August 1947
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The following events occurred in August 1947:


August 1 Events Pre-1600 *30 BC – Octavian (later known as Augustus) enters Alexandria, Egypt, bringing it under the control of the Roman Republic. *AD 69 – Batavian rebellion: The Batavians in Germania Inferior (Netherlands) revolt under ...
, 1947 (Friday)

*Bulgarian leader Georgi Dimitrov and Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito signed the Bled agreement, an alliance treaty paving the way for future unification between the states in a new
Balkan Federative Republic The Balkan Federation project was a left-wing political movement to create a country in the Balkans by combining Yugoslavia, Albania, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey. The concept of a Balkan federation emerged in the late 19th century from ...
. *Anti-British riots broke out in
Tel Aviv Tel Aviv-Yafo ( he, תֵּל־אָבִיב-יָפוֹ, translit=Tēl-ʾĀvīv-Yāfō ; ar, تَلّ أَبِيب – يَافَا, translit=Tall ʾAbīb-Yāfā, links=no), often referred to as just Tel Aviv, is the most populous city in the ...
during a funeral procession for the five Jews killed by British soldiers the previous day. *Born:
Lorna Goodison Lorna Gaye Goodison CD (born 1 August 1947)Debo ...
, poet, in Kingston, Jamaica


August 2, 1947 (Saturday)

* 1947 BSAA Avro Lancastrian ''Star Dust'' accident: A British South American Airways
Avro Lancastrian The Avro 691 Lancastrian was a Canadian and British passenger and mail transport aircraft of the 1940s and 1950s developed from the Avro Lancaster heavy bomber. The Lancaster was named after Lancaster, Lancashire; a Lancastrian is an inhabita ...
airliner crashed into Mount
Tupungato Tupungato, one of the highest mountains in the Americas, is a massive Andean lava dome dating to Pleistocene times. It lies on the border between the Chilean Metropolitan Region (near a major international highway about east of Santiago) and t ...
in the Argentine Andes during a flight from Buenos Aires to Santiago, killing all 11 aboard. Due to the remote location of the crash site and the effect of glacial ice, wreckage from the plane was not recovered until 1998.


August 3 Events Pre-1600 * 8 – Roman Empire general Tiberius defeats the Dalmatae on the river Bosna. * 435 – Deposed Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Nestorius, considered the originator of Nestorianism, is exiled by Roman Emper ...
, 1947 (Sunday)

*The Nicaraguan Constitutional Assembly election was held. Only
Anastasio Somoza García Anastasio Somoza García (1 February 1896 – 29 September 1956) was the leader of Nicaragua from 1937 until his assassination in 1956. He was only officially the 21st President of Nicaragua from 1 January 1937 to 1 May 1947 and from 21 May 195 ...
's
Nationalist Liberal Party The Nationalist Liberal Party ( es, Partido Liberal Nacionalista, PLN) was a political party in Nicaragua. When Anastasio Somoza García took power in 1936, the party aligned itself with the United States and other caudillos in Latin America, li ...
ticket offered any candidates, and voter turnout appears to have been so low that official tallies were not even published. *Born:
Colleen Corby Colleen Corby (born August 3, 1947) is an American retired model. She is best known for her work as a teen in the 1960s, as well as for her modeling work in department store catalogs from the 1960s and 1970s, including those of Sears, JC Penney, Mo ...
, model, in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Wilkes-Barre ( or ) is a city in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania and the county seat of Luzerne County. Located at the center of the Wyoming Valley in Northeastern Pennsylvania, it had a population of 44,328 in the 2020 census. It is the s ...
*Died:
Vic Willis Vic (; es, Vic or Pancracio Celdrán (2004). Diccionario de topónimos españoles y sus gentilicios (5ª edición). Madrid: Espasa Calpe. p. 843. ISBN 978-84-670-3054-9. «Vic o Vich (viquense, vigitano, vigatán, ausense, ausetano, ausonense): ...
, 71, American baseball player


