1964 (
MCMLXIV) was a
leap year starting on
Wednesday (link will display full calendar) of the 1964
Gregorian calendar.
Events of 1964
January
- January 10 – Introducing...the
Beatles is released by Chicago's Vee-Jay Records to get the
jump on Capitol Records' release of Meet the Beatles!, scheduled for
January 20. The 2 record companies fight over Vee-Jay's release of
this album in court.
- January 11 – United States Surgeon General
Luther Leonidas Terry reports
that smoking may be hazardous to one's health (the first such
statement from the U.S. government).
- January 12 – The
predominantly Arab government of Zanzibar
is
overthrown by African nationalist rebels; a U.S. destroyer
evacuates 61 U.S. citizens.
- January 12 –
Routine U.S. naval patrols of the South China Sea
begin.
- January 13 – In Manchester, NH
14-year-old Pamela Mason is murdered. Edward Coolidge is tried and
convicted of the crime, but the conviction is set aside by the
landmark Fourth
Amendment Case "Coolidge vs. New Hampshire (1971)."
- January 16 –
Hello, Dolly! opens
in New York
City
's St. James Theatre.
- January 16 – John Glenn, the first American to orbit the
earth, resigns from the space program.
- January 17 – John Glenn announces that he will seek the
Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator from Ohio
.
- January 18 – Plans
to build the New
York
World Trade Center
are announced.
- January 20 –
Meet the Beatles!, the
first Beatles album in the United States
, is released.
- January 22 –
Kenneth Kaunda is inaugurated as the
first President of Northern Rhodesia
.
- January 23 – Pope Paul VI instituted
the "World Day of Prayer for Vocations". It is being observed up to
now. During this celebration the Popes remind the universal Church
that still today salvation comes to us. It is celebrated every
Fourth Sunday of Easter also known as Good Shepherd Sunday.
- January 23 – Thirteen years after its
proposal and nearly 2 years after its passage by the United States Senate, the 24th Amendment
to the United States Constitution, prohibiting the use of
poll taxes in national elections, is
ratified.
- January 23 – Arthur Miller's After the Fall opens
on Broadway. A semi-autobiographical work, it arouses controversy
over his portrayal of late ex-wife Marilyn Monroe.
- January 27 –
France
and the
People's
Republic of China
announce their decision to establish diplomatic
relations.
- January 27 – U.S. Senator Margaret Chase Smith, 66, announces her
candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.
- January 28 – A U.S. Air Force jet
training plane that strays into East Germany
is shot down by Soviet fighters near Erfurt
; all 3 crew
men are killed.
- January 29 –
February 9 – The 1964 Winter Olympics are held in
Innsbruck
, Austria
.
- January 29 – The
Soviet
Union
launches 2 scientific satellites, Elektron I and II, from a single
rocket.
- January 29 –
Ranger 6 is launched by NASA
, on a
mission to carry television cameras and
crash-land on the Moon.
- January 30 – General Nguyen Khanh leads a bloodless military coup
d'état, replacing Duong Van Minh as
Prime Minister of South Vietnam.
February
- February 1 –
The Beatles vault to the #1 spot on the
U.S. singles charts for the first time, with "I Want to Hold Your Hand," forever
changing the way popular music sounds to Americans, also starting
the British Invasion in America
.
- February 3 –
Protesting against alleged de-facto school racial segregation, Black and Puerto
Rican groups in New York
City
boycott public
schools.
- February 4 – The Government of the United
States authorizes the Twenty-fourth Amendment, outlawing
the poll tax.
- February 4 – General Motors introduces the Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser and the
Buick Sport Wagon.
- February 6 –
Cuba
cuts off the normal water supply to the United
States Guantanamo Bay Naval Base
, in reprisal for the U.S. seizure 4 days earlier of
4 Cuban fishing boats off the coast of Florida
.
- February 7 – A
Jackson,
Mississippi
jury, trying Byron
De La Beckwith for the murder of Medgar
Evers in June 1963, reports that it can not reach a verdict,
resulting in a mistrial.
- February 7 –
The Beatles arrive from England at
New York
City
's JFK International Airport
, receiving a tumultuous reception from a throng of
screaming fans, marking the first occurrence of "Beatlemania" in the United States.
- February 9 – The Beatles appear on The Ed Sullivan Show, marking
their first live performance on American television. Seen by an
estimated 73 million viewers, the appearance becomes the catalyst
for the mid-1960s "British
Invasion" of American popular music.
- February 11 –
Greeks & Turks begin fighting in Limassol
, Cyprus
.
- February 11 – The
Republic of
China
(Taiwan
) drops
diplomatic relations with France because of French recognition of
the People's
Republic of China
.
- February 17 – Wesberry v. Sanders (376 US 1 1964): The
Supreme Court of the United
States
rules that congressional districts have
to be approximately equal in population.
- February 17 – Gabonese president
Leon M'ba is toppled by a coup and his archrival,
Jean-Hilaire Aubame, is
installed in his place.
- February 25 –
Muhammad Ali beats Sonny Liston in Miami Beach, Florida
, and is crowned the
heavyweight champion of the world.
- February 26 –
U.S. politician John Glenn slips on a
bathroom rug in his Columbus, Ohio
apartment and hits his head on the bathtub,
injuring his left inner ear, and prompting him (later that week) to
withdraw from the race for the Democratic Party Senate
nomination.
- February 27 – The
government of Italy
asks for
help to keep the Leaning Tower of Pisa
from toppling over.
- February 29 – U.S. President
Lyndon B. Johnson announces that the United States
has developed a jet airplane (the A-11), capable of sustained
flight at more than and of altitudes of more than .
March
- March 4 – Teamsters President Jimmy
Hoffa is convicted by a federal jury of tampering with a
federal jury in 1962.
- March 6 – Constantine II becomes King of
Greece
, upon the
death of his father King Paul.
- March 8 – Malcolm X, suspended from the Nation of Islam, says in New York City
that he is forming a black nationalist
party.
- March 9 –
New York Times Co. v
Sullivan (376 US 254 1964): The United
States Supreme Court
rules that under the First
Amendment, speech criticizing political figures cannot be
censored.
- March 9 – The first Ford Mustang rolls off the assembly line at Ford Motor Company.
