Timeline of the history of the United States (1930-1950)
List of years in the United States
1945 in U.S. states and territories
States
Alabama
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Territories
American Samoa
Guam
Puerto Rico
United States Virgin Islands
Washington, D.C.
List of years in the United States by state or territory
Events from the year 1945 in the United States. World War II ended during this year following the surrender of Germany in May and that of Japan in September.
Incumbents
Federal government
President:
Franklin D. Roosevelt (D-New York) (until April 12)
Harry S. Truman (D-Missouri) (starting April 12)
Vice President:
Henry A. Wallace (D-Iowa) (until January 20)
Harry S. Truman (D-Missouri) (January 20 – April 12)
vacant (starting April 12)
Chief Justice: Harlan F. Stone (New York)
Speaker of the House of Representatives: Sam Rayburn (D-Texas)
Senate Majority Leader: Alben W. Barkley (D-Kentucky)
Congress: 78th (until January 3), 79th (starting January 3)
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama: Chauncey Sparks (Democratic)
Governor of Arizona: Sidney Preston Osborn (Democratic)
Governor of Arkansas: Homer Martin Adkins (Democratic) (until January 9), Benjamin Travis Laney (Democratic) (starting January 9)
Governor of California: Earl Warren (Republican)
Governor of Colorado: John Charles Vivian (Republican)
Governor of Connecticut: Raymond E. Baldwin (Republican)
Governor of Delaware: Walter W. Bacon (Republican)
Governor of Florida: Spessard Holland (Democratic) (until January 2), Millard F. Caldwell (Democratic) (starting January 2)
Governor of Georgia: Ellis Arnall (Democratic)
Governor of Idaho:
until January 1: C. A. Bottolfsen (Republican)
January 1-November 17: Charles C. Gossett (Democratic)
starting November 17: Arnold Williams (Democratic)
Governor of Illinois: Dwight H. Green (Republican)
Governor of Indiana: Henry F. Schricker (Democratic) (until January 8), Ralph F. Gates (Republican) (starting January 8)
Governor of Iowa: Bourke B. Hickenlooper (Republican) (until January 11), Robert D. Blue (Republican) (starting January 11)
Governor of Kansas: Andrew F. Schoeppel (Republican)
Governor of Kentucky: Simeon S. Willis (Republican)
Governor of Louisiana: Jimmie H. Davis (Democratic)
Governor of Maine: Sumner Sewall (Republican) (until January 3), Horace A. Hildreth (Republican) (starting January 3)
Governor of Maryland: Herbert R. O'Conor (Democratic)
Governor of Massachusetts: Leverett Saltonstall (Republican) (until January 3), Maurice J. Tobin (Democratic) (starting January 3)
Governor of Michigan: Harry Kelly (Republican)
Governor of Minnesota: Edward John Thye (Republican)
Governor of Mississippi: Thomas L. Bailey (Democratic)
Governor of Missouri: Forrest C. Donnell (Republican) (until January 8), Phil M. Donnelly (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Governor of Montana: Sam C. Ford (Republican)
Governor of Nebraska: Dwight Griswold (Republican)
Governor of Nevada: Edward P. Carville (Democratic) (until July 24), Vail M. Pittman (Democratic) (starting July 24)
Governor of New Hampshire: Robert O. Blood (Republican) (until January 4), Charles M. Dale (Republican) (starting January 4)
Governor of New Jersey: Walter Evans Edge (Republican)
Governor of New Mexico: John J. Dempsey (Democratic)
Governor of New York: Thomas Dewey (Republican)
Governor of North Carolina: J. Melville Broughton (Democratic) (until January 4), R. Gregg Cherry (Democratic) (until January 4)
Governor of North Dakota: John Moses (Democratic) (until January 4), Fred G. Aandahl (Republican) (starting January 4)
Governor of Ohio: John W. Bricker (Republican) (until January 8), Frank J. Lausche (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Governor of Oklahoma: Robert S. Kerr (Democratic)
Governor of Oregon: Earl Snell (Republican)
Governor of Pennsylvania: Edward Martin (Republican)
Governor of Rhode Island: J. Howard McGrath (Democratic) (until October 6), John Orlando Pastore (Democratic) (starting October 6)
Governor of South Carolina: Olin D. Johnston (Democratic) (until January 2), Ransome Judson Williams (Democratic) (starting January 2)
Governor of South Dakota: Merrill Q. Sharpe (Republican)
Governor of Tennessee: Prentice Cooper (Democratic) (until January 16), Jim Nance McCord (Democratic) (starting January 16)
Governor of Texas: Coke R. Stevenson (Democratic)
Governor of Utah: Herbert B. Maw (Democratic)
Governor of Vermont: William H. Wills (Republican) (until January 4), Mortimer R. Proctor (Republican) (starting January 4)
Governor of Virginia: Colgate Darden (Democratic)
Governor of Washington: Arthur B. Langlie (Republican) (until January 8), Monrad C. Wallgren (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Governor of West Virginia: Matthew M. Neely (Democratic) (until January 15), Clarence W. Meadows (Democratic) (starting January 15)
Governor of Wisconsin: Walter S. Goodland (Republican)
Governor of Wyoming: Lester C. Hunt (Democratic)
