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May 1959

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May 28, 1959: Spider monkey Miss Baker...
... launched into outer space with rhesus monkey Miss Able

The following events occurred in May 1959:

May 1, 1959 (Friday)

May 2, 1959 (Saturday)

  • Four white men in Tallahassee, Florida, kidnapped and raped a black woman, Betty Jean Owens, near the campus of Florida A & M University, beginning a case that attracted nationwide attention. Ultimately, an all-white jury convicted the four men, and on June 22, Judge W. May Walker sentenced them to life in prison.
  • Jerry Unser Jr. was fatally injured while practicing for the Indianapolis 500. Unser's car struck a retaining wall at 133 miles per hour (214 km/h) and burst into flame, and he died 15 days later from his burns. As a result, Indy racing officials required all drivers to wear fire-resistant suits in practice and in competition.

May 3, 1959 (Sunday)

  • A body was found in the shallow waters of a slough (wetland) of the Columbia River near Camas, Washington, and soon confirmed to be that of 10-year-old Susan Martin, one of five members of a Portland, Oregon, family that had vanished almost five months earlier. On December 7, 1958, Ken and Barbara Martin, and their three daughters, had left home to buy a Christmas tree, and never returned. The mystery garnered national attention. The next day, the body of 12-year-old Virginia Martin was found at the Bonneville Dam. No trace of the other three victims was ever located, nor was their car, a red and white station wagon. After more than sixty years, the mystery of what happened to the Martin family would remain unsolved.

May 4, 1959 (Monday)

  • The first Grammy Awards were bestowed by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, in a ceremony held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills. The Music from Peter Gunn, by Henry Mancini, was album of the year, and Doenico Modugno's Volare was song of the year. The Champs' Tequila won the award for best rhythm & blues performance. "Grammy" is an abbreviation for the Gramophone Award.
  • On a day on which a white man was exonerated from charges of rape of a black woman, and a black man convicted of rape of a white woman, Robert Williams of the NAACP declared in Monroe, North Carolina, "We must meet violence with violence".
  • In a rare appearance before Congress, former U.S. President Harry S. Truman testified in favor of a repeal of the two-terms amendment. "You don't have to be very smart to know that an officeholder who is not eligible for re-election loses a lot of influence."

May 5, 1959 (Tuesday)

May 6, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • South Vietnam's President Ngô Đình Diệm promulgated "Law 10/59" to combat opposition by the communist Viet Cong. Under Article I, the death penalty could be invoked for murder and for other crimes, including theft of farm implements, and under Article III, a person found guilty of belonging to "an organization designed to help to prepare or perpetrate" such crimes could be executed. Death was by beheading, and traveling military tribunals brought guillotines along to carry out sentences.
  • The Armed Forces Special Weapons Project, which oversaw the American nuclear arsenal, was reorganized as DASA, the Defense Atomic Support Agency. Later renamed the Defense Nuclear Agency (1971) and then the Defense Special Weapons Agency (1996), the former DASA is now part of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.
  • Pigs were eliminated as Little Joe flight test subjects when studies disclosed that they could not survive long periods of time on their backs. However, McDonnell did use a pig, "Gentle Bess," to test the impact crushable support, and the test was successful.

May 7, 1959 (Thursday)

  • English scientist and novelist C. P. Snow delivered an influential Rede Lecture on The Two Cultures, concerning a perceived breakdown of communication between the sciences and humanities, in the Senate House, University of Cambridge (U.K.)
  • The largest crowd ever to attend a Major League Baseball game up that time —93,103—turned out for an exhibition between the NL Dodgers and the AL Yankees (who won 6–2), at Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, for Roy Campanella Night, to honor the Dodgers catcher who had been paralyzed in a car crash the year before. The record stood for nearly half a century, until March 29, 2008, in another exhibition game at the L.A. Coliseum, when 115,300 came out for a charity game between the Dodgers and the Red Sox (who won 7–4). In a game that did count, Stan Musial of the Cardinals hit his 400th home run in a 4–3 win over the visiting Cubs.
  • Two burglars broke into the apartment of socialite Mary G. Roebling at the Hotel Hildebrecht in Trenton, New Jersey, loaded nearly one million dollars worth of gems and furs into a cardboard box and rode down the hotel elevator for their getaway—where New York City police were waiting for them. The police had been following the pair and their driver since February 2, after being tipped off.

