May 1946

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May 25, 1946: Truman comes within three minutes of ordering U.S. Army to seize America's railroads
May 11, 1946: The first "CARE Package" is delivered
May 3, 1946: Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal opens
May 16, 1946: The original "tape" recorder, the hi-fidelity Magnetophon, is first demonstrated

The following events occurred in May 1946:

May 1, 1946 (Wednesday)

May 2, 1946 (Thursday)

May 3, 1946 (Friday)

  • The
    Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal began the trial of Japanese military and political leaders for war crimes.[6]
  • In Paris, at the Luxembourg Palace, the Council of Foreign Ministers debated the Italian peace treaty and Italy's border with Yugoslavia, in the presence of the two countries’ delegations, led by the Prime Ministers Alcide De Gasperi and Edvard Kardelj. Kardelj asked for Trieste’s annexation to Yugoslavia, while De Gasperi defended the Italian character of the Julian March.[7]
  • Willie Francis, 17, was strapped into the electric chair, awaiting execution at St. Martinville, Louisiana, but got only a mild shock when the circuits failed. Francis had been convicted of the murder of a local pharmacist.[8] After the chair was repaired, Francis's execution was rescheduled for May 9, but Lieutenant Governor Emile Verret used his power as acting governor to grant a stay of execution. Francis would eventually be executed on May 9, 1947.[9]

May 4, 1946 (Saturday)

May 5, 1946 (Sunday)

  • In Italy, the SISAL football pools gambling system was launched; the first winner was the clerk Emilio Blasetti, who won 463,846 liras. In the following decades, SISAL (renamed Totocalcio) would become the most popular Italian betting pool and a social phenomenon.[12]
  • Voters in France rejected the proposed constitution for the Fourth Republic. Another vote, boycotted by millions, would be taken on October 13, and a new draft would be approved.[13]
  • Jorge Gaitan. The later assassination of Gaitan precipitated "La Violencia", in which thousands of people would be killed.[14]
  • Stan Laurel was married for the fifth time, to the actress Ida Kitaeva.[15]

May 6, 1946 (Monday)

  • American
    Navajo veterans of World War II were denied in their attempts to register to vote in the 1946 general elections in New Mexico. The county clerk of McKinley County rejected their applications, citing a provision in the state constitution that denied the right of suffrage to "Indians not taxed", referring to Native Americans who lived on federal reservations.[16] The applicants challenged the provision, and on August 3, 1948, a federal court ruled that the New Mexico constitutional provision violated the United States Constitution. The 1948 general election marked the first time that residents of New Mexico's Indian reservations were allowed to vote.[17]
  • LIFE Magazine published "Bedlam 1946: Most U.S. Mental Hospitals are a Shame and a Disgrace" in its May 6, 1946, issue. Albert Q. Maisel's exposé of the atrocities at two mental institutions, in Ohio and Pennsylvania, which he described as "concentration camps masquerading as hospitals",[18] spurred reforms in psychiatric care.[19]
  • Curly Howard, the bald member of The Three Stooges, suffered a stroke on the final day of filming of Half-Wits Holiday and retired at age 42.

May 7, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering (Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo or Totsuko) was founded by Masaru Ibuka and Akio Morita, who started with only 20 employees and built the company into one of the world's largest electronics manufacturers. In 1955, the company renamed itself Sony.[20]
  • Born: Thelma Houston, American pop singer ("Don't Leave Me This Way"), in Leland, Mississippi

May 8, 1946 (Wednesday)

May 9, 1946 (Thursday)

King Victor Emmanuel III
  • Hour Glass, considered the first network television entertainment show, premiered at 8:00 p.m. on WNBT-TV in New York City. The program, described by Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh as "one of the most important pioneers in the early history of television",[23] By November, the show was telecast on the NBC television network, which consisted of three stations (New York, Philadelphia and Schenectady).
  • King
    Umberto II.[24]
  • Born:

May 10, 1946 (Friday)

  • Two naval airplanes collided during a training mission at the
    Pensacola Naval Air Station, killing 28 U.S. Navy airmen. The two PB-4Y planes were practicing evasive maneuvers with an F6F Hellcat fighter and crashed into a wooded area eight miles north of the town of Munson in Santa Rosa County, Florida.[25]
  • An American-launched
    U.S. Army politely declined his offer to become the first astronaut in history. "Experts said that there was room in a V-2 for a human being and he probably could survive the 3,500 mile an hour top speed," noted a report, "but added there was no known means of escaping alive before the rocket crashed to earth."[26]
  • Born:

May 11, 1946 (Saturday)

  • Sixty-one SS members, who had carried out exterminations at the Mauthausen concentration camp at Dachau, were convicted of murdering 70,000 people, mostly Jewish.[27] Forty-nine of them were executed, and the other 12 released from prison by 1951.[28]
  • The first 20,000 "CARE Packages", each with almost 20 pounds (9.1 kg) of food, were delivered to people in need, as a ship unloaded the materials at the French port of Le Havre. Under the charity program, an individual could pay for a CARE Package to be delivered elsewhere in the world. The phrase "care package" would become a generic term for sending necessary items to someone in need. CARE originally stood for "Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe", and later for "Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere".[29]
  • Born: Robert Jarvik, American physicist and artificial heart inventor, in Midland, Michigan

May 12, 1946 (Sunday)

May 13, 1946 (Monday)

May 14, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • Nueces County, Texas, including Corpus Christi, was quarantined to prevent the spread of a "polio-like disease" that had broken out in Corpus Christi and San Antonio. In addition to the closing of all schools, churches, theaters, and parks, the roads leading into and out of Nueces County were blocked by 300 members of the Texas National Guard, and nobody under 21 was allowed in. Buses and trains were "sprayed with DDT", with the pesticide being used as a disinfectant.[34]

May 15, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • The USCG Eagle, later known as "America's Tall Ship", was commissioned as a training vessel for the United States Coast Guard. The only active American sail-powered vessel had been built in 1936 for the German Navy as the Horst Wessel, and was captured in World War II.[35]

May 16, 1946 (Thursday)

May 17, 1946 (Friday)

May 18, 1946 (Saturday)

May 19, 1946 (Sunday)

Tarkington

May 20, 1946 (Monday)

May 21, 1946 (Tuesday)

Louis Slotin
  • Dr. Louis Slotin, a physicist at the Los Alamos research center, was fatally injured during an experiment with a "subcritical nuclear assembly", a plutonium core and two halves of a beryllium sphere. The purpose was to measure the increase in radiation as the two hemispheres (which deflected neutrons back into the plutonium) were moved closer together. At 3:20 pm, the screwdriver slipped and the two beryllium pieces came together, causing a critical reaction. Slotin knocked the halves apart, saving the other seven men in the room, while absorbing a lethal dose of radiation that a radiologist described as a "3-D sunburn" to all the cells of his body. Slotin died nine days later.[48][49]

May 22, 1946 (Wednesday)

Krug
Frank

May 23, 1946 (Thursday)

  • At 4 p.m., thousands of railroad workers in the Eastern Time Zone of the United States walked off of their jobs. Hour by hour, as 4 o'clock arrived in the rest of the nation, laborers walked off of their jobs. By 7 pm EST, the 227,000 miles of American railroads were tied up.[52] In addition to the halt of freight shipments, millions of travelers were stranded in what was described as "the most crippling work stoppage the nation ever suffered",[53]
  • The first issue of the weekly news magazine World Report, created by publisher David Lawrence as a complement to his weekly newspaper United States News, was published. Beginning on January 16, 1948, the two publications would be combined into one weekly magazine, U.S. News & World Report.[54]
  • Chick-fil-A, a U.S. chain of restaurants known originally for their chicken fillet sandwiches, was founded by S. Truett Cathy with the opening of his Dwarf Grill 24-hour diner in Hapeville, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta. [55] Mr. Cathy would expand his chicken restaurant chain by opening the first restaurant with the name "Chick-fil-A" on November 24, 1967, in Atlanta’s Greenbriar Mall and the chain remained limited to indoor shopping malls until inaugurating a stand-alone location in 1986. [55]

May 24, 1946 (Friday)

  • At 9 pm Eastern Time, U.S. President Harry S. Truman made a nationwide radio address regarding the railway strike, and delivered an ultimatum: "If sufficient workers to operate the trains have not returned, by 4 p.m. tomorrow, as head of our government, I have no alternative but to operate the trains by using every means within my power ... I shall ask our armed forces to furnish protection to every man who heeds the call of his country in this hour of need." Having set a deadline of 19 hours for action, Truman closed by saying that he would address a joint session of Congress the next day at 4.[56]
  • French Indo-China. The troops from France were supported by planes and artillery, and clashed with local forces while pursuing Communist rebels.[57]
  • An unidentified U.S. Congressman on the House Appropriations Committee told a reporter of a
    biological weapon that "can wipe out all form of life in a large city", describing a "germ proposition" that would be sprayed from airplanes to deliver "quick and certain death".[58]