- March 10 – Soviet
military forces shoot down an unarmed
reconnaissance bomber that had strayed into East Germany
; the 3 U.S. flyers parachute to safety.
- March 10 – Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Ambassador to
South Vietnam, wins the New Hampshire
Republican
primary.
- March 12 – Malcolm
X leaves the Nation of
Islam.
- March 13 – In a
notorious incident, 38 of her neighbors in Queens, New York City
fail to respond to the cries of Kitty Genovese, 28, as she is being stabbed
to death.
- March 14 – A
Dallas,
Texas
jury finds Jack Ruby
guilty of killing John F. Kennedy
assassin Lee Harvey
Oswald.
- March 20 – The
precursor of the European Space Agency
, ESRO (European Space Research
Organization) is established per an agreement signed on June 14,
1962.
- March 21 – Non
ho l'età by Gigliola Cinquetti (music by Nicola Salerno, text
by Mario Panzeri) wins the Eurovision Song Contest 1964
for Italy
.
- March 26 – Malcolm X and Martin Luther
King, Jr. at news conference. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara delivers an address that
reiterates American determination to give South Vietnam increased
military and economic aid, in its war against the Communist insurgency.
- March 27 – The
Good Friday Earthquake, the
most powerful earthquake in U.S. history at a magnitude of 9.2, strikes South Central Alaska, killing 125
people and inflicting massive damage to the city of Anchorage,
Alaska
.
- March 29 – Radio Caroline becomes England
's first pirate radio
station, from a ship anchored just outside UK
territorial waters.
- March 30 – Merv
Griffin's game show Jeopardy!
debuts on NBC; Art
Fleming is its first host.
- March 31 – The
military, backed by the USA, overthrows Brazilian President João Goulart in a coup, starting 21 years of
dictatorship in
Brazil
.
April
- April 2 – Mrs.
Malcolm Peabody, 72, mother of Massachusetts
Governor Endicott
Peabody, is released on $450 bond after spending 2 days in a
St. Augustine, Florida jail, for participating in an
anti-segregation demonstration there.
- April 4 – The
Beatles hold the top 5 positions in the Billboard Top 40
singles in America, an unprecedented achievement. The top songs in
America as listed on April 4, in order, are: Can't Buy Me Love, Twist and Shout, She Loves You, I Want to Hold Your Hand, and
Please Please Me.
- April 4 – Three high school friends in
Hoboken, N.J., open the first BLIMPIE on
Washington Street.
- April 6 – Jigme Palden Dorji, Premier of the
Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan
, is shot
dead by an unidentified assassin in Puncholing, near the Indian
border.
- April 7 – IBM announces the System/360.
- April 8 – Four of 5 railroad operating union
strike against the Illinois Central Railroad without warning,
bringing to a head a 5-year dispute over railroad work rules.
- April 8 – Gemini
1 is launched on the first unmanned test of the 2-man
spacecraft.
- April 8 –
From Russia with
Love is shown in U.S.
theaters.
- April 9 – The
United Nations Security
Council adopts by a 9–0 vote a resolution deploring a British
air attack on a fort in Yemen
12 days
earlier, in which 25 persons were reported killed.
- April 11 – The
Brazilian Congress elects Field Marshal Humberto de Alencar Castello
Branco as President of Brazil
.
- April 12 – In
Detroit,
Michigan
, Malcolm X delivers a
speech entitled "The Ballot or the Bullet."
- April 13 – The 36th Academy Awards ceremony is
held.
- April 14 – A
Delta rocket's third stage motor
ignites prematurely in an assembly room at Cape
Canaveral
, killing
3.
- April 16 – The Rolling Stones release their debut
album, The Rolling
Stones.
- April 16 – Sentences
totalling 307 years are passed on 12 men who stole £2.6m in used
bank notes, after holding up the night mail train travelling from
Glasgow
to London
in August
1963 – a heist that became known as the Great Train
Robbery
.
- April 17 – In the
United
States
, the Ford Mustang is
officially unveiled to the public.
- April 17 – Shea Stadium
opens in Flushing,
New York.
- April 19 – In
Laos
, the coalition government of Prince Souvanna Phouma is deposed by a right-wing
military group, led by Brig. Gen. Kouprasith Abhay. Not supported by the
U.S., the coup is ultimately unsuccessful, and Souvanna Phouma is
reinstated, remaining Prime Minister until 1975.
- April 20 – U.S. President Lyndon Johnson in New York, and Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev in
Moscow
,
simultaneously announce plans to cut back production of materials
for making nuclear
weapons.
- April 20 – Nelson Mandela makes his "I Am Prepared to
Die" speech at the opening of the Rivonia
Trial, a classic of the anti-apartheid movement.
- April 20 – BBC2 starts broadcasting in the UK
.
- April 22 – British businessman Greville Wynne, imprisoned in Moscow since
1963 for alleged spying, is exchanged for
Soviet spy Gordon Lonsdale.
- April 22 – The 1964 New York World's Fair opens
to celebrate the 300th anniversary of New Amsterdam being taken
over by British forces under the Duke of York (later King James II)
and being renamed New York in 1664. The fair runs until Oct. 18,
1964 and reopens April 21, 1965, finally closing October 17, 1965.
(Not sanctioned, due to being within 10 years of the Seattle World's Fair in 1962, some countries decline, but many countries have
pavilions with exotic crafts, art & food.)
- April 25 – Thieves
steal the head of the Little Mermaid
statue in Copenhagen
, Denmark (Henrik Bruun confesses in 1997).
- April 26 – Tanganyika and Zanzibar
merge to form Tanzania.
May
- May 1 – At 4:00 a.m., John George Kemeny and Thomas Eugene Kurtz run the first
program written in BASIC
(Beginners' All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code), an easy to
learn high level programming
language which they have created. BASIC is eventually included
on many computers and even some games
consoles.
- May 2 – Senator
Barry Goldwater receives more than
75% of the votes in the Texas
Republican
Presidential primary.
- May 2 – Some 400–1,000
students march through Times Square,
New York and another 700 in San Francisco
, in the first major student demonstration against
the Vietnam War. Smaller marches also occur in Boston,
Seattle, and Madison, Wisconsin.
