September 1947

{{short description|Month of 1947}}

{{Events by month|1947}}

{{calendar|year=1947|month=September}}

The following events occurred in September 1947:

[[September 1]], 1947 (Monday)

  • 31 people were killed in the Dugald rail accident in Dugald, Manitoba, Canada.
  • The Federation of American Scientists marked the second anniversary of V-J Day by issuing a statement that read in part: "A strong science will enable us to fight poverty, disease and ignorance. It will also enable us to fight a war effectively. It will not give us national security ... Other nations will soon have atomic bombs. There is no adequate defense against atomic bombs. There will be no defense. Inescapably then, national security lies in world security and that can be attained only by international action. As a nation, we have not learned this lesson."{{cite journal |date=September 2, 1947 |title=Scientists Bar Any Real A-Bomb Defense; Assert That World's Security Is Key to Ours |journal=The New York Times |page= 11 }}
  • Born: Al Green, politician, in New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Died: Frederick Russell Burnham, 86, American scout and adventurer

[[September 2]], 1947 (Tuesday)

  • The Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance was signed by many countries of the Americas in Rio de Janeiro. US President Harry S. Truman addressed the final session of the conference, praising the treaty as a sign of fidelity to the United Nations.{{cite book |last=Leonard |first=Thomas M. |date=1977 |title=Day By Day: The Forties |location=New York |publisher=Facts On File, Inc. |page=722 |isbn=0-87196-375-2 }}
  • The London Evening Standard ran an editorial titled "It Is Not Too Late—Call Off the Games," expressing opposition to London hosting the 1948 Summer Olympics. "Sane opinion will marvel only at the colossal thickness of hide which permits its owners, at this time of crisis, to indulge in grandiose and luxurious schemes for an international weight-lifting and basketball jamboree," the editorial argued, going on to say that "a people which has had its housing program and food imports cut, and which is preparing for a winter battle of survival, may be forgiven for thinking that a full year of excessive preparations for the reception of an army of foreign athletes verges on the border of the excessive." An official from Britain's organizing committee for the Olympics replied that hundreds of thousands of Britons were looking forward to the games, and that preparations to insure their smooth running were limited to "the minimum arrangements necessary."{{cite journal |date=September 3, 1947 |title=Cancel Olympics, London Daily Asks |journal=The New York Times |page= 35 }}
  • Mariano Suárez became President of Ecuador when Carlos Mancheno Cajas was ousted after just ten days in power.

[[September 3]], 1947 (Wednesday)

[[September 4]], 1947 (Thursday)

  • The Greek government avoided a strike by 72,000 Athens civil service workers by agreeing to increase their wages by 20-50%.
  • French Upper Volta, which had previously existed from 1919 to 1932, was reestablished by French colonial authorities.

[[September 5]], 1947 (Friday)

  • The US and UK agreed to joint control of the Ruhr mines in occupied Germany.{{cite book |date=1989 |editor-last=Mercer |editor-first=Derrik |title=Chronicle of the 20th Century |location=London |publisher=Chronicle Communications Ltd. |page=661 |isbn=9-780582-039193 }}
  • Australian Prime Minister Ben Chifley announced the sale of all of Australia's gold production to the UK. The move would help cash-strapped Britain to obtain dollars immediately in the United States. The 150,000 ounces (representing two months of production) already sold under the agreement were worth about $5 million AUD.{{cite journal |date=September 6, 1947 |title=Australia Sells Gold to Britain |journal=The New York Times |page= 9 }}{{cite journal |date=September 6, 1947 |title=Australia's Gold for Britain |url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/27896215 |journal=The Sydney Morning Herald |page= 1 }}
  • Born: Buddy Miles, rock drummer, singer, composer and producer, in Omaha, Nebraska (d. 2008); Kiyoshi Takayama, yakuza boss, in Tsushima, Aichi, Japan

[[September 6]], 1947 (Saturday)

[[September 7]], 1947 (Sunday)

  • Themistoklis Sofoulis became Prime Minister of Greece for the third time.
  • The city of Moscow officially celebrated the 800th anniversary of its founding.{{cite journal |date=September 5, 1947 |title=800th Anniversary of Moscow |url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2724436 |journal=The Canberra Times |page= 4 }} Joseph Stalin made a radio address for the occasion in which he called Moscow a "model for the capitals of the world."{{cite journal |date=September 7, 1947 |title=Moscow Acclaimed by Stalin as 'Model' |journal=The New York Times |page= 33 }}

