April 1947

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The following events occurred in April 1947:

April 1, 1947 (Tuesday)

April 2, 1947 (Wednesday)

April 3, 1947 (Thursday)

  • The private medical company Bupa was founded in the UK.[5]
  • The children's TV game show Juvenile Jury hosted by Jack Barry premiered on NBC. Each episode had a panel of kids giving advice to solve the problems of other kids. The program ran until 1954 and would be revived several times thereafter.

April 4, 1947 (Friday)

  • Founded: The International Civil Aviation Organization was founded, more popularly known as ICAO
  • Amerigo Dumini and two other Italian fascists were sentenced to 30 years imprisonment for the 1924 assassination of the socialist politician Giacomo Matteotti.[6]

April 5, 1947 (Saturday)

  • Five US Marines participating in Operation Beleaguer were killed and 16 others wounded in battle with a "dissident" Chinese force that attempted to raid the Marine munitions dump near Tangku.[7]
  • Soviet occupation forces in Germany calculated a shortfall of 1.3 million homes in the eastern zone.[8]
  • Born: Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, 14th President of the Philippines, in San Juan, Philippines[9]

April 6, 1947 (Sunday)

April 7, 1947 (Monday)

  • 325,000 telephone workers went on strike in the United States with a variety of demands including a $12 weekly pay boost, increased vacation and pension benefits.[10]
  • The Ba'ath Party was founded in Syria.
  • Died: Henry Ford, 83, American industrialist and founder of the Ford Motor Company

April 8, 1947 (Tuesday)

  • Following a series of killings due to labor strife, the Cuban Interior Ministry banned all political meetings that may provoke disorder.[11]
  • The Pohl trial began in Nuremberg. Oswald Pohl and 17 other SS officers went on trial for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
  • New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey signed a bill giving the Attorney General power to "restrain" activities of oathbound organizations until they had filed a complete roster of members and other data with the Secretary of State. The law was aimed at tightening controls on communists.[12]
  • Born:

April 9, 1947 (Wednesday)

  • The Journey of Reconciliation was begun by 16 men from the Congress of Racial Equality to challenge segregation laws on interstate buses in the Southern United States.
  • The Glazier–Higgins–Woodward tornadoes swept through Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, killing at least 181 people.
  • Brooklyn Dodgers manager Leo Durocher was suspended for the 1947 season by Baseball Commissioner Happy Chandler for "accumulated unpleasant incidents in which he has been involved, which the commissioner construes as detrimental to baseball."[13]
  • Singer Frank Sinatra floored newspaper columnist Lee Mortimer with a punch in the foyer of the Hollywood nightclub Ciro's. Sinatra claimed that Mortimer had insulted him with a racial slur, but the columnist said he didn't even know Sinatra was in the nightclub until he was attacked from behind and held down by two of Sinatra's companions while the singer struck him "two or three more times" and threatened to kill him if he saw him again. Mortimer was known to criticize Sinatra in his newspaper column for his political views and claim that he couldn't sing.[14] Sinatra would be charged with assault, but the charge would be dismissed after he reportedly agreed to pay Mortimer $9,000.[15]

April 10, 1947 (Thursday)

April 11, 1947 (Friday)

April 12, 1947 (Saturday)

  • The Big Four conferees at Moscow agreed that major German war plants should be destroyed by June 30, 1948.[7]
  • Mobster Lucky Luciano was taken ashore by police at Genoa and booked on charges of clandestine expatriation because of his departure from Italy to Cuba in late 1946. Luciano had previously been deported to Italy by the United States after his release from a long prison term.[18]
  • Born:

April 13, 1947 (Sunday)

  • The site of the future Headquarters of the United Nations was formally dedicated in New York City. UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie declared: "We are proud to have the world capital of the United Nations established here in this great melting pot of the peoples of the world." The UN planned to have its first building on the site completed by the fall of 1948.[19]
  • Born: Mike Chapman, record producer and songwriter, in Nambour, Queensland, Australia
  • Died: Jean Chassagne, 65, French submariner, aviator and race car driver

April 14, 1947 (Monday)

April 15, 1947 (Tuesday)

April 16, 1947 (Wednesday)

April 17, 1947 (Thursday)

  • The Milch Trial concluded in Nuremberg. Erhard Milch was found guilty of war crimes and responsible for slave labor, but was acquitted of the charge of having knowingly and willfully participated in fatal medical experiments. Milch was sentenced to life in prison.
  • In Rome, a mob of about a thousand unemployed workers staged a noisy protest outside the Parliament building, stopping private cars and sometimes beating the occupants. One of those assaulted was Italian Foreign Minister Carlo Sforza, who was struck by several fists as he stepped out of his car to go to his office. The Foreign Ministry said that Sforza had been shaken but not seriously hurt.[24]

April 18, 1947 (Friday)

April 19, 1947 (Saturday)

April 20, 1947 (Sunday)

  • Frederik IX of Denmark took the throne upon the death of his father Christian X.
  • NBC Radio cut off a broadcast of The Fred Allen Show for twenty-five seconds because the host refused to change his script. The censored bit started off with another actor asking Allen why the program was cut off the previous week. Allen explained, "Well, there's a little man in the company we work for. He's a vice president in charge of program ends. When our program runs overtime, he marks down how much time is saved." Allen was then asked, "What does he do with all this time?" to which he replied: "He adds it all up, 10 seconds here, 20 seconds there, and when the vice president saves up enough seconds, minutes and hours to make two weeks, he uses the two weeks of our time for his vacation." Allen described NBC's action as "sheer stupidity. The radio industry is 25 years old, but some people in it are keeping it in its infancy by such action as this."[27]
  • Born: Hector, singer-songwriter, as Heikki Veikko Harma in Helsinki, Finland
  • Died:

April 21, 1947 (Monday)

  • Princess Elizabeth gave a radio address on her twenty-first birthday from Cape Town, South Africa. "I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong," Elizabeth said.[28]
  • Born: Iggy Pop, rock musician, as James Newell Osterberg, Jr. in Muskegon, Michigan

April 22, 1947 (Tuesday)

April 23, 1947 (Wednesday)

  • The War Crimes Tribunal in Rabaul sentenced Japanese general Hatazō Adachi to life imprisonment on a charge of being responsible for the atrocities committed by his troops.[30]
  • In Moscow, the Big Four powers agreed to a deadline of December 31, 1948 to repatriate all of the nearly 2 million German prisoners of war still in Allied hands.[31]

April 24, 1947 (Thursday)

April 25, 1947 (Friday)

April 26, 1947 (Saturday)

April 27, 1947 (Sunday)

April 28, 1947 (Monday)

April 29, 1947 (Tuesday)

April 30, 1947 (Wednesday)

References