1941


Year '1941' ('MCMXLI') was a common year starting on Wednesday (the link will display 1941 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar.

Contents
Events
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Undated
Ongoing
Births
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Deaths
January-February
March-July
August-December
Nobel prizes
Ship events
External links

Events


:: ''(Below, many events of World War II have the "World War II" prefix.)''
January

Jan. 20 FDR again: 3rd term.


January 4 - The short subject ''Elmer's Pet Rabbit'' is released, marking the second appearance of Bugs Bunny, and also the first to have his name on a title card.

January 6


Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivers his Four Freedoms Speech in the State of the Union Address.


★ Keel of USS Missouri (BB-63) is laid at New York Navy Yard in Brooklyn.

January 8 - Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell the founder of Scouting, dies.

January 10 - Lend-Lease is introduced into the U.S. Congress.

January 15 - John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford E. Berry describe the workings of the Atanasoff–Berry Computer in print.

January 19 - British troops attack Italian-held Eritrea.

January 20 - Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes swears in U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt for the third and last time.

January 21 - World War II: Australian and British forces attack Tobruk, Libya.

January 22 - World War II: British troops capture Tobruk from the Italians.

January 23 - Aviator Charles Lindbergh testifies before the U.S. Congress and recommends that the United States negotiate a neutrality pact with Adolf Hitler.

February


February 3 - World War II: The Nazis forcibly restore Pierre Laval to office in occupied Vichy, France.

February 4 - World War II: The United Service Organization (USO) is created to entertain American troops.

February 11 - World War II: Lieutenant-General Erwin Rommel arrives in Tripoli.

February 19 - World War II: The start of the 'Three Nights' Blitz' over Swansea, South Wales. Over these three nights of intensive bombing, which lasted a total of 13 hours and 48 minutes, Swansea town centre was almost completely obliterated by the 896 High Explosive bombs employed by the Luftwaffe. A total of 397 casualties and 230 deaths were reported. The Three nights Blitz ended in the early hours of February 22.

February 23: Glenn T. Seaborg isolates and discovers plutonium.
March


★ March - Captain America Comics #1 issues the first ''Captain America'' & ''Bucky'' comic.

March 1 - World War II: Bulgaria signs the Tripartite Pact thus joining the Axis powers.

March 1


W47NV begins operations in Nashville, Tennessee becoming the first FM radio station.


Arthur L. Bristol becomes Rear Admiral for the U.S. Navy's Support Force, Atlantic Fleet

March 4 - World War II: British Commandos carry out a successful raid on the Lofoten Islands off the north coast of Norway.

March 11


World War II: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signs the Lend-Lease Act into law, allowing American-built war supplies to be shipped to the Allies on loan.


Kinsmen Club of Brantford is chartered.

March 17


★ In Washington, DC, the National Gallery of Art is officially opened by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.


★ British Minister of Labour, Ernest Bevin, calls for women to fill vital jobs.

March 22 - Washington's Grand Coulee Dam begins to generate electricity.

March 25 - World War II: Kingdom of Yugoslavia in Vienna joins the Axis powers

March 27 - World War II:


★ Anti-Axis coup d'etat in Yugoslavia - Prince Paul exiled; 17-year-old King Peter II assumes power.


Attack on Pearl Harbor - Japanese spy Takeo Yoshikawa arrives in Honolulu, Hawaii and begins to study the United States fleet at Pearl Harbor.

March 29 - World War II: Battle of Cape Matapan - Off the Peloponnesus coast in the Mediterranean, British naval forces defeat those of Italy sinking five warships. Battle started on March 27.

March 30 - All German, Italian, and Danish ships anchored in United States waters are taken into "protective custody".
April


April 6 - World War II: Germany invades Yugoslavia and Greece.

April 12 - World War II: German troops enter Belgrade.

April 13 - Soviet Union and Japan sign a neutrality pact.

April 17 - World War II: Yugoslav Royal Army capitulates.

April 18 - World War II: Prime Minister of Greece Alexandros Koryzis commits suicide as German troops approach Athens.

April 21 - World War II: Greece capitulates. Commonwealth troops and some elements of the Greek Army withdraw to Crete.

April 23 - America First Committee holds its first mass rally in New York City with Charles Lindbergh as keynote speaker.