August 4 Events Pre-1600 * 598 – Goguryeo-Sui War: In response to a Goguryeo (Korean) incursion into Liaoxi, Emperor Wéndi of Sui orders his youngest son, Yang Liang (assisted by the co-prime minister Gao Jiong), to conquer Goguryeo during th ...
, 1947 (Monday)

*
Argentina Argentina (), officially the Argentine Republic ( es, link=no, República Argentina), is a country in the southern half of South America. Argentina covers an area of , making it the second-largest country in South America after Brazil, th ...
and
Ireland Ireland ( ; ga, Éire ; Ulster Scots dialect, Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the Atlantic Ocean, North Atlantic Ocean, in Northwestern Europe, north-western Europe. It is separated from Great Britain to its east by the North Channel (Grea ...
established full diplomatic relations. *The Technicolor comedy film ''
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (1939) is a short story by James Thurber. The most famous of Thurber's stories, it first appeared in ''The New Yorker'' on March 18, 1939, and was first collected in his book '' My World and Welcome to It'' ( Ha ...
'' starring Danny Kaye and
Virginia Mayo Virginia Mayo (born Virginia Clara Jones; November 30, 1920 – January 17, 2005) was an American actress and dancer. She was in a series of comedy films with Danny Kaye and was Warner Brothers' biggest box-office money-maker in the late 1940s. ...
was released. *Born:
Hubert Ingraham The Right Honourable Hubert Alexander Ingraham, PC (born 4 August 1947) is a Bahamian politician who was Prime Minister of the Bahamas from August 1992 to May 2002 and again from May 2007 to May 2012. He is a member of the Free National Movem ...
, two-time prime minister of the Bahamas, in Grand Bahama, Pine Ridge, the Bahamas


August 5, 1947 (Tuesday)

*35 Zionist leaders in Palestine were detained for terrorist activities. *Australia formally joined the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. *Dutch troops in Indonesia completed Operation Product, taking over large parts of Java and Sumatra from Republican forces. *North Carolina Governor R. Gregg Cherry called the failure of a grand jury in Jackson, North Carolina to indict seven white men on charges of lynching an African-American a "miscarriage of justice" and said he would order the case reopened. *Born: Rick Derringer, rock guitarist and singer, in Fort Recovery, Ohio


August 6, 1947 (Wednesday)

*The HM Treasury, UK Treasury imposed a 75 percent customs duty on the value of imported films under the Import Duties Act 1932. *Howard Hughes made his first appearance before a senatorial inquiry into wartime contracts and testified that committee chairman Owen Brewster had offered to kill the investigation if Hughes would agree to merge Trans World Airlines, TWA with Pan American World Airways, Pan-American Airlines, which Brewster had part interest in. *Died: Alan Sullivan, 78, Canadian poet and short story author


August 7, 1947 (Thursday)

*After 101 days and 4,300 miles, the raft of the Kon-Tiki expedition, ''Kon-Tiki'' expedition led by Thor Heyerdahl smashed into a reef at Raroia in the Tuamotus. Heyerdahl demonstrated that there were no technical reasons preventing South Americans of Pre-Columbian era, pre-Columbian times from settling Polynesia. *The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, Bombay Municipal Corporation formally took over the Brihanmumbai Electric Supply and Transport, Bombay Electric Supply and Transport (BEST). *Born: Franciscus Henri, musician and children's entertainer, in The Hague, Netherlands


August 8, 1947 (Friday)

*The British House of Commons on second reading passed a bill to give the Labour government sweeping powers to deal with Britain's economic crisis. Opposition leader Winston Churchill accused the government of seeking a "blank check for totalitarianism." *Born: George Costigan, actor, in Portsmouth, England; José Cruz, baseball player, in Arroyo, Puerto Rico; Ken Dryden, ice hockey player and politician, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada *Died: Anton Denikin, 74, Russian general


August 9, 1947 (Saturday)

