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February 1949

Month of 1949 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The following events occurred in February 1949:

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February 1, 1949 (Tuesday)

February 2, 1949 (Wednesday)

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February 3, 1949 (Thursday)

  • US President Harry S. Truman stated at his weekly press conference that he would only meet with Joseph Stalin if the Soviet leader came to Washington as his personal guest. The president reiterated the determination of the United States to not enter negotiations with the Soviet Union outside of the framework of the United Nations.[5]
  • Hungarian Cardinal József Mindszenty and six co-defendants went on trial in Budapest for treason and other crimes against the state.[6]
  • Born: Hennie Kuiper, racing cyclist, in Denekamp, Netherlands
  • Died: William Rust, 45, British newspaper editor and communist activist

February 4, 1949 (Friday)

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February 5, 1949 (Saturday)

  • The three-day trial of Cardinal Mindszenty ended. The Primate of Hungary admitted guilt "in principle" to most of the charges against him but denied plotting to overthrow the Hungarian government.[10]
  • The Soviet Union offered Norway a non-aggression pact and warned that country not to join the proposed North Atlantic alliance.[11]
  • The Communist Tudeh Party of Iran was banned amid the government crackdown following an attempt on the Shah's life.[8]
  • Born: Kate Braverman, American novelist, in Philadelphia (d. 2019)
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February 6, 1949 (Sunday)

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February 7, 1949 (Monday)

February 8, 1949 (Tuesday)

February 9, 1949 (Wednesday)

February 10, 1949 (Thursday)

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February 11, 1949 (Friday)

  • The metropolitan police in Seoul announced the arrest of three Communists implicated in a plot to assassinate the members of the United Nations Commission on Korea as well as top Korean government officials.[21]
  • Canadian Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent arrived in Washington for a three-day visit to confer with President Truman on various issues affecting the United States and Canada.[22]
  • The London Mozart Players performed their first concert at Wigmore Hall.
  • Died: Giovanni Zenatello, 72, Italian opera singer
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February 12, 1949 (Saturday)

  • The Sacred Constitorial Congregation excommunicated and declared "infamous" all persons who took part in the Cardinal Mindszenty trial.[23]
  • 30 people were killed and 40 injured in a train derailment 40 miles west of Tarragona, Spain. Railway officials blamed the accident on sabotage of the tracks.[24]
  • Died: Hassan al-Banna, 42, Egyptian imam and founder of the Muslim Brotherhood (assassinated by the Egyptian secret police)

February 13, 1949 (Sunday)

February 14, 1949 (Monday)

  • Israel's first Constituent Assembly was sworn in by acting president Chaim Weizmann in Jerusalem. The United States, Britain and France boycotted the ceremony, protesting Israel's refusal to recognize the UN declaration of Jerusalem as an international city.[28][29]
  • The Asbestos strike began in and around Asbestos, Quebec.
  • Died: Fernand Desprès, 69, French anarchist and Communist activist

February 15, 1949 (Tuesday)

  • The Soviet Union denounced allegations that up to 14 million people were working as slave laborers in Russia and dying in large numbers because of inhumane treatment. Soviet UN delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin said that any proposal to send a special commission to investigate the alleged slave labor camps was merely a ruse to let American spies into the USSR.[30]
  • Argentina diplomatically recognized Israel.[31]
  • Born: Ken Anderson, NFL quarterback, in Batavia, Illinois
  • Died: Charles L. Bartholomew, 80, American editorial cartoonist; Patricia Ryan, 27, American actress (cerebral hemorrhage)

February 16, 1949 (Wednesday)

February 17, 1949 (Thursday)

February 18, 1949 (Friday)

February 19, 1949 (Saturday)

  • President Truman reactivated the United Service Organizations (USO).[42]
  • Ezra Pound was named the winner of the first annual Bollingen Prize for Poetry for his book The Pisan Cantos. Anticipating controversy for giving the award to a man under indictment for broadcasting Fascist propaganda during the war, the judges accompanied the announcement with the statement: "To permit other considerations than that of poetic achievement to sway the decision would destroy the significance of the award and would in principle deny the validity of that objective perception of value on which any civilized society must rest."[43]
  • Born: Danielle Bunten Berry, computer game designer and programmer, in St. Louis, Missouri (d. 1998)
  • Died: Fidelio Ponce de León, 54, Cuban painter

February 20, 1949 (Sunday)

February 21, 1949 (Monday)

February 22, 1949 (Tuesday)

February 23, 1949 (Wednesday)

  • Mildred Gillars took the stand in her treason trial. During her testimony she admitted to having signed an oath of allegiance to Nazi Germany, but claimed she only did so "in order to live."[49]
  • Quebec Premier Maurice Duplessis declared the Asbestos strike illegal and dispatched a battalion of provincial police to the area.[50]

February 24, 1949 (Thursday)

  • Israel and Egypt signed a general armistice agreement at the UN mediation headquarters on the island of Rhodes.[51]
  • The flag of Samoa was adopted.

February 25, 1949 (Friday)

February 26, 1949 (Saturday)

  • Paraguay's second coup in a month ousted Raimundo Rolón as provisional president in favor of Felipe Molas López.[55]
  • The Dutch government announced that it would transfer sovereignty over Indonesia before the July 1, 1950 deadline set by the UN.[55]
  • Italian Communist leader Palmiro Togliatti echoed Maurice Thorez' recent remarks by declaring that Italian Communists would be duty-bound to assist the Red Army if it should invade Italy in pursuit of an aggressor.[55]
  • Grady the Cow was freed by rubbing her with grease, putting her on a greased platform and pushing her back out the same small opening she had bolted through.[56]
  • Born: Simon Crean, politician and trade unionist, in Melbourne, Australia (d. 2023)

February 27, 1949 (Sunday)

February 28, 1949 (Monday)

References

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