April 25 - Franklin D. Roosevelt, at his regular press conference, criticizes Charles Lindbergh by comparing him to the Copperheads of the Civil War period. In response, Lindbergh resigns his commission in the U.S. Army Air Corps Reserve on April 28.

April 27 - World War II: German troops enter Athens.
May


May 1


★ Breakfast cereal Cheerios is introduced as CheeriOats by General Mills.


Orson Welles' film ''Citizen Kane'' premieres in New York City


★ The first Defense Bonds and Defense Savings Stamps go on sale in the United States to help fund the greatly increased production of military equipment.

May 5 - Emperor Haile Selassie enters Addis Ababa, which had been liberated from Italian forces; this date has been since commemorated as Liberation Day in Ethiopia.

May 6 - At California's March Field, Bob Hope performs his first USO Show.

May 9 - World War II: The German submarine U-110 is captured by the British Royal Navy. On board is the latest Enigma cryptography machine which Allied cryptographers later use to break coded German messages.

May 10 - World War II:


★ The United Kingdom's House of Commons is damaged by the Luftwaffe in an air raid.


Rudolf Hess parachutes into Scotland claiming to be on a peace mission.

May 12 - Konrad Zuse presented the Z3, the world's first working programmable, fully automatic computer in Berlin.

May 15


★ First British jet aircraft, the Gloster E.28/39, is flown.


Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak begins, lasting until July 17.

May 20 - World War II: Battle of Crete - Germany launches airborne invasion of Crete.

May 21 - World War II: 950 miles off the coast of Brazil, the freighter SS ''Robin Moor'' becomes the first United States ship sunk by a German U-boat.

May 24 - World War II: In the North Atlantic, the German battleship ''Bismarck'' sinks the HMS ''Hood'' killing all but three crewman on what was the pride of the Royal Navy.

May 26 - World War II: In the North Atlantic, Fairey Swordfish aircraft from the carrier HMS Ark Royal fatally cripple the German battleship Bismarck in torpedo attack.

May 27 - World War II:


President Roosevelt proclaims an "unlimited national emergency."


★ German battleship ''Bismarck'' is sunk in North Atlantic killing 2,300.
June


June 5 - Four thousands Chongqing residents were asphyxiated in a bomb shelter during the Bombing of Chongqing.

June 13 - TASS, the official Soviet news agency, denies reports of tension between Germany and the Soviet Union.

June 14


★ Mass deportations by Soviet Union authorities take place in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.


★ All German and Italian assets in the United States are frozen.

June 16 - All German and Italian consulates in the United States are ordered closed and their staffs to leave the country by July 10.

June 22 - World War II:


Germany attacks the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa



Italy and Romania declare war on the Soviet Union.


Winston Churchill promises all possible British assistance to the Soviet Union in a worldwide broadcast: "Any man or state who fights against Nazidom will have our aid. Any man or state who marches with Hitler is our foe."


First Sisak Partisan Brigade, first anti-fascist armed unit in occupied Europe founded by Croatian partisans near Sisak, Croatia.

June 23 - Hungary and Slovakia declare war on the Soviet Union.

June 25 - World War II: Finland attacks the Soviet Union to seek the opportunity of revenge in the Continuation War.

June 28 - Albania declares war on the Soviet Union.
July


July 2 - World War II: Japan calls up one million men for military service.

July 3 - World War II: Joseph Stalin, in his first address since the German invasion, calls upon the Soviet people to carry out a "scorched earth" policy of resistance to the bitter end.

July 4 - Mass murder of Polish scientists and writers, committed by German troops in captured Polish city of Lwów.

July 5 - World War II: German troops reach the Dnieper River.

July 5-19 - War between Peru and Ecuador

July 7 - World War II:


American forces take over the defense of Iceland from the British


Serbia starts the first popular uprising in Europe against the Axis Powers.


German troops take over Estonia from the Soviets.

July 13 - World War II: Montenegro starts the second popular uprising in Europe against the Axis Powers.

July 14 - World War II: Vichy France signs armistice terms ending all fighting in Syria and Lebanon.

July 19 - World War II: A BBC broadcast by "Colonel Britton" calls on the people of Occupied Europe to resist the Nazis under the slogan "V for Victory".

July 26 - World War II:


★ In response to the Japanese occupation of French Indo-China, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the seizure of all Japanese assets in the United States.


★ General Douglas MacArthur is named commander of all U.S. forces in the Philippines; the Philippines Army ordered nationalized by President Roosevelt.