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama: Leven H. Ellis (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas: James Lavesque Shaver (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of California: Frederick F. Houser (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: William Eugene Higby (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: William L. Hadden (Republican) (until month and day unknown), Charles Wilbert Snow (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware: Isaac J. MacCollum (Democratic) (until January 16), Elbert N. Carvel (Democratic) (starting January 16)
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho:
until January 1: Edwin Nelson (Republican)
January 1-November 17: Arnold Williams (Democratic)
starting November 17: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: Hugh W. Cross (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: Charles M. Dawson (Democratic) (until January 8), Richard T. James (Republican) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Robert D. Blue (Republican) (until January 11), Kenneth A. Evans (Republican) (starting January 11)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: Jess C. Denious, Sr. (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: Kenneth H. Tuggle (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: J. Emile Verret (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Horace T. Cahill (Republican) (until January 3), vacant (starting January 3)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: Eugene C. Keyes (Republican) (until month and day unknown), Vernon J. Brown (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Archie H. Miller (Republican) (until January 2), C. Elmer Anderson (Republican) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: Fielding L. Wright (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: vacant (until January 8), Walter Naylor Davis (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Montana: Ernest T. Eaton (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska: Roy W. Johnson (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Vail M. Pittman (Democratic) (until July 24), vacant (starting July 24)
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico: James B. Jones (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: Joseph R. Hanley (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: Reginald L. Harris (Democratic) (until January 4), Lynton Y. Ballentine (Democratic) (starting January 4)
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota: vacant (until January 4), Clarence P. Dahl (Republican) (starting January 4)
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio: Paul M. Herbert (Republican) (until January 8), George D. Nye (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma: James E. Berry (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: John C. Bell, Jr. (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island:
until month and day unknown: vacant
month and day unknown: John O. Pastore (Democratic)
starting month and day unknown: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: Ransome Judson Williams (Democratic) (until January 2), vacant (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota: A. C. Miller (Republican) (until month and day unknown), Sioux K. Grigsby (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: Joseph H. Ballew (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), Larry Morgan (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas: John Lee Smith (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Mortimer R. Proctor (Republican) (until January 4), Lee E. Emerson (Republican) (starting January 4)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: William M. Tuck (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Washington: Victor A. Meyers (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: Oscar Rennebohm (Republican)
Events
January
January 20:Franklin D. Roosevelt, the 32nd president of the United States, begins his fourth termHarry S. Truman becomes the 34th U.S. vice president
January – American troops cross the Siegfried Line into Belgium.
January 6
Naval lieutenant George H. W. Bush, future president of the United States, and future First Lady Barbara Pierce marry in Rye, New York.
Pepe Le Pew makes his debut as the first major Looney Tunes character, in "Odor-able Kitty"
January 20 – Franklin D. Roosevelt is inaugurated to an unprecedented fourth term as President of the United States. No president before, or since, reaches a third term in office. Harry S. Truman is sworn in as Vice President of the United States.
January 24 – Nine OSS men and Associated Press war correspondent Joseph Morton are summarily executed by the Germans at Mauthausen concentration camp, contrary to the Geneva Convention.
January 30 – Raid at Cabanatuan: 121 American soldiers and 800 Filipino guerrillas free 813 American POWs from the Japanese-held camp in Cabanatuan, Philippines.
