February 1949
The following events occurred in February 1949:
[February 1], 1949 (Tuesday)
- The Israeli Cabinet terminated the military governorship of Jerusalem and formally incorporated the city into the State of Israel.
- Born: Joan Burton, politician, in Stoneybatter, Ireland
- Died: Herbert Stothart, 63, American songwriter and composer
[February 2], 1949 (Wednesday)
- South Korea formally applied for membership in the United Nations.
- Golfer Ben Hogan suffered a fractured pelvis and broken collarbone in a head-on collision between his Cadillac and a bus east of Van Horn, Texas. Ben's wife Valerie suffered minor injuries.
- Born: Duncan Bannatyne, entrepreneur, in Clydebank, Scotland; Brent Spiner, actor, comedian and singer, in Houston, Texas
- Died: Pedro Paulo Bruno, 60, Brazilian painter, singer, poet and landscaper
[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.
- Hungarian Cardinal József Mindszenty and six co-defendants went on trial in Budapest for treason and other crimes against the state.
- Born: Hennie Kuiper, racing cyclist, in Denekamp, Netherlands
- Died: William Rust, 45, British newspaper editor and communist activist
[February 4], 1949 (Friday)
- Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was shot in the back and mouth during an unsuccessful assassination attempt. As the Shah was getting out of his car on the steps of Tehran University, a journalist pretended to take his picture but instead fired five shots at point blank range. The Shah's aides and the police pounced on the assailant and beat him to the point that he would die of his injuries in hospital.
- The comedy film John Loves Mary starring Ronald Reagan, Patricia Neal and Jack Carson premiered at the Strand Theatre in New York City.
- Born: Rasim Delić, Chief of Staff of the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and war criminal, in Čelić, Yugoslavia
[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.
- The Soviet Union offered Norway a non-aggression pact and warned that country not to join the proposed North Atlantic alliance.
- The Communist Tudeh Party of Iran was banned amid the government crackdown following an attempt on the Shah's life.
- Born: Kate Braverman, American novelist, in Philadelphia
[February 6], 1949 (Sunday)
- Premier of the Republic of China Sun Fo said that his government's "principal task is to realize an honorable peace" and maintained that the Civil War would continue until the Communists dropped their demand for punishment of war criminals.
- The Oldsmobile company introduced the Oldsmobile 88, blending affordability with a powerful V8 engine that has led it to be widely cited as the auto industry's first muscle car.
- Born: Jim Sheridan, playwright and filmmaker, in Dublin, Ireland; Manuel Orantes, former Spanish tennis player and titles for 1975 US Open and 1976 Commercial Union Assurance Masters, in Granada, Andalusia, Spain.
- Died: Hiroaki Abe, 59, Japanese admiral
[February 7], 1949 (Monday)
- Joe DiMaggio signed a new contract with the New York Yankees paying him a reported $90,000 for the upcoming season, making him the highest-salaried player in baseball.
- Born: Joe English, musician best known as the drummer of Wings, in Rochester, New York; Alan Lancaster, bassist of the rock band Status Quo, in London, England
[February 8], 1949 (Tuesday)
- Cardinal Mindszenty was sentenced to life imprisonment. Mindszenty's six co-defendants were also given prison sentences ranging from three years to life.
- German dynamite teams under Soviet orders began demolishing the heavily damaged remains of the Reich Chancellory in Berlin.
- Born: Brooke Adams, actress, in New York City; Florinda Meza, actress, in Juchipila, Zacatecas, Mexico
[February 9], 1949 (Wednesday)
- North Korea applied for membership in the United Nations.
- Actor Robert Mitchum received a 60-day prison sentence in Los Angeles for participating in a marijuana smoking party.
- Born: Judith Light, actress, in Trenton, New Jersey
[February 10], 1949 (Thursday)
- The UN Security Council rejected a Soviet proposal that each member of the Big Five list its armed forces and armaments, including atomic bombs.
- The Georgia State Senate passed a voter registration bill requiring new applicants to meet educational and intelligence standards. Opponents charged that the bill's sole purpose was to disenfranchise black voters.
- The Arthur Miller play Death of a Salesman premiered at the Morosco Theatre on Broadway.
- Born: Maxime Le Forestier, singer, as Bruno Le Forestier in Paris, France; Nigel Olsson, rock drummer, in Wallasey, England
- Died: Francesco Ticciati, 55, Italian composer and concert pianist
[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.
- 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.
- The London Mozart Players performed their first concert at Wigmore Hall.
- Died: Giovanni Zenatello, 72, Italian opera singer
[February 12], 1949 (Saturday)
- The Sacred Constitorial Congregation excommunicated and declared "infamous" all persons who took part in the Cardinal Mindszenty trial.
- 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.
- Died: Hassan al-Banna, 42, Egyptian imam and founder of the Muslim Brotherhood
[February 13], 1949 (Sunday)
- A presidential election was held in Portugal, won by Óscar Carmona.
- 70 people were killed by a landslide in Peru.
- A Spanish-language version of the Orson Welles radio drama The War of the Worlds set off rioting in Quito, Ecuador, that killed 15 people.
- Died: George Aubourne Clarke, 69, Scottish meteorologist
[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.
- 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.
- Argentina diplomatically recognized Israel.
- Born: Ken Anderson, NFL quarterback, in Batavia, Illinois
- Died: Charles L. Bartholomew, 80, American editorial cartoonist; Patricia Ryan, 27, American actress
[February 16], 1949 (Wednesday)
- The United Nations Security Council voted 8-2 to reject consideration of North Korea's application for membership in the UN.
- World Health Organization Director-General Brock Chisholm announced that the Soviet Union, Ukraine and Byelorussia had withdrawn from the organization.
- The Lithuanian Partisans Declaration of February 16, 1949 was created.
- Born: Lyn Paul, pop singer and actress, in Wythenshawe, England
[February 17], 1949 (Thursday)
- Thailand declared a state of emergency and closed its Malayan border to hinder the movement of Malayan guerrillas.
- The Israeli constituent assembly adopted an interim constitution setting limits on presidential authority and making the prime minister and his cabinet answerable to parliament. The Assembly also confirmed Chaim Weizmann as President.
- The defense presented its opening argument in the Mildred Gillars trial with the statement that treason cannot be committed by "mere words."
- The film noir Caught, starring James Mason, Barbara Bel Geddes and Robert Ryan, premiered in New York.
- Born: Dennis Green, NFL coach, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
- Died: George Denholm Armour, 85, British painter and illustrator
[February 18], 1949 (Friday)
- An RAF transport plane flew the one millionth ton of supplies into Berlin since the airlift began.
- The World Figure Skating Championships concluded in Paris. Dick Button of the United States won the Men's event while Alena Vrzáňová of Czechoslovakia won the Ladies'.
- The United States Atomic Energy Commission assumed control of the Naval Proving Ground in Idaho's Lost River Desert, expanding it by and renaming it the National Reactor Testing Station.
- Born: Gary Ridgway, serial killer, in Salt Lake City, Utah
- Died:
- *Niceto Alcalá-Zamora, 71, Spanish lawyer and 6th President of Spain
- *Marty O'Toole, 60, Major League Baseball pitcher
[February 19], 1949 (Saturday)
- President Truman reactivated the United Service Organizations.
- 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."
- Born: Danielle Bunten Berry, computer game designer and programmer, in St. Louis, Missouri
- Died: Fidelio Ponce de León, 54, Cuban painter