July 30 - World War II: U.S. gunboat ''Tutuila'' attacked by Japanese aircraft while anchored in the Yangtze River at Chungking. Japan apologizes for the incident the following day.

July 31 - Holocaust: Under instructions from Adolf Hitler, Nazi official Hermann Göring, orders SS general Reinhard Heydrich to "submit to me as soon as possible a general plan of the administrative material and financial measures necessary for carrying out the desired final solution of the Jewish question."
August


★ August - Formation of the Political Warfare Executive in the United Kingdom

August 1 - The first jeep is produced

August 6 - 6-year-old Elaine Esposito goes to an appendix operation in Florida and lapses into a coma. She dies 1978, still in coma.

August 9 - Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill meet at Argentia, Dominion of Newfoundland. The Atlantic Charter is created as a result.

August 12 - By one vote (203-202), the U.S. House of Representatives passes legislation extending the draft period for selectees and the National Guard from one year to 30 months.

August 18 - Adolf Hitler orders a temporary halt to Nazi Germany's systematic euthanasia of mentally ill and handicapped due to protests. However, graduates of the T-4 Euthanasia Program were then transferred to concentration camps, where they continued in their trade.

August 22 - World War II: France - German Occupation Authority announces that anyone found either working for or aiding the Free French will be sentenced to death.

August 24 - World War II: A Luftwaffe bombing hits an Estonian steamer with 3500 Soviet-mobilized Estonian men on board, killing 598 of them.

August 25 - World War II: Operation Countenance - United Kingdom and Soviet forces invade Iran.

August 27 - World War II: France - Pierre Laval is shot in an assassination attempt at Versailles.

August 28 - World War II: Soviets announce the destruction of massive Dnieper River dam at Zaporozhye to prevent its capture by the Germans.

August 31 - ''The Great Gildersleeve'' debuts on NBC Radio.
September


September 4 - World War II: The USS ''Greer'' becomes the first United States ship fired upon by a German submarine in the war, even though the United States is a neutral power. Tension heightens between the two nations as a result.

September 6 - Holocaust: The requirement to wear the Star of David with the word "Jew" inscribed, is extended to all Jews over the age of 6 in German-occupied areas.

September 8 - World War II: Siege of Leningrad begins - German forces begin a siege against the Soviet Union's second-largest city, Leningrad. Stalin orders the Volga Deutsche deported to Siberia.

September 11 - World War II:


Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the United States Navy to shoot on sight if any ship or convoy is threatened.


Charles Lindbergh, at an America First Committee rally in Des Moines, Iowa, accuses "the British, the Jewish, and the Roosevelt administration" of leading the United States toward war. Widespread condemnation of Lindbergh follows.

September 12 - World War II: First snowfall reported on Russian front.

September 15 - Self-government of Estonia, headed by Hjalmar Mäe, is appointed by German military administration.

September 16 - Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran is forced to resign in favor of his son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran under pressure from the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union.

September 27 - The first Liberty Ship, the SS ''Patrick Henry'', is launched at Baltimore, Maryland.
October


October 2 - World War II: Operation Typhoon - Germany begins an all-out offensive against Moscow.

October 7 - John Curtin becomes the 14th Prime Minister of Australia

October 8 - World War II: In their invasion of the Soviet Union, Germany reaches the Sea of Azov with the capture of Mariupol.

October 16 - World War II: Soviet Union government moves to Kuibyshev, but Stalin remains in Moscow.

October 17 - World War II: The destroyer USS ''Kearny'' is torpedoed and damaged near Iceland, killing eleven sailors - the first American military casualties of the war.

October 18 - General Hideki Tojo becomes the 40th Prime Minister of Japan.

October 21 - World War II: Germans rampage in Yugoslavia, killing thousands of civilians

October 23 - Walt Disney's feature-length cartoon ''Dumbo'' is released.

October 24 - Franz von Werra disappears during a flight over North Sea

October 30 - World War II: Franklin Delano Roosevelt approves US$1 billion in Lend-Lease aid to the Soviet Union.

October 31


★ After 14 years of work, drilling is completed on Mount Rushmore.


World War II: The destroyer USS ''Reuben James'' is torpedoed by a German U-boat near Iceland, killing more than 100 United States Navy sailors.
November


November 6 - World War II: Soviet leader Joseph Stalin addresses the Soviet Union for only the second time during his three-decade rule (the first time was earlier that year on July 2). He states that even though 350,000 troops were killed in German attacks so far, that the Germans have lost 4.5 million soldiers (a gross exaggeration) and that Soviet victory was near.

