The following events occurred in June 1948:
June 1, 1948 (Tuesday)
June 2, 1948 (Wednesday)
- The UN Security Council decided that both Israel and the Arab states had accepted unconditionally its demand for a four-week truce despite reservations by both sides, and asked the UN mediator Folke Bernadotte to set a time for the ceasefire order to go into effect.
- The first Battle of Negba was fought. The Egyptian army attacked the kibbutz of Negba but was repulsed.
- The British House of Lords voted 181âÂÂ28 to reject the five-year moratorium on capital punishment that the House of Commons had approved.
- About 3,500 people attended a rally at the Washington Monument organized by followers of Henry A. Wallace to urge enactment of civil rights legislation and protest the Mundt-Nixon Communist Control Bill.
- Born: Jerry Mathers, actor, in Sioux City, Iowa
- Died: hanged at Landsberg Prison for crimes against humanity:
- Viktor Brack, 43, German Nazi;
- Karl Brandt, 44, German Nazi SS officer;
- Karl Gebhardt, 50, German doctor;
- Waldemar Hoven, 45, German Nazi physician;
- Joachim Mrugowsky, 42, German Nazi hygienist;
- Wolfram Sievers, 42, German Nazi
June 3, 1948 (Thursday)
June 4, 1948 (Friday)
June 5, 1948 (Saturday)
June 6, 1948 (Sunday)
June 7, 1948 (Monday)
June 8, 1948 (Tuesday)
June 9, 1948 (Wednesday)
June 10, 1948 (Thursday)
- The Battle of Nitzanim ended in Egyptian victory.
- By a vote of 78âÂÂ10, the US Senate passed a selective draft bill authorizing up to 250,000 men aged 19 to 25 to be called for up to two years of military service.
- In Puerto Rico Law 53, better known as the Gag Law, was signed into law with the goal of suppressing the independence movement in Puerto Rico. The law would remain in force until 1957.
- The radio anthology series Hallmark Playhouse premiered on CBS.
June 11, 1948 (Friday)
- The Arab-Israeli truce went into effect.
- The Danish passenger steamship Kjobenhavn struck a mine in the Kattegat and sank with the loss of 141 of the 402 people aboard.
- A rhesus monkey named Albert I became the first primate astronaut when he was launched inside a V-2 rocket (itself designated "Albert") in White Sands, New Mexico with virtually no publicity. He died of suffocation during the flight.
- Died: Hugh Dorsey, 76, American lawyer and 62nd Governor of Georgia
June 12, 1948 (Saturday)
June 13, 1948 (Sunday)
- In the first immigration case since the Arab-Israeli truce began, the liner Kedmah anchored in Tel Aviv from Marseille carrying 420 people. Under the truce terms, all men between the ages of 14 and 45 were to be interned in a refugee camp if they immigrated to Israel during the four-week truce period.
- Born: Garnet Bailey, ice hockey player, in Lloydminster, Saskatchewan, Canada (d. 2001)
- Died: Osamu Dazai, 38, Japanese author (suicide by drowning); Jimmy Frise, 56, Canadian cartoonist
June 14, 1948 (Monday)
- Klement Gottwald was unanimously elected President of Czechoslovakia by the National Assembly.
- Russian authorities in Germany halted shipment of coal from the British occupation zone to Berlin and closed the Elbe River bridge on the main Berlin-Helmstedt highway, allegedly for "repairs."
- Half of London's dockworkers began a wildcat strike in protest of eleven dockers being punished for refusing to handle a "dirty" cargo of zinc oxide unless they were paid more.
- A prototype of TV Guide appeared on newsstands in New York, originally called TeleVision Guide. The first cover subject was Gloria Swanson, who at the time was starring in a short-lived television series, The Gloria Swanson Hour.
- Born: Linda Clifford, singer and actress, in New York City; Steve Hunter, rock guitarist, in Decatur, Illinois; Laurence Yep, writer, in San Francisco, California
- Died: Gertrude Atherton, 90, American author
June 15, 1948 (Tuesday)
June 16, 1948 (Wednesday)
June 17, 1948 (Thursday)
- United Airlines Flight 624: A Douglas DC-6 airliner crashed near Aristes, Pennsylvania, killing all 39 passengers and 4 crew aboard.
- The Battle of Shangcai began during the Chinese Civil War.
- US Congress overturned a presidential veto for the third time in four days. By a vote of 297âÂÂ102, the House overrode Truman's veto of the Reed-Bulwinkle Bill exempting railway rate agreements from antitrust laws.
