February 1948 Explained
The following events occurred in February 1948:
- Seeking to prevent further unrest in the wake of Gandhi's assassination, the Indian government banned all private armies and organizations preaching violence or communal hatred.[4]
- Born: Ina Garten, author and television host, in Brooklyn, New York; Roger Williamson, racing driver, in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, England (d. 1973)
- Died: Bevil Rudd, 53, South African athlete
- US Attorney General Tom C. Clark testified before a House Un-American Activities subcommittee in Washington that he opposed outlawing the American Communist Party but endorsed the idea of requiring communists to register as agents of a foreign power.[6]
- Born: Sven-Göran Eriksson, footballer and manager, in Sunne, Sweden; Christopher Guest, actor, filmmaker and comedian, in New York City; Barbara Hershey, actress, as Barbara Herzstein in Hollywood, California; Tom Wilkinson, actor, in Wharfedale, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
- Died: Johannes Blaskowitz, 64, German general (committed suicide by breaking away from his guards and throwing himself off the balcony of the Nuremberg court building during his trial for war crimes)
- British Prime Minister Clement Attlee made a radio broadcast encouraging the people to support the government's wage stabilization program, warning that failure of the drive to increase production and exports would mean mass unemployment and "real, desperate hunger."[7]
- Died: Otto von Stülpnagel, 69, German general (committed suicide in the Cherche-Midi prison)
- General elections were held in Costa Rica. Opposition candidate Otilio Ulate Blanco apparently defeated the incumbent Rafael Ángel Calderón Guardia for the presidency, but the result would be deemed fraudulent and annulled by Congress, leading to the Costa Rican Civil War a few weeks later.
- The closing ceremonies of the 1948 Winter Olympics were held in St. Moritz, Switzerland. Norway and Sweden tied for first place in the final medal count with 4 gold medals, 3 silvers and 3 bronzes each.
- Italy released the list of warships to be divided among the Soviet Union, France, Yugoslavia, Greece and Albania under the terms of the 1947 Peace Treaty. The USSR would get the largest share of ships with 45, including the only battleship, Giulio Cesare.[11]
- Born: Jan Góra, Roman Catholic Priest, in Prudnik, Poland (d. 2015)[12]
- In a speech on the floor of Congress, Mississippi Senator James Eastland blasted President Truman's civil rights program and proposed that Southern Democrats nominate an independent candidate to run against him. "We find the national Democratic leadership today attempting to barter the South's social institutions for the political favors of mongrel Northern minority groups in politically doubtful states," Eastland said. "We are expected to remain docile while the pure blood of the South is mongrelized by the barter of our heritage by Northern politicians in order to secure political favors from Red mongrels in the slums of the cities of the East and Middle West."[13]
- The Flag of Guam was adopted.
- Born: David Hayman, actor and director, in Glasgow, Scotland
- Died: Burns Mantle, 74, American theatre critic; Karl Valentin, 65, Bavarian actor and comedian
- The border between France and Spain was formally reopened after France gave up on its two-year attempt to impose an economic blockade that other nations refused to participate in.[14]
- In St. John's, Newfoundland, a building being used as an infirmary caught fire. 33 patients died in the blaze.[15]
- Born: John Magnier, business magnate, in Fermoy, Ireland
- The Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union issued a decree criticizing the composers Dmitri Shostakovich, Sergei Prokofiev and Aram Katchaturian for failing to heed warnings and instructions for the elimination of "bourgeois" influences in their music. A new program was outlined for everyone in the Soviet music world to follow, "the foundation of which is recognition of the huge, progressive role of the classic heritage and especially of the traditions of the Russian musical school."[16]
- Born: Chris Rush, comedian, in Brooklyn, New York (d. 2018)
- Died: Sergei Eisenstein, 50, Soviet filmmaker; Isaac Isaacs, 92, 3rd Chief Justice of Australia
- The ashes of Mahatma Gandhi were cast upon the sacred Ganges River at Allahabad. The crowd that packed the banks of the river and the ancient city was estimated at 2 to 3 million.[17]
- 4,000 Democrats meeting in Jackson, Mississippi unanimously adopted a resolution calling upon "all true white Jeffersonian Democrats" to assemble for a nationwide conference to unite against President Truman's civil rights program.[18]
- Born: Ray Kurzweil, author, scientist and inventor, in Queens, New York
- A London policeman was slain for the first time in twenty-eight years when Constable Nathaniel Edgar was shot by a suspect he was questioning about a recent spate of burglaries in the Southgate area.[19] [20] The murder inspired the 1950 police drama film The Blue Lamp.[21]
- The US Senate Foreign Relations Committee authorized $5.3 billion to cover the first twelve months of the Marshall Plan from April 1.[22]
- Born: Kitten Natividad, actress, in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico
- The United States and Britain agreed to permit German manufacturers to produce virgin aluminum, which had been prohibited under the Potsdam Agreement.[23]
- Born: Wally Tax, singer and songwriter, in Amsterdam, Netherlands (d. 2005); Raymond Teller, illusionist and half of the comedy magic duo Penn & Teller, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Yehuda Shoenfeld, physician and autoimmunity researcher, in Slovakia
- Died: Mordecai Brown, 71, American baseball player
- The Hostages Trial ended in Nuremberg, in which German generals of the Balkan Campaign stood trial for war crimes. Eight defendants received prison sentences ranging from seven years to life, while two were acquitted.