*The Motion Picture Association of America suspended all shipments of films to the UK in reaction to the new customs duty. *"Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette)" by Tex Williams hit #1 on the ''Billboard (magazine), Billboard'' Best Sellers in Stores record chart. *Born: John Varley (author), John Varley, science fiction author, in Austin, Texas


August 10, 1947 (Sunday)

*General Lucius D. Clay reported the release of the last 8 million German prisoners of war and the complete destruction or conversion of all armaments plants in the US-occupied zone. The United States became the first of the four occupying powers to release all of its German POWs. *William Odom landed in Chicago after a record 73-hour solo flight around the world in the ''Milton_Reynolds#Reynolds_the_aviator, Reynolds Bombshell'', a converted A-26 bomber.Leonard, p. 717. *In Karachi, the Parliament of Pakistan met for the first time. *Born: Ian Anderson, rock musician (Jethro Tull (band), Jethro Tull), in Dunfermline, Scotland; Drupi, pop-rock singer, as Giampiero Anelli in Pavia, Italy; Anwar Ibrahim, politician, in Bukit Mertajam, Penang, Malayan Union


August 11, 1947 (Monday)

*Senator Homer S. Ferguson suddenly called a suspension of the senatorial inquiry into Howard Hughes' war contracts, reportedly due to the bad publicity it was generating. Hughes claimed that the move was a "vindication" of his conduct. *Born: Diether Krebs, actor, cabaret artist and comedian, in Essen, Germany (d. 2000) *Died: Harry Davis (1900s first baseman), Harry Davis, 74, American baseball player


August 12, 1947 (Tuesday)

*Huge fires raged in Lahore following a full day of arson, killings and other crimes on the eve of the announcement of how the Punjab boundary commission would partition the province. At least 100 people died in the violence. *The Philadelphia Gum, Philadelphia Chewing Gum Corporation was formed. *Born: William Hartston, chess player, in London, England


August 13, 1947 (Wednesday)

*The two-day riot total in Lahore rose to over 200 dead. *General Lucius D. Clay testified before the UN Palestine Inquiry Commission in Berlin that the German economy probably could not absorb many displaced persons without causing an increase in anti-Semitism. *Born: John Stocker (voice actor), John Stocker, voice actor, in Toronto, Canada *Died: Iha Fuyū, 71, Japanese scholar; George Godfrey (boxer born 1897), George Godfrey, 50, American heavyweight boxer


August 14, 1947 (Thursday)

*The Buchenwald Trial ended. 22 of the 31 convicted staff members of Buchenwald concentration camp received death sentences, five were sentenced to life imprisonment, and the remaining four were given sentences of 10 to 20 years. *The Dominion of Pakistan was formed when the Muslim majority region formed by the Partition of India gained independence. *The Technicolor comedy film ''Life with Father (film), Life with Father'' starring William Powell, Irene Dunne and Elizabeth Taylor had its world premiere in Skowhegan, Maine, the same town where the original play had first been performed eight years earlier. *Shortly before the stroke of midnight on the eve of India's independence, Jawaharlal Nehru delivered the famous Tryst with Destiny speech. *Born: Maddy Prior, folk singer (Steeleye Span), in Blackpool, England; Danielle Steel, romance novelist, in New York City


August 15, 1947 (Friday)

*India became an Independence Day (India), independent country. Jawaharlal Nehru became the nation's first prime minister and participated in the official raising of the Flag of India, Indian flag in New Delhi's War Memorial Square in front of half a million people. *Liaquat Ali Khan took office as the 1st Prime Minister of Pakistan. *GLEEP, Britain's first nuclear reactor, atomic reactor, started up at Harwell, Oxfordshire, Harwell. *Twenty nations of the Americas gathered in Petrópolis, Brazil to draft a new defense pact formalizing the Inter-American Conference on Problems of War and Peace, Act of Chapultepec. *Born: Rakhee Gulzar, actress, in Ranaghat, India


August 16, 1947 (Saturday)

