April 1959

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April 9, 1959: The Mercury Seven astronauts are introduced. Pictured front row, Wally Schirra, Deke Slayton, John Glenn and Scott Carpenter, and back row, Alan Shepard, Gus Grissom and Gordon Cooper

The following events occurred in April 1959:

April 1, 1959 (Wednesday)

April 2, 1959 (Thursday)

April 3, 1959 (Friday)

April 4, 1959 (Saturday)

  • In a speech at
    U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower announced the first American commitment to keeping South Vietnam as a separate, non-Communist nation. "We reach the inescapable conclusion", said Eisenhower, "that our own national interests demand some help from us in sustaining in Vietnam the morale, the economic progress, and the military strength necessary to its continued existence in freedom."[12]

April 5, 1959 (Sunday)

  • In Dortmund, West Germany, Rong Guotuan of Communist China defeated Ferenc Sido of Hungary to win the 25th World Table Tennis Championships, becoming the first Chinese player to do so.
  • At the Southmoor Hotel in Chicago, black nationalist S.A. Davis, Chairman of the Joint Council of Repatriation, and eight of his associates met with George Lincoln Rockwell, white supremacist, and two of his associates in the American Nazi Party, to discuss a joint resolution in support of government-supported "repatriation" of African-Americans to a homeland on the African continent.[13]

April 6, 1959 (Monday)

  • The
    RKO Pantages Theatre in Hollywood. Gigi won a record nine Oscars, including the award for Best Picture.[14]
  • Texas A&M University won in its fight against admitting women as students, as the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed an appeal by two women from a state court decision.[15]
  • Pan Africanist Congress as a black African alternative to the African National Congress.[16]
  • Hal Holbrook began his career of portraying a retired author, with his first performance of Mark Twain Tonight! at the Forty-first Street Theatre in Manhattan.[17]
  • The "escudo" was created as the new currency of the South American nation of Chile, with the signing by President Jorge Alessandri of Law 13,305 in response to runaway inflation. The new escudo was worth 1,000 old pesos, which would be completely replaced by January 1, 1960. The "new peso" would replace the Chilean escudo on September 29, 1975, at a rate of one new peso for every 1,000 escudos (or every one million "old pesos").

April 7, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • In Washington, the
    dry cleaners.[18] The AMA, as well as a trade association of dry-cleaning stores, joined in the warning. In January, Dr. Paul B. Jarrett of Phoenix had begun a campaign to educate the public after five children had suffocated in the previous year.[19]
  • The first photograph of a falling meteorite was taken in Příbram, Czechoslovakia.[20]
  • For the first time, a radar signal was sent between the Earth and the Sun. A team led by Dr. Von R. Eshleman, Lt. Col. Robert C. Barthle, and Dr. Philip B. Gallagher, transmitted the beam from Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and received the return 17 minutes later. The morning experiments were repeated on April 10 and April 12, and the data was published in the journal Science on February 5, 1960.[21]
  • By a margin of 386,845 to 314,380 voters in Oklahoma elected to repeal the state's constitutional prohibition on the sale of alcohol, leaving Mississippi as the only dry American state. Liquor sales began on September 1.[22]
  • The town of Jackpot, Nevada, was founded. Located a few miles south of the border with Idaho, the gambling center was created after Idaho banned gambling.[23]
  • Israel created the first
    Holocaust Memorial Day by vote of the Knesset in Tel Aviv, to be observed on the 27th day of Nisan, which fell on May 5 in 1959. If the 27th falls on a Friday, the observation is held on the 26th. In 2009, Nisan 27 was on April 21.[24]
  • The Philippine government began use of the presidential yacht, the R.P.S. Lapu-Lapu (PY-77).[25]

April 8, 1959 (Wednesday)

April 9, 1959 (Thursday)

April 9, 1959: Mercury Seven press conference
Frank Lloyd Wright

April 10, 1959 (Friday)

April 10, 1959: Crown Prince Akihito marries Michiko Shōda in Japan's royal wedding
30-yen commemorative stamp

April 11, 1959 (Saturday)

  • Nova rocket, once perfected, would "be able to transport two or three men to the moon and return them to earth."[43]

April 12, 1959 (Sunday)

April 13, 1959 (Monday)

  • The United States and Britain asked the Soviet Union to join in a moratorium on above-ground nuclear weapons testing.[46][47]
  • Singer Mario Lanza gave his final concert, in Kiel, West Germany. He would die on October 7 of the same year.[48]
  • The United States launched the Discoverer II satellite from
    Vandenberg Air Force Base
    in California at 1:20 pm. The capsule was successfully ejected but lost after a timing error sent it to Norway rather than Hawaii.
  • NASA asked the U.S. Navy for use of the "
    Johnsville, Pennsylvania, for the Mercury program. [7]
  • Died:
    Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam. Van Beinum was reportedly leading the orchestra in playing Brahms' First Symphony in C Minor "when he lowered his baton and called for a pause", then fell to the floor.[49]