November 7 - World War II: Soviet hospital ship Armenia sunk by German planes while evacuating refugees and wounded military and staff of several Crimea’s hospitals. It is estimated that over 5,000 people died in the sinking.

November 10 - In a speech at the Mansion House in London, Winston Churchill promises, "...should the United States become involved in war with Japan, the British declaration will follow within the hour."

November 12 - World War II: Battle of Moscow: Temperatures around Moscow drop to −12 °C and the Soviet Union launches ski troops for the first time against the freezing German forces near the city.

November 13 - World War II: The aircraft carrier HMS ''Ark Royal'' is hit by German U-boat U-81

November 14 - World War II:


HMS ''Ark Royal'' capsizes and sinks, having been torpedoed by U 81.


Attack on Pearl Harbor - Japanese diplomat Saburo Kurusu arrives in the United States to assist Ambassador Kichisaburo Nomura in peace negotiations.

November 17 - World War II: Attack on Pearl Harbor - Joseph Grew, the United States ambassador to Japan, cables the State Department that Japan had plans to launch an attack against Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (his cable was ignored).

November 19 - World War II: The Australian war cruiser HMAS ''Sydney'' sinks off the coast of Western Australia, killing 645 sailors.

November 21 - The radio program ''King Biscuit Time'' is broadcast for the first time (it would later become the longest running daily radio broadcast in history and the most famous live blues radio program).

November 24 - World War II: The United States grants Lend-Lease to the Free French.

November 26


★ US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signs a bill establishing the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day in the United States (this partly reversed a 1939 action by Roosevelt that changed the celebration of Thanksgiving to the third Thursday of November).


★ The Hull note ultimatum is delivered to Japan by the United States.


Attack on Pearl Harbor - A fleet of six aircraft carriers commanded by Japanese Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo leaves Hitokapu Bay for Pearl Harbor under strict radio silence.

November 27


★ A group of young men stop traffic on highway US 99 south of Yreka, California, handing out fliers proclaiming the establishment of the State of Jefferson.



Battle of Moscow - Germans reach their closest approach to Moscow. They are subsequently frozen by cold weather and attacks by the Soviets.


Attack on Pearl Harbor - All U.S. military forces in Asia and the Pacific are placed on war alert.
December

The USS Arizona ablaze after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor


December 1 - World War II:


Fiorello LaGuardia, Mayor of New York City and Director of the Office of Civilian Defense, signed Administrative Order 9 creating the Civil Air Patrol under the authority of the United States Army Air Corps.


★ State of emergency declared in Malaya and the Straits Settlements.

December 2 - World War II: Attack on Pearl Harbor - The code message "Climb Mount Niitaka" is transmitted to the Japanese task force, indicating that negotiations have broken down and that the attack is to be carried out according to plan.

December 4 - State of Jefferson declared in Yreka, California, with judge John Childs as a governor

December 6 - World War II: Attack on Pearl Harbor - Franklin D. Roosevelt makes a personal peace appeal to Emperor Hirohito of Japan.

December 7, December 8 (in Japan standard time) - Japanese Navy launches a surprise attack consisting of two full regiments on the United States fleet at Pearl Harbor, thus drawing the United States into World War II.

December 8 - World War II:


★ The United States officially declares war on Japan.


China officially declares war on Japan


★ The Netherlands declares war on Japan


Japan launches invasions in Hong Kong, Malaya, Manila, and Singapore.

December 10 - World War II: The British battleships HMS ''Prince of Wales'' and HMS ''Repulse'' are sunk by Japanese aircraft in the South China Sea north of Singapore.

December 11 - World War II:


Germany declares war on the United States.


★ American forces repel a Japanese landing attempt at Wake Island.

December 12 - Hungary and Romania declare war on the United States. India declares war on Japan. United States seizes French ship Normandie.

December 13 - Sweden's low temperature record of -53°C was set in a village within Vilhelmina Municipality.

December 19 - World War II: Hitler becomes Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the German Army

December 23 - World War II: A second Japanese landing attempt on Wake Island is successful, and the American garrison surrenders after a full night and morning of fighting.

December 25 - World War II: British and Canadians are defeated by the Japanese at Hong Kong.

