September 1946

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The following events occurred in September 1946:

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September 2, 1946: British India's Viceroy Wavell swears in transitional government and future prime ministers Nehru of India and Liaquat Ali Khan of Pakistan
September 10, 1946: Sister Agnes Bojaxhiu receives "call within a call" and inspiration to become Mother Teresa

September 1, 1946 (Sunday)

September 2, 1946 (Monday)

September 3, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. President Harry S. Truman approved the go-ahead for "Project Paperclip", ostensibly a campaign to bring German scientists to the U.S., and to keep them from being taken to the U.S.S.R. Many of the scientists had been former Nazis, and assisted in experimentation on human subjects with radiation, oxygen deprivation and flash blindness.

September 4, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • An Air France plane bound for London crashed moments after takeoff, when it failed to clear the roof of a factory at Le Bourget, killing 20 persons. The evening before, another Air France plane crashed as it approached Copenhagen from Paris, killing all 22 persons on board.
  • The Ben Hecht-written play A Flag is Born, advocating the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people in Israel, opened on Broadway.
  • The comedy film Monsieur Beaucaire starring Bob Hope was released.
  • Died: Nobu Shirase, 85, leader of the Japanese Antarctic Expedition of 1911–1912

September 5, 1946 (Thursday)

  • Trans-Luxury Airlines Flight 850, on its way (with several stops) from New York to San Francisco, crashed into a hillside as it attempted to land in Elko, Nevada, killing 21 of the 22 people on board. A 2-year-old boy survived the accident with only minor injuries.
  • The Tuskegee Airmen unit was disbanded and the base at Tuskegee, Alabama, was closed.
  • Born: Freddie Mercury, singer and songwriter for the rock group (Queen), as Farrokh Bulsara; in Stone Town, Zanzibar (d. 1991).

September 6, 1946 (Friday)

September 7, 1946 (Saturday)

  • Royal Air Force Captain Teddy Donaldson set a new official speed record, flying a Gloster Meteor at 615.78 miles per hour in level flight, or Mach 0.81 at 1,100 feet.
  • In the fourth major airline accident in five days, a British South American Airways airliner crashed shortly after takeoff from Bathurst (modern day Banjul, capital of the Gambia). Only one of the 24 persons on board survived.

September 8, 1946 (Sunday)

September 9, 1946 (Monday)

September 10, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • In what is now celebrated among the Missionaries of Charity as "Inspiration Day", 36-year-old Sister Agnes Teresa Bojaxhiu of the Loreto Sisters' Convent experienced what she would describe as the "call within a call". She was traveling on a train from Siliguri to Darjeeling when she heard the call of God: "I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them.". As one author later noted, "Though no one knew it at the time, Sister Teresa had just become Mother Teresa".
  • Fred Morrison, an American fighter pilot during World War II, first sketched his idea for a toy plastic disc could fly through the air after it was thrown. He called his invention the "Whirlo-Way". By 1955, he sold a lighter version, the "Pluto Platter", to the Wham-O toy company, which manufactured millions of the discs under the brand name Frisbee.
  • With workers at Pittsburgh's electric utility threatening a walkout, and management standing firm against their demands, citizens of the 10th largest city in the U.S. braced for a 12:01 a.m. shutdown of all electric power. To their surprise, the blackout never came, as a judge issued an injunction at midnight.
  • Born:

September 11, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • The Brooklyn Dodgers and the visiting Cincinnati Reds played the longest scoreless tie in Major League Baseball history, going for 19 innings in 4 hours, 40 minutes, before the game was called because of darkness.
  • The United States turned over $1,121,400,000 worth of surplus U.S. Army property to the Philippines, including vehicles, construction equipment, prefab structures, clothing, medicine, food and other items. The material had been stockpiled in the Philippines after its recapture by the Allies, for the planned invasion of Japan.
  • Died: Ida Stover Eisenhower, 84, mother of General Dwight D. Eisenhower

September 12, 1946 (Thursday)

Commerce Secretary Wallace and President Truman
  • U.S. Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace delivered a speech at a rally at Madison Square Garden, contradicting the statement of foreign policy that had been made six days earlier by Secretary of State Byrnes, embarrassing President Harry S. Truman, and bringing an end to Wallace's career in government. Truman, who had glanced at the speech two days earlier, was asked at a press conference about the speech and whether it "represented the policy of his administration", and replied that it was. That evening, Wallace declared that "We have no more business in the political affairs of Eastern Europe than Russia has in the political affairs of Latin America, Western Europe and the United States... and just two days ago, when President Truman read these words, he said they represented the policy of his Administration.". Truman compounded the error by making the excuse that "It was my intention to express the thought that I approved the right of the Secretary of Commerce to deliver that speech. I did not intend to indicate that I approved the speech" which TIME magazine described as a "clumsy lie".
  • Born: Neil Lyndon, British journalist and writer, known for his book No More Sex War: The Failures of Feminism

