1946 in the United States GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      Events from the year 1946 in the United States.


      Incumbents




      = Federal government

      =
      President: Harry S. Truman (D-Missouri)
      Vice President: vacant
      Chief Justice:
      Harlan F. Stone (New York) (until April 22)
      Fred M. Vinson (Kentucky) (starting June 24)
      Speaker of the House of Representatives: Sam Rayburn (D-Texas)
      Senate Majority Leader: Alben W. Barkley (D-Kentucky)
      Congress: 79th


      Events




      = January–March

      =

      January 6 – A revised revival of Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II's Show Boat opens on Broadway at the Ziegfeld Theatre.
      January 17 – U.S. Senator Dennis Chávez (D-NM) calls for a vote on a Fair Employment Practice Committee bill which calls for an end to discrimination in the workplace. A filibuster prevents it from passing.
      January 25 – The United Mine Workers rejoins the American Federation of Labor.
      January 29 – The Central Intelligence Group is established (the CIA in 1947).
      February 12 – Isaac Woodard, an African American army veteran, is beaten and blinded by police chief Lynwood Shull in Batesburg, South Carolina, an event which is brought to national attention on Orson Welles's radio show.
      February 14 – ENIAC (for "Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer"), the first general-purpose electronic computer, is unveiled at the University of Pennsylvania.
      February 18 – President Truman signs the Rescission Act of 1946 annulling benefits payable to Filipino troops who fought for the U.S. during World War II.
      February 28 – In Philadelphia, General Electric strikers and police clash.
      March 5 – In his speech at Westminster College, in Fulton, Missouri, Winston Churchill popularizes the political metaphor of the Iron Curtain.
      March 6 – Vietnam War: Ho Chi Minh signs an agreement with France which recognizes Vietnam as an autonomous state in the Indochinese Federation and the French Union.
      March 7 – The 18th Academy Awards ceremony, hosted by James Stewart and Bob Hope, is held at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles, the first ceremony after World War II. Billy Wilder's The Lost Weekend wins the most awards with four, including Best Motion Picture and Best Director for Wilder. Leo McCarey's The Bells of St. Mary's receives the most nominations with eight.
      March 21 – The Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League, newly relocated from Cleveland, sign Kenny Washington, making him the first African American player in the league since 1933.
      March 24 – BBC Home Service radio in the United Kingdom broadcasts Alistair Cooke's first American Letter. As Letter from America, this programme will continue until a few weeks before Cooke's death in 2004.


      = April–June

      =
      April 1 – The 8.6 Mw  Aleutian Islands earthquake affects Alaska with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong), causing a destructive basin wide tsunami, leaving 165–173 dead.
      April 18 – The United States recognizes Josip Broz Tito's government in Yugoslavia.
      April 20 – Walt Disney's eighth feature film, Make Mine Music, is released. It is Disney's third of six package films to be released through the 1940s.
      April 22 – Girouard v. United States, a citizenship case decided in the Supreme Court, overturns the decision in United States v. Schwimmer (1929).
      April 23
      The Eastern Pennsylvania Basketball League (later the Continental Basketball Association (CBA)) is founded.
      Howard Hughes's Western movie The Outlaw (1943), starring Jane Russell, goes on general release.
      May 2 – Six inmates unsuccessfully try to escape from Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary in San Francisco Bay; a riot occurs, the "Battle of Alcatraz".
      May 10 – The first V-2 rocket to be successfully launched in the U.S. is fired from White Sands Missile Range.
      May 21 – Manhattan Project physicist Dr. Louis Slotin accidentally triggers a fission reaction at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and, although saving his coworkers, gives himself a lethal dose of hard radiation, making him the second victim of a criticality accident in history (the incident is initially treated as classified information).
      May 23 – Dwarf Grill, predecessor of Chick-fil-A, a fast food chicken restaurant, is founded in Georgia.
      June 6 – The Basketball Association of America is formed in New York City, later renamed the National Basketball Association.
      June 17
      The 1946 Windsor-Tecumseh, Ontario tornado on the Detroit River kills 17.
      Laurence Olivier's Henry V opens in the United States nearly 2 years after its release in the UK. It is the first Shakespeare film in color, and critics hail it as the finest film of a Shakespeare play ever made.


