Year
1940 (
MCMXL) was a
leap year starting on Monday
(link will display the full 1940 calendar) of the
Gregorian calendar.
Events
- (Below, many events of World War
II have the "WWII"
prefix.)
January
February
March
- March – Truth or
Consequences debuts on NBC
Radio.
- March 2 – Cartoon character Elmer Fudd makes his debut in the animated short
Elmer's Candid
Camera.
- March 3 – In Sweden, a
time bomb destroys the office
of Norrskenflamman (a Swedish
communist newspaper), killing 5.
- March 5- Katyn massacre
: Members of the Soviet Politburo (Stalin, Molotov,
Lazar Kaganovich, Mikhail Kalinin, Kliment Voroshilov and Lavrenty Beria) sign an order, prepared by
Beria, for the execution of 25,700 Polish intelligentsia, including
14,700 Polish POWs.
- March 12 – The
Soviet
Union
and Finland
sign a peace treaty in Moscow
ending the
Winter War; Finns, along with the world
at large, are shocked by the harsh terms.
- March 18 – WWII – Axis powers:
Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini meet at Brenner Pass
in the Alps and agree to form
an alliance against France
and the
United
Kingdom
.
- March 21 – Édouard Daladier resigns as prime
minister of France; Paul Reynaud
succeeds him.
- March 23 – The
Pakistan Resolution is
rallied around by the All-India
Muslim League; Muslims from every corner
of India
meet up
around Iqbal
Park
, Lahore
(now in
modern-day Pakistan
).
April
May
.
- May 13 – Winston Churchill, in his first address as
Prime Minister, tells the House of Commons
, "I have nothing to offer you but blood, toil, tears, and
sweat."
- May 13 – WWII: German armies open a 60-mile wide breach
in the Maginot Line at Sedan, France
.
- May 14 – Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands
and her government flee to London
; Rotterdam
is subjected to savage terror bombing by the
Luftwaffe; 980 are killed, and 20,000
buildings destroyed.
- May 14 – Recruitment
begins in Britain
for a home
defence force: the Local
Defence Volunteers, later known as the Home Guard.
- May 15 – The very
first McDonald's restaurant opens in
San
Bernardino, California
.
- May 15 – WWII: The Dutch army surrenders.
- May 16 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, addressing a joint session
of Congress, asks for an
extraordinary credit of approximately $900 million to finance
construction of at least 50,000 airplanes per year.
- May 17 – Brussels
falls to German
forces; the
Belgian
government
flees to Ostend
.
- May 18 – Marshal
Philippe Pétain is named
vice-premier of France
.
- May 19 – General
Maxime Weygand replaces Maurice Gamelin as commander-in-chief of all
French
forces.
- May 20 – WWII: German
forces,
under General Erwin Rommel, reach the
English
Channel
.
- May 20 – Holocaust: The Auschwitz-Birkenau
concentration and death camp opens in Poland
.
- May 22 – WWII: The British
Parliament
passes the Emergency Powers Act, giving the
government full control over all persons and property.
- May 26 – WWII: The Dunkirk
evacuation of the British Expeditionary
Force starts.
- May 28 – WWII: King Leopold III of Belgium orders the
Belgian
forces to
cease fighting. Leaders of the Belgian government on French
territory declare Leopold deposed.
- May 28 – Winston Churchill warns the House of
Commons
to "prepare itself for hard and heavy
tidings."
- May 29 – The Vought XF4U-1, prototype of
the F4U Corsair U.S. fighter later used
in WWII, makes its first flight.
June
- June 3 – The
Holocaust: Franz Rademacher
proposes the Madagascar Plan.
- June 3 – WWII: Paris
is bombed
by the Luftwaffe for the first
time.
- June 4 – The Dunkirk evacuation ends – British
forces complete evacuating 300,000 troops from
Dunkirk
in France
.
- June 4 – Winston Churchill tells the British
House of Commons
, "We shall not flag or fail. We shall fight on the
beaches... on the landing grounds... in the fields and the
streets.... We shall never surrender."
- June 9 – WWII: The British
Commandos are created.
- June 10 – WWII: Italy
declares
war on France
and the
United
Kingdom
.
- June 10 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt denounces Italy's actions
with his "Stab in the Back" speech during the graduation
ceremonies of the University of Virginia
.