April 14, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • The Robert A. Taft Memorial, a carillon with 27 bells, was dedicated in Washington. President Eisenhower and former president Hoover delivered remarks before a crowd of 5,000 people.[50]
  • The
    Atlas D missile was launched from Cape Canaveral in its first test. With a range of 10,360 miles (16,670 km), the missile could travel farther than any previously produced in the United States. The rocket exploded soon after launch, as did two other Atlas D launches, until succeeding on July 29, 1959.[51]
  • The Grumman OV-1 Mohawk, built as the U.S. Army's reconnaissance airplane, made its first flight.[52]

April 15, 1959 (Wednesday)

April 16, 1959 (Thursday)

April 17, 1959 (Friday)

  • Twenty-six people died in the crash of a Mexican
    Guayama
    . The Tigres Voladores Airlines plane exploded in midair as it made its approach.
  • Born: Sean Bean, English actor; in Handsworth, South Yorkshire

April 18, 1959 (Saturday)

Corvette Stingray

April 19, 1959 (Sunday)

April 20, 1959 (Monday)

Promo for the CBS pilot

April 21, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • Alfred Dean set a record by catching a 2,664-pound (1,208 kg) great white shark off the coast of Ceduna, South Australia.[73]
  • The tradition of a cannon firing at noon in Rome was started again after a 20-year hiatus.[74]

April 22, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • In a game between the
    Kansas City Athletics and the Chicago White Sox, the Sox scored 11 runs in the seventh inning on only one base hit, and went on to win 20–6. John Callison singled to bring in two players who had reached base on Athletics' errors. After the bases were loaded, eight other players (including Callison) scored from third base by a player being walked, while another scored from third after a batter was struck by a pitch.[75]
  • In 1955,
    Branch Davidian sect in Waco, Texas, had predicted that God would establish the Kingdom of Palestine on April 22, 1959. The prophecy failed, but the Davidians continued, dying in a fire at Waco in 1993.[76][77]
  • Norman Rosen filed a patent for the
    crib bumper, designed to prevent infant suffocation by providing an alternative to the traditional cloth or vinyl sides within a crib. Rosen would receive U.S. Patent No. 3,018,492 on January 30, 1962, for his invention.[78]
Mercury spacecraft and escape system configuration
  • In a meeting at Langley, NASA officials concluded that the tower configuration was the best escape system for the Mercury spacecraft and development would proceed using this concept. [7]
  • The second of two recording dates of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue at Columbia Records' 30th Street Studio in New York City.
  • Born: Ryan Stiles, American comedian; in Seattle

April 23, 1959 (Thursday)

  • The press secretary for
    President of Panama, charged that American actor John Wayne was financing an attempt by Roberto Arias to overthrow the government there. Wayne dismissed the accusations as ridiculous, and noted, "Roberto never talked politics, and I never heard him say anything about overthrowing the Panamanian government."[79]

April 24, 1959 (Friday)

  • The 34
  • The bond graph was invented, described as "one of the most effective and most elegant tools for modeling system dynamics".[81]
  • DeMarquis D. Wyatt, NASA's Assistant to the Director of Space Flight Development, testified before Congress]] in support of a request for $3 million in Fiscal Year 1960 for research into techniques and problems of space rendezvous, which would be a goal of Project Gemini.[82][83]
  • Your Hit Parade was broadcast for the last time.[84]
  • Died: Omaha, 27, American thoroughbred racehorse and winner of the 1935 Triple Crown, died at the age of 24 on a farm in Nebraska City, Nebraska. The horse was buried somewhere on the Ak-Sar-Ben Raceway grounds, but the location has been lost.[85]

April 25, 1959 (Saturday)

April 26, 1959 (Sunday)

April 27, 1959 (Monday)

  • Liu Shaoqi was named as the new President of the People's Republic of China, as Mao Zedong gave up the ceremonial post to concentrate on the job of First Secretary of the Communist Party.[91]
  • Philibert Tsiranana was elected the first president of the Malagasy Republic on the island of Madagascar.[92]
  • At 7:00 a.m. Eastern time, NBC's national broadcasts were shut down by a walkout of engineering personnel. The dispute arose over the planned airing of a Today show segment that had been recorded without union personnel. Programming resumed three hours later.[93]
  • The radio program One Man's Family was broadcast for the last time, after 27 years on NBC radio.[94]
  • The seven Project Mercury astronauts reported for duty and their training program was undertaken immediately.[7] Actual training began the next day. Within 3 months the astronauts were acquainted with the various facets of the Mercury program. [7]
  • Born:
    Bellshill, North Lanarkshire

April 28, 1959 (Tuesday)

April 29, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • The crash of an Iberia Airlines DC-3 killed all 28 people on board, including Joaquín Blume, 25, the 1957 European gymnastics champion. Blume and four other gymnasts had boarded the flight in Barcelona en route to Madrid and were scheduled to compete in a meet in the Canary Islands. Flying in a storm, the twin-engine plane struck the side of the 5,900-foot (1,800 m) high Toba Peak in the Sierra de Valdemeca range, at a location near the city of Cuenca.[101]
  • The Las Vegas Convention Center opened.[102]
  • The fraternity
    Phi Kappa and Theta Kappa Phi.[103]

April 30, 1959 (Thursday)

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