May 1947

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The following events occurred in May 1947:

May 1, 1947 (Thursday)

May 2, 1947 (Friday)

May 3, 1947 (Saturday)

May 4, 1947 (Sunday)

May 5, 1947 (Monday)

May 6, 1947 (Tuesday)

May 7, 1947 (Wednesday)

May 8, 1947 (Thursday)

May 9, 1947 (Friday)

  • Over 100,000 trade unionists in Hamburg, Germany and their supporters gathered to protest food shortages in the British-occupied zone. The population of the city was only receiving about 800 calories of food per day instead of the prescribed 1500.[11]
  • The Brooklyn Dodgers paid their first visit of the season to Shibe Park in Philadelphia. To make amends for the negative publicity generated by the racist taunting incident of April 22, Phillies manager Ben Chapman was coaxed into standing next to Jackie Robinson for a photograph in which both men posed stiffly while holding the same bat.[12][13]
  • Died: Willie Francis, 18, American convicted murderer who survived a failed execution by electric chair on May 3, 1946 (executed by electric chair)

May 10, 1947 (Saturday)

May 11, 1947 (Sunday)

May 12, 1947 (Monday)

  • Syrian delegate to the United Nations Fares al-Khoury told the General Assembly's Political Committee that Zionism was a "fatal dream" and that the Arabs "will never permit it to succeed."[17]
  • Born: Michael Ignatieff, author, academic and politician, in Toronto, Canada

May 13, 1947 (Tuesday)

May 14, 1947 (Wednesday)

May 15, 1947 (Thursday)

May 16, 1947 (Friday)

May 17, 1947 (Saturday)

  • Japanese Finance Minister Tanzan Ishibashi, Justice Minister Tokutaro Kimura and Commerce and Industry Minister Mitsujirō Ishii were purged from cabinet and forbidden any further political activity because of their roles in the time of the Empire.[24]
  • Died: George Forbes, 78, Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1930 to 1935; Seabiscuit, 13, American champion Thoroughbred racehorse

May 18, 1947 (Sunday)

  • The American Association of Scientific Workers issued a 40,000-word technical summary warning that the United States would be especially vulnerable to biological warfare.[14]
  • Wrigley Field in Chicago recorded the largest regular season paid attendance in its history when 46,572 people came out to see Jackie Robinson make his first appearance at the ballpark for the Brooklyn Dodgers against the Cubs (A Ladies Day at Wrigley in 1930 had recorded an attendance of 51,556, but that was not the paid attendance record since women got in free.) Robinson went 0-for-4 but the Dodgers won, 4–2.[25]
  • Died: Hal Chase, 64, American baseball player; Edmund FitzAlan-Howard, 1st Viscount FitzAlan of Derwent, 91, British politician; Lucile Gleason, 59, American actress

May 19, 1947 (Monday)

May 20, 1947 (Tuesday)

  • The Viet Minh announced the execution of Hòa Hảo leader Huỳnh Phú Sổ.[28]
  • The US telephone operators' strike ended after six weeks when the last remaining strikers agreed to a two-year, no-strike contract with an average wage increase of 11½ cents an hour.[29]
  • Died: Bruno Bräuer, 54, German paratrooper (executed by firing squad in Greece for war crimes); Philipp Lenard, 84, German physicist and Nobel laureate; Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller, 49, German general (executed by firing squad in Greece for war crimes)

May 21, 1947 (Wednesday)

  • In Greenville, South Carolina, a case that drew national attention came to an end when 28 men charged with murder and conspiracy in the February 17 lynching of Willie Earle, an African-American man, were acquitted by an all-white jury. Pandemonium broke out on the floor of the courtroom, but once order was restored Judge J. Robert Martin expressed displeasure with the verdict by leaving without the customary courtesy of thanking the jury for their service.[30][31]

May 22, 1947 (Thursday)

  • President Harry S. Truman signed the Truman Doctrine into law, granting $400 million in aid to stabilize the Turkish and Greek governments in an effort to contain communism.[32]
  • The USA's first guided ballistic missile, the 45-foot long Corporal, was first fired.[33]

May 23, 1947 (Friday)

May 24, 1947 (Saturday)

May 25, 1947 (Sunday)

May 26, 1947 (Monday)

May 27, 1947 (Tuesday)

May 28, 1947 (Wednesday)

May 29, 1947 (Thursday)

May 30, 1947 (Friday)


May 31, 1947 (Saturday)

References