1943

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Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 19th century
  • 20th century
  • 21st century
Decades:
  • 1920s
  • 1930s
  • 1940s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
Years:
  • 1940
  • 1941
  • 1942
  • 1943
  • 1944
  • 1945
  • 1946
1943 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1943
MCMXLIII
Ab urbe condita2696
Armenian calendar1392
ԹՎ ՌՅՂԲ
Assyrian calendar6693
Bahá'í calendar99–100
Balinese saka calendar1864–1865
Bengali calendar1350
Berber calendar2893
British Regnal yearGeo. 6 – 8 Geo. 6
Buddhist calendar2487
Burmese calendar1305
Byzantine calendar7451–7452
Chinese calendar壬午(Water Horse)
4639 or 4579
    — to —
癸未年 (Water Goat)
4640 or 4580
Coptic calendar1659–1660
Discordian calendar3109
Ethiopian calendar1935–1936
Hebrew calendar5703–5704
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1999–2000
 - Shaka Samvat1864–1865
 - Kali Yuga5043–5044
Holocene calendar11943
Igbo calendar943–944
Iranian calendar1321–1322
Islamic calendar1361–1363
Japanese calendarShōwa 18
(昭和18年)
Javanese calendar1873–1874
Juche calendar32
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4276
Minguo calendarROC 32
民國32年
Nanakshahi calendar475
Thai solar calendar2486
Tibetan calendar阳水马年
(male Water-Horse)
2069 or 1688 or 916
    — to —
阴水羊年
(female Water-Goat)
2070 or 1689 or 917

1943 (MCMXLIII) was a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar, the 1943rd year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 943rd year of the 2nd millennium, the 43rd year of the 20th century, and the 4th year of the 1940s decade.

Events[]

Below, the events of World War II have the "WWII" prefix.

January[]

  • January 1 – WWII: The Soviet Union announces that 22 German divisions have been encircled at Stalingrad, with 175,000 killed and 137,650 captured.
  • January 4 – WWII: Greek-Polish athlete and saboteur Jerzy Iwanow-Szajnowicz is executed by the Germans at Kaisariani.
  • January 11
    • The United States and United Kingdom revise previously unequal treaty relationships with the Republic of China.
    • Italian-American anarchist Carlo Tresca is assassinated in New York City.
  • January 13 – Anti-Nazi protests in Sofia result in 200 arrests and 36 executions.
  • January 1424 – WWII: Casablanca Conference: Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States; Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom; and Generals Charles de Gaulle and Henri Giraud of the Free French forces meet secretly at the Anfa Hotel in Casablanca, Morocco, to plan the Allied European strategy for the next stage of the war.
  • January 15
    • WWII: Guadalcanal CampaignOperation Ke: Japanese forces begin to withdraw from Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands.
    • The world's largest office building, The Pentagon, headquarters of the United States Department of War, is dedicated in Arlington, Virginia.
  • January 16Iraq declares war on the Axis powers.
  • January 18
    • WWII: Soviet officials announce that the Red Army has broken the Wehrmacht's siege of Leningrad as part of Operation Iskra, opening a narrow land corridor to the city. Georgy Zhukov is promoted to Marshal of the Soviet Union.
    • The first Warsaw Ghetto Uprising begins: several days engagement with the Germans limits the number of Jews deported at this time.
  • January 21 – WWII: Pan Am Flight 1104Pan American Airways Martin M-130 flying boat crashes about 7 mi (11 km) southwest of Ukiah, California. All 10 passengers and 9 crew aboard are killed, including Admiral Robert H. English (at this time COMSUBPAC).
  • January 22
    • WWII: Battle of Buna–Gona: American and Australian forces secure control of the territory of Papua.
    • The Holocaust: Round up of Marseille begins – Over 4,000 Jews are detained in Nazi-occupied Marseille as part of "Action Tiger", before being transported to extermination camps in Poland.
  • January 23
    • WWII: British forces capture Tripoli from the Italians.
    • Duke Ellington plays at New York City's Carnegie Hall for the first time.
    • American critic and commentator Alexander Woollcott suffers an eventually fatal heart attack, during a regular broadcast of the CBS Radio round-table program People's Platform.
  • January 27 – WWII: 50 bombers mount the first all American air raid against Germany: Wilhelmshaven is the target.
  • January 29
  • January 2930 – WWII: Battle of Rennell Island – The Imperial Japanese Navy resists the United States Navy's attempt to interrupt the withdrawal of Japanese forces from Guadalcanal, in the last major naval battle of the Guadalcanal Campaign.
  • January 2931 – WWII: Battle of Wau – Australian forces, with United States support, resist a Japanese advance in the New Guinea campaign.
  • January 30 – WWII: German General Friedrich Paulus is promoted to the rank of Field Marshal and instructed to fight to the death in Stalingrad, while Karl Dönitz is promoted to Commander in Chief of the German Navy, replacing Erich Raeder.[1]

February[]

  • February 2 – WWII: In Russia, the Battle of Stalingrad comes to an end, with the surrender of the German 6th Army.
  • February 3 – WWII: The Four Chaplains of the U.S. Army are among those drowned when their ship, Dorchester, is struck by a German torpedo in the North Atlantic.
  • February 5 – Lt. General Frank M. Andrews is selected to command the U.S. armies in Europe, while General Dwight D. Eisenhower is assigned command in North Africa. Andrews will serve only 3 months, before dying in an airplane crash.
  • February 6 – WWII: RCN corvette HMCS Louisburg is bombed and sunk off Oran, Algeria by Italian aircraft.
  • February 7 – WWII:
    • North Atlantic convoy SC 118 is attacked by U-boats, who sink 8 ships.[2]
    • In the United States, it is announced that shoe rationing will go into effect in two days.
  • February 9
    • WWII: The Guadalcanal Campaign in the Solomon Islands ends with United States forces in command of Guadalcanal, the evacuation of Japanese forces in Operation Ke having been completed two days earlier.
    • WWII: Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army begin, with the Parośla I massacre within the Reichskommissariat Ukraine.
    • The Holocaust: Rue Sainte-Catherine Roundup – The Gestapo, directed by Klaus Barbie, arrest 86 Jews in Lyon.
  • February 10March 3Mohandas Gandhi (under arrest by forces of the British Raj in Pune as a member of the Quit India Movement) keeps a hunger strike to protest his imprisonment.
  • February 14 – WWII: Rostov-on-Don in Russia is liberated.
  • February 1417 – WWII: Battle of Sidi Bou Zid: In the Tunisia Campaign, German Panzer divisions commanded by Hans-Jürgen von Arnim are victorious over the United States Army.
  • February 16 – WWII: The Soviet Union reconquers Kharkov, but is later driven out in the Third Battle of Kharkov.
  • February 18
    • In a Sportpalast speech in Berlin, German Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels declares a "total war" against the Allies, tacitly admitting that Nazi Germany faces serious dangers.
    • The Nazis arrest the members of the White Rose German Resistance movement.
  • February 1924 – WWII: Battle of Kasserine Pass: German General Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps and other Axis forces launch an offensive against Allied defenses in Tunisia; it is the United States' first major battle defeat of the war. On February 22, an Anglo-American force halts the German advance near Thala, forcing the Germans to retreat, US bombers harass the retreating Panzers.
  • February 20
    • American movie studio executives agree to allow the Office of War Information to censor movies.
    • The Parícutin volcano begins to appear in a cornfield in Mexico.[3][4][5]
  • February 21 – WWII: North Atlantic convoy ON 166 is attacked by U-boats, who sink eleven ships.[6]
  • February 22
    • WWII: RCN corvette HMCS Weyburn sinks east of Gibraltar, after being mined.
    • Members of the White Rose are executed in Nazi Germany.
  • February 2324Cavan Orphanage Fire: 35 girls and a cook from St Joseph's Orphanage, an industrial school at Cavan, Ireland, are killed in a fire in their dormitories. A subsequent inquiry absolves the Poor Clares of blame.
  • February 27Smith Mine disaster: An explosion at Smith Mine #3 in Bearcreek, Montana, United States kills 74 coal miners.
  • February 28Operation Gunnerside: 6 Norwegians, led by Joachim Rønneberg, successfully attack the heavy water plant at Vemork.

March[]

A low level attack on a Japanese ship during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea
Jewish prisoners being deported from the Kraków Ghetto
  • March – Exiled French aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's self-illustrated children's novella, The Little Prince, is published in New York City, the all-time best-selling book originating in French.
  • MarchDecemberHistory of computing hardware: British prototype Mark I Colossus computer is constructed (the world's first totally electronic programmable computing device) to assist in cryptanalysis of German signals at Bletchley Park.[7]
  • March 1Heinz Guderian becomes Inspector-General of the Armoured Troops for the German Army.
  • March 12 – WWII: Koriukivka massacre – 6,700 inhabitants of Koriukivka are murdered in the Ukraine, by a German SS unit.
  • March 2 – WWII: Battle of the Bismarck Sea – United States and Australian forces sink Japanese convoy ships, then strafe survivors in the water.[8]
  • March 3 – 173 people are killed in a crush, while trying to enter an air-raid shelter at Bethnal Green, London.
  • March 4 – The 15th Academy Awards ceremony is held in Los Angeles. Mrs. Miniver wins the Best Picture Award.
  • March 46 – WWII: Battle of Fardykambos – Greek partisans and armed civilians force the surrender of an Italian army battalion.
  • March 5 – The Gloster Meteor, the first Allied jet fighter, makes its first flight, in England.
  • March 910 – WWII: North Atlantic convoy SC 121 is attacked by U-boats sinking seven ships.[9]
  • March 9Şükrü Saracoğlu forms the new government of Turkey (14th government; Şükrü Saracoğlu had served twice as a prime minister).
  • March 10Banco Bradesco is founded in Marília, São Paulo, Brazil.
  • March 12 – WWII: Italian occupation of Greece: The Italian occupying forces abandon the town of Karditsa to the partisans. On the same day, an Italian motorized column razes the village of Tsaritsani, burning 360 of its 600 houses and shooting 40 civilians.
  • March 13The Holocaust: Nazi German forces liquidate the Jews of the Kraków Ghetto, in Occupied Poland.
  • March 14 – WWII: British submarine HMS Thunderbolt is sunk off Sicily by an Italian corvette, the second time this vessel has been lost with all hands.[10][11]
  • March 15 – WWII:
    • Italian submarine Leonardo da Vinci sinks Canadian Pacific liner RMS Empress of Canada off Sierra Leone. Nearly half of the 392 fatalities are Italian prisoners of war.
    • German forces recapture Kharkov after four days of house-to-house fighting against Soviet troops, ending the month-long Third Battle of Kharkov.
  • March 1619 – WWII: 22 ships from Convoys HX 229/SC 122 and one U-boat are sunk, in the largest North Atlantic U-boat "wolfpack" attack of the war.
  • March 17 (Saint Patrick's Day) – Éamon de Valera, Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland, makes the speech "The Ireland That We Dreamed Of", commonly called the "comely maidens" speech, in Dublin Castle.
  • March 22 – WWII: Khatyn massacre – The entire population of Khatyn, Belarus is burnt alive by German occupation forces.
  • March 23 – The drugs Vicodin and Lortab are first produced in Germany.
  • March 26 – WWII: Battle of the Komandorski Islands: In the Aleutian Islands, the battle begins when United States Navy forces intercept Japanese troops attempting to reinforce a garrison at Kiska.
  • March 27 – WWII: British Royal Navy escort carrier HMS Dasher (D37) is destroyed by an accidental explosion in the Firth of Clyde, killing 379 of the crew of 528.
  • March 28 – In Italy a ship full of weapons and ammunition explodes in the port of Naples, killing 600.
  • March 31Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma! opens on Broadway, heralds a new era in "integrated" stage musicals, becomes an instantaneous stage classic and goes on to be Broadway's longest-running musical up to this time (1948).