December 26 - World War II: Winston Churchill becomes the first British Prime Minister to address a Joint session of the U.S. Congress

December 27 - World War II: British Commandos raid the Norwegian port of Vaagso, causing Hitler to reinforce the garrison and defenses, drawing vital troops away from other areas.

December 28 - World War II: starts the Operation Anthropoid (the assassination of Heydrich in Prague).
Undated


★ The Valley of Geysers is discovered in Russia.

★ Results of the Ives–Stilwell experiment are published, showing that ions radiate at frequencies affected by their motion.

★ In Sweden, Victor Hasselblad forms the Hasselblad camera company.

★ Indochina Communist party, led by Ho Chi Minh, combines with Nationalist party to form the Vietminh.
Ongoing


Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945).

World War II (1939-1945).

Births


January


January 3 - Van Dyke Parks, American composer, producer, and musician

January 4 - John Bennett Perry, American actor

January 5


Hayao Miyazaki, Japanese filmmaker


Kevin Keelan, English footballer

January 7


Iona Brown, British violinist and conductor (d. 2004)


John E. Walker, English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate

January 8 - Graham Chapman, British comedian (d. 1989)

January 9 - Joan Baez, American singer and activitist

January 11 - Dave Edwards, American musician (d. 2000)

January 12 - Long John Baldry, British singer (d. 2005)

January 14


Faye Dunaway, American actress


Milan KuÄan, Slovenian politician and statesman

January 15 - Captain Beefheart, American singer

January 18 - David Ruffin, American singer (d. 1991)

January 21


Plácido Domingo, Spanish-born tenor


Richie Havens, American musician

January 24


Neil Diamond, American singer and songwriter


Aaron Neville, American singer

January 26


Scott Glenn, American actor


Henry Jaglom, English film director

January 27 - Beatrice Tinsley, English astronomer

January 30


Dick Cheney, Vice President of the United States


Tineke Lagerberg, Dutch swimmer

January 31 - Dick Gephardt, American politician
February


February 1 - Jerry Spinelli, American children's author

February 5


David Selby, American actor


Kaspar Villiger, Swiss Federal Councilor

February 6 - Howard Phillips, American politician

February 7 - Peter Foxhall, Australian evangelist

February 8 - Nick Nolte, American actor

February 10 - Michael Apted, English film director

February 13 - Sigmar Polke, German painter

February 19 - David Gross, American physicist, Nobel Prize laureate

February 20 - Buffy Sainte-Marie, American singer

February 26 - Tony Ray-Jones, British photographer (d. 1972)

February 27 - Paddy Ashdown, British politician
March


March 4


Adrian Lyne, English film director


John Aprea, American actor

March 5 - Nona Gaprindashvili, Georgian chess player

March 6 - Willie Stargell, baseball player (d. 2001)

March 14 - Wolfgang Petersen, German film director

March 15 - Mike Love, American musician (The Beach Boys)

March 16


Robert Guéï, military ruler of Côte d'Ivoire (d. 2002)


Chuck Woolery, American game show host

March 18 - Wilson Pickett, American singer (d. 2006)

March 23 - Jim Trelease, American educator and author

March 26 - Richard Dawkins, British scientist

March 28 - Jim Turner, American football player

March 29 - Joseph Hooton Taylor, Jr., American astrophysicist, Nobel Prize laureate

March 30 - Wasim Sajjad, President of Pakistan
April


April 3 - Philippe Wynne, American musician (d. 1984)

April 8 - Peggy Lennon, American singer (The Lennon Sisters)

April 12 - Bobby Moore, English football player and World Cup winning captain (d. 1993)

April 13 - Michael Stuart Brown, American geneticist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

April 14 - Julie Christie, British actress

April 14 - Pete Rose, baseball player

April 23


Paavo Lipponen, Prime Minister of Finland


Ed Stewart, English disc jockey

April 24 - John Williams, Australian guitarist

April 27 - Lee Roy Jordan, American football player

April 28


Ann-Margret, Swedish-born actress


K. Barry Sharpless, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate


Iryna Zhylenko, Ukrainian poet
May


May 5 - Alexander Ragulin, Russian hockey player (d. 2004)

May 11 - Eric Burdon, English singer (The Animals)

May 13


Senta Berger, Swedish actress


Ritchie Valens, American singer (d. 1959)

