^ "May 9, 1926: Byrd flies over the North Pole?". This Day in History. A&E Television Networks. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  8. ^ "San Siro". AC Milan. 2016. Archived from the original on February 25, 2019. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  9. ^ Mercer, Derrik (1989). Chronicle of the 20th Century. London, UK: Chronicle Communications Ltd. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-582-03919-3.
  10. ^ Russo, Gus (2001). The Outfit: The Role of Chicago's Underworld in the Shaping of Modern America. New York: Bloomsbury. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-59691-897-9.
  11. ^ Stewart, Mark (2010). The Detroit Red Wings. Chicago, IL: Norwood House Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-1599534015.
  12. ^ "1,200 Killed as Shells Explode on Burning Ship". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 17, 1926. p. 20.
  13. ^ "Nicaragua (1909-present)". University of Central Arkansas. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  14. ^ "U.S. Troops Take 2 Nicaraguan Ports". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 24, 1926. p. 1.
  15. ^ Group, Global Media (May 22, 2018). "Morreu Júlio Pomar". JN (in Portuguese). Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  16. ^ "CRAIG DIXON Obituary (1926-2021)". Los Angeles Times.
  17. ^ "Virgil I. Grissom | American astronaut". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  18. ^ "Why does the Queen have two birthdays? - CBBC Newsround". BBC. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
  19. ^ Commire, Anne (1999). Women of World History. 1. Detroit: Gale. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-7876-4080-4.
  20. ^ Grinstein, Louise S.; Campbell, Paul J. (1987). Women of Mathematics : a Biobibliographic Sourcebook. New York: Greenwood Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-3132-4849-8.
  21. ^ "Ivan Illich". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  22. ^ Ford, James Ishmael (2006). Zen Master Who?: A Guide to the People and Stories of Zen. Wisdom Publications. p. 90. ISBN 0-86171-509-8.
  23. ^ Taylor, Philip (2007). Modernity and Re-enchantment: Religion in Post-revolutionary Vietnam. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. p. 299. ISBN 9789812304407. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  24. ^ "Henri Fertet". Musée de l'Ordre de la Libération (in French). Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  25. ^ "Lorenzo Wright Bio, Stats, and Results | Olympics at Sports-Reference.com". April 18, 2020. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020.
  26. ^ "These Nobel Prize Winners Weren't Always Noble". National Geographic News. October 6, 2015. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
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