April 1946


The following events occurred in April 1946:

April 1, 1946 (Monday)

April 2, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • In Japan, General Douglas MacArthur, administrator of the American occupation, issued the first regulations against fraternization between American soldiers and Japanese citizens. Originally intended to stop soldiers from consorting with prostitutes, the regulations soon provided for segregation in public transportation, food service and accommodation, with Japanese residents being barred from American facilities, and vice versa.
  • Japanese storekeeper Katsumi Yanagisawa began the business of manufacturing music stands, which grew into the Pearl Musical Instrument Company, and eventually became Pearl Drums.
  • Born: Yves "Apache" Trudeau, Canadian murderer alleged to have killed 43 people for the Hells Angels group.
  • Died: Kate Bruce, 88, American silent screen actress

April 3, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • An article on the front page of the Amsterdam newspaper Het Parool brought the attention of publishers to the existence of a diary, written by a teenage girl who had died in a Nazi concentration camp. Historian Jan Romein wrote, under the headline "Kinderstem", "his apparently inconsequential diary by a child ... stammered out in a child's voice, embodies all the hideousness of fascism, more so than all the evidence at Nueremberg put together." Published in the Netherlands as 1947 as Het Archterhuis: Dagboekbrieven, the book would be translated into English in 1952 as Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl.
  • Died: Lt. Gen. Masaharu Homma, Japanese general who ordered the Bataan death march, was executed in Manila by a U.S. Army firing squad.

April 4, 1946 (Thursday)

  • The eleven nation Far Eastern Commission exempted Japan's Emperor Hirohito from being tried for war crimes.
  • Nine U.S. Navy personnel, from the aircraft carrier USS Tarawa, were killed while watching training exercises from an observation tower in Puerto Rico. One of the airplanes inadvertently released a bomb which made a direct hit on the tower.
  • Born: Dave Hill, English guitarist, in Holbeton

April 5, 1946 (Friday)

April 6, 1946 (Saturday)

  • Captain Hoshijima Susumu, Japanese commander of the Sandakan prisoner-of-war camp in Indonesia, was hanged for war crimes. Capt. Hoshijima had ordered the "Sandakan Death Marches" as the war approached a close in 1945. During his administration, nearly 6,000 prisoners died—4,000 Indonesians, 1,381 Australians and 641 British.
  • Acting on a tip from a geisha house, American officials unearthed two billion dollars' worth of gold, silver and platinum that had been hidden in the muddy bottom of Tokyo Bay. An officer of the Japanese Army had carried out the concealment of the precious metals in July 1945, shortly before the surrender of Japan.

April 7, 1946 (Sunday)

April 8, 1946 (Monday)

April 9, 1946 (Tuesday)

April 10, 1946 (Wednesday)

April 11, 1946 (Thursday)

  • The French National Assembly passed a resolution sponsored by deputy Félix Houphouët-Boigny of the Ivory Coast, finally outlawing the practice of "forced labor", in France's overseas territories. Until that time, it was permissible for the colonial government to require adult males in the African colonies to work on government projects, without remuneration, for a set number of days in each year. On the island of Madagascar, Malagasy men had to labor a minimum of fifty days on colonial projects. Houphouët-Boigny, for whom the "Loi Houphouët-Boigny" was named, would become the first President of the Ivory Coast in 1960.
  • The Bell X-1 experimental jet airplane made its first powered flight, with Chalmers "Slick" Goodlin taking the first of the three prototypes, X-1-1, on a flight from the Muroc Army Air Field. The X-1-1 had first been glide-tested on January 25, 1946. On October 14, 1947, Chuck Yeager would fly the X-1-1 at faster than the speed of sound.
  • Born: Bob Harris, radio presenter in Northampton, England

April 12, 1946 (Friday)

April 13, 1946 (Saturday)

  • A group of Jewish employees at a bakery in Nuremberg placed arsenic on the bottom of thousands of loaves of bread to be delivered to a prisoner-of-war camp housing former members of the German SS. In all, 2,283 SS men at Stalag 13 became ill, none fatally, in the week that followed.
  • In France, the "Loi Marthe Richard" took effect, and the system of government-regulated houses of prostitution came to an end. The 1,400 brothels, including 200 in Paris, were closed.
  • "Arzamas-16" was established by the Soviet government at the site of the Russian town of Sarov, as a secret center for the construction of nuclear weapons.
  • British Prime Minister Clement Attlee authorized Sir Stafford Cripps, the leader of the Cabinet Mission to British India, to agree to the partition of the colony into separate nations. The predominantly Hindu provinces became the Dominion of India, while the mostly Muslim provinces became the Dominion of Pakistan.
  • Rikichi Andō, the last Japanese Governor-General of Taiwan, was captured by Nationalist forces and charged with war crimes. He committed suicide one week later.
  • Born: Al Green, American soul and gospel singer, in Forrest City, Arkansas
  • Died: Miss Elsie Marks, who worked in carnivals for 20 years as the "Cobra Woman", after being bitten by a diamondback rattlesnake during a performance in Long Beach, California. Her autopsy confirmed that the Cobra Woman had been a man, Alexander Marks.