- The five-day Conference of Youth and Students of Southeast Asia Fighting for Freedom and Independence opened in Calcutta, India.
- Born: Pim Fortuyn, politician, in Driehuis, Netherlands (d. 2002); Tony Iommi, guitarist and founding member of the heavy metal band Black Sabbath, in Handsworth, Birmingham, England
Palestinian Arabs planted two truckloads of explosives in the Jewish sector of Jerusalem, destroying a three-block area resulting in about 54 deaths and 200 injuries.[36]
- In Vienna, US and British diplomats walked out on a celebration of the 30th anniversary of the Red Army at the Musikverein when Russian High Commissioner in Austria L. V. Kurasov accused "imperialistic" powers of helping Germany launch World War II and of plotting a new war against the Soviet Union.[37]
- Born: John Ashton, actor, in Springfield, Massachusetts; Leslie H. Sabo Jr., American Medal of Honor recipient, in Kufstein, Austria (d. 1970)
- Czechoslovakia's Communist Minister of the Interior and Minister of War claimed that groups within the National Social Party, the second-largest in the country, were conspiring for an armed revolt against the state. An order from the Interior Ministry forbade Czechoslovak citizens from leaving the country without a special passport stamp, while Police occupied and thoroughly searched the National Social party's headquarters in Prague and confiscated a number of documents. A statement was issued that same day on behalf of President Beneš asking "all citizens to maintain calm and order and to continue to work. He assures everyone that he acts in accord with the principles of parliamentary democracy and that he works to the end that all parties of the National Front seek to find unity to renew the collaboration of the whole National Front."[38]
- Idaho Senator Glen H. Taylor announced in a radio address that he was quitting the Democrats and joining the new Progressive Party. "I am not leaving the Democratic Party," Taylor declared. "It left me. Wall Street and the military have taken over."[39]
- Died: John Robert Gregg, 80, American educator and inventor of the Gregg Shorthand writing system
- In Czechoslovakia, Communist action committees took over all offices and departments headed by non-Communists as well as opposition newspapers and political headquarters.[40]
- Born: Jayalalithaa, actor and politician, in Mandya, India (d. 2016); Walter Smith, footballer and manager, in Lanark, Scotland (d. 2021)
- The United States, Great Britain and France issued a joint statement condemning the Czechoslovak coup, calling it engineered "by means of a crisis artificially and deliberately instigated."[41]
- The Argentine foreign ministry said that Argentina would refuse to negotiate with Britain over the Falkland Islands, which it claimed to be unquestionably Argentine territory.
- The Soviet Union asked Finland to enter a mutual military assistance pact "as quickly as possible."[42]
- The US House of Representatives voted to cut President Truman's budget by $2.5 billion.[43]
- Died: Patriarch Nicodim of Romania, 83.[44]
- The Accra riots began in Accra in the British colony of the Gold Coast after police broke up a protest march of unarmed ex-servicemen demanding the pensions they'd been promised for their service in World War II. Three of the ex-soldiers were killed: Sergeant Cornelius Adjetey, Corporal Patrick Attipoe and Private Odartey Lamptey.
- Born: Steven Chu, physicist and 12th United States Secretary of Energy, in St. Louis, Missouri; Mike Figgis, filmmaker and composer, in Carlisle, Cumbria, England; Kjell Isaksson, pole vaulter, in Härnösand, Sweden; Bernadette Peters, actress and singer, in Ozone Park, Queens, New York; Mercedes Ruehl, actor, in Jackson Heights, Queens, New York; Alfred Sant, 11th Prime Minister of Malta and novelist, in Pietà, Malta
- Died: Gerhard Flesch, 38, German SS officer (executed by firing squad for war crimes)
- The House Foreign Affairs subcommittee published a report titled Strategy and Tactics of World Communism which concluded that world revolution was the goal of communism.
- The first of the two Cairo–Haifa train bombings were carried out by the Jewish militant group Lehi, killing 28 British soldiers.
- Born: Ken Foree, actor, in Indianapolis, Indiana; Henry Small, musician and radio personality, in Beacon, New York; Ruby Wilson, blues and gospel singer and actress, in Fort Worth, Texas (d. 2016)
- Died: François Sevez, 56, French general (shot in a hunting accident)
Notes and References
- Book: Bose, Sumantra . 2007 . Contested Land . Harvard University Press . 230 . 9780674028562 .
- Web site: Chicago Sun-Times . Chicagology . May 20, 2018 .