- June 10 – Canada
declares
war on Italy
.
- June 10 – Norway
surrenders
to German
forces.
- June 10 – The French
government flees to Tours
.
- June 12 – WWII: 13,000 British
and French
troops
surrender to Field Marshal Erwin Rommel at St. Valery-en-Caux
.
- June 13 – WWII: Paris
is declared
an open city.
- June 14 – The French
government flees to Bordeaux
and Paris
falls under
German
occupation.
- June 14 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Naval Expansion
Act into law, which aims to increase the United States Navy's tonnage by 11%.
- June 14 – A group of
728 Polish
political
prisoners from Tarnów
become the
first residents of the Auschwitz concentration camp
.
- June 15 – WWII: Verdun
falls to
German
forces.
- June 16 – The
Sturgis Motorcycle Rally is
held for the first time in Sturgis, South Dakota
.
- June 17 – Philippe Pétain becomes Prime Minister of France and
immediately asks Germany
for peace terms.
- June 17 – The Soviet
Army enters the Baltic states of
Estonia
, Lithuania
and Latvia
.
- June 17 – Operation Ariel begins: Allied troops start to evacuate
France
, following
Germany
's takeover of Paris
and most of
the nation.
- June 17 – A Luftwaffe Junkers 88
bomber sinks the British ship RMS
Lancastria, which was evacuating troops from near Saint-Nazaire
, France
, killing
over 2,500 (wartime censorship prevents the story from going
public).
- June 18 – Winston Churchill says to the House of
Commons
: "The Battle of
France is over. The Battle
of Britain is about to begin."
- June 18 – General
Charles de Gaulle broadcasts from
London
, calling on
all French people to continue the fight against Nazi Germany: "France has lost a battle. But France has not lost the war."
- June 21 – WWII: Vichy France
and Germany sign an armistice at Compiegne
, in the same wagon-lit railroad car used by Marshal
Ferdinand Foch to accept the
surrender of Germany in 1918.
- June 23 – WWII: German
leader Adolf Hitler
surveys newly defeated Paris
in now
occupied France
.[6144]
- June 24 – U.S.
politics: The Republican Party begins its
national convention in Philadelphia
and nominates Wendell
Willkie as its candidate for president.
- June 24 – WWII: Vichy France
signs armistice terms with Italy
.
- June 28 – General
Charles de Gaulle is officially
recognized by Britain
as the
"Leader of all Free Frenchmen, wherever
they may be."
- June 30 – WWII: German
forces land in Guernsey
, marking the start of the 5-year Occupation of the Channel
Islands.
July
- July 1 The first Tacoma
Narrows Bridge
opens for business, built with an 8-foot girder and
190 feet above the water, as the third longest suspension bridge in the
world.
- July 3 – WWII: British naval units sink or seize ships
of the French fleet anchored in the Algerian
ports of Oran
and
Mers-el-Kebir
. The following day, Vichy France breaks off diplomatic relations
with Britain
.
- July 10 – WWII: The Battle
of Britain begins
- July 10 – WWII: Vichy France
begins with a constitutional law which only 80 members of the parliament vote against.
- July 14 – Winston Churchill, in a worldwide
broadcast, proclaims the intention of Great Britain to fight alone
against Germany whatever the outcome: "We shall seek no terms. We
shall tolerate no parley. We may show mercy. We shall ask
none."
- July 15 – U.S.
politics: The Democratic Party begins its
national convention in Chicago
, and nominates Franklin D. Roosevelt for an unprecedented third
term as president.
- July 19 – WWII: Adolf Hitler
makes a peace appeal to Britain
in an address to the Reichstag. Lord Halifax, British foreign minister, flatly
rejects peace terms in a broadcast reply on July
22.
- July 21 – The
Estonian
SSR
, Latvian SSR and
Lithuanian SSR are proclaimed in
Moscow
.
- July 27 – Bugs
Bunny makes his debut in the Oscar-nominated cartoon short, A Wild Hare.
August
September
- September – The U.S. Army 45th Infantry
Division (previously a National Guard Division in Arizona
, Colorado
, New
Mexico
, and Oklahoma
), is activated and ordered into federal service for
1 year, to engage in a training program in Ft.
Sill
and Louisiana
, prior to serving in World
War II.
- September 2 –
WWII: An agreement between America
and Great Britain
is announced to the effect that 50 U.S. destroyers
needed for escort work will be transferred to Great Britain.