      = July–September

      =

      July 4 – The Philippines is granted independence by the United States.
      July 7
      Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini becomes the first American to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church.
      Howard Hughes nearly dies when a test flight of the Hughes XF-11 crashes in a Beverly Hills neighborhood due to a propeller malfunction.
      July 14 – Benjamin Spock's influential The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care is published.
      July 25
      Nuclear testing: In the first underwater test of the atomic bomb, the surplus USS Saratoga is sunk near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean, when the United States detonates the Baker device during Operation Crossroads.
      At Club 500 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis stage their first show as a comedy team.
      1946 Georgia lynching: In the last mass lynching in the United States, a mob of white men shoot and kill two African-American couples near Moore's Ford Bridge in Georgia.
      August 1
      President Truman signs the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, which establishes the United States Atomic Energy Commission.
      The Fulbright Program, a system of U.S. international educational exchange scholarships, is established.
      August 25 – American golfer Ben Hogan wins the PGA Championship.
      September 15 – DuMont Television Network begins broadcasting regularly.
      September 22 – Yogi Berra makes his Major League Baseball debut, entering a game for the New York Yankees against the Philadelphia A's and hitting a home run in his first time at bat.
      September 24 – White House counsel Clark Clifford presents President Truman with a top secret report authored by George Elsey on American Relations with the Soviet Union which forms the basis of the U.S. policy of containment.


      = October–December

      =
      October 15 – The St. Louis Cardinals defeat the Boston Red Sox, 4 games to 3, to win their 6th World Series.
      October 16 – The United Nations' first meeting in Long Island is held.
      November 1 – The New York Knicks play against the Toronto Huskies at the Maple Leaf Gardens, in the first Basketball Association of America game. The Knicks win 68–66.
      November 6 – Senate and House elections in the United States both give majorities to the Republicans.
      November 12 – In Chicago, a branch of the Exchange National Bank (later part of the LaSalle Bank) opens the first 10 drive-up teller windows.
      November 25 – In St. Paul, Minnesota, over a thousand public school teachers go on strike for more than a month.
      November 27 – Cold War: Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru appeals to the United States and the Soviet Union to end nuclear testing and to start nuclear disarmament, stating that such an action would "save humanity from the ultimate disaster."
      December 2 – The International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling is signed in Washington, D.C. to "provide for the proper conservation of whale stocks and thus make possible the orderly development of the whaling industry" through establishment of the International Whaling Commission.
      December 5 – President Truman establishes the President's Committee on Civil Rights to investigate the status of civil rights in the United States and propose measures to strengthen and protect the civil rights of American citizens.
      December 7 – A fire at the Winecoff Hotel in Atlanta, Georgia kills 119.
      December 14
      Proposed United States purchase of Greenland from Denmark: An offer is made through diplomatic channels.
      Aspen Skiing Company opens Aspen Mountain (ski area) in Colorado with Ski Lift No. 1, at 6,800 ft (2.1 km) the world's longest chairlift at this time.
      December 20 – Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life, featuring James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore, Henry Travers and Thomas Mitchell, is released in New York.
      December 22 – The Havana Conference begins between U.S. organized crime bosses in Havana, Cuba.
      December 26 – The Flamingo Hotel opens on the Las Vegas Strip.
      December 31 – President Harry S. Truman delivers Proclamation 2714, which officially ends hostilities in World War II.


      = Undated

      =
      Airport Homes race riots in Chicago.
      The 20 mm M61 Vulcan Gatling gun contract is released.
      The All-America Football Conference team San Francisco 49ers is formed.
      The first Tupperware is sold in department and hardware stores in the United States.
      Binghamton University is founded in New York (state).


      Births




      = January

      =

      January 1 – Shelby Steele, American journalist, author and director
      January 3 – Cissy King, American dancer, singer
      January 5 – Diane Keaton, American actress, film director (Annie Hall)
      January 7
      Michele Elliott, author, psychologist and founder of child protection charity Kidscape
      Michael Roizen, American anesthesiologist and author
      January 8
      Robby Krieger, American rock musician (The Doors)
      Stanton Peele, American psychologist
      January 11
      Naomi Judd, American country singer (d. 2022)
      John Piper, American theologian
      January 12 – George Duke, African-American musician (d. 2013)
      January 16 – Michael Coats, American astronaut
      January 19 – Dolly Parton, American singer-songwriter, actress, businesswoman and philanthropist
      January 20 – David Lynch, American film director (d. 2025)
      January 21 – Johnny Oates, American baseball player, manager (d. 2004)
      January 23 – Don Whittington, American race car driver
      January 25 – Doc Bundy, American race car driver and technician
      January 26
      Deon Jackson, American singer-songwriter (d. 2014)
      Gene Siskel, American film critic (Sneak Previews) (d. 1999)
      January 27 – Nedra Talley, African-American singer (The Ronettes)
      January 29 – Bettye LaVette, African-American soul singer, songwriter
      January 31 – Terry Kath, American rock musician (Chicago) (d. 1978)