- Book: Chiwengo, Ngwarsungu . 2007 . Understanding Cry, the Beloved Country . Westport, CT . The Greenwood Press . 21 . 9780313335082 .
- Trumbull . Robert . February 3, 1948 . India Bars Groups Teaching Violence . . 1 .
- February 5, 1948 . Fritz Kuhn Mysteriously Escapes From Dachau as He Awaits Trial . . 1 .
- February 6, 1948 . Asks Firmer Laws to Deal with Reds . New York Times . 26 .
- Egan . Charles E. . February 7, 1948 . Attlee Asks Curbs to Avert Collapse . . 4 .
- Hinton . Harold B. . February 8, 1948 . Eisenhower Ends Command, Warns of Lag in Recruiting . . 1 .
- February 8, 1948 . Mosley Announces New Organization . . 35 .
- Poole, Anne. "Oswald Mosley and the Union Movement: Success or Failure?" The Failure of British Fascism: The Far Right and the Fight for Political Recognition. Ed. Mike Cronin. Palgrave MacMillan, 1996. p. 62. .
- February 9, 1948 . Italy Lists Ships to Go . . 39 .
- Web site: Nie żyje ojciec Jan Góra. Miał 67 lat. 2021-10-28. wydarzenia.interia.pl. pl.
- February 10, 1948 . Truman Revolt In South Asked . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette . 1 .
- February 11, 1948 . Trains Cross Border of France and Spain . . 8 .
- Web site: Local Major Fires . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20160318145222/http://sjrfd.ca/about-us/local-major-fires/ . St. John's Regional Fire Department . March 18, 2016 . May 20, 2018 .
- February 12, 1948 . Soviet Denounces Its 'Big 3' In Music, Orders a New Line . . 1, 19 .
- Trumbull . Robert . February 13, 1948 . Ashes of Gandhi Cast Upon Waters . . 18 .
- Popham . John N. . February 13, 1948 . 4,000 in Mississippi Want Truman Out . . 1 .
- News: February 15, 1948 . London Arms Police After One Is Slain . . 1.
- Book: Odell, Robin . 2010 . The Mammoth Book of Bizarre Crimes . . 9781849014366.
- Book: McLaughlin, Eugene . 2006 . The New Policing . limited . . 12 . 9780803989054.
- News: Belair, Jr. . Felix . February 14, 1948 . $5,300,000 Is Set . . 1.
- Raymond . Jack . February 15, 1948 . German Aluminum Output Ordered By U. S., Britain Despite Potsdam . . 1 .
- Bracker . Milton . February 16, 1948 . Paraguay Elects One-Party Ticket . . 13 .
- February 16, 1948 . British Believed Sending Cruiser To the Disputed Falkland Islands . . 1 .
- https://pdf.defence.pk/threads/zionist-terrorism.175571/
- Browne . Mallory . February 17, 1948 . A Challenge Seen . . 1 .
- Kuiper, G. P., The Fifth Satellite of Uranus, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Vol. 61, No. 360, p. 129, June 1949.
- Book: 1989 . Mercer . Derrik . Chronicle of the 20th Century . London . Chronicle Communications Ltd. . 669 . 9-780582-039193 .
- Smith . Hugh . February 19, 1948 . Costello Elected Ireland's Premier . . 1 .
- Middleton . Drew . February 19, 1948 . Soviet Completes Network of Pacts . . 10 .
- Ross . Albion . February 21, 1948 . Three Parties Quit Cabinet in Prague on Red Police Issue . . 1, 5 .
- Ross . Albion . February 22, 1948 . Benes Is Opposing Totalitarian Rule in Czech Deadlock . . 1, 2 .
- Parrott . Lindsay . February 22, 1948 . Ashida Is Elected Japanese Premier . . 7 .
- February 22, 1948 . Wallce Backers Unite in Michigan . . 31 .
- Book: Leonard, Thomas M. . 1977 . Day By Day: The Forties . New York . Facts On File, Inc. . 770 . 0-87196-375-2 .
- MacCormac . John . February 23, 1948 . West's Envoys Quit Soviet Ceremony . . 1, 8 .
- Ross . Albion . February 24, 1948 . Prague Patrolled . . 1, 6 .
- Trussell . C.P. . February 24, 1948 . Glen Taylor to Run on Wallace Ticket . . 1, 15 .
- Book: 1949 . Yust . Walter . 1949 Britannica Book of the Year . Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc. . 3 .
- Hinton . Harold B. . February 27, 1948 . Dictatorship Seen . . 1 .
- February 28, 1948 . Russia Asks Finland for Military Pact . . Burnie, Tasmania . 1 .
- Morris . John D. . February 28, 1948 . Congress Adopts $2,500,000,000 Cut in Truman Budget . . 1 .
- Book: Cioroianu, Adrian. Focul ascuns în piatră. The Fire Hidden in the Stone. Bucharest. Editura Polirom. 2002. 310. 978-973-68-1076-3. RO.