- May 2 – Henry Hezekiah
Dee and Charles Eddie Moore, hitchhiking in Meadville,
Mississippi
, are kidnapped and beaten by members of the
Ku Klux Klan. Their badly
decomposed bodies are found by chance 2
months later in July, during the search for 3 civil rights workers – Chaney, Goodman, and
Schwerner.
- May 7 – Pacific Air
Lines Flight 773
crashes near San Ramon, California
, killing all 44 aboard; the FBI
later
reports that a cockpit recorder tape indicates that the pilot and
co-pilot had been shot by a suicidal passenger.
- May 7 – At a mail rockets demonstration by Gerhard Zucker on Hasselkopf Mountain near
Braunlage
(Lower Saxonia, Germany), 3 persons are killed by a
rocket explosion.
- May 9 – South Korean
President Chung Hee
Park reshuffles his Cabinet, after a series of student
demonstrations against his efforts to restore diplomatic and trade
relations with Japan
.
- May 11 – Terence Conran opens the first Habitat store on London
's Fulham Road
.
- May 19 – The United
States State Department
says that more than 40 hidden microphones have been
found embedded in the walls of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow
.
- May 23 – Mrs. Madeline
Dassault, 63, wife of a French plane manufacturer and politician,
is kidnapped while leaving her car in front of her Paris
home; she
is found unharmed the next day in a farmhouse from
Paris.
- May 23 – Pablo
Picasso paints his fourth Head of a Bearded Man.
- May 24–25 – The crowd at a football
match in Lima
, Peru
riots over
a referee's decision in the Peru-Argentina
game; 319 are killed, 500 injured.
- May 26 – Nelson Rockefeller defeats Barry Goldwater in the Oregon
Republican
primary, slowing but not stalling Goldwater's drive toward the
nomination.
- May 27 – Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru dies; he is succeeded by
Lal Bahadur Shastri.
June
- June 2 – Senator Barry
Goldwater wins the California
Republican Presidential primary, making him the
overwhelming favorite for the nomination.
- June 2 – Five million shares of stock in
the Communications Satellite Corporation (Comsat) are offered for
sale at $20 a share, and the issue is quickly sold out.
- June 3 – South Korean
President Park Chung
Hee declares martial law in Seoul
, after
10,000 student demonstrators overpower police.
- June 6 – With a
temporary order, the rocket launches at Cuxhaven
are terminated.
- June 7 – The Beatles travel the canals of Amsterdam
.
- June 9 – In Federal
Court in Kansas City,
Kansas
, army deserter George John Gessner, 28, is
convicted of passing United States secrets to the Soviet
Union.
- June 10 – The U.S. Senate votes cloture of the Civil Rights Bill after a 75-day
filibuster.
- June 11 – Greece
rejects
direct talks with Turkey
over
Cyprus
.
- June 11 – In Cologne, Germany
, Walter Seifert
attacks students and teachers in an elementary school with a
flamethrower, killing 10 and injuring
21.
- June 12 – Pennsylvania
Governor William
Scranton announces his candidacy for the Republican
Presidential nomination, as part of a 'stop-Goldwater'
movement.
- June 12 – Nelson Mandela and 7 others are sentenced to
life imprisonment in South Africa, and
sent to the Robben
Island
prison.
- June 16 – Keith Bennett, 12, is abducted
by Myra Hindley and Ian Brady.
- June 19 – U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy, 32, is seriously injured in a
private plane crash at Southampton, Massachusetts; the pilot is
killed.
- June 21 – Three civil
rights workers, Michael Schwerner,
Andrew Goodman, and James Chaney, are murdered near Philadelphia, Mississippi
, by local segregationist law enforcement
officials.
- June 21 – Spain beats the Soviet Union 2–1 to win the
1964 European
Nations Cup.
- June 21 – Jim
Bunning pitches a perfect game for
the Philadelphia
Phillies.
- June 25 – The Vatican condemns the female combined oral contraceptive
pill.
- June 26 – Moise Tshombe returns to the Democratic
Republic of the Congo
from exile in Spain.
July
- July 2 – President Lyndon Johnson signs
the Civil Rights Act of
1964 into law, abolishing racial segregation in the United
States.
- July 6 – Malawi
declares
its independence from the United Kingdom
.
- July 8 – U.S. military personnel announce
that U.S. casualties in Vietnam have risen to 1,387, including 399
dead and 17 MIA.
- July 16 – At the
Republican National
Convention in San
Francisco
, U.S.
presidential nominee Barry Goldwater
declares that "extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice", and
"moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue".
- July 18 – Six days of
race riots begin in Harlem
.
- July 18 – Judith Graham Pool publishes her
discovery of cryoprecipitate, a
substance that extends the lives of hemophiliacs around the world.
- July 19 – Vietnam War: At a rally in Saigon
, South Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Khanh calls for expanding the war into
North Vietnam.
- July 20 – Vietnam War: Viet Cong forces attack a provincial capital,
killing 11 South Vietnamese military personnel and 40 civilians (30
of which are children).
- July 21 – Race riots begin in Singapore
between ethnic Chinese and Malays.
- July 22 – The second meeting of the
Organization of African
Unity is held.
- July 27 – Vietnam
War: The U.S. sends 5,000 more military advisers to South
Vietnam, bringing the total number of United States forces in
Vietnam to 21,000.
- July 31 – Ranger program: Ranger
7 sends back the first close-up photographs of the moon (images
are 1,000 times clearer than anything ever seen from Earth-bound
telescopes).
August
- August 1 – The Final Looney Tune, "Señorella and the Glass
Huarache", is released before the Warner Bros. Cartoon Division
is shut down by Jack Warner.
- August 1 – Emancipation Declaration in
the Island of Jamaica. Freedom from slavery in the Island that was
colonised by the British
- August 4 – American civil rights
movement: The bodies of murdered civil
rights workers Michael
Schwerner, Andrew Goodman and
James Chaney are found.
- August 4 – Vietnam War: United States destroyers USS Maddox and USS
C.
Turner Joy
are attacked in the Gulf of Tonkin
. Air support from the carrier USS Ticonderoga sinks 1
gunboat, while the other 2 leave the battle.
- August 5 – Vietnam
War: Operation Pierce Arrow –
Aircraft from carriers USS
Ticonderoga and USS Constellation
bomb North Vietnam
in retaliation for strikes against U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of
Tonkin
.