May 8, 1959 (Friday)

May 9, 1959 (Saturday)

  • The legislature for Eritrea voted to become part of Ethiopia, with the President being redesignated as "Chief of the Eritrean Administration under Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia".
  • Alfred H. Fuller, President of the Fuller Brush Company and the son of company founder Alfred C. Fuller, died, along with his wife, when a blown rear tire crashed their Mercedes-Benz near Hawthorne, Nevada.

May 10, 1959 (Sunday)

May 11, 1959 (Monday)

  • Nine clubs from the Transvaal and three from Natal province formed the first professional soccer football league in South Africa. It was designated by its members as the National Football League. In accordance with the apartheid laws in effect at the time, the South African NFL was limited to white players only and would play its first matches on July 4. The original 12 members were Durban City and Durban United (Durban); Benoni United, Brakpan United, Germiston Callies (East Rand); Northern United, Rangers Johannesburg and Southern Park (Johannesburg); Maritzburg Celtic (Pietermaritzburg); Pretoria City and Arcadia Shepherds (Pretoria); and Randfontein (West Rand). In 1978, the all-white NFL would merge with the all-nonwhite National Professional Soccer League (NPSL) under the NPSL name.
  • The foreign ministers of Britain, France, the Soviet Union and the United States met in Geneva for a 17-day conference on the reunification of Germany, without coming to an agreement.
  • A NASA policy concerning Mercury astronauts was issued. The astronauts were subject to the regulations and directives of NASA, and information of unclassified nature reported by the astronauts would be disseminated to the public.

May 12, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • Capital Airlines Flight 75, a turboprop flying from New York to Atlanta, disintegrated at an altitude of 5,000 feet (1,500 m) after encountering severe turbulence, crashing near Chase, Maryland, at 4:16 p.m., killing all 31 people on board. Less than an hour earlier, two of the 44 people on Capital Airlines Flight 983 from Buffalo to Atlanta were killed when the plane slid down a 200-foot (61 m) embankment after skidded off the runway during a stop in Charleston, West Virginia. The pair of disasters marked the first time that two planes from the same airline had crashed on the same day.
picture1picture 2Fisher with Debbie Reynolds, then Elizabeth Taylor
  • Hours after his divorce from Debbie Reynolds became final, Eddie Fisher married Elizabeth Taylor in Las Vegas.
  • From May 12 to 14, an informal meeting of the Mock-Up Inspection Board was held at McDonnell to review changes to the Mercury spacecraft development program resulting from the March mock-up meeting. Besides the review, a number of suggestions were made for changes in the crew space layout to permit more effective use of the controls, particularly when the astronaut was in the pressure suit in a full-pressurized condition. Among suggested changes were the shoulder harness release, the spacecraft compression and decompression handles, the ready switch, and the spacecraft squib switch. Test subjects also found that when in the fully pressurized suit none of the circuit breakers could be reached. McDonnell was directed to act on these problem areas.

May 13, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • The deadline for Communist Pathet Lao troops to lay down their weapons or join the ranks of the Royal Army of Laos expired at noon. One battalion at Xieng Ngeun surrendered peacefully, while the other escaped and continued to fight. Pathet Lao leader Prince Souphanouvong was placed under house arrest two days later, but would become the President of Laos in 1975 after the Communists triumphed over the royal government.

May 14, 1959 (Thursday)

Radio telescope at Jodrell Bank
  • For the first time, radio signals were bounced off the Moon from one station to another. The Jodrell Bank Observatory in Britain transmitted a signal from Britain to the Cambridge Research Center in the United States. In Morse code, Jodrell Bank sent the statement "Jodrell Bank to Air Force Cambridge Research Centre. We will have no trouble with fishing boats on this circuit." The message, a spokesman said, "was a humorous link with the Russian trawlers recently suspected of tampering with Atlantic cables." The next day, Dr. John Evans transmitted a voice message, "Hello U.S.A. This is Jodrell Bank." The station in the U.S. had to reply by conventional means.
  • U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower attended the groundbreaking for the Lincoln Center in New York City, which was witnessed by a crowd of 12,000.
  • Died: Sidney Bechet, 62, American jazz saxophonist

May 15, 1959 (Friday)

  • Generals Richard G. Stilwell and Edward G. Lansdale delivered what was later described as "one of the most influential military documents of the past half century" to President Eisenhower. The report "Training Under the Mutual Security Program (With Emphasis on Development of Leaders)" proposed using the American military to further "political stability, economic growth, and social change" in developing nations.
  • The Caravelle inaugurated passenger jet service for Air France and for the Scandinavian airline SAS.
  • Fidel Castro announced an end to war crimes trials that had been conducted since his takeover of Cuba in January. An unofficial count was that 621 people had been executed for war crimes.