- The US Senate shelved the controversial Mundt-Nixon bill after deciding there was not enough time left to consider it during that congressional session. The bill would be revived in 1950 as the MundtâÂÂFerguson Communist Registration Bill.
- Born: Dave Concepción, baseball player, in Ocumare de la Costa, Venezuela
- Died: Earl Carroll, 54, American theatrical producer, director, songwriter and composer (killed on United Airlines Flight 624); Changampuzha Krishna Pillai, 36, Malayalam poet (tuberculosis); Beryl Wallace, 39?, American dancer, singer and actress (killed on United Airlines Flight 624)
June 18, 1948 (Friday)
June 19, 1948 (Saturday)
- After a 19-hour overnight filibuster in the US Senate, the House passed a stop-gap bill for the induction of 21 months of military service for men aged 19 through 25.
- The Battle of Shangcai ended in Communist victory.
- The biographical film Fighting Father Dunne starring Pat O'Brien was released.
- Born: Nick Drake, singer-songwriter, in Rangoon, Burma (d. 1974); Lea Laven, pop singer, in Haukipudas, Finland; Phylicia Rashad, actress, in Houston, Texas
June 20, 1948 (Sunday)
- US Congress completed a marathon 44 hour and 15 minute session passing a whirlwind of legislation, including a foreign aid bill appropriating over $6 billion for global relief. It was the second-longest Senate session in history, surpassed only by one in 1915 that lasted 54 hours 10 minutes.
- The first of the series of Cairo bombings occurred, killing 22 Jews.
- The new Deutsche Mark was introduced in Western Germany, replacing the Reichsmark.
- The TV variety program The Ed Sullivan Show premiered on CBS under its original title, Toast of the Town. The program would run until 1971, airing 1,068 episodes.
- The Naked and the Dead by Norman Mailer topped The New York Times Fiction Best Seller list for the first of eleven consecutive weeks.
- Born: Ludwig Scotty, President of Nauru, in Anabar, Nauru
- Died: Norah Lindsay, 75, Indian-born English socialite and garden designer
June 21, 1948 (Monday)
- The Republican National Convention opened in Philadelphia. It was the first convention in US history to be televised.
- The Manchester Baby, the world's first electronic stored-program computer, ran its first program.
- Columbia Records held a press conference at the Waldorf Astoria New York to announce a new format of record - the LP, containing up to 22ý minutes of music per side.
- The Gathering Storm, the first volume in Winston Churchill's historical book series The Second World War, was published in the United States.
- The British troopship HMT Empire Windrush arrives at the Port of Tilbury, near London. The passengers on board include one of the first large groups of post-war West Indian immigrants to the United Kingdom,
- Born: Lionel Rose, boxer, in Drouin, Victoria, Australia (d. 2011); Philippe Sarde, film composer, in Hauts-de-Seine, France; Andrzej Sapkowski, fantasy author, in Ã
ÂódÃ
º, Poland
June 22, 1948 (Tuesday)
- Thomas E. Dewey entered a commanding position at the Republican National Convention when Pennsylvania Senator Edward Martin withdrew from consideration and threw his support to Dewey.
- The British drama film Oliver Twist based on the Charles Dickens novel of the same name and starring Alec Guinness, Robert Newton and John Howard Davies premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square in London.
- Born: ShÃ
Âhaku Okumura, SÃ
ÂtÃ
 Zen priest, in Osaka, Japan; Todd Rundgren, musician, songwriter and producer, in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania; Franciszek Smuda, footballer and coach, in Lubomia, Poland (d. 2024)
June 23, 1948 (Wednesday)
- After having funded the project, the U.S. Department of Defense decided against imposing secrecy restrictions on the development of the transistor by Bell Laboratories. The date and its significance were noted 10 years later by Dr. J. P. Molnar, who said that the decision allowed rapid development of the electronics industry.
- The Republican National Convention unanimously adopted a party platform. Pledges included a reduction of public debt, promotion of small business, "eventual statehood for Hawaii, Alaska, and Puerto Rico," a foreign policy "which welcomes co-operation but spurns appeasement," and "a vigorous enforcement of existing laws against Communists."
- The British government called in soldiers to begin unloading food supplies tied up in the 10-day dockworker's strike.