In
return, America gains 99-year leases on British bases in the
North
Atlantic
, West Indies
and Bermuda
.
- September 7 –
Treaty of Craiova: Romania
loses Southern
Dobrudja to Bulgaria
.
- September 7 –
WWII: The
Blitz – Nazi Germany begins to rain
bombs on London
(the first
of 57 consecutive nights of strategic
bombing).
- September 12 –
In Lascaux
, France
, 17,000-year-old cave
paintings are discovered by a group of young Frenchmen hiking
through Southern France. The paintings depict animals and
date to the Stone Age.
- September 12 –
The Hercules Munitions Plant in Succasunna-Kenvil, New Jersey
explodes, killing 55 people.
- September 16 – WWII: The Selective Training
and Service Act of 1940 is signed into law by Franklin D. Roosevelt, creating the first
peacetime draft in U.S.
history.
- September 26 –
WWII: The United States
imposes a total embargo on
all scrap metal shipments to Japan
.
- September 27 –
WWII: Germany
, Italy
and
Japan
sign the Tripartite
Pact.
October
November
- November 5 – U.S. presidential election,
1940: Democrat
incumbent Franklin D.
Roosevelt defeats Republican challenger
Wendell Willkie and becomes the
United
States
' first and only third-term president.
- November 6 Agatha Christe published
"And Then There Were None"
- November 7 – In
Tacoma,
Washington
, the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
(known as Galloping Gertie) collapses in a 42-mile
per hour wind storm, causing the center span of the bridge to
sway. When it collapses, a 600 foot-long design of the
center span falls 190 feet above the water, killing Tubby, a black male cocker spaniel dog.
- November 9 –
Joaquin Rodrigo's Concierto de Aranjuez premieres
in Barcelona
, Spain
.
- November 10 – An
earthquake in Bucharest
, Romania
kills 1,000.
- November 11 –
WWII: Battle of Taranto
: The Royal Navy launches
the first aircraft carrier strike
in history, on the Italian
fleet at Taranto
.
- November 11 – The
German Hilfskreuzer (cruiser) Atlantis captures top secret British
mail, and sends it to Japan
.
- November 11 – Armistice Day Blizzard: An unexpected
blizzard kills 144 in U.S. Midwest.
- November 13 – Walt Disney's Fantasia is released. It is the first
box office failure for Disney, though it eventually recoups its
cost years later, and becomes one of the most highly regarded of
Disney's films.
- November 14 –
WWII: The city of Coventry
, England
is destroyed by 500 German
Luftwaffe bombers (150,000
fire bombs, 503 tons of high explosives,
and 130 parachute mines level 60,000 of the city's 75,000
buildings; 568 people are killed).
- November 16 –
WWII: In response to Germany
levelling Coventry
2 days before, the Royal
Air Force begins to bomb Hamburg
(by war's end, 50,000 Hamburg residents will have
died from Allied attacks).
- November 16 – An unexploded pipe bomb is found in the Consolidated Edison office building
(only years later is the culprit, George
Metesky, apprehended).
- November 16 – The Jamaica
Association of Local Government Officers is founded.
- November 18 –
WWII: German
leader Adolf Hitler and
Italian
Foreign Minister Galeazzo
Ciano meet to discuss Benito
Mussolini's disastrous invasion of Greece
.
- November 20 –
WWII: Hungary
, Romania
and Slovakia
join the Axis
Powers.
- November 27 – In
Romania
, coup leader General Ion
Antonescu's Iron Guard arrests and executes over 60 of exiled
king Carol II of Romania's
aides. Among the dead is former minister and acclaimed
historian Nicolae Iorga.
- November 27 – WWII: The Royal Navy
and Regia Marina fight the Battle of Cape Spartivento.
December
- December 1 – Manuel Ávila Camacho takes office
as President of Mexico.
- December 8 – The Chicago Bears, in what will become the most
one-sided victory in National
Football League history, defeat the Washington Redskins 73–0 in the 1940 NFL
Championship Game.
- December 9 –
WWII: Operation Compass – British forces in
North Africa begin their first major offensive with an attack on
Italian forces at Sidi
Barrani
, Egypt
.
- December 12 &
December 15 – WWII- "Sheffield
Blitz": The City of
Sheffield
is badly
damaged by German air-raids.