      = February

      =

      February 2 – Blake Clark, American actor, comedian
      February 6 – Jim Turner, American politician
      February 7 – Sammy Johns, American singer-songwriter (d. 2013)
      February 9 – Jim Webb, American politician
      February 11 – Chris Rush, American stand-up comedian (d. 2018)
      February 13
      Richard Blumenthal, American politician
      Joe Estevez, American actor
      February 14 – Gregory Hines, African-American dancer, actor (d. 2003)
      February 16 – Marvin Sease, American blues and soul singer-songwriter (d. 2011)
      February 19 – Karen Silkwood, American activist (d. 1974)
      February 20
      Sandy Duncan, American singer, dancer, comedian and actress
      J. Geils, American guitarist (The J. Geils Band) (d. 2017)
      February 21
      Tyne Daly, American actress (Cagney & Lacey)
      Monica Johnson, American screenwriter (d. 2010)
      Jim Ryan, American politician and lawyer (d. 2022)
      February 25 – Rick Hummel, American sportswriter (d. 2023)
      February 28
      Don Ciccone, American singer, songwriter (The Critters) (d. 2016)
      Don Francisco, American Christian musician
      Syreeta Wright, African-American singer, songwriter ("With You I'm Born Again") (d. 2004)


      = March

      =

      March 1 – Lana Wood, American actress, producer
      March 7
      John Heard, American actor (d. 2017)
      Peter Wolf, American rock musician (The J. Geils Band)
      March 8 – Randy Meisner, American musician (The Eagles) (d. 2023)
      March 10 – Mike Davis, American scholar (d. 2022)
      March 12
      Frank Welker, American voice actor, singer
      Liza Minnelli, American singer, actress
      March 13 – Yonatan Netanyahu, American-born Israeli soldier (d. 1976 in Israel)
      March 15 – Bobby Bonds, American baseball player, manager (d. 2003)
      March 17 – Larry Langford, American politician (d. 2019)
      March 24 – Kitty O'Neil, speed record holder and stuntwoman (d. 2018)
      March 26 – Johnny Crawford, American child actor, musician (The Rifleman) (d. 2021)
      March 27 – Mike Jackson, American former MLB pitcher


      = April

      =

      April 2 - Dickie Drake, air force veteran and Alabaman politician
      April 3 – Rod Gaspar, baseball player
      April 7 – Robert Metcalfe, computer scientist and entrepreneur
      April 8
      Catfish Hunter, baseball player (d. 1999)
      Tim Thomerson, actor, comedian
      April 9 – Nate Colbert, baseball player (d. 2023)
      April 10 – David Angell, television producer (d. 2001)
      April 11 – Chris Burden, artist (d. 2015)
      April 12 – Ed O'Neill, actor (Married... with Children)
      April 13 – Al Green, singer, songwriter and record producer
      April 15 – Marsha Hunt, actress, singer and novelist
      April 16 – Margot Adler, journalist (d. 2014)
      April 20
      Gordon Smiley, race car driver (died 1982)
      Tommy Hutton, baseball player and sportscaster
      April 22 – John Waters, film director
      April 24
      Stafford James, bassist and composer
      Phil Robertson, businessman and reality television personality
      April 25
      Talia Shire, actress (Rocky)
      Strobe Talbott, journalist
      April 26 – Richard S. Fuld Jr., banker
      April 28 – Larissa Grunig, public relations theorist, feminist
      April 30 – Bill Plympton, animator, graphic designer, cartoonist and filmmaker


      = May

      =

      May 2 – Lesley Gore, American rock singer ("It's My Party") (d. 2015)
      May 3
      Greg Gumbel, American sportscaster (d. 2024)
      Jane LaTour, American activist and journalist (d. 2023)
      May 5 – Jim Kelly, African-American actor, martial artist and tennis player (d. 2013)
      May 6
      Larry Huber, American television producer, animator
      Grier Jones, American golfer and coach
      May 7 – Thelma Houston, African-American singer ("Don't Leave Me This Way")
      May 9 – Candice Bergen, American actress (Murphy Brown)
      May 11 – Robert Jarvik, American physicist, artificial heart inventor
      May 12 – Richard Bruce Silverman, American chemist
      May 14 – Claudia Goldin, American economic historian, recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2023
      May 18
      Reggie Jackson, African-American baseball player
      Andreas Katsulas, American actor (d. 2006)
      May 20
      Craig Patrick, American-Canadian hockey player, coach and manager
      Cher, born Cherilyn Sarkisian, singer, songwriter and actress