[[September 8]], 1947 (Monday)

[[September 9]], 1947 (Tuesday)

  • Ex-governor of Minnesota Harold Stassen announced his candidacy for the 1948 Republican presidential nomination.{{cite journal |last=Hurd |first=Charles |date=September 10, 1947 |title=Stassen to Enter Wisconsin Primary |journal=The New York Times |page= 14 }}
  • The first software bug was recorded, in the Harvard Mark II electromechanical computer. The glitch was quite literally a "bug", as the error was traced to a moth trapped in a relay, which was carefully removed and taped to the log book.
  • Born: Freddy Weller, country music singer and songwriter, in Atlanta, Georgia
  • Died: Ananda Coomaraswamy, 70, Ceylonese Tamil philosopher and metaphysician

[[September 10]], 1947 (Wednesday)

[[September 11]], 1947 (Thursday)

  • During a trial run off the Copeland Islands, a crankcase explosion aboard the newly repaired passenger ship Reina del Pacifico killed 28 crew members and injured 23 others in one of the worst engineering disasters in maritime history.{{cite book |last=Curtis |first=Simon |date=2012 |title=The Law of Shipbuilding Contracts, Fourth Edition |publisher=Routledge |page=177 |isbn=9781317984368 }}{{cite journal |date=September 12, 1947 |title=Blast on Liner! 18 Killed |journal=Chicago Daily Tribune |location=Chicago |page= 1 }}
  • General Eisenhower seemingly ruled himself out of ever running for political office when he said during a visit to Columbia University that "any man who has spent most of his life in the military should not occupy any position in partisan politics, and I can only repeat what I have said many times before—I shall never seek any partisan political office." However, he did not specifically say he would refuse a nomination if drafted, only saying he would have no part in anything "artificial."{{cite journal |date=September 11, 1947 |title=Ike Rules Himself Out Of '48 Race--or Almost |journal=Brooklyn Eagle |location=Brooklyn |page= 1 }}

[[September 12]], 1947 (Friday)

[[September 13]], 1947 (Saturday)

  • Greek Parliament voted in favor of an unconditional amnesty for guerrillas who surrendered within the next 30 days.Leonard, p. 724.
  • NBC stations voted unanimously to ban radio broadcasts of crime and mystery shows before 9:30 p.m. EST, to minimize the possibility they would be heard by children.{{cite book |date=1948 |editor1-last=Yust |editor1-first=Walter |title=1948 Britannica Book of the Year |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. |page=12 }}

[[September 14]], 1947 (Sunday)

  • The Communist-dominated Polish government renounced the Concordat of 1925 between the Catholic Church and the Second Polish Republic.
  • Kansas Senator Arthur Capper said during a radio broadcast that unless General Eisenhower "takes himself out of the picture by some unequivocal statement, he will be a factor in the Republican convention at Philadelphia whether or not he is an announced candidate."{{cite journal |date=September 15, 1947 |title=Backing for Ike for President Grows: Capper |journal=Chicago Daily Tribune |location=Chicago |page= 12 }}
  • Born: Sam Neill, Northern Irish-born New Zealand actor, in Omagh
  • Died: Arthur Grenfell Wauchope, 73, British soldier and colonial administrator

[[September 15]], 1947 (Monday)

[[September 16]], 1947 (Tuesday)

[[September 17]], 1947 (Wednesday)

  • James Forrestal was sworn in as US Defense Secretary.Leonard, p. 727.
  • The Fort Lauderdale hurricane made landfall near New Orleans, Louisiana. By the time it dissipated on September 20 the hurricane would cause 51 direct fatalities and $110 million worth of damage.
  • Born: Tessa Jowell, politician, née Tessa Palmer in London, England (d. 2018)
  • Died: Maurice Fargues, 34, French underwater diver, while trying to set a new depth record{{cite book |last=Matsen |first=Brad |title=Jacques Cousteau: The Sea King |publisher=Pantheon Books |location=New York |year=2009 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/jacquescousteaus0000mats/page/73 73], 76–79, 85 |isbn=978-0-375-42413-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/jacquescousteaus0000mats|url-access=registration }}

[[September 18]], 1947 (Thursday)

[[September 19]], 1947 (Friday)

[[September 20]], 1947 (Saturday)