- December 14 – Plutonium is first isolated chemically in the
laboratory.
- December 17 – President Roosevelt,
at his regular press conference, first sets forth the outline of
his plan to send aid to Great Britain that will become known as
Lend-Lease.
- December 23 –
Winston Churchill, in a broadcast
address to the people of Italy
, squarely
blames Benito Mussolini for leading
his nation to war against the British, contrary to Italy's historic
friendship with them: "One man has arrayed the trustees and
inheritors of ancient Rome upon the side of the ferocious pagan
barbarians."
- December 24 – Mahatma Gandhi, Indian spiritual non-violence
leader writes his second letter to Adolf
Hitler addressing him "My friend", requesting him to stop the
war Germany had begun.
- December 29 – Franklin D. Roosevelt, in a fireside chat to the nation, declares that the
United
States
must become "the great arsenal of
democracy."
- December 29 –
WWII – "Second Great
Fire of London
": Luftwaffe carries out a
massive incendiary bombing raid, starting 1,500 fires. Many
famous buildings, including the Guildhall
and Trinity House, are either damaged or destroyed.
- December 30 –
California
's first modern freeway, the
future State Route 110,
opens to traffic in Pasadena, California
, as the Arroyo
Seco Parkway (now the Pasadena Freeway).
Undated
Ongoing
Births
January
- January 2 – Jim
Bakker, American televangelist and former husband of Tammy Faye
- January 4 – Brian David Josephson, Welsh
physicist, Nobel Prize
laureate
- January 4 – Gao Xingjian, Chinese-born writer, Nobel Prize laureate
- January 6 – Penny Lernoux, American journalist and author
(d. 1989)
- January 9 – Miguel Ángel Rodríguez,
Costa Rican politician, lawyer, economist, and businessman
- January 14 – Julian Bond, American civil rights activist
- January 19 – Mike Reid, English actor (d. 2007)
- January 20 – Carol Heiss, American figure skater
- January 21 – Jack Nicklaus, American golfer
- January 22 – John Hurt, English actor
- January 27 – James Cromwell, American actor
- January 31 – Kitch Christie, South African rugby coach (d.
1998)
February
- February 2 – David Jason, English actor
- February 3 – Fran Tarkenton, American football player
- February 4 – George Romero, American film writer, producer,
and director
- February 5 – H. R. Giger, Swiss artist
- February 6 – Tom Brokaw, American television news
reporter
- February 6 – Jimmy Tarbuck, English comedian
- February 8 – Ted Koppel, American journalist
- February 8 – Joe
South, American singer and songwriter
- February 9 – J. M. Coetzee, South African writer, Nobel Prize laureate
- February 12 – Richard Lynch, American actor
- February 17 – Gene Pitney, American singer (d. 2006)
- February 18 – Fabrizio De André, Italian
singer-songwriter (d. 1999)
- February 19 – Smokey Robinson, American musician
- February 20 – Jimmy Greaves, English footballer
- February 21 – James Wong, Hong Kong composer (d. 2004)
- February 22 – Judy Cornwell, British actress
- February 22 – Johnson Mlambo, South African politician
- February 22 – Billy Name, American photographer and Warhol archivist
- February 23 – Peter Fonda, American actor
- February 24 – Denis Law, Scottish footballer
- February 24 – Peter Deuel American actor
- February 25 – Ron Santo, American baseball player
- February 28 – Mario Andretti, American race car driver
March
- March 3 – Germán Castro Caycedo, Colombian
writer and journalist
- March 3 – Owen Spencer-Thomas, English
broadcaster, journalist and clergyman
- March 6 – Willie Stargell, African-American baseball
player (d. 2001)
- March 7 – Rudi
Dutschke, German radical student leader (d. 1979)
- March 9 – Raúl Juliá, Puerto Rican actor (d.