January 31 – Eddie Slovik is executed by firing squad for desertion, the first American soldier since the American Civil War, and last to date to be executed for this offense.
February
February 4–11: Yalta Conference
February 2 – WW II: President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill leave to meet with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin at the Yalta Conference.
February 3
WW II: United States forces capture Manila, Philippines from the Japanese Imperial Army.
Walt Disney Productions' seventh feature film, The Three Caballeros, is released. It is Disney's second of six package films to be released through the 1940s and the first feature film to incorporate traditional animation with live-action actors.
February 4 – WW II: President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin begin the Yalta Conference (ends February 11).
February 7 – WW II: General Douglas MacArthur returns to Manila.
February 8 – The Alaska Anti-Discrimination Act of 1945, championed by charismatic native leader Elizabeth Peratrovich, is passed by the territorial Senate, after the legislature defeated a previous bill in 1943.
February 12 – A devastating tornado outbreak in Mississippi and Alabama kills 45 people and injures 427 others.
February 16
Combined American and Filipino forces recapture the Bataan Peninsula.
American and Filipino ground forces land on Corregidor Island in the Philippines.
February 19 – WW II: Battle of Iwo Jima – About 30,000 United States Marines land on Iwo Jima.
February 23
The American and Filipino troops enter Intramuros, Manila.
The capital of the Philippines, Manila, is liberated by combined American and Filipino ground troops.
Battle of Iwo Jima: A group of United States Marines reach the top of Mount Suribachi on the island and are photographed raising the American flag. The photo, Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima (taken by Joe Rosenthal), later wins a Pulitzer Prize.
February – Raymond L. Libby of American Cyanamid's research laboratories, at Stamford, Connecticut, announces a method of orally administering the antibiotic penicillin.[1]
March
March 1 – President Franklin D. Roosevelt gives what will be his last address to a joint session of Congress, reporting on the Yalta Conference.
March 2 – Former Vice President Henry Agard Wallace starts his term of office as U.S. Secretary of Commerce, serving under President Roosevelt.
March 3 – WW II: United States and Filipino troops take Manila, Philippines.
March 7 – WW II: American troops seize the bridge over the Rhine River at Remagen, Germany and begin to cross.
March 15 – The 17th Academy Awards ceremony, hosted by John Cromwell and Bob Hope, is held at Grauman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood, Los Angeles, broadcast via radio for the first time. Leo McCarey's Going My Way wins Outstanding Motion Picture. The film also wins the most awards overall with seven, including McCarey's second win for Best Director, and ties for the most nominations with Henry King's Wilson, both with ten.
March 19 – WW II: Off the coast of Japan, bombers hit the aircraft carrier USS Franklin, killing about 800 of her crewmen and crippling the ship.
March 24 – The cartoon character Sylvester the cat debuts in Life with Feathers
March 29 – The "Clash of Titans" in basketball: George Mikan and Bob Kurland duel at Madison Square Garden as OSU defeats DePaul 52–44.
April
April 12: Vice President Harry S. Truman becomes the 33rd U.S. president upon the death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt
April 1 – WW II: Battle of Okinawa – U.S. troops land on Okinawa.
April 4 – The Holocaust: American troops liberate their first Nazi concentration camp, Ohrdruf death camp in Germany.
April 7 – The only flight of the German ramming unit known as the Sonderkommando Elbe takes place, resulting in the loss of some 24 B-17s and B-24s of the United States Eighth Air Force.
April 12 – President Franklin D. Roosevelt dies suddenly at Warm Springs, Georgia; Vice President Harry S. Truman becomes the 33rd president.
April 18 – The American war correspondent Ernie Pyle is killed by Japanese machine gun fire on the island of Ie Shima off Okinawa.
April 19 – Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel, a musical play based on Ferenc Molnár's Liliom, opens on Broadway and becomes their second long-running stage classic.
April 25
WW II: Elbe Day – United States and Soviet troops link up at the Elbe River, cutting Germany in two.
Founding negotiations for the United Nations begin in San Francisco.
April 27 – U.S. Ordnance troops find the coffins of 18th-century Prussian kings Frederick Wilhelm I and Frederick the Great, in addition to German President Paul von Hindenburg and his wife.