May 15 - K.T. Oslin, American musician

May 19


Bobby Burgess, American dancer and singer


Nora Ephron, American film, producer, director, and screenwriter

May 20 - Goh Chok Tong, Prime Minister of Singapore

May 22 - Paul Winfield, American actor (d. 2004)

May 24 - Bob Dylan, American poet and musician

May 26 - John Kaufman, Sculptor

May 31 - Louis J. Ignarro, American pharmacologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
June


June 4 - Erkin Koray, Turkish musician

June 5


Martha Argerich, Argentine pianist


Spalding Gray, American actor and screenwriter (d. 2004)

June 6 - Neal Adams, American comic book artist

June 8


Robert Bradford, Irish footballer and politician (d. 1981)


Fuzzy Haskins, American musician (P-Funk)

June 10 - Mickey Jones, American actor and musician

June 21


Joe Flaherty, American-Canadian actor


John O'Kea, Welsh rally driver

June 22 - Michael Lerner, American actor

June 24 - Bill Reardon, American politician and educator

June 27 - Krzysztof Kieślowski, Polish film director (d. 1996)

June 28 - Joseph Goguen, American computer scientist (d. 2006)
July


July 1


Alfred G. Gilman, American scientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine


Myron Scholes, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate

July 6 - Harold Leighton Weller, American conductor

July 7 - Bill Oddie, English comedian and ornithologist

July 10 - Jackie Lane, British actress

July 11 - Tommy Vance, English disc jockey (d. 2005)

July 14


Maulana Karenga, American author and activist


Andreas Khol, Austrian politician

July 19 - Vikki Carr, American singer

July 27 - Bill Baxley, Alabama politician

July 28 - Riccardo Muti, Italian conductor

July 29


Jennifer Dunn, American politician (d. 2007)


David Warner, English actor

July 30 - Paul Anka, Canadian-American singer and songwriter

July 31 - Amarsinh Chaudhary, Indian politician
August


August 3 - Martha Stewart, American television and magazine personality

August 6 - Lyle Berman, American poker player

August 14 - Connie Smith, American singer

August 20 - Slobodan Milošević, President of Serbia (d. 2006)

August 22 - Bill Parcells, American football coach

August 28 - Joseph Shabalala, South African musician (Ladysmith Black Mambazo)
September


September 2 - David Bale, South African-born activist (d. 2003)

September 4 - Sushilkumar Shinde, Indian politician

September 9


Otis Redding, American musician (d. 1967)


Dennis Ritchie, American computer scientist

September 10


Christopher Hogwood, English conductor


Gunpei Yokoi, Japanese computer game producer (d. 1997)

September 14 - Alberto Naranjo, Venezuelan musician

September 15


George Saimes, American football player


Mirosław Hermaszewski, First Polish Cosmonaut in Space

September 17 - Bob Matsui, U.S. Congressman from California (d. 2005)

September 19 - Cass Elliott, American singer (d. 1974)

September 24 - Guy Hovis, American singer
October


October 4


Jackie Collins, British writer


Anne Rice, American writer

October 5 - Eduardo Duhalde, President of Argentina

October 8 - Jesse Jackson, American clergyman and civil rights activist

October 10 - Peter Coyote, American actor

October 13 - Paul Simon, American singer and composer

October 16 - Tim McCarver, baseball commentator

October 20 - Anneke Wills, British actress

October 25


Helen Reddy, Australian singer and actress


Anne Tyler, American novelist

October 28


John Hallam, Irish actor


Hank Marvin, British guitarist, singer and songwriter

October 30 - Theodor W. Hänsch, German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
November


November 1 - Nigel Dempster, British journalist, author, broadcaster and diarist (d.2007)

November 5 - Art Garfunkel, American singer.

November 6 - Doug Sahm, American musician (d. 1999)

November 18 - David Hemmings, English actor (d. 2003)

November 23 - Derek Mahon, Irish poet

November 25 - Gohar Shahi, Spiritual Leader of Pakistan (d. 2001)

November 26 - G. Alan Marlatt, American psychologist

November 27 - Eddie Rabbitt, American musician (d. 1998)

November 29 - Bill Freehan, baseball player
December


December 9 - Beau Bridges, American actor

December 10


Colin Kelly, American airman


Kyu Sakamoto, Japanese singer and actor (d. 1985)

December 13 - John Davidson, American singer and actor

December 18 - Prince William of Gloucester

December 23 - Tim Hardin, American musician (d. 1980)