      = June

      =

      June 3 – Michael Clarke, American drummer (d. 1993)
      June 4 – Suzanne Ciani, American pianist, electronic composer
      June 6 – Thomas DeSimone, gangster (disappeared 1979)
      June 7 – Robert Tilton, American televangelist, author
      June 13 – Paul L. Modrich, American biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2015
      June 14 – Donald Trump, American businessman, television producer, politician, 45th and 47th president of the United States from 2017 to 2021 and from 2025
      June 15 – Janet Lennon, American singer (The Lennon Sisters)
      June 16 – Jodi Rell, American politician (d. 2024)
      June 17 – Marcy Kaptur, American politician
      June 18 – Bruiser Brody, American professional wrestler (d. 1988)
      June 20
      Bob Vila, American television host
      Joseph Waeckerle, American physician and diplomat
      André Watts, American pianist (d. 2023)
      June 22 – Kay Redfield Jamison, American psychiatrist
      June 23 – Ted Shackelford, American actor
      June 24
      Ellison Onizuka, American astronaut (d. 1986)
      Robert Reich, 22nd United States Secretary of Labor
      June 26
      Leo Rossi, American actor
      Ricky Jay, American actor, author and magician (d. 2018)
      June 27 – Russ Critchfield, American basketball player
      June 28 – Gilda Radner, American comedian, actress (Saturday Night Live) (d. 1989)


      = July

      =

      July 2 – Richard Axel, American scientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
      July 4 – Michael Milken, American financier, financial criminal and philanthropist
      July 5 – Ed O'Ross, American actor
      July 6
      George W. Bush, 43rd president of the United States from 2001 to 2009
      Sylvester Stallone, American actor, filmmaker and screenwriter
      Fred Dryer, American football defensive end, actor (Hunter)
      Jamie Wyeth, American painter
      July 10
      Sue Lyon, American actress (d. 2019)
      Oliver Martin, American cyclist
      July 11 – Jack Wrangler, porn star (d. 2009)
      July 13 – Cheech Marin, Mexican-American actor, comedian (Cheech and Chong)
      July 14
      Nick Benedict, American actor and musician (d. 2023)
      Vincent Pastore, American actor
      July 15 – Linda Ronstadt, singer and songwriter
      July 16
      Dave Goelz, puppeteer
      Barbara Lee, politician
      Ron Yary, American football player
      July 19
      Suzanne de Passe, American music and screen producer
      Roland Griffiths, American scientist (d. 2023)
      July 22 – Danny Glover, African-American actor, film director and political activist
      July 23
      Sally Flynn, American singer
      Khan Jamal, American musician (d. 2022)
      July 26 – Nancy Adler, American health psychologist (d. 2024)
      July 27
      Larry Biittner, American baseball player (d. 2022)
      Gwynne Gilford, American actress
      July 28 – Jonathan Edwards, American singer, songwriter and guitarist
      July 30 – Neil Bonnett, American race car driver (d. 1994)


      = August

      =

      August 1
      Mike Emrick, American sportscaster
      Sandi Griffiths, American singer
      August 5
      Ron Silliman, American poet
      Loni Anderson, American actress (WKRP in Cincinnati)
      Shirley Ann Jackson, African American physicist and academic administrator
      August 9 – Jim Kiick, American football player
      August 13 – Janet Yellen, American Chair of the Federal Reserve
      August 14 – Dennis Hof, American brothel owner (d. 2018)
      August 16 – Lesley Ann Warren, American actress, singer
      August 17 – Drake Levin, American rock guitarist (Paul Revere & the Raiders) (d. 2009)
      August 19
      Charles Bolden, African-American astronaut
      Bill Clinton, 42nd president of the United States from 1993 to 2001
      August 20 – Connie Chung, Asian-American reporter
      August 25
      Nancy Blomberg, American art curator (d. 2018)
      Rollie Fingers, American baseball player
      Charles Ghigna, American poet, children's author
      August 26
      Valerie Simpson, African-American singer
      Mark Snow, American composer
      Swede Savage, American race car driver (d. 1973)
      August 29 – Bob Beamon, American athlete
      August 30 – Peggy Lipton, American actress and model (d. 2019)
      August 31
      Jerome Corsi, American political commentator and conspiracy theorist
      Tom Coughlin, American football player, coach and executive