April 30 – Adolf Hitler commits suicide by shooting himself with a gun in an underground bunker. Eva Braun, his wife, bit into a cyanide capsule.
May
May 3 – Rocket scientist Wernher von Braun and 120 members of his team surrender to U.S. forces (later he becomes at the forefront and a pioneer of the U.S. space program).
May 4 – The Holy Crown of Hungary is found in Mattsee, Austria, by the United States Army 86th Infantry Division. The U.S. government keeps the crown in Fort Knox for safekeeping from the Soviets until it is returned to Hungary on January 6, 1978.[2]
May 5
A Japanese Fu-Go balloon bomb kills five children and a grown woman, Elsie Mitchell, near Bly, Oregon, when it explodes as they drag it from the woods. They are the only people killed by an enemy attack on the American mainland during World War II.
The US 11th Armored Division liberates the prisoners of Mauthausen concentration camp, including Simon Wiesenthal.
Expatriate American poet and author Ezra Pound turns himself in to American soldiers in Italy and is imprisoned for treason.
The cartoon character Yosemite Sam debuts in Hare Trigger.
May 8
Victory in Europe Day: The Allies accept Germany's unconditional surrender. War in Europe is over
Hermann Göring surrenders himself to the U.S. Army near Radstadt.[3]
June
June 22 – WWII: Battle of Okinawa ends, with U.S. occupation of the island until 1972.
June 26 – The United Nations Charter is signed in San Francisco.
June 30 – John von Neumann's First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC is distributed, containing the first published description of the logical design of a computer, with stored-program and instruction data stored in the same address space within the memory (von Neumann architecture).
July
July 8 – WW II: President Harry S. Truman is informed that Japan will talk peace if it can retain the Emperor.[4]
July 9 – A forest fire breaks out in the Tillamook Burn (the third in that area of Oregon since 1933).
July 15 – The Scott Morrison Award of Minor Hockey Excellence is first given; the first recipient is Gordie Howe.
July 16 – The Trinity test detonates the world's first atomic bomb.
July 21 – WW II: President Harry S. Truman approves the order for atomic bombs to be used against Japan.[4]
July 28 – A U.S. Army Air Forces B-25 bomber crashes into the Empire State Building, killing 14 people, including all on board.
July 30 – WW II: The heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis is hit and sunk by torpedoes from the I-58 in the Philippine Sea. Some 900 survivors jump into the sea and are adrift for up to four days. Nearly 600 die before help arrives. Captain Charles B. McVay III of the cruiser is later court-martialed and convicted; in 2000, he is posthumously exonerated.[5]
August
August 6: Atomic bombing of Hiroshima
August 6 – WW II: Atomic bombing of Hiroshima – United States Boeing B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay drops a uranium-235 atomic bomb, codenamed "Little Boy", on the Japanese city of Hiroshima at 8:15 a.m. local time, resulting in between 90,000 and 146,000 deaths.
August 7 – President Harry Truman announces the successful bombing of Hiroshima with the atomic bomb, while returning from the Potsdam Conference aboard the U.S. Navy heavy cruiser USS Augusta in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.
August 8 – The United Nations Charter is ratified by the United States Senate, and this nation becomes the third one to join the new international organization.
August 9 – Atomic bombing of Nagasaki: United States B-29 Bockscar drops a plutonium-239 atomic bomb, codenamed "Fat Man", on the Japanese city of Nagasaki at 11:02 a.m. local time, resulting in between 39,000 and 80,000 deaths.
August 14 (August 15 in Japan) – Emperor Hirohito announces Japan's surrender on the radio. The United States calls this day V-J Day (Victory over Japan). This ends the period of Japanese expansionism and begins the period of Occupied Japan.
August 17 – The United States and the U.S.S.R. split up the Korean Peninsula making North Korea and South Korea
August 31 – A team at American Cyanamid's Lederle Laboratories, Pearl River, New York, led by Yellapragada Subbarow, announces they have obtained folic acid in a pure crystalline form.[6]
September
September 2
World War II ends: The final official surrender of Japan is accepted by the Supreme Allied Commander, General Douglas MacArthur, and Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz for the United States, and delegates from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, The Netherlands, China, and others from a Japanese delegation led by Mamoru Shigemitsu, on board the American battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay (but in Japan August 14 is recognized as the day the Pacific War ended).