April[]

  • April 3 – Shipwrecked steward Poon Lim is rescued by Brazilian fishermen after being adrift for 130 days.
  • April 13 – WWII: Radio Berlin announces the discovery by Wehrmacht of mass graves of Poles killed by Soviets in the Katyn massacre.
  • April 19
    • History of lysergic acid diethylamide: Albert Hofmann self-administers the psychedelic drug LSD (which he first synthesized in 1938) for the first time in history and records the details of his experience.[12]
    • The Holocaust: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising begins when Nazi troops enter the Warsaw Ghetto to round up remaining Jews.
  • April 21 – WWII:
    • Aberdeen, Scotland, experiences its worst bombing, with 125 people killed.[13]
    • The first German Tiger I tank is captured in North Africa by British forces.
  • April 25Easter occurs on the latest possible date (last time 1886; next time 2038) in the Western Christian Church.
  • April 27 – The U.S. Federal Writers' Project ceases operation.

May[]

This photograph, from the Stroop Report, shows captured fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
The Möhne Dam breached following Operation Chastise, carried out by the "Dambusters" of the RAF.
  • May 6 – WWII: Six U-boats are sunk, after sinking 12 ships from Convoy ONS 5, in the last major North Atlantic U-boat "wolfpack" attack of the war.
  • May 912 – Japanese troops carry out the Changjiao massacre in Changjiao, Hunan, China.
  • May 11 – WWII: American troops invade Attu in the Aleutian Islands, in an attempt to expel occupying Japanese forces.
  • May 12 – The Third Washington Conference ("Trident") begins in Washington, D.C., with Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill taking part.
  • May 13 – WWII: German Afrika Korps and Italian troops in North Africa surrender to Allied forces.
  • May 14
    • Australian Hospital Ship Centaur is sunk off the coast of Queensland by Japanese submarine  I-177, killing 268 of the 332 medical personnel and civilian crew aboard.
    • The 358th Bombardment Squadron, 303d Bombardment Group B-17F Hell's Angels is the first USAAF bomber to complete 25 missions.
  • May 15 – The Comintern is dissolved in Moscow.
  • May 1617 – WWII: Operation Chastise (the 'Dambuster Raid') takes place: No. 617 Squadron RAF use bouncing bombs to breach German dams in the Ruhr Valley.
  • May 16Holocaust: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising ends. 13,000 Jews have been killed in the ghetto and almost all the remaining 50,000 residents are deported to Majdanek and Treblinka extermination camps.
  • May 17 – WWII:
    • The United States Army contracts with the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School to develop the computer ENIAC.
    • The Memphis Belle's crew becomes the first aircrew in the 8th Air Force to complete its 25-mission tour of duty. The aircraft and crew are the first to return to the U.S. intact for a War Bond drive.
  • May 19Winston Churchill addresses a joint session of the United States Congress.
  • May 23 – WWII: The battleship USS New Jersey (BB-62) is commissioned at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
  • May 27 – The port city of Maizuru is founded in Japan.
  • May 29Norman Rockwell's illustration of 'Rosie the Riveter' first appears, on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post.
  • May 30The Holocaust: Dr. Josef Mengele begins his position as a medical officer in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.

June[]

  • June 1BOAC Flight 777, a scheduled passenger flight, is shot down over the Bay of Biscay by German Junkers Ju 88s; all 17 persons aboard perish, including actor Leslie Howard.
  • June 3
    • The Zoot Suit Riots erupt between military personnel and Mexican-American youths in East Los Angeles.[14]
    • The French Committee of National Liberation (Comité Français de Libération Nationale, CFLN) is formed with headquarters in Algiers and Generals Charles de Gaulle and Henri Giraud as co-presidents.
  • June 4 – A military coup d'état in Argentina ousts Ramón Castillo.
  • June 8 – WWII: Japanese battleship Mutsu is destroyed by an accidental magazine explosion, in Hashirajima anchorage.
  • June 89 – WWII: Battle of Porta: The Royal Italian Army is defeated by the Greek People's Liberation Army.
  • June 2023 – The Detroit race riot of 1943 in the United States kills 34 people (25 African Americans, 9 whites), wounds hundreds more and damages and destroys property worth millions.[15]
  • June 21 – WWII: British saboteurs blow up the strategically significant railway viaduct at Asopos, Greece.
  • June 22 – WWII: The U.S. Army 45th Infantry Division lands in North Africa, prior to training at Arzew, French Morocco.
  • June 30 – The United States Civilian Conservation Corps is abolished.
  • June (late) – The Holocaust: The last trainload of Jewish prisoners is moved from Bełżec extermination camp in Occupied Poland (for gassing at Sobibór), and for the remainder of the year the Nazis make efforts to obliterate the site.[16][17]

July[]

The U.S. Liberty ship SS Robert Rowan explodes during the Allied invasion of Sicily, July 11, 1943.
The bombing of Hamburg during 1943.
Wladyslaw Sikorski, Polish military and political leader of the Polish government in exile during World War 2
  • July 1 – The United States Women's Army Corps (WAC) is converted to full status.
  • July 41943 Gibraltar B-24 crash: The aircraft carrying General Władysław Sikorski, Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile, crashes, killing him and 15 others, leading to a lasting controversy over the circumstances.
  • July 5 – WWII:
    • Battle of Kursk – The largest tank battle in history begins.
    • A fleet sets sail for the Allied invasion of Sicily.
    • The National Bands Agreement is concluded in Greece.
  • July 6 – WWII: Americans and Japanese fight the Battle of Kula Gulf off Kolombangara.
  • July 10
    • (0245 GMT (4:45 a.m. local time)) – WWII: Allied invasion of Sicily – The Allied invasion of Axis-controlled Europe begins, with landings on the island of Sicily off mainland Italy by the Seventh United States Army and the British Eighth Army, including the 1st Canadian Infantry Division.
    • The Holocaust: Jedwabne pogrom – At least 340 Polish Jews are marched to a local barn, locked inside and subsequently burned to death.
  • July 11 – WWII:
    • United States Army forces make an assault on Piano Lupo, just outside Gela, Sicily.
    • Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army within the Reichskommissariat Ukraine (Volhynia) peak.
  • July 12 – WWII: Main engagement of the Battle of Prokhorovka – The Wehrmacht and the Red Army fight to a draw in one of the largest tank battles in military history.
  • July 19 – WWII: Rome is bombed by the Allies, for the first time in the war.
  • July 24 – WWII: Operation Gomorrha: British and Canadian aeroplanes bomb Hamburg by night; American planes bomb the city by day. By the end of the operation in November, 9,000 tons of explosives will have killed more than 42,000 people and destroyed 280,000 buildings.
Mussolini
  • July 25Benito Mussolini, Fascist Prime Minister of Italy since 1922, is arrested after the Grand Council of Fascism withdraws its support. "Il Duce" is replaced by General Pietro Badoglio.

August[]

Mackenzie King, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill at the 1943 Quebec Conference.
  • August 1Operation Tidal Wave: 177 B-24 Liberator bombers from the U.S. Army Air Force bomb oil refineries at Ploiești, Romania.
  • August 2 – WWII: John F. Kennedy's PT boat PT-109 is run down by Japanese destroyer Amagiri.
  • August 4 – WWII: The aircraft carrier USS Intrepid (CV-11) is launched at Newport News, Virginia.
  • August 5 – WWII:
    • United States Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) are formed, consolidating the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (WAFS) and Women Airforce Service Pilots (WFTD).
    • John F. Kennedy and crew are found by Solomon Islands coastwatchers Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana, with their dugout canoe.
  • August 6 – WWII: Battle of Vella Gulf: Americans defeat a Japanese convoy off Kolombangara, as the U.S. Army drives the Japanese out of Munda airfield on New Georgia.
  • August 14
    • WWII: Rome is declared an open city by the Italian government, with Italy offering to demilitarize the capital, in return for an Allied agreement not to bomb the city further.[18]
    • The Quadrant Conference begins in Quebec City; Canadian Prime Minister MacKenzie King meets with Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  • August 17 – WWII:
    • The Seventh U.S. Army, under General George S. Patton, meets the Eighth British Army under Field Marshal B. L. Montgomery in Messina, Sicily, completing the Allied invasion of Sicily.
    • Operation Hydra: The British Royal Air Force sets out to bomb the Peenemünde Army Research Center, to disrupt the German V-weapons programme.
  • August 211943 Australian federal election: John Curtin's Labor Government defeats the Country/UAP Coalition, led by former Prime Minister Arthur Fadden. Labor achieves its greatest ever electoral result, including winning every seat (except one) outside of the eastern states. Notably, this election marked the first time that a woman has been elected to both the Senate and the House of Representatives. Fadden will step down from the Opposition leadership, handing it over to Robert Menzies, who will go on to dissolve the UAP and form the Liberal Party shortly after.
  • August 23 – WWII: The Battle of Kursk ends, with a strategic defeat for the German forces.
  • August 24Heinrich Himmler is named Reichminister of the Interior in Germany.
  • August 26 – WWII: Louis Mountbatten is named Supreme Allied Commander for Southeast Asia.
  • August 28 – WWII: King Boris III of Bulgaria dies under suspicious circumstances; his 6-year-old son, Simeon II, ascends to the throne.
  • August 29 – WWII: Occupation of Denmark – Germany dissolves the Danish government, after it refuses to deal with a wave of strikes and disturbances to the satisfaction of the German authorities.

September[]

  • September 3 – WWII: Allied invasion of Italy
    • Armistice of Cassibile: The Kingdom of Italy surrenders to the Allies in a document signed on Sicily but not made public at this time.
    • Operation Baytown: Mainland Italy is invaded by Allied forces under General Bernard Montgomery, for the first time in the war.
  • September 5 – WWII: The 503rd Parachute Regiment (under American General Douglas MacArthur) lands and occupies Nadzab, just east of the port city of Lae, in northeastern Papua New Guinea.
  • September 7Gulf Hotel fire: A fire at the Gulf Hotel in Houston, Texas kills 55.
  • September 8
    • WWII: United States General Dwight D. Eisenhower publicly announces the surrender of Italy to the Allies.
    • WWII: Frascati air raid: The USAAF bombs the German General Headquarters for the Mediterranean zone.
    • The first classes commence at Grace University in Omaha, Nebraska.
  • September 9Bertolt Brecht's play Life of Galileo (German: Leben des Galilei) receives its first theatrical production, at the Schauspielhaus Zürich.
  • September 12 – WWII: Gran Sasso raid – German paratroopers rescue Mussolini from imprisonment, in Unternehmen Eiche ("Operation Oak").
  • September 16 – WWII: Salerno Mutiny – Soldiers of the British Army's X Corps refuse postings to new units.
  • September 17 – WWII: Villefranche-de-Rouergue Mutiny – A group of pro-Partisan soldiers, led by Ferid Džanić and others within the 13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SS Handschar (1st Croatian), training in Occupied France, rise against Nazi German troops in the Division; the revolt is rapidly suppressed.
  • September 2126 – WWII: Massacre of the Acqui Division – German soldiers of the 1st Mountain Division (Wehrmacht) kill over 5,100 Italian military internees resisting disarmament on the Greek island of Cephalonia.
  • September 22October 2 – WWII: Landing at Scarlet Beach on the Huon Peninsula of New Guinea by Allied forces, the first time Australian troops have made an opposed amphibious landing since the Gallipoli Campaign of 1915.
  • September 23 – WWII: The Italian Social Republic ("Republic of Salò") is founded in northern Italy as a puppet state of Nazi Germany.
  • September 27 – WWII: Four days of Naples begins: a popular uprising drives German occupying forces from the city.