May 25, 1946 (Saturday)

Flag of the Kingdom of Transjordan

May 26, 1946 (Sunday)

Gottwald
  • In the first democratic elections since World War II in Czechoslovakia, the Communist Party, led by Klement Gottwald captured 114 of the 300 seats in Parliament. Gottwald became prime minister of a coalition government. In 1948, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia would become the sole legal party.[63]
  • Vincent Pellicio, a 21-year-old prisoner in
    Newhall, California. Returned to Virginia, Pellicio was pardoned later that month by Virginia Governor Gerald Baliles, "in view of his law-abiding behavior and commendable adjustment since his escape".[64]

May 27, 1946 (Monday)

  • In Vietnam, the French colonial government created an administration for the minority Montagnard population, separate from the Vietnamese people, with the headquarters at Buôn Ma Thuột. A short-lived, autonomous Pays Montagnard du Sud followed in 1950.[65]

May 28, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • The United States made a loan package to France for a record 1.37 billion dollars.[66]
  • In the first nighttime baseball game ever played at Yankee Stadium, a crowd of 49,917 watched the New York Yankees lose to the Washington Senators, 2–1.[67]
  • Born:
    Koyamparambath Satchidanandan, Indian Malayalam language poet, in Kerala
  • Died: Carter Glass, 89, United States Senator (D-Virginia) since 1920 and oldest member of the U.S. Senate. Senator Glass had not appeared in Congress in almost four years after a stroke, but had been re-elected later in 1942. Even after he became incapacitated, his seat was never declared vacant.

May 29, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • The Minsk Tractor Works was founded in the Soviet Union at the capital of the Byelorussian SSR (now Belarus). The state-supported company became the world's largest manufacturer of farm tractors.[68]
John L. Lewis

May 30, 1946 (Thursday)

May 31, 1946 (Friday)