General MacArthur is given the title of Supreme Commander Allied Powers and tasked with the occupation of Japan.[7]
Japanese general Tomoyuki Yamashita surrenders to Filipino and American forces at Kiangan, Ifugao.
September 5
The Russian code clerk Igor Gouzenko comes forward with numerous documents implicating the Soviet Union in numerous spy rings in North America: both in the United States and in Canada.
Iva Toguri D'Aquino, a Japanese-American suspected of being wartime radio propagandist "Tokyo Rose", is arrested in Yokohama.
September 8 – American troops occupy southern Korea, while the Soviet Union occupies the north, with the dividing line being the 38th parallel of latitude. This arrangement proves to be the indirect beginning of a divided Korea.
September 9 – The first actual case of a (computer) bug being found, is a moth lodged in a relay of a Harvard Mark II computer at the Naval Weapons Center in Dahlgren, Virginia.
September 20 – The Office of Strategic Services (OSS) is disbanded and split up among several other agencies.
October
October 2 – George Albert Smith becomes president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
October 3–10 – The Detroit Tigers win the World Series against the Chicago Cubs.
October 5 – Hollywood Black Friday: A strike by the Set Decorator's Union in Hollywood results in a riot.
October 23 – Jackie Robinson signs a contract with the Montreal Royals, making him the first black baseball player in the International League since the 1880s.
October 29 – At Gimbel's Department Store in New York City, the first ballpoint pens go on sale at $12.50 each.
November
November 15 – Harry S. Truman, Clement Attlee, and Mackenzie King call for a U.N. Atomic Energy Commission.[4]
November 16
Cold War: The United States controversially imports 88 German scientists to help in the production of rocket technology.
The cartoon character Casper the Friendly Ghost debuts, in The Friendly Ghost.
The motion picture The Lost Weekend, starring Ray Milland, is released. The most realistic film portrayal of alcoholism up to this time, it wins several Academy Awards the following year.
Yeshiva College is founded in New York City.
November 29 – Assembly of the world's first general purpose electronic computer, the Electronic Numerical Integrator Analyzer and Computer (ENIAC), is completed, covering 1,800 square feet (170 m2) of floor space, and the first set of calculations is run on it.
December
December 4 – By a vote of 65–7, the United States Senate approves the entry of the United States into the United Nations.[8]
December 5 – Flight 19 of U.S. Navy Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bombers disappears on a training exercise from Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale.
December 9 – General George S. Patton is injured in an automobile accident in France, resulting in his death on December 21.
December 24 – Sodder children disappearance: Five of nine children go missing after their home in Fayetteville, West Virginia, is burned down.
Undated
The U.S. House of Representatives calls for unrestricted Jewish immigration to Palestine in order to establish a Jewish commonwealth there.
The Berklee College of Music is founded in Boston.
The Galleries Maurice Sternberg is established in Chicago.[9]
Russian-American physicist Vladimir Kosma Zworykin coauthors Electron Optics and the Electron Microscope.
Ongoing
World War II, U.S. involvement (1941–1945; ends on September 2)
Births
January
Stephen StillsTom Selleck
January 1 – Diahnne Abbott, American actress and singer
January 3 – Stephen Stills, American rock singer, songwriter (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young)
January 4 – Richard R. Schrock, American chemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2005
January 6
Allen Appel, American author, illustrator, and photographer
^Angier, R. B.; Boothe, J. H.; Hutchings, B. L.; Mowat, J. H.; Semb, J.; Stokstad, E. L. R.; Subbarow, Y.; Waller, C. W.; Cosulich, D. B.; Fahrenbach, M. J.; Hultquist, M. E.; Kuh, E.; Northey, E. H.; Seeger, D. R.; Sickels, J. P.; Smith Jr, J. M. (1945). "Synthesis of a Compound Identical with the L. Casei Factor Isolated from Liver". Science. 102 (2644): 227–28. Bibcode:1945Sci...102..227A. doi:10.1126/science.102.2644.227. PMID 17778509.
^Jessup, John E. (1989). A Chronology of Conflict and Resolution, 1945-1985. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-24308-5.
^"On This Day", New York Times, retrieved 24 August 2016