September 13, 1946 (Friday)

  • Captain Amon Göth, 37, Nazi SS officer who had carried out the mass executions of more than 13,000 Jews in Kraków and Tarnów, and the Szebnia concentration camp, was hanged, along with Dr. Leon Gross, a Jew who had collaborated with him at the Plaszow concentration camp. Captain Göth was portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in the film Schindler's List.
  • Ten days after the United States launched Project Paperclip, the Soviet Union issued decree No. 2163-880s, launching Operation Osoaviakhim, to transfer German rocket production potential to the USSR.
  • The Boston Red Sox clinched the American League pennant, after Ted Williams hit an inside-the-park home run for a 1–0 win over the Cleveland Indians.
  • Dr. Willis J. Potts performed the first aorta-to-pulmonary artery anastomosis to correct a congenital heart defect, a surgery later called the Potts shunt. The first patient was a 21-month-old girl at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago. The surgery was performed on 658 more patients until being discontinued in 1967 because of complications that often arose.
  • Died: George Washington Hill, 61, President of American Tobacco Company, who increased cigarette sales worldwide over a 21-year period.

September 14, 1946 (Saturday)

 
Hank Williams
  • The U.S. Census Bureau forecast that the United States population in 1990 would peak at 165,000,000 and that it would decline to 168,177,000 by 2000. The actual figures for the two censuses were 248,709,873 in 1990 and 281,421,906 in 2000.
  • Hiram King "Hank" Williams began his celebrated career as a country musician, signing a contract with Fred Rose in Nashville.
  • Ivan Serov completed his report to Joseph Stalin about the fate of Stalin's son, Lt. Yakov Dzhugashvili, who had been captured by the Germans in World War II, and killed in 1943 while attempting to escape from the POW camp at Sachsenhausen.
  • Ho Chi Minh left Paris after being forced into signing an unfavorable agreement with France. During his stay, the future President of North Vietnam had visited the American Embassy in a fruitless attempt to obtain assistance from the United States.
  • In a referendum on independence, residents of the small Faroe Islands voted 5,660 to 5,500 in favor of independence from Denmark. Approximately 25,000 people lived on 17 of the 21 islands in the group.

September 15, 1946 (Sunday)

September 16, 1946 (Monday)

  • After drought and a poor harvest added to a famine in the Soviet Union, a governmental decree went into effect, doubling the price for rations of meat and dairy products, and tripling the price of bread. On September 27, another decree reduced the number of people entitled to bread rations. The famine lasted into 1947, costing more than a million lives.
  • At his factory in Maranello, Italian auto manufacturer Enzo Ferrari produced his first V12 engine, the component that would set the Ferrari as a leader in the production of sports cars.
  • Owners of baseball's National League and American League teams met in New York City and, according to Dodgers' owner Branch Rickey and baseball commissioner Happy Chandler, secretly voted 15–1 to approve an August 27 recommendation against allowing African American players into the major leagues. Although other owners disputed the story, Chandler's copy of the committee report was discovered after Chandler's death, when his papers had been donated to the University of Kentucky.

September 17, 1946 (Tuesday)

 
RCA 630-TS, first mass produced TV set
  • Mass production of television sets began, with RCA producing the first new TV since World War II, a 10-inch set made at its plant in Camden, New Jersey. Only 5,000 sets had been produced in the years before the U.S. entered the war. By the end of 1947, 150,000 had been sold, rising to 4 million in 1949 and 10 million in 1950.

September 18, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • Hidden in the Warsaw Ghetto by the Ojneg-Szabes group during the Second World War, the archive of materials that had been written during the siege was unearthed. Dr. Emmanuel Ringelblum supervised the writing, collection, storage (in watertight milk cans) and burial for future generations to read.
  • Mound Metalcraft, Inc., was founded in Mound, Minnesota, by Lynn E. Baker, Avery F. Crounse and Alvin F. Tesch. In 1947, the company introduced the first Tonka toys, a line of durable metal toy trucks and other equipment.

September 19, 1946 (Thursday)

  • In a speech at Zürich, former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill proposed what would eventually become the European Community. Churchill suggested "a remedy, which, if generously and spontaneously adopted by a great majority of the people of many lands, would, as if by a miracle, transform the whole scene and make Europe as free and happy as Switzerland is today... We must build a kind of United States of Europe."
  • The first Cannes Film Festival was held, taking place at the city of the same name on the French Riviera. The event had originally been planned for September 1, 1939, the day that World War II began, and postponed until the war's end.
  • Walter F. White, executive director of the NAACP, and five other civil rights activists met at the White House with President Truman to ask for the help of the U.S. government in ending violence against African-Americans. Although White had met in the past with Presidents Coolidge, Hoover and Roosevelt without success, Truman was horrified by the description of the blinding of Isaac Woodard, and ordered Attorney General Tom Clark to begin working on "the inauguration of some sort of policy to prevent such happenings".
  • Born: Gerald Brisco, professional wrestler; in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

September 20, 1946 (Friday)

  • President Truman fired Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace, eight days after Wallace's controversial speech in New York. Noting that "the Government of the United States must stand as a unit in its relations with the rest of the world", President Truman announced, "I have today asked Mr. Wallace to resign from the Cabinet."
  • The landscape of the American and Canadian Niagara Falls was permanently altered when a 120-foot (37 m) wide section of rock collapsed at 10:19 a.m.
  • The 1st Cannes Film Festival opened in France.