References

  1. ^ "Pilbara: Australia's longest strike". Green Left. May 3, 2006. Archived from the original on 20 December 2009.
  2. ^ Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Brooks, Courtney G.; Ertel, Ivan D.; Newkirk, Roland W. "PART I: Early Space Station Activities -1923 to December 1962.". SKYLAB: A CHRONOLOGY. NASA Special Publication-4011. NASA. pp. 4–5. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  3. Salt Lake Tribune
    . May 3, 1946. p. 1.
  4. ^ "Alcatraz Officers Regain Control". Salt Lake Tribune. May 5, 1946. p. 1.
  5. ^ "The Battle of Alcatraz". AlcatrazHistory.com.
  6. The American Experience
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  7. ^ "I punti di vista della Yugoslavia e dell'Italia esposti da Kardelj e da De Gasperi ai Quattro" [The points of view of Yugoslavia and Italy presented by Kardelj and De Gasperi to the Four.]. La Stampa (in Italian). 4 May 1946.
  8. ^ "Convict Lives On As 'Chair' Fails". Salt Lake Tribune. May 4, 1946. p. 1.
  9. ^ King, Gilbert (July 19, 2006). "The Two Executions of Willie Francis". The Washington Post. p. A19.
  10. ^ Saunavaara, Juha. "Occupation Authorities, the Hatoyama Purge and the Making of Japan's Postwar Political Order". JapanFocus.org.
  11. ^ "Le notizie del 4 maggio 1946" [The news of 4 May 1946]. www.cinquantamila.it (in Italian). Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  12. ^ "5 maggio 1946: si gioca la prima schedina SISAL; l'antenata del Totocalcio" [5 May 1946: the first SISAL card is played; the ancestor of Totocalcio.]. www.eurosport.com (in Italian). Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  13. ^ van der Eyden, Ton (2003). Public Management of Society: Rediscovering French Institutional Engineering in the European Context. IOS Press. p. 57.
  14. ^ Braun, Herbert (2003). The Assassination of Gaitan: Public Life And Urban Violence In Colombia. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 226.
  15. ^ "Famous Weddings & Divorces in May 1946". OnThisDay.com. May 1946. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  16. ^ "Indians Seek Vote Right", Salt Lake Tribune, May 7, 1946, p1
  17. ^ "Suffrage for the Suffering Indians", Milwaukee Journal, October 12, 1948, p20
  18. ^ LIFE Magazine, May 6, 1946 p102
  19. ^ The American Experience, pbs.org
  20. ^ "Sony Corporate History", SonyEurope.com
  21. ^ "11 Nations Invited to View Atom Test". Milwaukee Journal. May 8, 1946. p. 11.
  22. ^ a b Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Grimwood, James M. "Part 1 (A) Major Events Leading to Project Mercury March 1944 through December 1957". Project Mercury - A Chronology. NASA Special Publication-4001. NASA. Retrieved 29 January 2023.
  23. ^ Brooks and Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–present (8th Ed., Random House, Inc., 2003) pp554–555
  24. ^ "Italian King Abdicates; Umberto Wins Crown", Salt Lake Tribune, May 10, 1946, p1
  25. ^ "28 Navy Airmen Die As Planes Collide". Salt Lake Tribune. May 11, 1946. p. 1.
  26. ^ "Rocket Pierces Skies 75 Miles". The Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. May 11, 1946. p. 1 – via Google News.
  27. ^ "61 SS Killers Convicted". Salt Lake Tribune. May 12, 1946. p. 1.
  28. ^ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  29. ^ CARE.org
  30. ^ Newfoundland Herald website Archived 2008-10-03 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ RussianSpaceWeb.com
  32. ^ "The History of Government Airport Funding"
  33. ^ "Coal Unions Trek Back to Mines", Salt Lake Tribune, May 13, 1946, p1
  34. ^ "Guardsmen Patrol Texas City As Polio-Like Disease Spreads", Miami Daily News, May 14, 1946, p1
  35. ^ "Eagle Captain Spends Last Summer Aboard America's Tall Ship" Archived 2011-06-13 at the Wayback Machine U.S. Coast Guard Academy
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  37. ^ "British Propose India Union; Reject Moslem State Idea", Salt Lake Tribune, May 17, 1946, p1
  38. ^ "27 Die as Airliner Dives Into Virginia Pine Woods", Salt Lake Tribune, May 17, 1946, p1
  39. ^ "The Race to Video" Archived 2011-04-04 at the Wayback Machine, by Stewart Wolpin, Invention & Technology Magazine (Fall 1994), AmericanHeritage.com
  40. ^ "A homecoming long overdue", by Meredith Goad, Portland Press-Herald, November 9, 2009
  41. ^ "NASA - Dryden History - Historic Aircraft - X-1 Flight Summary". NASA. Archived from the original on 2023-06-29.
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  43. ^ Nature-Spot.com
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  46. ^ Office of Public Sector Information, United Kingdom
  47. ^ "C-45 Strikes Skyscraper, Kills 5 in N.Y.", Salt Lake Tribune, May 21, 1946, p1
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  50. ^ "Truman Seizes Coal Pits; Orders Wage Parley", Salt Lake Tribune, May 22, 1946, p1
  51. ^ Institute history
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  54. ^ "History of U.S. News" Archived 2005-11-16 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ a b "The history of Chick-fil-A: From small diner to fast-food giant closed on Sunday", by Kelly Hayes, Fox 5 News (New York), June 6, 2022
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  57. ^ "French Troops Move Into Siam", Salt Lake Tribune, May 27, 1946, p1
  58. ^ "New U.S. Secret Weapon Is Germ Spray That Can Wipe Out Cities" El Paso Herald-Post, May 24, 1946, p1
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  62. ^ "Dr. Patty Hill Funeral Set For Today", Louisville (KY) Courier-Journal, May 27, 1946, p5
  63. ^ Norman M. Naimark and Leonid Gibianskii, The Establishment of Communist Regimes in Eastern Europe, 1944–1949 (Westview Press, 1997) p250
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  67. ^ "Senators Nip Yanks, Threaten For Second", Milwaukee Journal, May 29, 1946, pB-3; BallparksOfBaseball.com
  68. ^ Minsk Tourist Bureau
  69. ^ "Coal Dispute Ends; Strike Draft Dies – Lewis Orders Men Back, Gains 18.5 c Wage Hike". Salt Lake Tribune. May 30, 1946. p. 1.
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  72. ^ "90 Killed and 60 Injured as Chinese Train Derails", Milwaukee Journal, June 3, 1946, p1
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  74. ^ "Turkish 'Quake Toll Set at 255". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. June 3, 1946. p. 1.
  75. ^ Thomas, David St John (2006). Journey Through Britain: Landscape, People and Books. Frances Lincoln Ltd. p. 503.
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