October[]

  • October 1 – WWII: United States forces enter liberated Naples.
  • October 3 – WWII: Nazi Wehrmacht forces commit the Lyngiades massacre in northwest Greece as an arbitrary reprisal.
  • October 6 – WWII: Americans and Japanese fight the naval Battle of Vella Lavella.
  • October 7 – WWII: The Naples post-office bombing kills 100.
  • October 10
    • WWII: Double Tenth incident (Japanese occupation of Singapore): The Japanese military police, the Kempeitai, arrest and torture more than 50 civilians and civilian internees, on false suspicion of their involvement in a raid on Singapore Harbour during Operation Jaywick.
    • The Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky is instituted in the Soviet Union.
  • October 13 – WWII: The new government of Italy sides with the Allies and declares war on Germany.
  • October 14
    • WWII: During the Second Raid on Schweinfurt, the United States Eighth Air Force suffers so many losses, that it loses air supremacy over Germany for several months.
    • The Holocaust: Uprising in Sobibór extermination camp; about half the inmates escape. Three days later, the camp is closed.
    • José P. Laurel takes the oath of office as President of the Philippines (Second Philippine Republic).
  • October 16 – The Holocaust: Raid of the Ghetto of Rome – Over a thousand Jews are rounded up in Rome by the Gestapo; only 16 will survive their deportation to Auschwitz concentration camp. The public silence of Pope Pius XII on the raid becomes a matter of historical controversy.
  • October 17 – WWII:
    • The last commerce raider, German auxiliary cruiser Michel, is sunk off Japan by United States submarine Tarpon.[19]
    • The Burma Railway is completed between Bangkok, Thailand and Rangoon, Burma (modern-day Myanmar) (415 km (258 mi)) by the Empire of Japan, to support its forces in the Burma campaign, using the forced labour of Asian civilians and Allied Prisoners of war.
  • October 18Chiang Kai-shek takes the oath of office as Chairman of the National Government of China.
  • October 19 – WWII: Allied aircraft sink the German-controlled cargo ship MS Sinfra in the Mediterranean, killing over 2,000 people, mostly Italian military internees.
  • October 2028 – WWII: Italian Campaign – Battle of Ortona: Canadian infantry defeat elite German paratroops.
  • October 21Lucie Aubrac and others in her French Resistance cell liberate Raymond Aubrac from Gestapo imprisonment.
  • October 22 – WWII: Bombing of Kassel in World War II: The British Royal Air Force delivers a highly destructive airstrike on the German industrial and population center of Kassel; at least 10,000 are killed and 150,000 are made homeless.
  • October 24 – WWII: British Royal Navy destroyer HMS Eclipse (H08) is sunk by a mine in the Aegean Sea, with the loss of 119 of the ship's company and 134 troops.[20]
  • October 30
    • WWII: Signing of Moscow Declarations: the Declaration of the Four Nations on general security, by the United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union and Republic of China; and the Declarations on Italy, Austria and Atrocities by the first three governments.
    • The Merrie Melodies animated cartoon Falling Hare, one of the only shorts with Bugs Bunny getting out-smarted, is released in the United States.

November[]

Chiang Kai-shek, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill at the Cairo Conference, November 25, 1943.
The first Lebanese flag hand drawn and signed by the deputies of the Lebanese parliament, November 11, 1943. The French Mandate ends and Lebanon gains independence in November 1943.
Joseph Stalin, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill on the verandah of the Soviet Embassy in Tehran during the Tehran Conference
  • November 1 – WWII: Operation Goodtime: United States Marines land on Bougainville Island in the Solomon Islands.
  • November 2 – WWII:
    • Battle of Empress Augusta Bay off Bougainville Island: American and Japanese ships fight to a draw.
    • WWII: British troops in Italy reach the Garigliano River.
  • November 34The Holocaust: Aktion Erntefest ("Operation Harvest Festival") – The largest single day massacre of Jews in the entire war takes place when over 43,000 Jews are shot-gunned to death by the SS, the Ordnungspolizei and the "Trawniki men" (Ukrainian collaborators) in Sonderdienst formations at the Majdanek, Trawniki and Poniatowa concentration camps in the General Government territory of occupied Poland.
  • November 5 – WWII: First Bombing of the Vatican – Four bombs are dropped on the neutral Vatican City; the aircraft responsible is never certainly identified.
  • November 9An agreement for the foundation of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration is signed by 44 countries in the White House, Washington, D.C.
  • November 10 – The Lübeck martyrs, four men of religion, are executed for supposedly treasonable views.
  • November 14Leonard Bernstein, substituting at the last minute for ailing principal conductor Bruno Walter, directs the New York Philharmonic in its regular Sunday afternoon broadcast concert, over CBS Radio. The event receives front-page coverage in The New York Times the following day.
  • November 15Porajmos: German SS leader Heinrich Himmler orders that Gypsies be put "on the same level as Jews and placed in Nazi concentration camps."
  • November 16 – WWII:
    • After flying from Britain, 160 American bombers strike a hydro-electric power facility and heavy water factory in German-controlled Vemork, Norway.
    • A Japanese submarine sinks the surfaced U.S. submarine USS Corvina, near Chuuk Lagoon (Truk).
  • November 18 – WWII: Battle of Berlin – The British Royal Air Force opens its bombing campaign against Berlin with 440 planes, causing only light damage and killing 131. The RAF loses 9 aircraft and 53 aviators.
  • November 19The Holocaust: Inmates of Janowska concentration camp, near Lwów (at this time in German-occupied Poland), stage a failed uprising, after which the SS liquidates the camp, resulting in at least 6,000 deaths.
  • November 20 – WWII: Battle of Tarawa: United States Marines land on Tarawa and Makin atolls in the Gilbert Islands (Kiribati from 1979) and take heavy fire from Japanese shore guns.
  • November 2226 – WWII: Cairo Conference ("Sextant") – President of the United States Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Winston Churchill and Chairman of the National Government of China Chiang Kai-shek meet at Cairo, Egypt, to discuss ways to defeat Japan in the Pacific War.
  • November 22Lebanon gains independence, upon the ending of the French Mandate.
  • November 23 – The Deutsches Opernhaus on Bismarckstraße, in the Berlin district of Charlottenburg, is destroyed in an air raid (it is reopened in 1961, as the Deutsche Oper Berlin).
  • November 25 – WWII: Americans and Japanese fight the naval Battle of Cape St. George, between Buka and New Ireland.
  • November 26 – WWII: British troopship HMT Rohna is sunk off the north African coast by a Luftwaffe Henschel Hs 293 radio controlled glide bomb, killing 1,015.[21][22]
  • November 27 – The 1943 Tosya–Ladik earthquake in Turkey kills thousands.[23]
  • November 28 – WWII: Tehran Conference: U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin meet in Tehran, to discuss war strategy. On November 30, they establish an agreement concerning a planned June 1944 invasion of Europe, codenamed Operation Overlord.
  • November 29 – The second session of AVNOJ, the Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia, is held in Jajce, Bosnia and Herzegovina, to determine the post-war ordering of the country.

December[]

  • December 2 – WWII: Bari chemical warfare disaster: A surprise Luftwaffe air raid on Bari, Italy sinks 28 Allied ships in the harbor, including the American Liberty ship SS John Harvey, releasing its secret cargo of mustard gas bombs, inflating the number of casualties.[24]
  • December 3
    • In reprisal for an act of sabotage, the SS and Gestapo execute 100 Warsaw Tramway workers.[25]
    • Edward R. Murrow delivers his classic "Orchestrated Hell" broadcast over CBS Radio, describing a Royal Air Force nighttime bombing raid on Berlin.
  • December 4
    • WWII: In Yugoslavia, resistance leader Marshal Tito proclaims a provisional democratic Yugoslav government-in-exile.
    • With unemployment figures falling fast due to WWII-related employment, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt closes the Works Progress Administration.
    • WWII: Bolivia declares war on Romania and Hungary.
  • December 7Chiara Lubich starts the humanitarian Focolare Movement in Trento, Italy.
  • December 13 – WWII: Massacre of Kalavryta – The occupying 117th Jäger Division (Wehrmacht) machine-guns all adult males from Kalavryta, Greece, subsequently burning the town.
  • December 15 – WWII: American and Australian forces begin the Battle of Arawe as a diversion before a larger landing at Cape Gloucester on New Britain, in Papua New Guinea.
  • December 20 – A military coup is staged in Bolivia.
  • December 24 – WWII: U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes Supreme Allied Commander Europe. He establishes the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force in London.
  • December 26 – WWII: Battle of the North CapeGerman battleship Scharnhorst is torpedoed and sunk in a night action north of the Arctic Circle by British battleship HMS Duke of York and her escorts with the loss of all but 36 of the German crew of 1,943 (including Admiral Erich Bey);[26][27] this is the war's last action between big-gun capital ships of Britain and Germany.
  • December 30Subhas Chandra Bose sets up a pro-Japanese Indian government at Port Blair, India.
  • December 31 - The Times Square Ball in Times Square, New York City isn't dropped a second time. Instead, there was a moment of silence at midnight, followed by the sound of bells playing from sound trucks at the base of One Times Square.