      = September

      =

      September 2
      Billy Preston, African-American soul musician ("Nothing from Nothing") (d. 2006)
      Dan White, American politician, murderer (d. 1985)
      September 4
      Gary Duncan, American rock guitarist (Quicksilver Messenger Service) (d. 2019)
      Greg Elmore, American rock drummer (Quicksilver Messenger Service)
      September 5
      Dennis Dugan, American actor, director
      Loudon Wainwright III, American songwriter, folk singer, humorist and actor
      September 7 – Willie Crawford, American baseball player (d. 2004)
      September 10 – Jim Hines, African-American sprinter (d. 2023)
      September 14 – Jim Angle, American journalist and television reporter (d. 2022)
      September 15
      Tommy Lee Jones, American actor and filmmaker
      Oliver Stone, American film director, screenwriter, producer and veteran
      September 18
      Peter Alsop, American musician
      Otis Sistrunk, American football player and wrestler
      September 19 – Connie Kreski, American model (d. 1995)
      September 20 – Dorothy Hukill, American politician (d. 2018)
      September 21 – Richard St. Clair, American musician, composer
      September 25 – Jerry Penrod, American bass player
      September 26
      Andrea Dworkin, American feminist, writer (d. 2005)
      Christine Todd Whitman, American politician
      September 28 – Jeffrey Jones, American actor
      September 30 – Diego Cortez, American filmmaker and art curator (d. 2021)


      = October

      =

      October 1 – Tim O'Brien, author
      October 3
      P. P. Arnold, singer
      Melinda Ledbetter, talent manager (d. 2024)
      October 4
      Chuck Hagel, politician, 24th United States Secretary of Defense
      Susan Sarandon, actress (Thelma & Louise)
      October 5 – Heather MacRae, actress
      October 6
      Gene Clines, baseball player and coach (d. 2022)
      Lloyd Doggett, politician
      October 7 – Catharine A. MacKinnon, feminist
      October 8 – John T. Walton, son of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton (d. 2005)
      October 10 – John Prine, country folk singer (d. 2020)
      October 11 – Daryl Hall, rock musician (Hall & Oates)
      October 12 – Drew Edmondson, politician
      October 13
      Dorothy Moore, singer
      Demond Wilson, African-American actor, minister (Sanford and Son)
      October 14 – Craig Venter, biotechnologist
      October 15
      Richard Carpenter, American pop musician, composer (The Carpenters)
      John Getz, American actor
      October 16 – Suzanne Somers, American actress, singer (Three's Company) (d. 2023)
      October 17 – Bob Seagren, American athlete, actor
      October 18 – James Robert Baker, American novelist, screenwriter (d. 1997)
      October 23 – Mel Martínez, American politician
      October 26 – Pat Sajak, American game-show host (Wheel of Fortune)
      October 29 – Kathryn J. Whitmire, Texas politician, mayor of Houston
      October 30
      Lynne Marta, American actress (d. 2024)
      Andrea Mitchell, American journalist


      = November

      =

      November 1 – Lynne Russell, American newsreader
      November 4
      Laura Bush, former First Lady of the United States
      Les Lannom, American actor, musician
      Robert Mapplethorpe, American photographer (d. 1989)
      November 5
      Loleatta Holloway, American singer (d. 2011)
      Gram Parsons, American musician (d. 1973)
      November 6 – Sally Field, American actress, singer (The Flying Nun)
      November 10 – Alaina Reed Hall, American actress (d. 2009)
      November 11
      Corrine Brown, American politician, fraudster
      Sandy Skoglund, American photographer
      November 14 – Sacheen Littlefeather, American actress, model and activist for Native American civil rights (d. 2022)
      November 16
      Barbara Leigh, American fashion model and film actress in the 1970s
      Terence McKenna, American writer, philosopher, ethnobotanist and shaman (d. 2000)
      Jo Jo White, American basketball player (d. 2018)
      November 17 – Terry Branstad, American politician
      November 18 – Alan Dean Foster, American novelist
      November 20
      J. Blackfoot, American singer (The Soul Children) (d. 2011)
      Greg Cook, American football player (d, 2012)
      Judy Woodruff, American television reporter
      Duane Allman, American rock guitarist, co-founder and leader of the Allman Brothers Band (d. 1971)
      Samuel E. Wright, American actor and singer (d. 2021)
      November 23 – Bobby Rush, African-American politician, activist and pastor
      November 24
      Ted Bundy, American serial killer (d. 1989)
      Jimmy Collins, American basketball player and coach (d. 2020)
      November 27 – Richard Codey, American politician, 53rd Governor of New Jersey
      November 29 – Suzy Chaffee, American singer, actress
      November 30 – Barbara Cubin, U.S. Congresswoman from Wyoming