- Born: Larry Coker, American football player and coach, in Okemah, Oklahoma; Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, in Pin Point, Georgia
June 24, 1948 (Thursday)
- The Berlin Blockade began. Russian authorities cut off electricity to Berlin's western zones and halted rail transport between western Germany and the city as well, claiming "technical difficulties." Britain retaliated by banning the shipment of Ruhr coal and steel to the Soviet occupation zone.
- Thomas E. Dewey was unanimously chosen Republican nominee for president on the third ballot at the National Convention. "I thank you with all my heart for your friendship and confidence," Dewey said in his acceptance speech. "I am profoundly sensible of the responsibility that goes with it. I accept your nomination. In all humility, I pray God that I may deserve this opportunity to serve our country."
- The Military Selective Service Act became effective in the United States.
- Born: Patrick Moraz, keyboardist and composer, in Morges, Switzerland
June 25, 1948 (Friday)
June 26, 1948 (Saturday)
- The Berlin Airlift began with 32 flights by US C-47s in West Germany to the Tempelhof Airport in Berlin. 80 tons of provisions were delivered on the first day.
- Civil rights leader A. Philip Randolph called for a civil disobedience campaign to resist the new draft law until President Truman issued an executive order against segregation in the military.
- This week's issue of The New Yorker included the short story "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson.
- Stanley Skridla, 28, was found dead in Oregon, Illinois. His murder is still unsolved.
June 27, 1948 (Sunday)
June 28, 1948 (Monday)
- The Fukui earthquake killed over 3,700 people in Fukui Prefecture, Japan.
- King George VI proclaimed a state of emergency throughout the United Kingdom as the London dock strike threatened to spread to other ports. Prime Minister Clement Attlee gave a radio address telling the strikers, "This is not a strike against capitalists or employers. It is a strike against your mates; a strike against the housewife; a strike against the common people who have difficulties enough."
- Folke Bernadotte submitted proposals to both sides in the Arab-Israeli conflict that he hoped would "lay a basis for a solution of the Palestine question."
- TitoâÂÂStalin Split: A Cominform Resolution accused the Communist Party of Yugoslavia of departing from communism by "undertaking an entirely wrong policy on the principal question of foreign and internal politics." Following the resolution, the Party was expelled from Cominform and the Informbiro period began in Yugoslavia.
- Columbia Records released the very first LP, a recording of the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto by Nathan Milstein and the New York Philharmonic.
- Ronald Reagan got a divorce from his first wife, Jane Wyman.
- Lotte Group, a confectionery and global conglomerate in South Korea and Japan was founded.
- Born: Kathy Bates, actress, in Memphis, Tennessee; Deborah Moggach, novelist and screenwriter, in England
June 29, 1948 (Tuesday)
- The Central Committee of Yugoslavia's Communist Party defied the Cominform by issuing a point-by-point refutation of the Cominform's charges and making it clear that Yugoslavia would not be dictated to by the Soviet Union and other Cominform powers and would only discuss the dispute in a "basis of equality."
- London dock workers voted to end their 16-day strike and go back to work rather than face the government's threat to invoke its broad emergency powers.
- The body of Mary Jane Reed, 17, was found in Oregon, Illinois. Her murder is still unsolved.
- Born: Leo Burke, professional wrestler, born Leonce Cormier in Dorchester, New Brunswick, Canada (d. 2024); Fred Grandy, actor and politician, in Sioux City, Iowa; Ian Paice, rock drummer (Deep Purple), in Nottingham, England.
June 30, 1948 (Wednesday)
- A federal court in Boston sentenced Robert Henry Best to life in prison for broadcasting Nazi propaganda during the war.
- A Bulgarian Junkers Ju 52 flying from Varna to Sofia with 17 passengers aboard was hijacked by seven anti-Communists who killed the pilot and radio operator, then flew the plane to Istanbul where they sought political asylum.
- The last British soldiers left Palestine through the port of Haifa.
- Bob Lemon of the Cleveland Indians pitched a 2-0 no-hitter against the Detroit Tigers at Briggs Stadium.
- The musical film Easter Parade starring Judy Garland and Fred Astaire had its world premiere in New York.
- The film Oliver Twist starring Alec Guinness and based on the Charles Dickens novel of the same name premiered in London.
- Born: Raymond Leo Burke, Roman Catholic cardinal prelate, in Richland Center, Wisconsin; Vladimir Yakunin, businessman, in Melenki, Vladimir Oblast, USSR
- Died: Omobono Tenni, 42, Italian motorcycle road racer (killed in an accident during practice)
References