April 14, 1946 (Sunday)

  • Sh'erit ha-Pletah members of Nakam, the "Jewish Avengers", carried out a plan to poison as many former members of Hitler's SS. After the war, thousands of former SS men were detained at Stalag XIII-D in Nuremberg. When the avenging group learned that most of the bread supplied to the prison camp came from a single bakery, one of the group's members, Arye Distel, obtained a job as an apprentice baker. Over a period of several days, Distel smuggled bottles of arsenic fluid into the bakery and, on April 13, he and four other members brushed the poison on 3,000 loaves of bread to be delivered to Stalag XIII-D. "How many of those SS men actually died following the poisoning at Stalag 13 has never been verified", The Guardian would report more than 60 years later, "but some put the figure at several hundred, others at a thousand."
  • Chinese Communist leader Zhou Enlai announced the beginning of a war against the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek, one day after Soviet troops had withdrawn from Manchuria. The Communist forces attacked Changchun on the same day and captured it by April 17.

April 15, 1946 (Monday)

April 16, 1946 (Tuesday)

  • The United States made its first successful launch of a V-2 rocket, captured from Germany and tested at the White Sands Proving Ground. In all, 63 were fired for various purposes as part of American development of its own missile program.
  • The mining firm Western Holdings Ltd. announced the discovery, at Odendaalsrus of the richest gold vein ever found in South Africa, setting off the first gold rush since before World War II. The yield was 62 ounces per ton, compared to 1/4 ounce per ton in most South African ore.
  • Baseball Commissioner A.B. Chandler announced a five-year suspension of any American players who broke their contracts to sign with Jorge Pasquel's Mexican League. Twenty major leaguers had been signed away after Pasquel attempted to compete against the American and National Leagues.
  • In the eight opening games for the 16 major league teams, a record 236,730 turned out. Among 18,261 who watched the Boston Braves beat the visiting Brooklyn Dodgers, 5–3, more than 300 discovered that they had been sitting in wet paint.
  • The world learned for the first time of a coal mine disaster that had killed 1,549 miners—mostly Chinese and Korean, laboring for a Japanese company – four years after it had happened. The April 16, 1942, explosion had been kept secret, even from the Tokyo government, by Japanese military officials.
  • Born: Moni Ovadia, Italian-Bulgarian actor, in Plodiv.

April 17, 1946 (Wednesday)

April 18, 1946 (Thursday)

April 19, 1946 (Friday)

  • The Constituent Assembly of France voted 309–249 to approve a new Constitution for what would be called the "French Fourth Republic" subject to approval at a referendum set for May 5, under which a unicameral legislature would replace the existing Senate and Chamber of Deputies.
  • Belmont, West Virginia, and Farmers Branch, Texas, were both incorporated as cities.
  • Born: Tim Curry, British actor, vocalist, and composer, in Grappenhall
  • Died: Walter Dandy, 60, pioneering American neurosurgeon

April 20, 1946 (Saturday)

April 21, 1946 (Sunday)

  • The Socialist Unity Party of Germany, with one million members, was created in the Soviet zone of Germany by the merger of the Communist Party and the Social Democratic Party. The SED would govern East Germany from 1946 until 1990.
  • The Columbia Broadcasting System made the first successful transmission of its system of color television, in a format that could be received by both black-and-white and color television sets.
  • in Milan, "red Eastern". An armed riot broke out in San Vittore Prison, led by the gangster Enzo Barbieri and the former gerarca Giulio Caradonna. The rebels surrendered on April 24, after the Army’s intervention. The final toll was five victims. 
  • The Roman daily newspaper Il Messaggero, after a two-year suspension, resumed publications with the headline Il nuovo messaggero. The director was Arrigo Jacchia, a Jewish journalist and victim of the Fascist racial laws.
  • Died: John Maynard Keynes, 62, British economist for whom Keynesian economics is named

April 22, 1946 (Monday)

April 23, 1946 (Tuesday)

April 24, 1946 (Wednesday)

  • In the United States, the Blue Angels stunt flying team was formed by the U.S. Navy.
  • In the Soviet Union, two new fighter jets—the MiG-9, flown by Alexei Grinchik, and the Yak-15, piloted by Mikhail I. Ivanov—both flew for the first time. A coin toss determined that the MiG was allowed to take off first.
  • In France, the Constituent Assembly voted 487 to 63 to nationalize the insurance industry, taking over fifty large companies.

April 25, 1946 (Thursday)

April 26, 1946 (Friday)

April 27, 1946 (Saturday)

  • The "Whirlaway", the first successful helicopter to have twin engines and twin rotors, was flown for the first time, with test pilot Charles R. Wood taking it up. Made by McDonnell Aircraft, the helicopter was designed so that if the engine powering one rotor failed, the remaining engine could still power both rotors, making helicopters safe to use.
  • In the first FA Cup Final to be played since 1939, Derby County beat Charlton Athletic 4–1.
  • Vittorio De Sica’s film Shoeshine was released in Milan and Rome. In Italy, the film was, at first, a commercial failure; it later gained international success and became a classic of cinema.

April 28, 1946 (Sunday)

April 29, 1946 (Monday)

April 30, 1946 (Tuesday)