- August 5 – The Simba
rebel army in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo
captures Stanleyville,
and takes 1,000 Western hostages.
- August 7 – Vietnam War: The United
States Congress passes the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, giving
U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson broad war powers to deal with
North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces.
- August 8 – A Rolling Stones gig in Scheveningen gets out of control. Riot police
end the gig after about 15 minutes, upon which spectators start to
fight the riot police.
- August 13 –
Murderers Gwynne Owen Evans and
Peter Anthony Allen become the
last people to be executed in the United Kingdom
.
- August 16 – Vietnam War: In a coup, General Nguyen Khanh
replaces Duong Van Minh as South
Vietnam's chief of state and establishes a new constitution, drafted partly by the U.S.
Embassy.
- August 17 – Margaret Harshaw,
Metropolitan Opera Soprano, sings the role of Turandot in Puccini's
opera Turandot at the New York World's
Fair.
- August 22 –
Fannie Lou Hamer, civil rights
activist and Vice Chair of the Mississippi Freedom
Democratic Party, addresses the Credentials Committee of the
Democratic National
Convention, challenging the all-white Mississippi
delegation.
- August 22 – Goalkeeper Derek Foster of
Sunderland becomes the youngest-ever player to play in the Football League, aged 15 years and 185
days.
- August 24–27 – The Democratic National
Convention in Atlantic
City
nominates incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson for a full term, and U.S.
Senator
Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota
as his running mate.
- August 27 – Walt Disney's Mary Poppins has its world premiere
in Los Angeles. It will go on to become Disney's biggest
moneymaker, and winner of 5 Academy Awards, including a Best
Actress award for Julie Andrews, who
accepted the part after she was passed over by Jack L. Warner
for the leading role of Eliza Dolittle in the film version of
My Fair Lady. Mary Poppins is the first Disney
film to be nominated for Best Picture.
- August 28 – Bob
Dylan turns The Beatles on to
cannabis for the first time.
- August 28–30
– Philadelphia 1964 race
riot: Tensions between African
American residents and police lead to 341 injuries and 774
arrests.
September
- September 2 – Indian Hungry generation poets are arrested on
charges of conspiracy against the State and obscenity in
literature.
- September 4 – The
Forth Road
Bridge
opens over the Firth of Forth
.
- September 10 –
Germany
receives its 1,000,000th foreign
worker.
- September 14 – The third period of
the Second Vatican Council
opens.
- September 14 –
The London
Daily Herald ceases
publication, replaced by The
Sun.
- September 16 – Shindig! premieres on the ABC, featuring the
top musical acts of the Sixties.
- September 17 –
Goldfinger opens in the
UK
.
- September 17 – Bewitched, starring Elizabeth Montgomery, premieres on
ABC.
- September 18 –
King Constantine II of
Greece marries Princess Anne-Marie of
Denmark in Athens
, who is
now Europe's youngest Queen at age eighteen years, nineteen
days.
- September 21 –
The island of Malta
obtains
independence from the United Kingdom
.
- September 24 –
The Warren Commission Report, the
first official investigation of the assassination of United States
President John F.
Kennedy, is published.
- September 25 – The Mozambican War of
Independence is launched by FRELIMO.
October
- October – In Photoplay magazine, Hedda Hopper announces that Sophia Loren and Paul
Newman will star in the film version of Arthur Miller's play, After the Fall,
with Loren in the role that was written about Marilyn Monroe. The film was never made.
- October 1 – Three
thousand student activists at University
of California, Berkeley
surround and block a police car from taking a
CORE volunteer arrested
for not showing his ID, when he violated a ban on outdoor activist
card tables. This protest eventually explodes into the
Berkeley Free Speech
Movement.
- October 1 – The
Shinkansen high-speed rail system is inaugurated in
Japan
, for the first sector between Tokyo
and
Osaka.
- October 2 – The
Kinks release their first album, The Kinks .
- October 5 –
Twenty-three men and thirty-one women escape to West Berlin through a narrow tunnel under the
Berlin
Wall
.
- October 5 –
Queen Elizabeth
II and Prince Phillip begin an 8-day visit to Canada
.
- October
10–24 – The 1964 Summer Olympics are held in
Tokyo
.
- October 12 – The Soviet Union
launches Voskhod 1 into Earth
orbit as the first spacecraft with a
multi-person crew and the first flight without space suits. The flight is cut short and lands
again on October 13 after 16 orbits.
- October 14 – American civil rights
movement leader Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. becomes the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, which was awarded to
him for leading non-violent resistance to end racial prejudice in the United States.
- October 14–15 – Nikita
Khrushchev is deposed as leader of the Soviet Union; Leonid Brezhnev and Alexei Kosygin assume power.
- October 15 – The
Labour Party wins the
parliamentary elections in the United Kingdom
, ending 13 years of Conservative Party
rule.
- October 15 –
Craig Breedlove's jet-powered car Spirit of America goes
out of control in Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah
and makes
skid marks 9.6 km long.
- October 15 – The St. Louis Cardinals defeat the visiting
New York Yankees, 7–5 to win the
World Series in 7 games (4–3), ending a
long run of 29 World Series appearances in 44 seasons for the Bronx
Bombers (also known as the Yankee Dynasty).
- October 16 – Harold Wilson becomes British Prime Minister
for the first time.
- October 16 – The
People's
Republic of China
explodes an atomic bomb
in Sinkiang.
- October 18 – The NY World's Fair closes for the year (it
reopens April 21, 1965).
- October 21 – The film version of the
hit Broadway stage musical My Fair Lady premieres in New
York City. The movie stars Audrey
Hepburn in the role of Eliza Doolittle and Rex Harrison repeating his stage performance as
Professor Henry Higgins, and which will win him his only Academy
Award for Best Actor. The film will win seven other Academy Awards,
including Best Picture, but Audrey
Hepburn will not be nominated. Critics interpret this as a rebuke
to Jack L. Warner for choosing Ms Hepburn over Julie Andrews.
- October 22 –
Canada
: A Federal Multi-Party Parliamentary Committee
selects a design to become the new official Flag of Canada.
- October 22 – A
5.3 Kiloton nuclear device is detonated at
the Tatum Salt Dome, from Hattiesburg
, Mississippi
as part of the Vela
Uniform program. This test is the Salmon phase of the
Atomic Energy Commission's Project Dribble.