1994)
- March 10 – Chuck Norris, American actor and martial
artist
- March 12 – Al
Jarreau, American singer
- March 15 – Phil
Lesh, American musician (Grateful
Dead)
- March 16 – Bernardo Bertolucci, Italian writer and
film director
- March 16 – Jan
Pronk, Dutch politician and diplomat
- March 17 – Mark
White, Governor of Texas
- March 22 – Haing S. Ngor,
Cambodian actor (d. 1996)
- March 25 – Anita Bryant, American entertainer
- March 26 – James
Caan, American actor
- March 26 – Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the United States
House of Representatives
- March 27 – Austin Pendleton, American actor
- March 27 – Cale Yarborough, American race car
driver
- March 29 – Ray Davis, American musician (P-Funk)
- March 30 – Astrud Gilberto, Brazilian-born singer
April
- April 1 – Wangari Maathai, Kenyan environmentalist,
recipient of the Nobel Peace
Prize
- April 2 – Penelope Keith, English actress
- April 12 – Herbie Hancock, American musician
- April 12 – John
Hagee, American televangelist
- April 13 – Max
Mosley, British motorsport boss
- April 16 – Queen Margrethe II of Denmark
- April 18 – Joseph L. Goldstein, American scientist, recipient
of the Nobel Prize
in Physiology or Medicine
- April 25 – Al
Pacino, American actor
- April 26 – Giorgio Moroder, Italian film composer
May
- May 1 – Elsa
Peretti, Italian jewelry designer
- May 5 – Lance
Henriksen, American actor and potter
- May 7 – Jim
Connors, American radio personality (d. 1987)
- May 8 – Peter
Benchley, American author (d. 2006)
- May 8 – Angela
Carter, English author and editor (d. 1992)
- May 8 – Ricky
Nelson, American singer (d. 1985)
- May 8 – Toni
Tennille, American singer
- May 9 – James
L. Brooks, American film
producer and writer
- May 9 – Nuala O'Faolain, Irish
journalist and author (d. 2008)
- May 11 – Juan
Downey, Chilean-born video artist (d. 1993)
- May 14 – 'H'.
Jones, British soldier (VC recipient) (d.
1982)
- May 15 – Don
Nelson, American basketball player and coach
- May 17 – Alan
Kay, American computer scientist
- May 17 – Reynato
Puno, Filipino Supreme Court Chief
Justice
- May 18 – Lenny
Lipton, American inventor
- May 20 – Stan
Mikita, Slovakian-born Canadian hockey player
- May 20 – Sadaharu
Oh, Japanese baseball player
- May 21 – António Victorino
d'Almeida, Portuguese composer, pianist, writer and
director
- May 22 – Bernard Shaw, American journalist
and television news reporter
- May 24 – Joseph
Brodsky, Russian-born poet, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1996)
- May 29 – Farooq
Leghari, President of
Pakistan
June
- June 1 – René Auberjonois, American
actor
- June 2 – King Constantine II of Greece
- June 4 – Ludwig
Schwarz, Austrian bishop
- June 6 – Richard
Paul, American actor (d. 1998)
- June 7 – Tom Jones, Welsh singer
- June 8 – Carole Ann Ford, British actress
- June 8 – Nancy
Sinatra, American singer
- June 16 – Neil Goldschmidt, Governor of Oregon
- June 16 – Taylor Gun-Jin Wang, Chinese-American
astronaut
- June 17 – George Akerlof, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate
- June 17 – Alan
Murray, Australian professional golfer
- June 20 – John
Mahoney, English-born actor
- June 21 – Mariette Hartley, American actress
- June 22 – Abbas Kiarostami, Iranian film director,
screenwriter, and film producer
- June 22 – Esther Rantzen, British broadcaster
- June 23 – Adam
Faith, English singer and actor (d. 2003)
- June 23 – Lord Irvine of Lairg, Lord Chancellor of England
- June 23 – Wilma
Rudolph, American athlete (d. 1994)
- June 25 – A.J. Quinnell,
English writer (d. 2005)
- June 27 – Anil
Karanjai, Indian painter of the Hungry generation movement.
- June 29 – Vyacheslav Artyomov, Russian
composer
July
- July 3 – César Tovar, Venezuelan Major League Baseball player (d.