Date unknown[]

  • Bengal Famine.
  • History of the cooperative movement: Father José María Arizmendiarrieta sets up a polytechnic school at Mondragón in the Spanish Basque Country (predecessor of the University of Mondragón), which inspires creation of the Mondragon Corporation.
  • Arana Hall, a residential college of the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand, is founded.
  • Jacques-Yves Cousteau co-invents, with Émile Gagnan, the first commercially successful open circuit type of scuba diving equipment, the Aqua-lung.[28]
  • Martin Noth's groundbreaking work of Old Testament scholarship, Überlieferungsgeschichtliche Studien: Die sammelnden und bearbeitenden Geschichtswerke im Alten Testament, is published.[29]

Births[]

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

January[]

Janis Joplin
Princess Margriet of the Netherlands
Sharon Tate
  • January 1Jimmy Hart, American wrestling manager
  • January 2Barış Manço, Turkish singer, television personality (d. 1999)
  • January 4Doris Kearns Goodwin, American writer[30]
  • January 5James Goldstein, LA businessman, NBA basketball aficionado
  • January 6Terry Venables, English footballer and manager
  • January 7Sadako Sasaki, Japanese atomic bomb sickness victim (d. 1955)
  • January 9Scott Walker, American-born singer, composer and record producer (d. 2019)[31]
  • January 10Jim Croce, American surburbia musician (d. 1973)[32]
  • January 14
    • Mariss Jansons, Latvian conductor (d. 2019)
    • José Luis Rodríguez, Venezuelan singer
    • Ralph M. Steinman, Canadian immunologist, cell biologist and Nobel laureate (d. 2011)
    • Holland Taylor, American actress
  • January 15
    • Kirin Kiki, Japanese actress (d. 2018)
    • Dame Margaret Beckett, British politician
  • January 17
  • January 18
    • Paul Freeman, English actor
    • Kay Granger, American politician
  • January 19
    • Janis Joplin, American rock singer (d. 1970)
    • Princess Margriet of the Netherlands
  • January 22
  • January 24
    • Janice Raymond, American second-wave feminist activist
    • Sharon Tate, American actress, model and murder victim (d. 1969)
  • January 25
    • Roy Black, German singer (d. 1991)
    • Tobe Hooper, American film director (d. 2017)
  • January 26Soad Hosny, Egyptian actress (d. 2001)

February[]

Blythe Danner
Joe Pesci
Antonio Inoki
George Harrison
  • February 2Erkan Geniş, Turkish artist
  • February 3
    • Blythe Danner, American actress
    • Dennis Edwards, American soul, R&B singer (d. 2018)
    • Eric Haydock, British musician (d. 2019)
  • February 4Alberto João Jardim, Portuguese politician
  • February 5
    • Nolan Bushnell, American video game pioneer
    • Michael Mann, American film director, writer and producer
    • Craig Morton, American football player
  • February 7Gareth Hunt, English actor (d. 2007)
  • February 8Creed Bratton, American actor, musician
  • February 9
    • Joe Pesci, American actor (Goodfellas)
    • Joseph E. Stiglitz, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • February 10Walter B. Jones Jr., American politician (d. 2019)
  • February 11Mohammad Rafiquzzaman, Bangladeshi lyricist
  • February 12Wacław Kisielewski, Polish pianist (d. 1986)
  • February 14Maceo Parker, American musician (James Brown, P-Funk)
  • February 15Elke Heidenreich, German author, TV presenter and journalist
  • February 18Graeme Garden, Scottish writer, comedian and actor
  • February 19
    • Homer Hickam, American aerospace engineer and writer
    • Tim Hunt, British biochemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • February 20
    • Moshe Cotel, American composer, pianist (d. 2008)
    • Antonio Inoki, Japanese professional wrestler
    • Mike Leigh, British film director
  • February 21
    • David Geffen, American record executive, film producer
    • Lyudmila Ulitskaya, Russian novelist
  • February 22
    • Horst Köhler, President of the Federal Republic of Germany
    • Eduard Limonov, Russian writer, poet, publicist, and political dissident (d. 2020)
  • February 23Fred Biletnikoff, American football player, coach
  • February 24Hristo Prodanov, Bulgarian mountaineer
  • February 25
    • Boediono, Indonesian economist, 11th Vice President of Indonesia
    • George Harrison, English singer, guitarist (The Beatles) (d. 2001)
  • February 26
    • Bill Duke, American actor, director
    • Bob Hite, American singer, musician (Canned Heat) (d. 1981)
    • Darcus Howe, Trinidadian-born British civil rights activist (d. 2017)
  • February 27Morten Lauridsen, American composer
  • February 28Donnie Iris, American rock singer, guitarist (The Jaggerz, Wild Cherry, Donnie Iris and the Cruisers)

March[]

Lynn Redgrave
David Cronenberg
Mario Molina
Mario Monti
George Benson
Eric Idle
John Major
Christopher Walken
  • March 1
    • Gil Amelio, American entrepreneur
    • Richard H. Price, American physicist
  • March 2
    • Zygfryd Blaut, Polish footballer (d. 2005)
    • Tony Meehan, British drummer (The Shadows) (d. 2005)
    • Peter Straub, American author
  • March 3Trond Mohn, Norwegian billionaire
  • March 4
    • Lucio Dalla, Italian singer, songwriter (d. 2012)
    • Zoltán Jeney, Hungarian composer
  • March 5
    • Shehu Musa Yar'Adua, Nigerian Army major general (d. 1997)
    • Lucio Battisti, Italian singer, songwriter (d. 1998)
  • March 8
    • Lynn Redgrave, English-American actress (d. 2010)
    • Susan Clark, Canadian actress (Webster)
  • March 9
    • Bobby Fischer, American chess player (d. 2008)
    • Charles Gibson, American television journalist
  • March 11 - Ma'ruf Amin, Indonesian Islamic cleric and 13th Vice President of Indonesia
  • March 12Ratko Mladic, Serbia military leader
  • March 13André Téchiné, French film director
  • March 14
    • Anita Morris, American actress, singer and dancer (d. 1994)
    • Leroy "Sugarfoot" Bonner, American guitarist (Ohio Players) (d. 2013)
  • March 15
    • David Cronenberg, Canadian film director
    • Sly Stone, African-American singer (Sly and the Family Stone)
  • March 16
    • Helen Armstrong, American violinist (d. 2006)
    • Kim Mu-saeng, South Korean actor (d. 2005)
  • March 18
    • Kevin Dobson, American actor (d. 2020)
    • Lowrell Simon, American singer (d. 2018)
  • March 19
    • Mario J. Molina, Mexican chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2020)
    • Mario Monti, 54th Prime Minister of Italy
  • March 20
    • Gerard Malanga, American poet, photographer
    • Douglas Tompkins, American conservationist, businessman (d. 2015)
  • March 21
    • Luigi Agnolin, Italian football referee (d. 2018)
    • István Gyulai, Hungarian sports official (d. 2006)
    • Vivian Stanshall, British comedy writer, artist, broadcaster and musician (d. 1995)
    • Andreas, Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
  • March 22
    • George Benson, African American guitarist, singer and songwriter
    • Keith Relf, British rock musician (d. 1976)
  • March 23Lee May, American baseball player (d. 2017)
  • March 24Kate Webb, New Zealand-born Australian war correspondent (d. 2007)
  • March 25Paul Michael Glaser, American actor
  • March 26Bob Woodward, American journalist
  • March 28Conchata Ferrell, American actress (d. 2020)
  • March 29
    • Eric Idle, English comedian, actor, author, and musician (Monty Python's Flying Circus)
    • John Major, British politician, 70th Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
    • Vangelis, Greek musician, composer (Chariots of Fire, Cosmos)
  • March 30
    • Jay Traynor, American singer (Jay and the Americans) (d. 2014)
    • Dennis Etchison, American author and editor (d. 2019)
  • March 31
    • Motiur Rahman Nizami, Bangladeshi politician, convicted war criminal (d. 2016)
    • Christopher Walken, American actor

April[]

Jean-Louis Tauran
Harley Race
John Eliot Gardiner
Gary Wright
  • April 2Caterina Bueno, Italian singer (d. 2007)
  • April 3Hikaru Saeki, Japanese admiral, the first female star officer of the Japan Self-Defense Forces
  • April 4Isabel-Clara Simó, Spanish journalist and writer (d. 2020)
  • April 5
    • Jean-Louis Tauran, French cardinal (d. 2018)
    • Max Gail, American actor (Barney Miller)
  • April 6Susan Tolsky, American actress and voice actress
  • April 8
    • Miller Farr, American football player
    • Jack O'Halloran, American boxer and actor
  • April 10
  • April 11Harley Race, American professional wrestler, promoter and trainer (d. 2019)
  • April 13Doreen Tracey, British-born American actress (d. 2018)
  • April 15
    • Robert Lefkowitz, American physician and biochemist
    • Mighty Sam McClain, American singer, songwriter (d. 2015)
  • April 16Petro Tyschtschenko, German businessman
  • April 17Bobby Curtola, Canadian singer (d. 2016)
  • April 19Claus Theo Gärtner, German actor
  • April 20John Eliot Gardiner, English conductor
  • April 21Napsiah Omar, Malaysian educator, politician (d. 2018)
  • April 22
  • April 23
    • Dominik Duka, Czech Roman Catholic bishop, theologian
    • Gail Goodrich, American basketball player
    • Fighting Harada, Japanese boxer
    • Frans Koppelaar, Dutch painter
    • Hervé Villechaize, French-born actor (Fantasy Island) (d. 1993)
  • April 24Richard Sterban, American singer (The Oak Ridge Boys)
  • April 25
    • Alan Feduccia, American paleornithologist
    • James G. Mitchell, Canadian computer scientist
  • April 26Gary Wright, American singer, songwriter, musician and composer
  • April 28John O. Creighton, American astronaut
  • April 29 – Sir Ian Kershaw, English historian
  • April 30
    • Frederick Chiluba, Zambian politician, 2nd President of Zambia (d. 2011)
    • Bobby Vee, American singer (d. 2016)

May[]

Michael Palin
Betty Williams
  • May 1
    • Ian Dunn, Scottish gay and paedophile rights activist (d. 1998)[33]
    • Vassal Gadoengin, Nauruan politician (d. 2004)
  • May 2Mustafa Nadarević, Yugoslav and Bosnian actor and comedian (d. 2020)
  • May 3Jim Risch, American politician
  • May 5Michael Palin, English comedian, actor, and television presenter (Monty Python's Flying Circus)
  • May 6Grange Calveley, British writer, artist
  • May 7Orlando Ramírez, Chilean footballer (d. 2018)
  • May 8Danny Whitten, American musician (d. 1972)
  • May 10Richard Darman, American federal government official, businessman (d. 2008)
  • May 13Kurt Trampedach, Danish artist (d. 2013)
  • May 14
  • May 16Dan Coats, American politician and diplomat
  • May 17
    • Mark W. Olson, American economist, politician (d. 2018)
    • Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin, King of Malaysia
  • May 20Imata Kabua, Marshallese politician, 2nd President of the Marshall Islands (d. 2019)
  • May 22Betty Williams, Northern Irish political activist, co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 2020)
  • May 24Gary Burghoff, American actor (M*A*S*H)
  • May 25Jessi Colter, American singer, composer
  • May 26Erica Terpstra, Dutch swimmer, politician and president of the Dutch Olympic Committee
  • May 27
    • Bruce Weitz, American actor
    • Cilla Black, English singer, entertainer (d. 2015)
  • May 29Ion Ciubuc, Moldovan politician (d. 2018)
  • May 30James Chaney, African-American civil rights worker (d. 1964)
  • May 31
    • Sharon Gless, American actress
    • Joe Namath, American football player

June[]