- October 24 –
Northern Rhodesia, a former British
protectorate, becomes the independent Republic of Zambia
, ending 73 years of British rule.
- October 26 –
Eric Edgar Cooke becomes the last
man executed in Western Australia
, for murdering 8 citizens in Perth,
Western Australia
between 1959 and 1963.
- October 27 – In
the Democratic Republic of the
Congo
, rebel leader Christopher Gbenye takes 60
Americans and 800 Belgians hostage.
- October 29 – A
collection of irreplaceable gemstones,
including the Star of India, is stolen
from the American Museum of Natural
History
in New York
City
.
- October 31 –
Campaigning at Madison Square Garden
, New York, U.S. President Lyndon Johnson
pledges the creation of the Great
Society.
November
- November 1 – Mortar fire from North
Vietnamese forces rains on the USAF base at
Bien Hoa, South Vietnam, killing 4 U.S. servicemen, wounding 72,
and destroying 5 B-57 jet bombers and
other planes.
- November 3 – U.S. presidential election,
1964: Incumbent U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson defeats
Republican challenger
Barry Goldwater with over 60 percent
of the popular vote.
- November 3 – The
Bolivian
government of President Victor Paz Estenssoro is overthrown by
a military rebellion led by General Alfredo Ovando Candía,
commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
- November 5 – Mariner program: Mariner 3, a U.S. space probe intended for
Mars, is launched from Cape Kennedy but fails.
- November 9 – The
British
House of Commons
votes to abolish the death penalty for murder in
Britain.
- November 10 – Australia partially reintroduces compulsory military service due
to the Indonesian
Confrontation.
- November 13 – Bob Pettit (St. Louis
Hawks) becomes the first NBA player to score 20,000
points.
- November 19 –
The United States Department of
Defense
announces the closing of 95 military bases and
facilities, including the Brooklyn Navy Yard
, the Brooklyn Army Terminal, and Fort Jay
, New York.
- November 21 – Second Vatican Council: The third
period of the Catholic
Church's ecumenical council
closes.
- November 21 –
The Verrazano Narrows Bridge
opens to traffic (the world's longest suspension bridge at this
time).
- November 24 – Belgian paratroopers
and mercenaries capture Stanleyville,
but a number of hostages die in the
fighting, among them Evangelical Covenant Church
missionary Dr. Paul Carlson.
- November 28 – Mariner program: NASA launches the Mariner 4 space probe from Cape Kennedy toward
Mars to take television pictures of that planet in July 1965.
- November 28 – Vietnam War: United States National
Security Council members, including Robert McNamara, Dean
Rusk, and Maxwell Taylor, agree
to recommend a plan for a 2-stage escalation of bombing in North
Vietnam, to President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
December
- December 1 – Gustavo Díaz Ordaz takes office as
President of Mexico.
- December 1 – Vietnam War: U.S.
President Lyndon B. Johnson and his top-ranking advisers meet to
discuss plans to bomb North Vietnam (after some debate, they agree
on a 2-phase bombing plan).
- December 3 –
Berkeley Free Speech
Movement: Police arrest about 800 students at the University
of California, Berkeley
, following their takeover of and massive sit-in
at the Sproul Hall administration building. The sit-in most
directly protested the U.C. Regents' decision to punish student
activists for what many thought had been justified civil
disobedience earlier in the conflict.
- December 6 – The 1-hour stop-motion
animated special Rudolph the
Red-Nosed Reindeer, based on the popular Christmas song,
premieres on NBC. It becomes a beloved Christmas tradition, still being shown on
television more than 40 years later.
- December 10 –
Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. is awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize in Oslo,
Norway
.
- December 11 – Che Guevara addresses the U.N. General
Assembly.
- December 14 – Heart of Atlanta Motel
v. United States
(379 US 241 1964): The U.S. Supreme Court rules that, in accordance
with the Civil Rights Act of
1964, establishments providing public accommodations must
refrain from racial discrimination.
- December 15 – The Washington Post publishes an article
about James Hampton, who had
built a glittering religious throne out of recycled materials.
- December 18 – In
the wake of deadly riots in January over control of the Panama
Canal
, the U.S. offers to negotiate a new canal
treaty.
- December 21 –
The James Bond film Goldfinger begins its run in U.S.
theaters. It becomes one of the most successful and popular
Bond films ever made.
- December 22 – Comedian Lenny Bruce is
sentenced to 4 months in prison, concluding a 6-month obscenity trial.
- December 23 – Wonderful Radio London commences
transmissions with American top 40 format
broadcasting, from a ship anchored off the south coast of
England.
- December 26 – Lesley Ann Downey, 10,
is abducted by Myra Hindley and
Ian Brady.
- December 27 – The Cleveland Browns defeat the Baltimore Colts in the NFL Championship Game.
Undated
Ongoing
Births
January–February
- January 1 – Juliana Donald, American actress
- January 2 – Pernell Whitaker, American boxer
- January 5 – Miguel Ángel Jiménez, Spanish
golfer
- January 6 – Henry Maske, German boxer
- January 6 – Rafael Vidal, Venezuelan swimmer and sports
commentator (d. 2005)
- January 6 – Jacqueline DeLois Moore, American
wrestler
- January 7 – Nicolas Cage, American actor
- January 12 – Jeff Bezos, American Internet entrepreneur
- January 13 – Penelope Ann Miller, American
actress
- January 15 – Osmo Tapio Räihälä,
Finnish composer
- January 17 – Michelle Obama, First Lady of the United
States
- January 18 – Jane Horrocks, British actress
- January 23 – Mariska Hargitay, American actress
- January 27 – Bridget Fonda, American actress
- January 29 – Andre Reed, NFL player
- January 30 – Marcel Jacob, Swedish rock bassist (d. 2009)
- January 31 – Jeff Hanneman, American rock guitarist
(Slayer)
- February 5 – Laura Linney, American actress
- February 5 – Duff McKagan, American rock musician,
songwriter
- February 8 –
German Gref, Minister of Economics and
Trade of Russia

- February 10 – Glenn Beck, American right-wing broadcaster
- February 11 – Sarah Palin, American politician, former
Governor of Alaska
- February 11 – Ken Shamrock, American mixed martial arts fighter
- February 15 – Chris Farley, American actor and comedian (d.