December 24 - John Levene, British actor

December 30 - Mel Renfro, American football player

December 31 - Sir Alex Ferguson, Manager of Manchester United

★ ''date unknown'' - T S Krishnamurthy, Chief Election Commissioner of India

Deaths


January-February


January 4 - Henri Bergson, French philiosopher, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (b. 1859)

January 5 - Amy Johnson, English aviator (b. 1903)

January 8 - Lord Robert Baden-Powell, English soldier and founder of the Boy Scouts (b. 1847)

January 10


Frank Bridge, English composer (b. 1879)


★ Sir John Lavery, Irish artist (b. 1856)


Joe Penner, American comedian and actor (b. 1904)

January 13 - James Joyce, Irish writer (b. 1882)

February 6 - Banjo Paterson, Australian poet & journalist (b. 1864)

February 9 - Aaron S. Watkins, American temperance movement leader (b. 1863)

February 11 - Rudolf Hilferding, German economist and Minister of Finance (b. 1877)

February 21 - Frederick Banting, Canadian physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1891)

February 24 - Lothar von Arnauld de la Perière, German submariner (b. 1886)

February 27 - William D. Byron, U.S. Congressman (b. 1895)

February 28 - King Alfonso XIII of Spain (b. 1886)
March-July


March 6 - Gutzon Borglum, American sculptor (b. 1867)

March 8 - Sherwood Anderson, American author (b. 1876)

March 15 - Alexej von Jawlensky, Russian painter (b. 1864)

March 28 - Virginia Woolf, English writer (b. 1882)

April 13 - Annie Jump Cannon, American astronomer (b. 1863)

April 16 - Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp, Bt, GCB, GBE, FBA, a British civil servant, industrialist, economist, statistician and banker (b.1880)

April 24 - Karin Boye, Swedish poetess (suicide) (b. 1900)

April 28 - Luisa Tetrazzini, Italian coloratura soprano (b. 1871)

May 16 - Minnie Vautrin, American missionary and heroine of the Nanjing Massacre (b. 1887)

May 30 - Prajadhipok, Rama VII, king of Thailand (b. 1893)

June 2 - Lou Gehrig, baseball player (b. 1903)

June 4 - Wilhelm II, Last Emperor of Germany (b. 1859)

June 6 - Louis Chevrolet, Swiss-born automobile builder and race car driver (b. 1878)

June 29 - Ignacy Jan Paderewski, Polish pianist, composer, and third Prime Minister of Poland (b. 1860)

July 4 - Antoni Åomnicki, Polish mathematician (b. 1881)

July 10 - Jelly Roll Morton, American jazz musician and composer (b. 1890)

July 11 - Arthur Evans, English archaeologist (b. 1851)

July 25 - Allan Forrest, American actor (b. 1885)

July 26 - Henri Lebesgue, French mathematician (b. 1875)
August-December


August 7 - Rabindranath Tagore, Indian author, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1861)

August 13 - James Stuart Blackton, American film producer (b. 1875)

August 14 - Paul Sabatier, French chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1854)

August 30 - Peder Oluf Pedersen, Danish engineer and physicist (b. 1874)

August 31 - Marina Tsvetaeva, Russian poet (suicide) (b. 1892)

September 12 - Hans Spemann, German embryologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1869)

October 5 - Louis Brandeis, U.S. Supreme Court Justice (b. 1856)

October 26 - Arkady Gaidar, Russian writer (killed in combat) (b. 1904)

November 18


Walther Nernst, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1864)


Chris Watson, third Prime Minister of Australia (b. 1867)

November 21 - Henrietta Vinton Davis, American elocutionist, dramatist, impersonator, public speaker (b. 1860)

November 26 - Niels Hansen Jacobsen, Danish sculptor and ceramist (b. 1861)

December 3 - Christian Sinding, Norwegian composer (b. 1856)

December 7 - Isaac Campbell Kidd, American admiral (died in the attack on Pearl Harbor) (b. 1884)

December 30 - El Lissitzky, Russian artist and architect (b. 1890)

Nobel prizes



Physics - not awarded

Chemistry - not awarded

Medicine - not awarded

Literature - not awarded

Peace - not awarded

Ship events



List of ship launches in 1941

List of ship commissionings in 1941

List of shipwrecks in 1941

External links



1941 Coin Pictures

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