Malcolm McDowell
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen
Barry Manilow
Klaus von Klitzing
Florence Ballard
  • June 1
    • Kuki Gallmann, Kenyan writer, poet
    • Richard Goode, American pianist
    • Lorrie Wilmot, South African cricketer (d. 2004)
  • June 2Ilayaraaja, Indian composer
  • June 3
    • John Burgess, Australian game show host, actor
    • Billy Cunningham, American basketball player and coach
  • June 4Joyce Meyer, Christian author, speaker
  • June 6Richard Smalley, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2005)
  • June 7
    • Chan Hung-lit, Hong Kong actor (d. 2009)
    • Nikki Giovanni, American poet, writer, commentator, activist and educator
    • Ken Osmond, American actor (d. 2020)
  • June 8
  • June 11Henry Hill, American gangster (d. 2012)
  • June 13Malcolm McDowell, English actor
  • June 14Jim Sensenbrenner, American politician
  • June 15
    • Johnny Hallyday, French pop singer, actor (d. 2017)
    • Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, 23rd Prime Minister of Denmark
  • June 16
    • Raymond Ramazani Baya, Congolese politician (d. 2019)
    • Joan Van Ark, American actress
  • June 17
    • Newt Gingrich, American politician, author and historian
    • Barry Manilow, American pop musician
  • June 18
    • Raffaella Carrà, Italian singer, dancer and actress (d. 2021)
    • Barry Evans, English actor (d. 1997)
  • June 21Marika Green, French-Swedish actress
  • June 22
    • Klaus Maria Brandauer, Austrian actor
    • J. Michael Kosterlitz, Scottish-born condensed matter physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • June 23
    • Patrick Bokanowski, French filmmaker
    • James Levine, American conductor (d. 2021)
    • Vint Cerf, American internet pioneer
  • June 26
    • John Beasley, American actor
    • Warren Farrell, American educator, activist and author on gender issues
  • June 27Rico Petrocelli, American baseball player
  • June 28
    • Jens Birkemose, Danish painter
    • Klaus von Klitzing, German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • June 29
  • June 30
    • Cees Kurpershoek, Dutch sailor
    • Daniel Kablan Duncan, Ivorian politician
    • Florence Ballard, African-American singer, founder of The Supremes (d. 1976)
    • Dieter Kottysch, West German Olympic boxer (d. 2017)
    • Dani Litani, Israeli musician and actor

July[]

Kurtwood Smith
Geraldo Rivera
Robbie Robertson
Arthur Ashe
Christine McVie
Kay Bailey Hutchison
Mick Jagger
Richard Wright
Giovanni Goria
  • July 1
    • Freddie Lewis, American basketball player
    • Hassan Mohamed Ali Wariiri, Somali judge
    • Jeff Wayne, American musician
  • July 3
    • Judith Durham, Australian singer
    • Kurtwood Smith, American actor (That '70s Show)
    • Norman Thagard, American astronaut
  • July 4
    • Konrad "Conny" Bauer, German trombonist
    • Geraldo Rivera, American reporter, talk show host
    • Alan Wilson, American musician (Canned Heat) (d. 1970)
  • July 5
    • István Gáli, Hungarian boxer
    • Curt Blefary, American baseball player (d. 2001)
    • Robbie Robertson, Canadian musician (The Band)
  • July 6
    • Kim Kye-gwan, North Korean diplomat
    • Tamara Sinyavskaya, Russian mezzo-soprano
    • Rosemary Forsyth, Canadian-American actress, model
    • Muhammad Iqbal Gujjar, Pakistani politician
  • July 7
    • Jürgen Geschke, German track cyclist
    • M. Karathu, Malaysian football player, manager
    • Robert East, Welsh theatre, TV actor
    • Joel Siegel, American film critic (d. 2007)
    • Miguel Vila Luna, Dominican architect, painter (d. 2005)
  • July 8
  • July 9
    • Suzanne Rogers, American actress
    • Soledad Miranda, Spanish actress (d. 1970)
  • July 10
    • Arthur Ashe, African-American tennis player (d. 1993)
    • Inonge Mbikusita-Lewanika, Zambian politician
  • July 11
    • Edna Madzongwe, Zimbabwean politician
    • Tom Holland, American screenwriter, actor and filmmaker
    • Luciano Onder, Italian journalist
  • July 12
    • Christine McVie, British musician (Fleetwood Mac)
    • Walter Murch, American film editor, sound designer
  • July 14
    • George Thomas Coker, United States Navy commander
    • Harold Wheeler, American orchestrator, composer, conductor, arranger, record producer and music director
    • David Burden, British Army officer
  • July 15Jocelyn Bell Burnell, British astrophysicist
  • July 16
    • Reinaldo Arenas, Cuban writer (d. 1990)
    • Jimmy Johnson, American football coach, television analyst
    • Lim Zoong-sun, North Korean football player
  • July 17
    • Shlomo Ben-Ami, Israeli diplomat, politician and historian
    • Alfredo Mantica, Italian politician
  • July 18Jerry Chambers, American basketball player
  • July 19
    • Carla Mazzuca Poggiolini, Italian journalist and politician
    • David Griffin, British actor
  • July 20
    • Christopher Murney, American actor, vocal artist
    • Wendy Richard, British actress (d. 2009)
  • July 21
    • Michael Caton, Australian actor, comedian and television presenter
    • Edward Herrmann, American actor (d. 2014)
    • Henry McCullough, Northern Irish musician (Paul McCartney & Wings) (d. 2016)
    • Bob Shrum, American political consultant
  • July 22
    • Kay Bailey Hutchison, American attorney, television correspondent, politician and diplomat
    • Barka Sy, Senegalese sprinter
    • Nils Utsi, Norwegian actor, stage and film director (d. 2019)
  • July 23
    • Tony Joe White, American singer, songwriter and guitarist (d. 2018)
    • Larry Manetti, American actor
    • Zvonimir Vujin, Serbian amateur boxer (d. 2019)
  • July 24 - John Bryson, American businessman and Former 37th US Secretary of Commerce (2011–12)
  • July 25Erika Steinbach, German politician
  • July 26Mick Jagger, English rock singer (The Rolling Stones)
  • July 28
    • Mike Bloomfield, American guitarist and composer (d. 1981)
    • Bill Bradley, American basketball player and politician
    • Richard Wright, British musician (d. 2008)
  • July 29Bob Brunning, British musician (d. 2011)
  • July 30Giovanni Goria, Prime Minister of Italy (d. 1994)

August[]

Princess Christina of Sweden
Pervez Musharraf
Robert De Niro
Surayud Chulanont
  • August 2Max Wright, American actor (d. 2019)
  • August 3
    • Princess Christina of Sweden
    • Clarence Wijewardena, Sri Lankan musician (d. 1996)
  • August 4
  • August 5Nelson Briles, American baseball player (d. 2005)
  • August 6Jim Hardin, former Baltimore Orioles, New York Yankees and Atlanta Braves pitcher (d. 1991)
  • August 8Luc Rosenzweig, French journalist (d. 2018)
  • August 9Ken Norton, African-American boxer, actor (d. 2013)
  • August 10Frédéric Kyburz, Swiss judoka (d. 2018)
  • August 11
    • Abigail Folger, American heiress, murder victim (d. 1969)
    • Pervez Musharraf, Pakistani general, leader and 10th President of Pakistan
  • August 13Roberto Micheletti, President of Honduras
  • August 15Glória Maria, Brazilian journalist, reporter and television host
  • August 17
    • Robert De Niro, American actor
    • Yukio Kasaya, Japanese ski jumper
  • August 18
    • Martin Mull, American actor and comedian
    • Gianni Rivera, Italian footballer
  • August 19Edwin Hawkins, African-American gospel musician, pianist (d. 2018)
  • August 20Sylvester McCoy, British actor
  • August 22Nahas Angula, Prime Minister of Namibia
  • August 23Pino Presti, Italian bassist, arranger, composer, conductor, record producer
  • August 27Tuesday Weld, American actress
  • August 28
    • Surayud Chulanont, Thai politician, 24th Prime Minister of Thailand
    • Lou Piniella, American baseball player, manager
    • Jihad Al-Atrash, Lebanese actor, voice actor
  • August 29Arthur B. McDonald, Canadian astrophysicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • August 30
    • Tal Brody, American-born Israeli basketball player
    • R. Crumb, American artist, illustrator
    • Altovise Davis, American entertainer (d. 2009)
    • Jean-Claude Killy, French skier
  • August 31Leonid Ivashov, Russian general

September[]

Roger Waters
Jerry Bruckheimer
Julio Iglesias
  • September 5Dulce Saguisag, Filipino politician, former DSWD Secretary (d. 2007)
  • September 6
    • Harris Hines, American judge (d. 2018)
    • Richard J. Roberts, English biochemist, molecular biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
    • Roger Waters, English musician (Pink Floyd)
  • September 7Lena Valaitis, Lithuanian-German Schlager singer
  • September 9Art LaFleur, American actor
  • September 10
    • Daniel Truhitte, American actor
    • Neale Donald Walsch, American author (Conversations with God)
  • September 11
    • Mickey Hart, American percussionist and musicologist (Grateful Dead)
    • Jaime Thorne León, Peruvian politician (d. 2018)
    • Gilbert Proesch, Italian-born artist (Gilbert and George)
    • Raymond Villeneuve, Canadian terrorist
  • September 13Mildred D. Taylor, American writer
  • September 14
    • Irwin Goodman, Finnish singer (d. 1991)
    • Tunde Idiagbon, Nigerian Army major general (d. 1999)
  • September 16
    • Tadamasa Goto, Japanese yakuza boss
    • Oskar Lafontaine, German politician
  • September 18Nina Wayne, American actress
  • September 19Joe Morgan, American baseball player (d. 2020)
  • September 20Sani Abacha, Nigerian Army officer and dictator (d. 1998)
  • September 21
    • Jerry Bruckheimer, American film and television producer
    • David Hood, American session bassist and trombone player
    • Mathew Prichard, British philanthropist, the only child of literary guardian Rosalind Hicks and the only grandchild of author Agatha Christie
  • September 22Toni Basil, American musician, video artist (Mickey)
  • September 23
    • Ernie Ackerley, British footballer (d. 2017)
    • Julio Iglesias, Spanish singer, songwriter
    • Tanuja, Indian actress
  • September 28J. T. Walsh, American actor (d. 1998)
  • September 29
    • Wolfgang Overath, German footballer
    • Lech Wałęsa, President of Poland, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize
  • September 30
    • Johann Deisenhofer, German biochemist, Nobel Prize laureate
    • Ian Ogilvy, British-American actor

October[]

Chevy Chase
R.L. Stine
Penny Marshall
Catherine Deneuve
  • October 1
    • Jerry Martini, American musician
    • Naushad Ali, Pakistani cricketer
    • Jean-Jacques Annaud, French film director
  • October 2
    • Franklin Rosemont, American poet (d. 2009)
    • Henri Szeps, Australian actor
  • October 3Jeff Bingaman, American politician
  • October 4Buddy Roemer, American politician, investor and banker (d. 2021)
  • October 5
  • October 6Michael Durrell, American actor
  • October 7Oliver North, American military officer, military historian, political commentator, author and television host
  • October 8
    • Chevy Chase, American comedian, actor (Saturday Night Live)
    • R. L. Stine, American novelist (Goosebumps)
  • October 11
    • John Nettles, English actor, writer
    • Gene Watson, American country singer
  • October 12
    • Jeffrey R. MacDonald, American physician and United States Army Officer
    • Köbi Kuhn, Swiss footballer and manager (d. 2019)
  • October 14
    • Lois Hamilton, American model, actress and artist (d. 1999)
    • Mohammad Khatami, 5th President of Iran
    • Lance Rentzel, American football player
  • October 15Penny Marshall, American actress, director and producer (d. 2018)
  • October 18
    • Birthe Rønn Hornbech, Danish politician
    • Christine Charbonneau, Canadian francophone singer, songwriter (d. 2014)
  • October 22Catherine Deneuve, French actress
  • October 24
    • Theodor Stolojan, 54th Prime Minister of Romania
    • José E. Serrano, American politician
  • October 25Roy Lynes, English keyboardist
  • October 27Carmen Argenziano, American actor (d. 2019)
  • October 28Cornelia Froboess, German actress
  • October 29Don Simpson, American film producer, screenwriter and actor (d. 1996)