1997)
- February 16 – Christopher Eccleston, British
actor
- February 16 – Bebeto, Brazilian footballer
- February 18 – Matt Dillon, American actor
- February 23 – John Norum, Norwegian rock guitarist (Europe)
- February 24 – Todd Field, American actor and director
- February 25 – Lee Evans, British comedian and
actor
- February 28 – Djamolidine Abdoujaparov,
Uzbekistan cyclist
March–April
- March 1 – Clinton Gregory, American musician
- March 4 – Tom
Lampkin, American baseball player
- March 7 – Bret Easton Ellis, American author
- March 7 – Wanda
Sykes, American comedian and actress
- March 7 – Vladimir Smirnov,
Kazakh cross-country skier
- March 9 – Juliette Binoche, French actress
- March 9 – Steve
Wilkos, American talk show host
- March 10 – Prince Edward, youngest child
of Queen Elizabeth
II
- March 11 – Shane Richie, British actor
- March 16 – Pascal Richard, Swiss road bicycle racer
- March 17 – Rob
Lowe, American actor
- March 18 – Bonnie Blair, American speed skater
- March 18 – Rozalla, Zambian singer
- March 19 – Yoko
Kanno, Japanese composer
- March 20 – Natacha Atlas, Belgian singer
- March 24 – Liz
McColgan, British long-distance runner athlete
- March 25 – Lisa Gay Hamilton, American actress
- March 25 – Vince
Offer, American writer, director, comedian, and pitchman
- March 26 – Martin Donnelly, Northern
Irish racecar driver
- March 29 – Annabella Sciorra, Italian-American
actress
- March 29 – Ming
Tsai, Chinese-American chef
- March 30 – Tracy Chapman, American singer
- April 1 – Erik
Breukink, Dutch cyclist and manager
- April 3 – Bjarne
Riis, Danish cyclist
- April 4 – David
Cross, American actor and comedian
- April 5 – Princess Erika, French singer
- April 7 – Russell Crowe, New Zealand-born actor
- April 7 – Steve
Graves, Canadian ice hockey player
- April 8 – Lisa
Guerrero, Hispanic actress, model, and
sportscaster/reporter
- April 11 – Steve
Azar, American country music singer-songwriter
- April 13 – Caroline Rhea, Canadian actress and
comedian
- April 14 – Rachel Carson, marine biologist and author of
several best-sellers, including Silent
Spring.
- April 16 – Esbjörn Svensson Swiss jazz pianist
(d. 2008)
- April 17 – Maynard James Keenan, American rock
singer and songwriter (Tool, A Perfect Circle, Puscifer)
- April 18 – Lourenço Mutarelli, Brazilian
underground comic book writer
- April 18 – Bez,
British dancer
- April 20 – Andy
Serkis, British actor
- April 21 – Ludmila Engquist, Russian-born Swedish
athlete
- April 25 – Hank
Azaria, American actor
- April 25 – Andy Bell, English rock singer and
songwriter (Erasure)
- April 29 – Federico Castelluccio, Italian-born
actor
- April 30 – Kent
James, American singer-songwriter
May–June
- May 1 – Yvonne van Gennip, Dutch speed-skater
- May 4 – Zsuzsa
Mathe, Hungarian born painter and visual artist, founder of
Transrealism
- May 8 – Melissa
Gilbert, American actress and president of the Screen Actors
Guild
- May 8 – Bobby
Labonte, American race car driver
- May 11 – John
Parrott, English snooker player
- May 13 – Stephen Colbert, American comedian and
satirist
- May 16 – John
Salley, American basketball player and talk show host
- May 21 – Danny Bailey, English
footballer
- May 23 – Ruth Metzler-Arnold, member of the Swiss
Federal Council
- May 24 – Adrian Moorhouse, British swimmer
- May 26 – Lenny
Kravitz, American guitarist and singer
- May 26 – Caitlín R. Kiernan, Irish-American author and
paleontologist
- May 27 – Adam
Carolla, American comedic radio personality and television
personality
- May 28 – Jeff
Fenech, Australian boxer
- May 30 – Wynonna
Judd, American country singer
- May 30 – Tom
Morello, American rock guitarist (Rage Against the Machine, Audioslave, The
Nightwatchman)
- June 1 – Tribhuvan, Hindi Poet and Journalist
- June 3 – Kerry
King, American rock guitarist (Slayer)
- June 3 – James
Purefoy, British actor
- June 4 – Eva
Fampas, Greek classical guitarist
- June 4 – Sean
Pertwee, British actor
- June 5 – Rick
Riordan, American author
- June 7 – Gia
Carides, Greek-Australian actress
- June 9 – Gloria
Reuben, Canadian actress
- June 10 – Jimmy Chamberlin, American rock musician
(The Smashing Pumpkins)
- June 10 – Ben
Daniels, British (English) actor
- June 13 – Kathy
Burke, English actress and comedian
- June 13 – Iain
Donaldson, British politician
- June 15 – Courteney Cox, American actress
- June 15 – Michael Laudrup, Danish footballer and
manager
- June 17 – Erin
Murphy, American actress
- June 19 – Laura Ingraham, American radio host and
political commentator
- June 22 – Dan
Brown, American author
- June 23 – Lou
Yun, Chinese gymnast
- June 25 – Johnny Herbert, English race car driver
- June 26 – Tommi
Makinen, Finnish rally driver
- June 28 – Mark
Grace, American baseball player
- June 29 – Stedman Pearson, British R&B singer
(Five Star)
July–August
- July 1 – Bernard Laporte, French rugby player &
coach
- July 2 – José Canseco, Cuban baseball player
- July 2 – Ozzie
Canseco, Cuban baseball player, José's twin brother
- July 3 – Joanne
Harris, English author
- July 3 – Yeardley Smith, American voice actress
- July 4 – Martin
Flood, Australian quiz show winner
- July 7 – Karina
Galvez, Ecuadorian poet
- July 9 – Courtney Love, American musician/actress
- July 11 – Craig
Charles, British actor
- July 12 – Gaby
Roslin, British TV presenter
- July 16 – Miguel Indurain, Spanish cyclist
- July 18 – Wendy Williams, radio and
television personality
- July 20 – Chris
Cornell, American rock musician (Soundgarden, Audioslave)
- July 21 – Ross
Kemp, British actor
- July 22 – Bonnie Langford, British actress
- July 22 – Adam
Godley, British actor