      = December

      =

      December 1
      Jonathan Katz, American comedian and actor
      Jimmy McMillan, founder of the Rent Is Too Damn High Party, political activist, perennial candidate
      December 4 – Sherry Alberoni, American actress, voice artist
      December 6
      Frankie Beverly, American soul singer-songwriter and producer (d. 2024)
      Nancy Brinker, American health activist, diplomat
      December 8 – John Rubinstein, American actor, director and composer
      December 9 – Dennis Dunaway, American bassist and composer
      December 10
      Chrystos, American poet
      Thomas Lux, American poet and academic (d. 2017)
      December 11
      Susan Kyle, American writer
      Ellen Meloy, American writer (d. 2004)
      December 12
      Josepha Sherman, American author, folklorist and anthropologist (d. 2012)
      Paula Wagner, American film producer and executive
      Gloria Loring, American singer
      Don Gummer, American sculptor
      December 13 – Heather North, American television, voice actress (d. 2017)
      December 14
      Patty Duke, American actress (d. 2016)
      Lynne Marie Stewart, American actress
      December 16 – Alice Aycock, American sculptor
      December 18 – Steven Spielberg, American film director, screenwriter, producer and executive
      December 19
      Candace Pert, American neuroscientist (d. 2013)
      Robert Urich, American actor (Vega$) (d. 2002)
      December 20
      John Spencer, American actor (d. 2005)
      Lloyd Mumphord, American football player
      Sonny Perdue, politician, 81st Governor of Georgia
      Dick Wolf, American television producer
      December 21 – Carl Wilson, American musician (The Beach Boys) (d. 1998)
      December 23 – Susan Lucci, American actress (General Hospital)
      December 24
      Brenda Howard, American bisexual activist (d. 2005)
      Jeff Sessions, American politician, United States Attorney General
      December 25
      Jimmy Buffett, American rock singer, songwriter ("Margaritaville") (d. 2023)
      Larry Csonka, American football player
      Gene Lamont, American baseball player, manager
      December 27 – Lenny Kaye, American guitarist
      December 28
      Mike Beebe, American politician, attorney
      Tim Johnson, American politician (d. 2024)
      Edgar Winter, American rock musician ("Frankenstein")
      December 29 – Paul S. Trible, Jr., American politician
      December 30 – Patti Smith, American poet, singer


      = Date unknown

      =
      Tyler Burge, philosopher


      Deaths




      See also


      List of American films of 1946
      Timeline of United States history (1930–1949)


      References




      External links


      Media related to 1946 in the United States at Wikimedia Commons

    Kata Kunci Pencarian:

    1946 in the united statesunited states president 19461946 united states elections1946 united states quarter1946 united states penny1946 united states nickel1946 united states jefferson nickel1946 united states half dollar1946 united states walking liberty half dollar1946 united states dime
    1946 United States elections - Wikiwand

    1946 United States elections - Wikiwand

    United States America Circa 1946 Vintage Stock Photo 95545327 ...

    United States America Circa 1946 Vintage Stock Photo 95545327 ...

    1946 in the United States - Wikipedia

    1946 in the United States - Wikipedia

    United States of America - Published 1946 : XYZ Maps

    United States of America - Published 1946 : XYZ Maps

    1946 | The Mistranslation that Shifted a Culture

    1946 | The Mistranslation that Shifted a Culture

    20 Centavos 1946, United Mexican States (1941-1960) - Mexico - Coin - 37813

    20 Centavos 1946, United Mexican States (1941-1960) - Mexico - Coin - 37813

    1946 Events & Facts

    1946 Events & Facts

    1946 Events & Facts

    1946 Events & Facts

    Vintage Map of United States America its folklore representing USA 1946 ...

    Vintage Map of United States America its folklore representing USA 1946 ...

    November 1946

    November 1946

    William Jefferson Clinton (born 1946) 42nd President of the United ...

    William Jefferson Clinton (born 1946) 42nd President of the United ...

    Free 1946 Calendars in PDF, Word, Excel

    Free 1946 Calendars in PDF, Word, Excel