November[]

Joni Mitchell
Michael Spence
Wallace Shawn
Denis Sassou Nguesso
Randy Newman
  • November 1Jacques Attali, French economist
  • November 3Bert Jansch, Scottish folk musician (d. 2011)
  • November 4
    • Sundar Popo, Indo-Trinidadian chutney musician (d. 2000)
    • Chuck Scarborough, American news anchor
  • November 5
    • Friedman Paul Erhardt, German-American pioneering television chef (d. 2007)
    • Sam Shepard, American playwright, actor (d. 2017)
  • November 7
    • Stephen Greenblatt, American literary critic
    • Nasirdin Isanov, 1st Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan (d. 1991)
    • Joni Mitchell, Canadian musician (Big Yellow Taxi)
    • Michael Spence, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • November 8Martin Peters, English footballer (d. 2019)
  • November 11Doug Frost, Australian swimming coach
  • November 12Wallace Shawn, American actor
  • November 13
    • Roberto Boninsegna, Italian footballer
    • Jay Sigel, American golfer
  • November 14
    • Peter Norton, American software engineer, businessman
    • Rafael Leonardo Callejas, President of Honduras (d. 2020)
  • November 17Lauren Hutton, American actress, model
  • November 19Aurelio Monteagudo, Cuban Major League Baseball player (d. 1990)
  • November 20
    • Mie Hama, Japanese actress
    • Marek Tomaszewski, Polish pianist
  • November 21Larry Mahan, American rodeo cowboy
  • November 22
    • Peter Adair, American filmmaker (d. 1996)
    • Yvan Cournoyer, Canadian ice hockey player
    • Billie Jean King, American tennis player
    • William Kotzwinkle, American novelist, screenwriter
    • Fouad Siniora, 32nd Prime Minister of Lebanon
  • November 23Denis Sassou Nguesso, President of the Republic of the Congo
  • November 24
    • Dave Bing, American mayor, longtime NBA player
    • Kuniwo Nakamura, 6th President of Palau (d. 2020)
  • November 25Dante Caputo, Argentine diplomat, politician (d. 2018)
  • November 26Marilynne Robinson, American writer
  • November 28Randy Newman, American musician
  • November 30Terrence Malick, American film director

December[]

Jim Morrison
John Kerry
Keith Richards
Harry Shearer
Queen Silvia of Sweden
John Denver
Ben Kingsley
  • December 2
    • Wayne Allard, American politician
    • William Wegman, American photographer
  • December 5
    • Eva Joly, Norwegian-born French magistrate
    • Nicolae Văcăroiu, 55th Prime Minister of Romania
  • December 8
    • José Carbajal, Uruguayan singer, composer and guitarist (d. 2010)
    • Larry Martin, American paleontologist (d. 2013)
    • Jim Morrison, American rock musician (The Doors) (d. 1971)
    • Bodo Tümmler, German Olympic middle-distance runner
  • December 11John Kerry, American politician, 68th U.S. Secretary of State
  • December 12
    • Dickey Betts, American guitarist, singer, songwriter and composer (The Allman Brothers Band)
    • Gianni Russo, American actor
    • Phyllis Somerville, American actress (d. 2020)
    • Grover Washington, Jr., African-American saxophonist (d. 1999)
  • December 13
    • David W. Huff, American rock singer, guitarist of (David and the Giants)
    • Ferguson Jenkins, Canadian baseball player
  • December 14
  • December 15Lucien den Arend, Dutch sculptor
  • December 16Steven Bochco, American television producer (d. 2018)
  • December 17
    • Pak Doo-ik, North Korean footballer
    • Ron Geesin, British musician, songwriter (Pink Floyd)
    • Rick Nolan, American politician
  • December 18Keith Richards, English rock guitarist, songwriter (The Rolling Stones)
  • December 19
    • Sam Kelly, English actor (d. 2014)
    • Ross M. Lence, American political scientist (d. 2006)
    • Jimmy Mackay, Australian football player (d. 1998)
  • December 20Jacqueline Pearce, English screen actress (d. 2018)
  • December 21Jack Nance, American actor (d. 1996)
  • December 22Paul Wolfowitz, American political scientist
  • December 23
    • Elizabeth Hartman, American actress (d. 1987)
    • Harry Shearer, American actor, comedian and screenwriter
    • Queen Silvia of Sweden, Queen consort of Sweden
  • December 24
    • Tarja Halonen, 11th President of Finland
    • James A. Johnson, American business leader, philanthropist
  • December 25Hanna Schygulla, German actress
  • December 27Sam Hinds, 3-Time Prime Minister of Guyana
  • December 28
    • Keith Floyd, British chef (d. 2009)
    • Chas Hodges, English musician and singer (d. 2018)
    • Craig MacIntosh, American illustrator
    • Billy Chapin, American Child Actor (d.2016)
    • Richard Whiteley, English television presenter (d. 2005)
  • December 31
    • John Denver, American musician (d. 1997)
    • Sir Ben Kingsley, British actor (Gandhi)
    • Pete Quaife, English musician, artist and author (The Kinks) (d. 2010)

Deaths[]

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

January[]

George Washington Carver
Nikola Tesla
Agustin Pedro Justo
Taj al-Din al-Hasani
Gyula Peidl
  • January 2
    • Qazim Koculi, Albanian politician, acting Prime Minister of Albania (murdered) (b. 1887)
    • Wilhelm Lorenz, German general (died of wounds) (b. 1894)
  • January 3Bid McPhee, American baseball player, MLB Hall of Famer (b. 1859)
  • January 4
    • Emperor Hàm Nghi of Vietnam (b. 1872)
    • Jerzy Iwanow-Szajnowicz, Greek-born Polish athlete, resistance member (executed) (b. 1911)
    • Kate Price, Irish-born American actress (b. 1872)
  • January 5George Washington Carver, African-American botanist (b. c. 1864)
  • January 7
    • George Washington Crile, founder of the Cleveland Clinic (b. 1864)
    • Nikola Tesla, Serbian-born American electrical engineer, inventor (b. 1856)
  • January 8Richard Hillary, Australian-born British Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot, author (killed on active service in aviation accident) (b. 1919)
  • January 9R. G. Collingwood, English philosopher, historian and archaeologist (b. 1889)
  • January 10Lewis Hall, American soldier (killed on active service) (b. 1895)
  • January 11Agustín Pedro Justo, Argentinian military officer, diplomat and politician, 23rd President of Argentina (b. 1876)
  • January 12Jan Campert, Dutch journalist, writer (in Neuengamme concentration camp) (b. 1902)
  • January 13
    • Henner Henkel, German tennis champion (killed in action) (b. 1915)
    • Xavier Martinez, Mexican-born American painter (b. 1869)
    • Else Ury, German writer, children's book author (b. 1877)
  • January 14Laura E. Richards, American author (b. 1850)
  • January 15Eric Knight, American author (b. 1897)
  • January 16Sir William Arbuthnot Lane, 1st Baronet, British surgeon (b. 1856)
  • January 17
    • Jane Avril, French dancer (b. 1868)
    • Taj al-Din al-Hasani, Syrian politician, 6th Prime Minister of Syria and 6th President of Syria (b. 1885)
  • January 18Urban Jacob Rasmus Børresen, Norwegian admiral and industry leader (b. 1857)
  • January 19William Pettigrew, British Christian missionary (b. 1869)
  • January 20
    • Giacomo Benvenuti, Italian composer (b. 1885)
    • Baron Max Wladimir von Beck, former Minister-President of Austria (b. 1854)
  • January 21
    • Aimo Cajander, 7th Prime Minister of Finland (b. 1879)
    • Konstantinos Davakis, Greek army officer (died of wounds) (b. 1897)
    • Robert Henry English, American admiral (killed in aviation accident) (b. 1888)
  • January 22Gyula Peidl, 23rd Prime Minister of Hungary (b. 1873)
  • January 23Alexander Woollcott, American critic (b. 1887)
  • January 26Nikolai Vavilov, Russian, Soviet botanist, geneticist (b. 1887)
  • January 29
    • Henriette Caillaux, French murderer, socialite and wife of former French prime minister (b. 1874)
    • Vladimir Kokovtsov, 4th Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Russian Empire (b. 1853)

February[]

David Hilbert
Blessed Maria Josefa Karolina Brader
  • February 1Foy Draper, American Olympic athlete (killed in action) (b. 1911)
  • February 2
    • Alfred Cavendish, British general (b. 1859)
    • Ganga Singh, Maharaja of Bikaner (b. 1880)
  • February 4
    • Frank Calder, British-born Canadian ice hockey executive, first National Hockey League president (b. 1877)
    • Senjūrō Hayashi, Japanese army commander, politician and 22nd Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1876)
  • February 5
    • Sim Gokkes, Dutch composer (in Auschwitz concentration camp) (b. 1897)
    • W. S. Van Dyke, American director (b. 1889)
  • February 9
    • Eustace Fiennes, British soldier, politician (b. 1864)
    • Dmitry Kardovsky, Soviet painter, illustrator (b. 1866)
  • February 10
    • Sverre Granlund, Norwegian general (b. 1918)
    • James T. Powers, American actor (b. 1862)
  • February 11Bess Houdini, American wife of Harry Houdini (b. 1876)
  • February 14David Hilbert, German mathematician (b. 1862)
  • February 15Charles Bennett, American actor (b. 1889)
  • February 16Paul Ranous Greever, American politician (b. 1891)
  • February 18Sir Reginald Pinney, British army general (b. 1863)
  • February 19Jan Piekałkiewicz, Polish economist, statistician and politician (b. 1892)
  • February 20
    • Ernest Guglielminetti, Swiss physician (b. 1862)
    • Donald Haines, American actor (b. 1919)
  • February 22
    • Tamara Drasin, Russian-born American singer, actress (b. 1905)
    • Christoph Probst, German White Rose resistance member (executed) (b. 1919)
    • Ben Robertson, American novelist, journalist and war correspondent (b. 1903)
    • Hans Scholl, German White Rose resistance member (executed) (b. 1918)
    • Sophie Scholl, German White Rose resistance member (executed) (b. 1921)
  • February 23
  • February 26Theodor Eicke, German Nazi official (killed in action) (b. 1892)
  • February 27Maria Josefa Karolina Brader, Swiss Roman Catholic religious professed and blessed (b. 1860)

March[]