1994)
- July 7 – Ringo
Starr, British drummer (The
Beatles)
- July 10 – Gene
Alley, American baseball player
- July 10 – Tom
Farmer, Scottish entrepreneur
- July 10 – Helen
Donath, American soprano
- July 13 – Patrick Stewart, English actor
- July 13 – Paul
Prudhomme, American celebrity chef and cookbook author
- July 17 – Tim Brooke-Taylor, English comedian
- July 17 – Verne Lundquist, American sportscaster
- July 18 – Joe
Torre, American baseball player and manager
- July 18 – James
Brolin, American actor and director
- July 22 – George Clinton, American
musician
- July 22 – Alex
Trebek, Canadian game show host
- July 24 – Stanley Hauerwas, American theologian
- July 26 – Mary Jo Kopechne, American aide to Ted Kennedy (d. 1969)
- July 27 – Pina
Bausch, German choreographer (d. 2009)
- July 27 – Bharati Mukherjee, Indian-born
novelist
- July 31 – Roy
Walker, Northern Irish comedian (1986–1999)
August
- August 3 – Martin Sheen, American actor
- August 7 – Jean-Luc Dehaene, Prime Minister of Belgium
- August 8 – Dilip Sardesai, former Indian Test cricketer
(d. 2007)
- August 9 – Beverlee McKinsey, American actress
- August 10 – Bobby Hatfield, American singer (Righteous Brothers) (d. 2003)
- August 14 – Galen Hall, American football coach
- August 19 – Jill St. John, American actress
- August 20 – Musa Geshaev, Chechen poet and historian
- August 20 – Rubén Hinojosa, American politician
- August 22 – Valerie Harper, American actress
- August 25 – José Van Dam, Belgian bass-baritone
- August 28 – Tom Baker, American actor (d.
1982)
- August 29
September
- September 5 – Raquel Welch, American actress
- September 10 – David Mann, American artist (d.
2004)
- September 11 – Brian De Palma, American film director
- September 12 – Skip Hinnant, American actor
- September 12 – Mickey Lolich, American baseball player
- September 13 – Óscar Arias, Costa Rican politician,
recipient of the Nobel Peace
Prize
- September 14 – Larry Brown, American basketball
coach
- September 18 – Frankie Avalon, American singer and
actor
- September 20 – Taro Aso, Prime
Minister of Japan
- September 23 – Mohammad-Reza Shajarian, Iranian
traditional singer
- September 24 – Michiko Suganuma, Urushi Japanese
lacquer artist
October
- October 9 – John Lennon, British musician and singer
(The Beatles) (d. 1980)
- October 13 – Pharoah Sanders, American saxophonist
- October 14 – Cliff Richard, English singer
- October 15 – Peter C. Doherty, Australian immunologist, recipient
of the Nobel Prize
in Physiology or Medicine
- October 16 – Ivan Della Mea, Italian singer-songwriter (d.
2009)
- October 19 – Michael Gambon, Irish actor
- October 20 – Robert Pinsky, Poet Laureate of the United
States
- October 21 – Manfred Mann (Manfred Lubowitz), South African rock
musician
- October 21 – Geoffrey Boycott, English cricketer
- October 23 – Pelé, Brazilian footballer
- October 25 – Bobby Knight, American basketball coach
- October 27 – John Gotti, American gangster (d. 2002)
November
December
- December 1 – Richard Pryor, American actor and comedian (d.
2005)
- December 4 – Freddy Cannon, American singer
- December 4 – Gary Gilmore, American murderer (d. 1977)
- December 5 – Peter Pohl, Swedish writer
- December 12 – Sharad Pawar, Indian politician
- December 12 – Dionne Warwick, American singer
- December 20 – Pat Chapman, English author
- December 21 – Frank Zappa, American musician, composer, and
satirist (d. 1993)
- December 22 – Noel Jones, British ambassador to Kazakhstan (d.
1995)
- December 23 – Jorma Kaukonen, American musician (Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna)
- December 23 –
Robert Labine, former mayor of
Gatineau, Quebec

- December 26 – Edward C. Prescott, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate
Unknown dates
Deaths
January–March
- January – Fusajiro Yamauchi,
Japanese business executive (b. 1859)
- January 4 – Flora Finch, English-born actress and comedian
(b. 1869)
- January 18 – Kazimierz Tetmajer, Polish poet and
writer (b. 1865)
- January 27 – Isaac Babel, Ukrainian writer (b. 1894)
- February 1 – Philip Francis Nowlan, science fiction writer, creator of
Buck Rogers (b. 1888)
- February 11 – John Buchan, 1st Baron
Tweedsmuir, Governor
General of Canada (b. 1875)
- February 26 – Michael Hainisch, 2nd President of Austria (b. 1858)
- February 29 – Edward Frederic Benson, English
writer
- March 5
- March 10 – Mikhaïl Boulgakov, Russian writer (b.