  • A Pan-American Douglas DC-4 airliner flying from Bermuda to New York City developed engine trouble over the Atlantic Ocean, skimmed the waves for 60 miles and then crashed and burned at Floyd Bennett Field. All 36 passengers and 5 crew aboard survived.{{cite journal |date=September 21, 1947 |title=41 Saved as Airliner Crashes, Burns Here |journal=Brooklyn Eagle |location=Brooklyn |page= 1 }}{{cite web |url=http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19470920-0 |title=Accident description |website=Aviation Safety Network |accessdate=December 23, 2016 }}
  • The Medal "In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow" was established in the Soviet Union.
  • "Near You" by Francis Craig and His Orchestra hit #1 on the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores record chart.
  • Born: Göran Lagerberg, singer songwriter with rock group Tages
  • Died: Fiorello La Guardia, 64, Mayor of New York City from 1934 to 1945 (pancreatic cancer); Jantina Tammes, 76, Dutch botanist and geneticist

[[September 21]], 1947 (Sunday)

  • Palestine Arab Higher Committee spokesman Husayn al-Khalidi declared that a separate Arab state in a partitioned Palestine would not be economically or politically viable, predicting that partition would result in "border incidents everywhere" and could lead to a tragic "crusade between Jewry and Islam."{{cite journal |last=Daniel |first=Clifton |date=September 22, 1947 |title=Palestine State as Mapped in U. N. Is 'Impossible,' Says Arab Leader |journal=The New York Times |page= 5 }}
  • Mohandas Gandhi wrote in his weekly paper Harijan that the Indian government should take action to "banish the English language as a cultural usurper as we successfully banished the political rule of the English usurper."{{cite journal |date=September 22, 1947 |title=Gandhi Urges India to Banish English Tongue |journal=Chicago Daily Tribune |location=Chicago |page= 2 }}
  • Born: Don Felder, musician (Eagles), in Gainesville, Florida; Stephen King, author most associated with the horror genre, in Portland, Maine
  • Died: Harry Carey, 69, American film actor

[[September 22]], 1947 (Monday)

  • The 16-nation Marshall Plan conference in Paris ended.
  • Representatives of nine European Communist parties (mostly from the Soviet bloc but also including France and Italy) met in the Polish resort town of Szklarska Poręba for a conference aimed at coordinating their activities more closely.{{cite book |last=Paczkowski |first=Andrzej |date=1995 |title=Spring Will Be Ours: Poland and the Poles from Occupation to Freedom |location=University Park |publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press |page=198 |isbn=9780271047539 }}
  • An automated Douglas C-54 Skymaster transport plane flew from Newfoundland to London without human aid.
  • The Brooklyn Dodgers clinched the National League pennant when the St. Louis Cardinals were eliminated by losing the second game of a doubleheader to the Chicago Cubs, 6-3.{{cite journal |date=September 23, 1947 |title=Dodgers Take Pennant as Cubs Beat Cards |journal=Chicago Daily Tribune |location=Chicago |page= 29 }}
  • Born: Jo Beverley, English-born Canadian romance novelist, in Blackpool (d. 2016); Norma McCorvey, plaintiff in the landmark American lawsuit Roe v. Wade, in Simmesport, Louisiana (d. 2017)

[[September 23]], 1947 (Tuesday)

  • President of Argentina Juan Perón, on the balcony of the Presidential Palace before a cheering crowd of 100,000, signed a statute giving women the right to vote.{{cite journal |date=September 24, 1947 |title=Vote Decree Cheered by Argentine Women |journal=The New York Times |page= 8 }}
  • The UN General Assembly overrode Soviet objections to include the Greek question, Korean independence and the Italian peace treaty on its agenda.
  • Jackie Robinson of the Dodgers was honored with "Jackie Robinson Day" at Ebbets Field. He and his wife Rachel were presented with a new Cadillac, a gold wristwatch, a television, an interracial goodwill plaque and cash gifts.{{cite web |url=http://losangeles.dodgers.mlb.com/la/history/jackie_robinson_timeline/timeline_1.jsp |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070820180915/http://losangeles.dodgers.mlb.com/la/history/jackie_robinson_timeline/timeline_1.jsp |url-status=dead |archive-date=August 20, 2007 |title=Jackie Robinson Timeline |website=The Official Site of the Los Angeles Dodgers |accessdate=December 23, 2016 }}
  • Born: Mary Kay Place, actress, singer, director and screenwriter, in Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • Died: Nikola Petkov, 54, Bulgarian politician (hanged for espionage)