- July 22 – John
Leguizamo, Colombian-American actor
- July 22 – David
Spade, American comedian, actor and television personality
- July 23 – Ed
Forchion, political activist
- July 24 – Christopher Gudgeon, professor of
history
- July 24 – Barry
Bonds, American baseball player
- July 26 – Sandra Bullock, American actress
- July 26 – Anne
Provoost, Belgian author
- July 30 – Jurgen Klinsmann, German footballer and
manager
- July 30 – Vivica A. Fox,
American actress
- July 31 – Jim
Corr, Irish singer and musician (The
Corrs)
- August 3 – Lucky
Dube, South African reggae musician (d. 2007)
- August 5 – Adam
Yauch, American musician (Beastie
Boys)
- August 6 – Gary
Conrad, American animator
- August 9 – Brett
Hull, Canadian hockey player
- August 9 – William Martens, American computer
engineer
- August 13 – Ian Haugland, Swedish rock drummer (Europe)
- August 15 – Melinda Gates, American wife of Bill Gates
- August 16 – Jimmy Arias, American tennis player
- August 19 – Dermott Brereton, Australian rules
footballer
- August 24 – Salizhan Sharipov, Russian cosmonaut
- August 25 – Maxim Kontsevich, Russian
mathematician
September–October
- September 2 – Keanu Reeves, Canadian actor
- September 8 – Michael Johns, American health
care executive and Presidential speechwriter
- September 8 – Scott Levy, American professional wrestler
- September 11 – Ellis Burks, American baseball player
- September 11 – Victor Wooten, American bassist
- September 20 – Maggie Cheung, Hong Kong actress
- September 22 – Ian Culverhouse, English footballer
- September 22 – Juha Turunen, Finnish politician turned
criminal
- September 23 – Koshi Inaba, Japanese singer (B'z)
- September 25 – Kikuko Inoue, Japanese singer and seiyu (voice actress)
- September 26 – Nicki French, British singer
- September 27 – Stephan Jenkins, American rock singer
(Third Eye Blind)
- September 28 – Janeane Garofalo, American actress and
comedian
- September 30 – Monica Bellucci, Italian actress and
model
- September 30 – Trey Anastasio, American musician
- October 1 – Harry Hill, English comedian, writer and
actor
- October 2 – Dirk Brinkmann, German field hockey
player
- October 3 – Clive Owen, English actor
- October 4 – Yvonne Murray, Scottish athlete
- October 4 – Francis Magalona, Filipino Rapper (d.
2009)
- October 5 – Keiji Fujiwara, Japanese seiyu (voice actor)
- October 8 – CeCe Winans, American Christian musician
- October 10 – Quinton Flynn, American voice actor
- October 14 – Jim
Rome, American sports T.V. and radio host
- October 14 – David Kaye, Canadian voice actor
- October 19 – Ty Pennington, American carpenter, model and
television personality
- October 19 – Jorge Luis Gonzales, Cuban boxer
- October 22 – Drazen Petrovic, Croatian basketball player
(d. 1993)
- October 22 – Toby McKeehan, American musician
- October 26 – Marc Lépine, Canadian serial killer (d.
1989)
- October 29 – Yasmin Le Bon, British model
- October 31 – Marco van Basten, Dutch footballer and
manager
November–December
- November 4 – Douglas Wilson, American
television personality and interior designer
- November 6 – Greg Graffin, American rock singer (Bad Religion)
- November 7 – Dana Plato, American actress (d. 1999)
- November 10 – Magnus Scheving, Icelandic producer
- November 10 – Kenny Rogers, American
baseball player
- November 11 – Calista Flockhart, American actress
- November 14 – Patrick Warburton, American actor
- November 16 – Diana Krall, Canadian jazz pianist and
singer
- November 17 – Mitch Williams, American baseball player
- November 18 – Rita Cosby, American television personality
- November 18 – Seth Joyner, American football player
- November 21 – Shane Douglas, American wrestler
- November 23 – Boyd Kestner, American actor
- November 24 – Alistair McGowan, British actor and
comedian
- November 25 – Mark Lanegan, American rock singer (Screaming Trees)
- November 26 – Vreni Schneider, Swiss alpine skier
- November 27 – Robin Givens, American actress
- November 29 – Cork Graham, American author
- November 29 – Don Cheadle, American actor
- December 1 – Salvatore Schillaci, Italian
footballer
- December 4 – Marisa Tomei, American actress
- December 7 – Roberta Close, Brazilian model
- December 7 – Curtis Hughes, American wrestler
- December 8 – Teri Hatcher, American actress
- December 9 – Paul Landers, German rock musician (Rammstein)
- December 9 – Larry Emdur, Australian game-show host
- December 11 – John Mark Karr, American murder suspect
- December 12 – Sabu, American professional wrestler
- December 13 – Hideto "hide" Matsumoto, Japanese
musician
- December 14 – Rebecca Gibney, New Zealand-born actress
- December 15 – Jerry Ball, American football player
- December 16 – Heike Drechsler, German track-and-field
athlete
- December 16 – Billy Ripken, American baseball player
- December 17 – Frank Musil, Czech ice hockey player and
scout
- December 18 – Steve Austin, American professional
wrestler
- December 19 – Arvydas Sabonis, Lithuanian basketball
player
- December 23 – Eddie Vedder, American rock singer (Pearl Jam)
- December 28 – Malcolm Gets, American actor and dancer
- December 30 – Sophie Ward, British actress
Unknown dates
Deaths
January–June
- January 1 – Bechara El Khoury, President of Lebanon (b. 1890)
- January 15 – Tawfiq Canaan, Palestinian doctor (b. 1882)
- January 15 – Jack Teagarden, American jazz trombonist (b.
1905)
- January 17 – T. H. White, British author (b. 1906)
- January 19 – Joe Weatherly, NASCAR
championship driver (b. 1922)
- January 21 – Joseph Schildkraut, Austrian actor (b.
1896)
- January 22 – Marc Blitzstein, American composer (b.