*Nikola Petkov was sentenced to death on charges of conspiracy against the Bulgarian government. *Indian Prime Minister Nehru declared in a broadcast that it was "the first and sacred duty of this Government to restore peace and order in the country." Nehru warned that rioting must cease and that his government would spare no one who participated in disorders "whether he be Hindu, Muslim or Sikh." *Born: Marc Messier, actor and filmmaker, in Granby, Quebec, Canada; Carol Moseley Braun, politician, in Chicago, Illinois


August 17, 1947 (Sunday)

*Soviet authorities in Germany passed their own version of a law already adopted on the American side by declaring an amnesty for all Nazis except important party officials. *Ministry of Overseas France, Minister of Overseas France Marius Moutet announced that French India would become an establishment of five Special economic zone, free cities within the French Union. *Died: Wilhelm Uhde, 72, German art collector, dealer, author and critic


August 18, 1947 (Monday)

*Cádiz Explosion: at least 147 people were killed and 5,000 injured in Cádiz, Spain when munitions in a storage depot exploded for reasons that were never determined. *The United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to admit Yemen and Pakistan to membership. *The US government called the Petkov sentence a "gross miscarriage of justice" and called on the USSR to pressure the Bulgarian government to suspend the sentence pending review of the case.


August 19, 1947 (Tuesday)

*A US offer to settle the Indonesian-Netherlands dispute was rejected by Indonesian representative Sutan Sjahrir, who renewed his demand that the UN Security Council set up an arbitration commission to settle the matter. *Born: Terry Hoeppner, American college football coach, in Woodburn, Indiana (d. 2007); Gerard Schwarz, conductor and trumpeter, in Weehawken, New Jersey


August 20, 1947 (Wednesday)

*The Doctors' trial ended in Nuremberg. Seven high-ranking medical officials of Nazi Germany, including Hitler's personal physician Karl Brandt, were sentenced to death for having been involved in human experimentation and other crimes against humanity. *President Truman estimated in his annual mid-year review of the US budget that the government would end its 1948 fiscal year June 30 with a record surplus of $4.7 billion, which he asserted would be used to pay down the national debt and provide a reserve against emergencies. *Died: Franz Cumont, 79, Belgian archaeologist and historian; Max Gaines, 53?, American comic book publisher and founder of EC Comics; James Harbord, 81, American general and President and Chairman of the Board of RCA


August 21, 1947 (Thursday)

*Soviet UN delegate Andrei Gromyko vetoed the applications of Italy and Austria for UN membership, on the grounds that the Italian peace treaty had not yet been ratified and that treaty negotiations with Austria had not yet been started. *Chile's Chamber of Deputies authorized the government to suspend civil liberties to deal with a wave of Communist-led strikes. *Died: Theodore G. Bilbo, 69, American politician and white supremacist


August 22, 1947 (Friday)

*In Cairo, 1 person was killed and 75 injured in clashes between police and 5,000 demonstrators protesting the United States' support for a Brazilian proposal in the UN Security Council to refer Egypt's demand for Britain to leave the Nile valley back to Britain and Egypt for direct negotiations. *British transport ships with 4,500 refugees from the SS Exodus, SS ''Exodus'' left Port de Bouc, France and sailed for Hamburg after the passengers refused to disembark.Leonard, p. 720. *Born: Cindy Williams, actress (''Laverne & Shirley''), in Van Nuys, Los Angeles, California (d. 2023)


August 23, 1947 (Saturday)

*Ecuadoran Defense Minister Carlos Mancheno Cajas overthrew President José María Velasco Ibarra and seized power in a bloodless coup. *24 people were killed in a suburb of Berlin in the Soviet zone when a train burst into flames. It was believed that sparks from the engine ignited reels of film in the carriage while the train was moving. *Prominent American liberals marked the 20th anniversary of the Sacco and Vanzetti, Sacco-Vanzetti execution with a manifesto warning against all forms of tyranny. "The twenty years since that execution night in August 1927," the manifesto read, "have brought upon the world mass slaughter and human suffering on a scale staggering to human reason. In retrospect we now see that the fate of the good shoemaker and the poor fish peddler was an omen of this worldwide tragedy from which the human family has scarcely yet begun to emerge." Signers included Eleanor Roosevelt, Helen Gahagan Douglas and her husband Melvyn Douglas, Herbert H. Lehman and Robert Maynard Hutchins. *Born: Willy Russell, dramatist, lyricist and composer, in Whiston, Merseyside, Whiston, England