Gustav Vigeland
Hans Woellke
Sergei Rachmaninoff
Blessed Maria Restituta Kafka
  • March 1Alexandre Yersin, Swiss-French physician and bacteriologist (b. 1863)
  • March 2Gisela Januszewska, Austrian physician (in Theresienstadt concentration camp) (b. 1867)
  • March 3Rafael López Nussa, Puerto Rican physician (b. 1885)
  • March 6Jimmy Collins, American baseball player, MLB Hall of Famer (b. 1870)
  • March 8
    • Alma del Banco, German painter (suicide) (b. 1862)
    • Tjipto Mangoenkoesoemo, Indonesian independence leader (b. 1886)
  • March 9Otto Freundlich, German painter, sculptor (killed in Majdanek concentration camp) (b. 1878)
  • March 10Tully Marshall, American character actor (b. 1864)
  • March 12
    • Czesława Kwoka, Polish Roman Catholic religious sister and blessed (killed in Auschwitz concentration camp) (b. 1928)
    • Gustav Vigeland, Norwegian sculptor (b. 1869)
  • March 13Jaap Nunes Vaz, Dutch journalist, writer and editor (killed in Sobibór extermination camp) (b. 1906)
  • March 19Frank Nitti, Italian-born American gangster (suicide) (b. 1886)
  • March 20
    • Lizika Jančar, Slovene Partisan, national hero (killed by militia) (b. 1919)
    • Heinrich Zimmer, German-born Indologist, historian (pneumonia) (b. 1890)
  • March 22Hans Woellke, German Olympic athlete (killed by partisans) (b. 1911)
  • March 23Mervyn Herbert, Viscount Clive, British peer, army officer (killed on active service in aviation accident) (b. 1904)
  • March 27George Monckton-Arundell, 8th Viscount Galway, British politician, 5th Governor-General of New Zealand (b. 1882)
  • March 28
    • Ben Davies, British tenor (b. 1858)
    • Lorenzo Gasparri, Italian admiral (killed on active service in accidental explosion) (b. 1894)
    • Edward Heron-Allen, British polymath, lawyer, scientist and scholar (b. 1871)
    • Robert W. Paul, British film director (b. 1869)
    • Sergei Rachmaninoff, Soviet composer (b. 1873)
  • March 30Maria Restituta Kafka, German Roman Catholic religious sister and blessed (executed) (b. 1894)
  • March 31Pavel Milyukov, exiled Russian politician, founder and leader of the Constitutional Democratic Party (b. 1859)

April[]

Alexandre Millerand
Isoroku Yamamoto
  • April 1Vahida Maglajlić, Yugoslav partisan, national hero (killed in combat) (b. 1907)
  • April 3Conrad Veidt, German actor (b. 1893)
  • April 5W. G. Howard Gritten, British barrister, writer and conservative politician (b. 1870)
  • April 6Alexandre Millerand, French politician, 41st Prime Minister of France and 11th President of France (b. 1859)
  • April 7Auguste Audollent, French historian, archaeologist (b. 1864)
  • April 8
    • Harry Baur, French actor (b. 1880)
    • Itamar Ben-Avi, Israeli activist (b. 1882)
    • Tomás Garrido Canabal, Mexican politician, revolutionary (b. 1891)
    • Otto and Elise Hampel, German anti-Nazi resistance members (executed) (b. 1897 & 1903)
    • Richard Sears, American tennis champion (b. 1861)
  • April 9Philip Slier, Dutch Jewish typesetter (in Sobibór extermination camp) (b. 1923)
  • April 11Kim Myeong-sik, Korean independence activist (b. 1890)
  • April 13Oskar Schlemmer, German painter, sculptor, designer and choreographer (b. 1888)
  • April 16Carlos Arniches, Spanish playwright (b. 1866)
  • April 18Isoroku Yamamoto, Japanese admiral (b. 1884)
  • April 21Rihard Jakopič, Yugoslav painter (b. 1869)
  • April 24
    • Kenneth Whiting, United States Navy officer, submarine and naval aviation pioneer (b. 1881)
    • Kurt von Hammerstein-Equord, German general (b. 1878)
  • April 30
    • Eddy Hamel, American footballer (b. 1902; killed in Auschwitz)[34]
    • Otto Jespersen, Danish linguist, creator of Ido and Novial languages (b.1860)[35]
    • Beatrice Webb, British sociologist, economist, historian and social reformer (b. 1858)

May[]

Fethi Okyar
Rida Pasha al-Rikabi
Gordon Coates
  • May 1Johan Oscar Smith, Norwegian Christian leader, founder of Brunstad Christian Church (b. 1871)
  • May 3Frank Maxwell Andrews, American general (plane crash) (b. 1884)
  • May 4
    • Cesira Ferrani, Italian soprano (b. 1863)
    • Saverio Marotta, Italian naval officer (killed in action) (b. 1911)
  • May 5
    • Grzegorz Bolesław Frąckowiak, Polish Roman Catholic priest, martyr and blessed (executed) (b. 1911)
    • Gordon Hewart, 1st Viscount Hewart, British politician, judge (b. 1870)
  • May 7Fethi Okyar, Turkish diplomat, politician and 2nd Prime Minister of Turkey (b. 1880)
  • May 8Miroslav Šalom Freiberger, Yugoslav rabbi, writer and spiritual leader (killed at Auschwitz concentration camp) (b. 1903)
  • May 14
    • George, Crown Prince of Saxony, Catholic priest (b. 1893)
    • Henri La Fontaine, Belgian lawyer, author and Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1854)
  • May 15Horst Hannig, German Luftwaffe fighter ace (b. 1921)
  • May 17
    • Johanna Elberskirchen, German feminist (b. 1864)
    • Montagu Love, British actor (b. 1877)
  • May 19Kristjan Raud, Soviet painter, drawer (b. 1865)
  • May 20John Stone Stone, American physicist, inventor (b. 1869)
  • May 22Helen Taft, First Lady of the United States (b. 1861)
  • May 24Johannes Orasmaa, Estonian army general (in labour camp) (b. 1890)
  • May 25Ali Rikabi, 1st Prime Minister of Syria, 2-time Prime Minister of Jordan (b. 1864)
  • May 26Edsel Ford, American businessman, president of Ford Motor Company (b. 1893)
  • May 27Gordon Coates, 21st Prime Minister of New Zealand (b. 1878)
  • May 29Yasuyo Yamasaki, Imperial Japanese Army officer (killed in action) (b. 1891)
  • May 31
    • Prince Georg of Bavaria, Catholic priest (b. 1880)
    • Helmut Kapp, German Gestapo official (killed by partisans)

June[]

Kermit Roosevelt
Karl Landsteiner
  • June 1
    • István Bárczy, Hungarian politician (b. 1866)
    • Leslie Howard, British actor (aircraft shot down) (b. 1893)
  • June 2Nile Kinnick, American athlete, Heisman Trophy winner (died on active service in aviation accident) (b. 1918)
  • June 3Osgood Hanbury, British pilot (killed on active service) (b. 1917)
  • June 4
    • Francesco Pianzola, Italian Roman Catholic priest and blessed (b. 1881)
    • Kermit Roosevelt, American explorer, author (suicide) (b. 1889)
  • June 10 – Sultan Abdelaziz of Morocco (b. 1878)
  • June 11Heisuke Abe, Japanese general (b. 1886)
  • June 12Hans Junkermann, German actor (b. 1872)
  • June 26Karl Landsteiner, Austrian biologist, physician (b. 1868)
  • June 28Pietro Porcelli, Italian sculptor (b. 1872)
  • June 30Kristian Kristiansen, Norwegian explorer (b. 1865)

July[]

Saint Ignacia Nazaria March Mesa
Hedley Verity
  • July 2Alice Mary Dowd, American educator and poet (b. 1855)
  • July 4
  • July 5
  • July 6
    • Teruo Akiyama, Japanese admiral (killed in action) (b. 1891)
    • Nazaria Ignacia March Mesa, Spanish-born Roman Catholic religious sister, canonized (b. 1889)
  • July 8
    • Jean Moulin, French resistance fighter (injuries from suicide attempt in custody) (b. 1899)
    • Sir Harry Oakes, American-born British gold mine owner (murdered) (b. 1874)
  • July 11Eugen Lovinescu, Romanian critic, academic and novelist (b. 1881)
  • July 12
    • Shunji Isaki, Japanese admiral (killed in action) (b. 1892)
    • Cecilia Loftus, Scottish-born actress (b. 1876)
  • July 13
    • Lorenzo Barcelata, Mexican composer (b. 1898)
    • Marianna Biernacka, Polish Roman Catholic religious sister, martyr and blessed (killed) (b. 1888)
    • Luz Long, German long jump athlete (killed in action) (b. 1913)
    • Alexander Schmorell, Russian-born German White Rose resistance member, Orthodox Church passion bearer and saint (executed) (b. 1917)
  • July 14Mariya Borovichenko, Soviet medical officer (killed in action) (b. 1925)
  • July 16Saul Raphael Landau, Polish Jewish lawyer, journalist, publicist and Zionist activist (b. 1870)
  • July 19
    • Martin Faust, American film actor (b. 1886)
    • Giuseppe Terragni, Italian architect (b. 1904)
  • July 20
    • Maria Gay, Spanish opera singer (b. 1879)
    • Charles Hazelius Sternberg, American fossil collector and paleontologist (b. 1850)
  • July 21
  • July 23Mario Nicolis di Robilant, Italian general (b. 1855)
  • July 26Luis Barros Borgoño, Chilean politician (b. 1858)
  • July 28Charles Granval, French actor (b. 1882)
  • July 29William Ewart Hart, Australian aviator, dentist (b. 1885)
  • July 30Max Eitingon, Belarusian-German medical doctor and psychoanalyst (b. 1881)
  • July 31
    • Zdzisław Lubomirski, Polish aristocrat, landowner, lawyer, politician and activist (b. 1865)
    • James MacLachlan, British flying ace (b. 1919)
    • Hedley Verity, British cricketer (b. 1905)
    • Rodger Young, American soldier, remembered in the song "The Ballad of Rodger Young" (killed in action) (b. 1918)

August[]

King Boris III of Bulgaria
  • August 1Martyrs of Nowogródek, Polish nuns, martyrs and blessed (executed) (b. 1888–1916)
    • Lin Sen, Chinese chairman of the National Government of China (b. 1868)
  • August 5
    • Iosif Apanasenko, Soviet commander (killed in action) (b. 1890)
    • Eva-Maria Buch, German resistance leader (executed) (b. 1921)
  • August 9
    • Franz Jägerstätter, Austrian conscientious objector, martyr and blessed (executed) (b. 1907)
    • Chaim Soutine, Russian-born painter (b. 1893)
  • August 12Bobby Peel, English cricketer (b. 1857)
  • August 14Joe Kelley, American baseball player, MLB Hall of Famer (b. 1871)
  • August 18Hans Jeschonnek, German general (suicide) (b. 1899)
  • August 21Henrik Pontoppidan, Danish writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1857)
  • August 22Virgilio Dávila, Puerto Rican poet, educator, businessman and politician (b. 1869)
  • August 24
    • Ettore Muti, Italian Fascist politician (shot while under arrest) (b. 1902)
    • Simone Weil, French philosopher (b. 1909)
  • August 26Ted Ray, British golfer (b. 1877)
  • August 27
    • William de Burgh, British philosopher (b. 1866)
    • Constantin Prezan, Romanian general, Marshal of Romania (b. 1861)
  • August 28 – King Boris III of Bulgaria (b. 1894)
  • August 29Baba Nand Singh ji, Punjabi Sikh religious leader, saint (b. 1870)
  • August 31Gustav Bachmann, German naval officer, admiral (b. 1860)