1891)
- March 11 – John Monk Saunders, American writer (b.
1897)
- March 16 – Selma Lagerlöf, Swedish writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1858)
- March 20 – Alfred Ploetz, German physician, biologist,
and eugenicist (b. 1860)
- March 26 – Spiridon Louis, Greek runner (b. 1873)
- March 27
- March 31 – Tinsley Lindley, English footballer (b.
1865)
April–June
- April 1 – John
A. Hobson, English economist (b.
1858).
- April 26 – Carl
Bosch, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1874)
- April 28 – Luisa Tetrazzini, Italian opera singer (b.
1871)
- May 14 – Emma
Goldman, Lithuanian-born anarchist (b. 1869)
- May 15 – Menno
ter Braak, Dutch writer (b. 1902)
- May 19 – Diego Mazquiarán, Spanish matador (b.
1895)
- May 20 – Verner von Heidenstam, Swedish writer,
Nobel Prize laureate (b.
1859)
- May 25 – Joe De
Grasse, Canadian film director (b. 1873)
- May 26 – Wilhelm of Prussia,
Prussian prince (b. 1906)
- May 28
- May 29 – Mary Anderson, American stage
actress (b. 1859).
- June 7 – James Hall, American actor (b. 1900)
- June 10 – Marcus Garvey, Jamaican-born publisher,
entrepreneur, and black nationalist (b. 1887)
- June 11 – Alfred S. Alschuler, American architect (b. 1876)
- June 13 – George Fitzmaurice, American director (b.
1885)
- June 14 – Henry W. Antheil, Jr., American diplomat (b.
1912)
- June 17 – Arthur Harden, English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1865)
- June 19 – Maurice Jaubert, French composer (b.
1900)
- June 20 – Charley Chase, American comedian (b. 1893)
- June 21
- June 29 – Paul
Klee, Swiss artist (b. 1879)
July–September
- July 1 – Ben
Turpin, American actor (b. 1869)
- July 15 – Robert Pershing Wadlow, tallest man
ever (infection) (b. 1918)
- August 5 – Frederick Albert Cook, American
explorer (b. 1865)
- August 8 – Johnny Dodds, American jazz clarinetist (b.
1892)
- August 18 – Walter Chrysler, American automobile pioneer
(b. 1875)
- August 21 – Leon Trotsky, Russian revolutionary (b.
1879)
- August 21 – Hermann Obrecht, Swiss Federal Councillor
(b. 1882)
- August 22 – Mary Vaux Walcott, American artist and
naturalist (b. 1860)
- August 30 – J.J. Thomson,
English physicist, Nobel
Prize laureate (b. 1856)
- September 4 – George William de Carteret,
author from Jersey island (b. 1869)
- September 5 – Charles de Broqueville, Prime Minister of Belgium (b.
1860)
- September 25 – Marguerite Clark, American actress (b.
1883)
- September 27 – Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Austrian
neuroscientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine (b. 1857)
October–December
- October 5 – Ballington Booth, American co-founder of
Volunteers of America (b. 1857)
- October 5 – Lincoln Loy McCandless, Hawaiian
politician and cattle rancher (b. 1859)
- October 9 – Wilfred Grenfell, English medical
missionary to Newfoundland and Labrador (b. 1865)
- October 10 – Berton Churchill, Canadian actor (b.
1876)
- October 12 – Tom
Mix, American actor (b. 1880)
- November 9 – Neville Chamberlain, Prime Minister of the
United Kingdom (b. 1869)
- November 9 – John Henry Kirby, Texas legislator and
American businessman (b. 1860)
- November 17 – Eric Gill, British sculptor and writer (b.
1882)
- November 17 – Raymond Pearl, American biologist (b. 1879)
- December 5 – Jan Kubelík, Czech violinist (b. 1880)
- December 15 or December 16 – Billy Hamilton, American
baseball player (b. 1866)
- December 19 – Kyösti Kallio, President of Finland (b. 1873)
- December 21 – F. Scott
Fitzgerald, American writer (b. 1896)
- December 22 – Nathanael West, American writer (b. 1903)
- December 25 – Agnes Ayres, American actress (b. 1898)
- December 26 – Daniel Frohman, American theater producer (b.
1851)
Nobel Prizes
Ship events
Notes
External links