The following events occurred in December 1953:
December 1, 1953 (Tuesday)
December 2, 1953 (Wednesday)
December 3, 1953 (Thursday)
- off Miami Beach, Florida, 52-year-old American attorney Hope Root died in an attempt to set a new deep diving record of . Root descended to and did not resurface.
December 4, 1953 (Friday)
- A Federal grand jury indicted University of Chicago economist Val R. Lorwin on three counts of perjury in denying any Communist affiliation to State Department investigators in December 1950.
- Born:
- Jean-Pierre Darroussin, French actor and filmmaker, in Courbevoie
- Rick Middleton, Canadian National Hockey League player, in Toronto
- Jean-Marie Pfaff, Belgian professional footballer, in Lebbeke, East Flanders
- Died:
- Curio Barbasetti di Prun, 68, Italian World War II general
- Mario Gestri, 29, Italian road cyclist, died in a motorcycle accident.
- Daniel Gregory Mason, 80, American composer and music critic
December 5, 1953 (Saturday)
December 6, 1953 (Sunday)
- With the NBC Symphony Orchestra, conductor Arturo Toscanini performed what he claimed to be his favorite Beethoven symphony, the Eroica, for the last time. The live performance was broadcast nationwide on radio, and later released on records and CD.
December 7, 1953 (Monday)
December 8, 1953 (Tuesday)
December 9, 1953 (Wednesday)
December 10, 1953 (Thursday)
December 11, 1953 (Friday)
December 12, 1953 (Saturday)
- U.S. Air Force test pilot Chuck Yeager set a new flight airspeed record of Mach 2.435 () in the Bell X-1A experimental aircraft at Edwards Air Force Base. During the flight, Yeager lost control of the aircraft, which tumbled nearly in 70 seconds before Yeager regained control at .
- J. Robert Oppenheimer received an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Oxford University.
- An earthquake centered in the northwestern offshore area of Tumbes, Peru caused six deaths.
- A new terminal designed by Carroll, Grisdale & Van Alen was dedicated at Philadelphia International Airport.
- Former child star Freddie Bartholomew married television personality Aileen Paul. The couple would divorce in 1977.
- A human crush at the Shrine of the Virgin of Guadalupe in Mexico City killed four people and injured 1,000.
- Died:
- Mikhail Dratvin, 56, Soviet lieutenant general
- Karin Stephen (born Catherine Elizabeth Costelloe), 64, British psychoanalyst and psychologist, died by suicide.
- Morgan Wallace (born Maier Weill), 72, American actor
December 13, 1953 (Sunday)
December 14, 1953 (Monday)
December 15, 1953 (Tuesday)
- Born: Nawaf Salam, Lebanese politician and judge, Prime Minister of Lebanon (2025-present), in Beirut
- Died:
- Ed Barrow, 85, American Major League Baseball manager and front office executive, died from a malignancy.
- George White, 81, American politician, former Governor of Ohio
- Michael J. Kernan, 69, American politician, former member of the New York State Senate
- Robert Stangland, 72, American Olympic athlete and consulting engineer
- Alfred Lee Wyman, 79, judge of the United States District Court for the District of South Dakota
December 16, 1953 (Wednesday)
December 17, 1953 (Thursday)
- The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved color television (using the NTSC standard).
- A Lockheed P2V Neptune with nine crew aboard was reported missing and presumed down in the North Atlantic. Wreckage of the patrol bomber was sighted on Myrdalsjokull Glacier with at least three survivors on 18 December. The plane had departed from Keflavik Airport. The 53d Air Rescue Squadron flew in an Icelandic ground rescue party, including expert skiers, to an airfield at the foot of the glacier. The wreckage was at the level. Efforts to reach the crash site were hampered for several days by blizzards and high winds. When the site was reached on 21 December, all nine crew were dead and supplies dropped within of the wreckage four days before were untouched.
December 18, 1953 (Friday)
December 19, 1953 (Saturday)
- A train crash in Sydenham, New South Wales, killed five people and injured 748.
- The Bridgeport Harbor Light, built in 1851, caught fire and was destroyed while being dismantled to be replaced by an electric beacon. A bonfire burning unsalvageable wood ignited the fire that destroyed the lighthouse.
- Died:
- Robert Millikan, 85, American physicist and Nobel laureate
- Vincent P. Burke CBE, 75, Newfoundland educator, member of the Senate of Canada
- Ellsworth Faris, 79, American sociologist
December 20, 1953 (Sunday)
December 21, 1953 (Monday)
December 22, 1953 (Tuesday)
December 23, 1953 (Wednesday)
- Former Soviet politician and NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria was âÂÂtried by special sessionâ by the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union, convicted of treason, terrorism, and counter revolutionary activity, and executed by firing squad.
- Born: John Callahan, American soap opera actor, in Brooklyn, New York City (d. 2020)
- Died: Lavrentiy Beria, 54, Soviet politician and NKVD chief, executed by firing squad
December 24, 1953 (Thursday)
December 25, 1953 (Friday)
December 26, 1953 (Saturday)
December 27, 1953 (Sunday)
December 28, 1953 (Monday)
December 29, 1953 (Tuesday)
December 30, 1953 (Wednesday)
- The first color television sets went on sale for about US$1,175 â RCA Model 5 Prototype, which became CT-100, and Admiral C1617A.
December 31, 1953 (Thursday)
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