September[]

Ernst Trygger
  • September 1Charles Atangana, Cameroonian chief (b. 1880)
  • September 2Marsden Hartley, American Modernist artist (b. 1877)
  • September 6Reginald McKenna, British Chancellor of the Exchequer 1915–1916 (b. 1863)
  • September 7
    • Géza Grünwald, Hungarian mathematician (b. 1910)
    • Karlrobert Kreiten, German pianist (executed) (b. 1916)
  • September 8Julius Fučík, Czech resistance fighter (executed) (b. 1903)
  • September 9
    • Carlo Bergamini, Italian admiral (killed in action) (b. 1888)
    • Salvatore John Cavallaro, American naval officer (killed in action) (b. 1920)
    • Federico Martinengo, Italian pilot (killed in action) (b. 1899)
  • September 13
    • David Bacon, American film actor (b. 1914)
    • Ugo Cavallero, General of the Italian Army (suicide) (b. 1880)
  • September 17 – (killed in Ponary massacre)
  • September 19Germaine Cernay, French mezzo-soprano (b. 1900)
  • September 23
    • Elinor Glyn, British writer, critic (b. 1864)
    • Ernst Trygger, Swedish professor, politician and 19th Prime Minister of Sweden (b. 1857)
  • September 26 - Henri Fertet, French Resistance fighter (b. 1926)[36]
  • September 28
    • Sam Ruben, American chemist (b. 1913)
    • Filippo Illuminato, Italian partisan, Gold Medal of Military Valour (b. 1930)
  • September 27Willoughby Hamilton, Irish tennis player (b. 1864)
  • September 29Mariano Goybet, French army general (b. 1861)
  • September 30Adolf Paul, Swedish novelist, playwright (b. 1863)

October[]

Carlos Blanco Galindo
Pieter Zeeman
  • October 2
    • Carlos Blanco Galindo , 32nd President of Bolivia (b. 1882)
    • Muhamed Hadžiefendić, Yugoslav army officer (killed by partisans) (b. 1898)
  • October 4Irena Iłłakowicz, Polish general (murdered) (b. 1906)
  • October 5Leon Roppolo, American jazz clarinetist (b. 1902)
  • October 6Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln, Hungarian adventurer (b. 1879)
  • October 7Prince Christoph of Hesse (aviation accident) (b. 1901)
  • October 8
    • Marianne Golz, Austrian-born opera singer, World War II resistance member (executed) (b. 1895)
    • Wilhelm Hegeler, German novelist (b. 1870)
  • October 9Pieter Zeeman, Dutch physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1865)
  • October 12Max Wertheimer, Austro-Hungarian psychologist (b. 1880)
  • October 14
    • Rudolf Beckmann, German SS officer (Sobibór uprising) (b. 1910)
    • Siegfried Graetschus, German SS officer (Sobibór uprising) (b. 1916)
    • Johann Niemann, German SS officer (Sobibór uprising) (b. 1913)
  • October 15William Penhallow Henderson, American painter, architect and furniture designer (b. 1877)
  • October 18Margaret Bartholomew, American Civil Air Patrol officer (aviation accident on mission) (b. 1903)
  • October 19Camille Claudel, French sculptor (b. 1864)
  • October 21Sir Dudley Pound, British admiral (b. 1877)
  • October 22William Reginald Hall, British admiral (b. 1870)
  • October 23
    • André Antoine, French actor (b. 1858)
    • Ben Bernie, American jazz violinist (b. 1891)
    • Antonio Legnani, Italian admiral (automobile accident) (b. 1888)
    • Franceska Mann, Polish dancer (killed in Auschwitz concentration camp) (b. 1917)
  • October 24Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau, Canadian poet, lawyer (b. 1912)
  • October 28Sir Aurel Stein, Hungarian-born British archaeologist (b. 1862)
  • October 30Max Reinhardt, Austrian director (b. 1873)

November[]

Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich of Russia
Metropolitan Gurie Grosu
Doris Miller
  • November 5
    • Samad Abdullayev, Soviet army officer (killed in action) (b. 1920)
    • Frank Campeau, American actor (b. 1864)
    • Idhomene Kosturi, Albanian politician, acting Prime Minister of Albania (b. 1873)
  • November 7Dwight Frye, American character actor (b. 1899)
  • November 9Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich of Russia (b. 1877)
  • November 10 – Blessed Lübeck martyrs, German Roman Catholic priests (executed):
    • Johannes Prassek (b. 1911)
    • Eduard Müller (b. 1911)
    • Hermann Lange (b. 1912)
    • Karl Friedrich Stellbrink (b. 1894)
  • November 13Maurice Denis, French painter (b. 1870)
  • November 14Gurie Grosu, Romanian Orthodox priest and metropolitan (b. 1877)
  • November 19Baruch Lopes Leão de Laguna, Dutch painter (b. 1864)
  • November 22
    • Lorenz Hart, American lyricist (b. 1895)
    • Keiji Shibazaki, Japanese admiral (killed in action) (b. 1894)
  • November 23Charles Ray, American actor (b. 1891)
  • November 24
    • France Balantič, Yugoslav poet (killed in action) (b. 1921)
    • Doris Miller, African-American sailor, Pearl Harbor survivor (killed in action) (b. 1919)
    • Henry M. Mullinnix, American admiral (killed in action) (b. 1892)
  • November 25Renato Cialente, Italian film actor (b. 1897)
  • November 26
    • Prince Hubertus of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (b. 1909)
    • Kiyoto Kagawa, Japanese admiral (killed in action) (b. 1895)
    • Edward "Butch" O'Hare, American fighter pilot (killed in action) (b. 1914)
  • November 28Aleksander Hellat, Soviet politician (b. 1881)
  • November 29Zsolt Harsányi, Hungarian author, dramatist, translator and writer (b. 1887)

December[]

John Harvey Kellogg
Fats Waller
  • December 1
    • Antonio de Viti de Marco, Italian economist (b. 1858)
    • Damrong Rajanubhab, Thai prince, historian (b. 1862)
  • December 2Nordahl Grieg, Norwegian poet, novelist, journalist and activist (killed in action as war correspondent) (b. 1902)
  • December 6G. O. Smith, English sportsman (b. 1872)
  • December 7Hamilton Lamb, Australian politician, soldier (in Japanese POW camp) (b. 1900)
  • December 8Donald Mackintosh, British clergyman, Roman Catholic bishop and reverend (b. 1876)
  • December 9
  • December 10Charles Belcher, American film actor (b. 1872)
  • December 13Erich Garske, German political activist (executed) (b. 1907)
  • December 14John Harvey Kellogg, American physician, nutritionist (b. 1852)
  • December 15Fats Waller, African-American jazz pianist (pneumonia) (b. 1904)
  • December 18Hector Gray, British Royal Air Force officer (executed in Japanese Prisoner of War camp) (b. 1911)
  • December 20Edward L. Beach Sr., American naval officer, author (b. 1867)
  • December 22Beatrix Potter, British children's author, illustrator (b. 1866)
  • December 23Sir Frederic Fisher, British admiral (b. 1851)
  • December 25William Irving, German-born American film actor (b. 1893)
  • December 26Erich Bey, German admiral (killed in action) (b. 1898)
  • December 27
    • Rupert Julian, New Zealand actor, director (b. 1879)
    • Creelman MacArthur, Canadian businessman, politician (b. 1874)
  • December 30Hobart Bosworth, American film actor, director, writer and producer (b. 1867)

Nobel Prizes[]

Nobel medal.png
  • PhysicsOtto Stern
  • ChemistryGeorge de Hevesy
  • Physiology or MedicineCarl Peter Henrik Dam, Edward Adelbert Doisy
  • Literature – not awarded
  • Peace – not awarded

References[]

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  2. ^ Waters, John M. Jr., CAPT USCG (December 1966). "Stay Tough". United States Naval Institute Proceedings. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ "The Eruption of Parícutin (1943–1952)". How Volcanoes Work. Retrieved October 23, 2012.
  4. ^ "Parícutin, Mexico". Volcano World. Archived from the original on February 6, 2012. Retrieved October 23, 2012.
  5. ^ "Parícutin: The Birth of a Volcano". Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Retrieved October 23, 2012.
  6. ^ Rohwer, J.; Hummelchen, G. (1992). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. p. 194. ISBN 1-55750-105-X.
  7. ^ Copeland, B. Jack, ed. (2006). Colossus: the Secrets of Bletchley Park's Codebreaking Computers. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-284055-4.
  8. ^ Caidin, Martin. Ragged, Rugged Warriors (Bantam, 1978>)[page needed]
  9. ^ Rohwer, J.; Hummelchen, G. (1992). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. p. 196. ISBN 1-55750-105-X.
  10. ^ "HMS Thunderbolt (N 25)". uboat.net. Retrieved October 21, 2010.
  11. ^ Warren, C. E. T.; Benson, James (1958). "The Admiralty regrets ...": the story of His Majesty's submarine Thetis and Thunderbolt. London: Harrap.
  12. ^ Hofmann, Albert. "LSD — My Problem Child". The Psychedelic Library. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  13. ^ Bombing of Aberdeen, news.stv.tv; accessed December 6, 2014.
  14. ^ "Los Angeles Zoot Suit Riots". Los Angeles Almanac.
  15. ^ Cosgrove, Ben (June 18, 2014). "Hatred on the Home Front: The Detroit Race Riots During WWII". Time Life. Archived from the original on June 7, 2013. Retrieved November 29, 2016.
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  17. ^ "Belzec". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on January 7, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  18. ^ "Badolgio Declares Rome An 'Open City', Pittsburgh Press, August 15, 1943, p. 1
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  22. ^ Jackson, Carlton (1997). Forgotten Tragedy: The Sinking of HMT Rohna. Naval Institute Press.
  23. ^ United States Geological Survey (September 4, 2009). "PAGER-CAT Earthquake Catalog" (Version 2008_06.1 ed.). USGS.
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  26. ^ Mann, Chris (2012). British Policy and Strategy towards Norway, 1941–45. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 34–35.
  27. ^ "British Sink Scharnhorst". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 27, 1943. p. 1.
  28. ^ "Year by Year 1943" – History Channel International.
  29. ^ [Schriften der Königsberger Gelehrten-Gesellschaft: Geisteswissenschaftliche Klasse; 18,2 (trans: "Writings of the Königsberg Scholarly Society: Spiritual Scientific Class No. 18.2")]: (Halle ["Halle an der Saale"]: M. Niemeyer, 1943.)
  30. ^ Elizabeth A. Brennan; Elizabeth C. Clarage (1999). Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 323. ISBN 978-1-57356-111-2.
  31. ^ Sharon Davis (1997). The Sixties. Mainstream. p. 184. ISBN 978-1-85158-836-7.
  32. ^ Steve Hochman (1999). Popular Musicians. Salem Press. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-89356-987-7.
  33. ^ "Obituary: Ian Dunn". The Independent. March 21, 1998.
  34. ^ Simon Kuper (2012). Ajax, the Dutch, the War; The Strange Tale of Soccer During Europe's Darkest Hour
  35. ^ J.O.H. Jesperson (1860-1943)
  36. ^ "Henri Fertet". Musée de l'Ordre de la Libération (in French). Retrieved December 1, 2019.
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