September 21, 1946 (Saturday)

  • The KB Toys business was created by brothers Harry Kaufman and Joseph Kaufman, who had operated the Kaufman Brothers wholesale candy business since 1922 and then acquired a toy company from a debtor and moved into becoming a wholesale seller of toys under the trade name Kay-Bee Toy & Hobby Stores, later a chain of retail stores.
  • Died: Vincent Benevento, 46, self-styled "Cheese King of Chicago", was murdered while vacationing in Lake Zurich, Illinois. After surviving being shot 10 times in a 1945 attack, Benevento died after being shot 7 more times in the new incident.

September 22, 1946 (Sunday)

 
Berra
  • Yogi Berra made his major league debut, entering a game for the New York Yankees against the Philadelphia A's. Berra hit a home run in his first time at bat, and then went on to a colorful career.

September 23, 1946 (Monday)

  • In what would later become South Vietnam, the Commissioner of the French-controlled Autonomous Republic of Cochin-China issued an order authorizing the arrest of any Asian resident whose identity papers were not in order. Police and the French Army arrested more than 50,000 Vietnamese and conscripted them to work at the area's rubber plantations.
  • The Løgting, legislature for the Faroe Islands, voted 12–11 in favor of creating a nation independent of Denmark, which had ruled since the year 1386, in accordance with the September 15 plebiscite. King Christian X dissolved the Iagting the next day and denied the resolution. On September 9, 1947, a new Faroen parliament would accept a Danish proposal for autonomy in a continued union with Denmark.

September 24, 1946 (Tuesday)

 
Clifford
  • White House counsel Clark Clifford presented President Truman with a top secret report, authored by George Elsey, entitled "American Relations with the Soviet Union". "The U.S. must be prepared to wage atomic and biological warfare", the report stated in part, adding that "a war with the USSR would be 'total' in a more horrible sense than any previous war and there must be constant research for both offensive and defensive weapons." In her biography of her father, Margaret Truman wrote that when Clifford said that only ten copies existed, Truman told him, "I want the other nine." The Clifford-Elsey Report remained secret until 20 years later when a copy was given to Arthur Krock of The New York Times.
  • Roy C. Farrell and Sydney H. de Kantzow founded Cathay Pacific Airways.
  • Born:
  • Died: Jeff Tesreau, 57, American baseball pitcher

September 25, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • African-American actor Canada Lee surprised and impressed audiences at Boston's Shubert Theatre, portraying Daniel de Bosola in a production of The Duchess of Malfi. In a reversal of the longtime practice of white men donning blackface, Lee "opened a new field for Negro actors today by donning white makeup and portraying a white character for the first time in the history of the American stage", according to a UPI report. In the production that opened September 23 and continued to Broadway, Lee wore a special white paste that had been used medically, to cover burns and marks, but had never before been used in the theatre.
  • Born: Bishan Singh Bedi, Indian cricketer; in Amritsar, Punjab Province, British India)
  • Died: Dr. Hans Eppinger, physician at Dachau who oversaw experiments on making seawater drinkable. Eppinger committed suicide as the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials were concluding.

September 26, 1946 (Thursday)

September 27, 1946 (Friday)

  • Nikolai V. Novikov, the Soviet ambassador to the United States, sent a long telegram to his boss, Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov, describing U.S. foreign policy as reflecting "imperialistic tendencies of monopolistic American capital" and "a striving for world supremacy". Analogous to George F. Kennan's February 22 "long telegram", the Novikov cable helped shape strategy for one nation against its greatest adversary during the Cold War. Classified for years, the cable was not released until 1990 as part of the "Conduct of the Cold War" conferences.
  • Defending world middleweight boxing champion Tony Zale retained his title against heavily favored challenger Rocky Graziano, in a bout at Yankee Stadium. A crowd of 39,827 watched Zale, fighting after four years of World War II service, knock Graziano out midway through the sixth round.
  • Died: Geoffrey de Havilland Jr., British test pilot, was killed when his DH-108 jet, the Swallow, broke apart as he reached Mach 0.875 while attempting supersonic flight.

September 28, 1946 (Saturday)

September 29, 1946 (Sunday)

September 30, 1946 (Monday)

References