[[September 24]], 1947 (Wednesday)

[[September 25]], 1947 (Thursday)

[[September 26]], 1947 (Friday)

[[September 27]], 1947 (Saturday)

  • The Communist conference in Szklarska Poręba concluded with the founding of Cominform, an official forum of the international communist movement succeeding the Comintern which had been dissolved in 1943.{{cite book|author1-link=Michael Brecher|author2-link=Jonathan Wilkenfeld|last1=Brecher |first1=Michael |last2=Wilkenfeld |first2=Jonathan |date=1997 |title=A Study of Crisis |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |page=341 |isbn=9780472108060 }}
  • The Royal Navy intercepted the Jewish refugee ship Af Al Pi Chen which was sailing to Palestine from Italy with 434 passengers. 1 person was killed and 10 injured in the violent resistance during the boarding of the ship.{{cite web |url=http://www.paulsilverstone.com/immigration/Primary/Aliyah/ShowShip2A.php?shipno=146&pic=ShipPix/resized_135.%20Farida%20as%20museum.jpg&shipname=%3Ci%3EAf%20Al%20Pi%20Chen%3C/i%3E&rowno=49 |title=Af Al Pi Chen — Farida |last=Silverstone |first=Paul |website=Aliyah Bet Project |accessdate=December 23, 2016 }}{{cite journal |date=September 27, 1947 |title=British Seize New Jewish Refugee Ship |journal=Brooklyn Eagle |location=Brooklyn |page= 1 }}
  • Born:
  • Dick Advocaat, footballer and manager, in The Hague, Netherlands;
  • Meat Loaf, singer and actor, as Marvin Lee Aday in Dallas (d. 2022)

[[September 28]], 1947 (Sunday)

  • B'nai B'rith sent a telegram to President Truman asking him to issue a statement in support of a United Nations committee majority recommendation that Palestine be partitioned into Jewish and Arab states.{{cite journal |date=September 29, 1947 |title=B'nai B'rith Asks Truman to Back Palestine Plan |journal=Chicago Daily Tribune |location=Chicago |page= 14 }}
  • 37-year old baseball pitcher-turned-broadcaster Dizzy Dean came out of retirement to pitch one last game for the St. Louis Browns on the final day of the regular season as a publicity stunt. 15,910 people came out to watch Dean pitch four shutout innings against the Chicago White Sox and hit a single in his only plate appearance.{{cite book |last=Gay |first=Timothy M. |date=2010 |title=Satch, Dizzy, and Rapid Robert: The Wild Saga of Interracial Baseball Before Jackie Robinson |url=https://archive.org/details/satchdizzyrapidr00gayt|url-access=registration |location=New York |publisher=Simon & Schuster |page=[https://archive.org/details/satchdizzyrapidr00gayt/page/247 247] |isbn=9781439176313 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/SLA/SLA194709280.shtml |title=September 28, 1947 - Chicago White Sox at St. Louis Browns |website=Baseball-Reference.com |accessdate=December 23, 2016 }}
  • Born: Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister of Bangladesh, in Tungipara Upazila, Pakistan

[[September 29]], 1947 (Monday)

[[September 30]], 1947 (Tuesday)

  • Argentina and Canada were elected to the United Nations Security Council.{{cite journal |date=October 2, 1947 |title=Election to Security Council |url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/42540048 |journal=The Cairns Post |location=Far North Queensland |page= 1 }}
  • Game 1 of the 1947 World Series at Yankee Stadium was the first World Series game ever to be televised.{{cite book |last=Owens |first=Jim |date=2016 |title=Television Sports Production, 5th Edition |publisher=Focal Press |page=214 |isbn=9781317671091 }} The Yankees defeated the Dodgers 5-3 before a record crowd of 73,365.{{cite journal |last=Drebinger |first=John |date=October 1, 1947 |title=Yanks' 5 in Fifth Beat Dodgers, 5-3, in Series Opener |journal=The New York Times |page= 1 }}
  • Born: Marc Bolan, rock musician, as Mark Feld in Stoke Newington, London, England (d. 1977); Rula Lenska, actress, in St Neots, Huntingdonshire, England

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

{{Events by month links}}

1947

*1947-09