1905)
- January 27
- January 29 – Alan Ladd, American actor (b. 1913)
- February 5 – Matilde Moisant, American pilot (b. 1878)
- February 6 – Emilio Aguinaldo, First President of the
Philippines (b. 1869)
- February 8 – Ernst Kretschmer, German psychiatrist (b.
1888)
- February 8 – Boshiro Hosogaya, Japanese WWII admiral (b.
1888)
- February 10 – Eugen Sänger, Austrian aerospace engineer
(b. 1905)
- February 18 – Joseph-Armand Bombardier, Canadian
inventor of the snowmobile and founder of
Bombardier Inc. (b. 1907)
- February 25
- February 26 – F. F.
E. Yeo-Thomas, English World War II hero
(b. 1901)
- February 27 – Orry-Kelly, Australian-born costume designer (b.
1897)
- February 29 – Frank Albertson, American actor (b. 1909)
- March 4 – Edwin
August, American actor and director (b. 1883)
- March 6
- March 9 – Paul Erich von Lettow-Vorbeck,
German general (b. 1870)
- March 18 – Sigfrid Edström, Swedish sports
official (b. 1870)
- March 18 – Norbert Wiener, American mathematician (b.
1894)
- March 20 – Brendan Behan, Irish poet and writer (b.
1923)
- March 22 – Addison Richards, American actor (b.
1887)
- March 23 – Peter
Lorre, Hungarian-born actor (b. 1904)
- April 5 – Douglas MacArthur, U.S. Army general,
Supreme Allied Commander in the Pacific during World War II (b.
1880)
- April 13 – Veit
Harlan, German film director (b. 1899)
- April 14 – Rachel Carson, American biologist and
environmental writer (b. 1907)
- April 18 – Ben
Hecht, American screenwriter (b. 1894)
- April 24 – Gerhard Domagk, German bacteriologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine (declined) (b. 1895)
- April 26 – E. J. Pratt, Canadian poet (b. 1882)
- April 29 – J.M. Kerrigan,
Irish actor (b. 1884)
- May 2 – Nancy Astor, Viscountess
Astor, American-born politician (b. 1879)
- May 10 – Carol
Haney, American dancer and actress (b. 1924)
- May 13 – Diana
Wynyard, English actress (b. 1906)
- May 21 – James
Franck, German-born physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1882)
- May 27 – Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime Minister of India (b. 1889)
- May 30 – Dave
MacDonald, sports car driver (b. 1936)
- May 30 – Eddie
Sachs, auto racing driver (b. 1927)
- June 3 – Frans Eemil Sillanpää,
Finnish writer, Nobel
Prize laureate (b. 1888)
- June 6 – Robert
Warwick, American actor (b. 1878)
- June 7 – Violet Attlee, Countess
Attlee, wife of former British PM Clement Attlee (b. 1895)
- June 9 – Max Aitken, 1st Baron
Beaverbrook, Canadian-born newspaper publisher and politician
(b. 1879)
- June 17 – Clarence G. Badger, American film director (b.
1880)
- June 21 – James
Chaney, African-American civil rights activist (killed in
Mississippi) (b. 1943)
- June 21 – Andrew Goodman, American civil rights
activist (killed in Mississippi) (b. 1943)
- June 21 – Michael Schwerner, American civil rights
activist (killed in Mississippi) (b. 1939)
- June 25 – Gerrit Rietveld, Dutch architect (b.
1888)
- June 27 – Mona
Barrie, English actress (b. 1909)
July–December
- July 1 – Pierre
Monteux, French conductor (b. 1875)
- July 2 – Glenn "Fireball" Roberts, American race car
driver (b. 1929)
- July 4 – Henry Sylvern, U.S.
radio personality (b. 1908)
- July 7 – Lillian Copeland, American athlete (b.
1904)
- July 13 – Stephen Galatti, Director of AFS, American Field Service (b.
1888)
- July 16 – Alfred
Junge, German-born art director (b. 1886)
- July 23 – Thakin Kodaw Hmaing, Burmese poet and
politician (b. 1876)
- July 26 – William A. Seiter, American film director (b.
1890)
- July 29 – Vean
Gregg, American baseball player (b. 1885)
- July 31 – Jim
Reeves, American country singer (b. 1923)
- August 3 – Flannery O'Connor, American writer (b.
1925)
- August 6 – Sir Cedric Hardwicke, English actor (b.
1893)
- August 12
- August 21 – Palmiro Togliatti, Italian communist
leader (b. 1893)
- August 27 – Gracie Allen, American actress and comedian
(Burns And Allen) (b. 1895)
- September 2 – Glenn Albert Black, American
archaeologist (b. 1900)
- September 2 – Francisco Craveiro Lopes, President
of Portugal (b. 1894)
- September 2 – Alvin Cullum York, American hero of
World War I (b. 1887)
- September 18 – Clive Bell, English art critic (b. 1881)
- September 18 – Sean O'Casey, Irish writer (b. 1880)
- September 28
- October 10 – Eddie Cantor, American actor, comedian and
dancer(b. 1892)
- October 15 – Cole Porter, American composer (You're The
Top) (b. 1891)
- October 20 – Herbert Hoover, 31st President of the United
States (b. 1874)
- October 22 – Whip Wilson, American actor (b. 1911)
- October 27
- November 5
- November 6 – Hans von Euler-Chelpin, German-born
chemist, Nobel Prize
laureate (b. 1873)
- November 10 – Jimmie Dodd, American actor and TV personality
(b. 1910)
- November 25 – Clarence Kolb, American actor (b. 1874)
- November 29 – Anne de Vries, Dutch writer (b. 1904)
- December 1 – J. B.
S. Haldane, British geneticist (b. 1892)
- December 6 – Consuelo Vanderbilt, Duchess of
Marlborough (b. 1877)
- December 11
- December 9 – Edith Sitwell, British poet (b. 1887)
- December 14
- December 17 – Victor Franz Hess, Austrian-born
physicist, Nobel Prize
laureate (b. 1883)
- December 21 – Carl Van Vechten, American writer and
photographer (b. 1880)
- December 29 – Vladimir Favorsky, Russian artist and
engraver (b. 1886)
- December 31
- date unknown – Adolfo
Díaz, former President of Nicaragua (b. 1875)
Nobel Prizes
Ship events
External links
Notes