August 24, 1947 (Sunday)

*European officials reported that a large part of the continent was experiencing its worst drought in ten years and that near-famine conditions would exist over the winter if rain did not fall soon. The situation was particularly serious in Germany, which was going through its worst drought in 50 years. *In Scotland, the first Edinburgh International Festival opened at Usher Hall. *Born: Roger De Vlaeminck, racing cyclist, in Eeklo, Belgium


August 25, 1947 (Monday)

*A Douglas D-558-1 Skystreak set a new air speed record of 650.6 miles per hour at the Edwards Air Force Base, U.S. Army air base in Muroc, California. *Died: Clark Wissler, 76, American anthropologist


August 26, 1947 (Tuesday)

*Moscow rejected the American proposal that Nikola Petkov's death sentence be reviewed, calling it "interference" in Bulgarian affairs. *Born: Nicolae Dobrin, footballer, in Pitești, Romania (d. 2007)


August 27, 1947 (Wednesday)

*The IG Farben Trial began in Nuremberg. 24 IG Farben industrialists went on trial for their conduct in Nazi Germany. *The British government ordered "siege economy" measures Rationing in the United Kingdom, rationing food, motoring and foreign travel. *Born: Barbara Bach, actress and model, as Barbara Goldbach in Queens, New York


August 28, 1947 (Thursday)

*Kvitbjørn disaster, ''Kvitbjørn'' disaster: A Norwegian Air Lines Short Sandringham flying boat crashed into a mountain near Lødingen, Norway, killing all 35 aboard. *Ecuador's new dictator Carlos Mancheno abolished the country's 1944 constitution and proclaimed himself president under the 1906 charter with sweeping powers of decree. *In the Dutch town of Beek, 17,000 karats of cut diamonds worth $2.5 million US that had been taken by the Nazis from Dutch merchants during the occupation were returned to the Netherlands by a heavily armed US convoy. *Born: Liza Wang, actress, in Chongming County, China


August 29, 1947 (Friday)

*Konstantinos Tsaldaris became Prime Minister of Greece for the second time. *Three British transports carrying SS ''Exodus'' refugees sailed on from Gibraltar to Hamburg when the passengers maintained their refusal to disembark. *Born: Temple Grandin, professor of animal science and autism spokesperson, in Boston, Massachusetts *Died: Manolete, 30, Spanish bullfighter (killed in the arena); Kōtarō Nakamura, 66, Japanese general


August 30, 1947 (Saturday)

*About 90 people were killed and 60 injured in a movie theater fire in the Rueil-Malmaison, Rueil district of Paris, France. Police said the blaze was caused by a wire in the second balcony that short-circuited. *The Inter-American Defense Conference in Brazil concluded with the approval of a joint defense treaty for the entire Western hemisphere. *Paul Mantz repeated as the winner of the Bendix Trophy air race, making his run at an average speed of 460.423 miles per hour. *Born: Allan Rock, politician and diplomat, in Ottawa, Canada


August 31, 1947 (Sunday)

*Hungarian parliamentary election, 1947, Parliamentary elections were held in Hungary. The Hungarian Communist Party gained 30 seats, having consolidated its power in the two years since the last election by using salami tactics. This was the last remotely competitive election in Hungary until 1990. *Born: Ramón Castellano de Torres, artist, in Ceuta, Spain; Billy Marshall Stoneking, American-born Australian poet, playwright, filmmaker and teacher, in Orlando, Florida (d. 2016); Somchai Wongsawat, 26th prime minister of Thailand, in Chawang District, Chawang, Thailand


References

{{Events by month links August, 1947 1947, *1930-08 Months in the 1940s, *1947-08