May 16, 1959 (Saturday)

The Triton Fountain

May 17, 1959 (Sunday)

May 18, 1959 (Monday)

May 19, 1959 (Tuesday)

May 20, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • A group of 4,978 Japanese-Americans who had renounced their U.S. citizenship during World War II were restored to citizenship by the U.S. Justice Department.
  • Born: Bronson Pinchot, American actor, as Bronson Poncharavsky in New York City

May 21, 1959 (Thursday)

May 22, 1959 (Friday)

  • Brigadier General Benjamin O. Davis Jr., Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, Headquarters U.S. Air Forces in Europe, Wiesbaden, Germany, was nominated for a temporary promotion to Major General, making him the first African-American to be so nominated. His promotion to two-star rank became effective on June 30 and lasted until May 16, 1960, making him the highest ranking Negro officer in the United States military. A permanent promotion followed in 1962, and Davis attained lieutenant general rank in 1965, retiring in 1998 as the first African-American 4-star general. Davis's father, Benjamin O. Davis Sr., had been the first African-American General, attaining the rank of brigadier general in 1940.
  • The Project Mercury balloon flight test program was canceled. Space Task Group officials determined that the spacecraft could be tested environmentally in the Lewis Research Center's altitude wind tunnel. This included correct temperature and altitude simulations to 80,000 feet (24,000 m). The pilot could exercise the attitude control system and retrorockets could be fired in the tunnel. Because an active contract did exist with the Air Force, it was decided the two balloon drop tests with uncrewed boilerplate spacecraft would be accomplished.

May 23, 1959 (Saturday)

  • A 2+1⁄2-year-old boy in Hazelwood, Missouri, was attacked and killed by a pack of at least five dogs. Six weeks later, in Novinger, Missouri, on July 3, another two-year-old boy would be killed by dogs.

May 24, 1959 (Sunday)

  • The Anglo-Soviet Long Term Trade Agreement was signed, marking the first significant agreement between the U.S.S.R. and a Western nation since World War II. The five-year trade pact was renewed in 1964 and 1969.
John Foster Dulles, 1888–1959

May 25, 1959 (Monday)

Astronaut Wally Schirra preparing to board Johnsville centrifuge in November 1960

May 26, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • Harvey Haddix of the Pittsburgh Pirates did what no other baseball player had ever accomplished by pitching a perfect game – no hits, no runs, no errors—for 12 innings in Milwaukee, but Milwaukee Braves pitcher Lew Burdette was also hurling a shutout, and the score remained 0–0 going into the 13th inning. Félix Mantilla reached first base and the Braves went on to win 1–0. Haddix, who almost sat out the game because he was recovering from the flu, said later that he knew he had been pitching a no-hitter, but did not realize he had had a perfect game going until later.
  • The 1964 Summer Olympic Games were awarded to Tokyo, receiving 34 of the 58 votes cast at the IOC meeting in Munich. Runner up was Detroit with 10 votes, followed by Vienna and Brussels.
  • In fiction, Sally Brown, Charlie Brown's little sister, was born in the comic strip Peanuts.

May 27, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • Nikita Khrushchev's ultimatum for action on Berlin expired. The Soviet premier had notified the Western powers on November 27, 1958, that if occupying armies were not withdrawn from West Berlin within six months, access through East Germany to the city would be closed off. The Geneva talks that began on May 11 halted action on the ultimatum. The late U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who had said in 1958, "We are not afraid of May 27, 1959", was buried on that date, and the participants in the Geneva talks, including Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, attended the ceremonies at Arlington.
  • Eight former engineers of Sperry Rand Corporation formed National Semiconductor for the purpose of producing transistors for electronic products.

May 28, 1959 (Thursday)

  • Two female monkeys became the first animals launched by NASA into outer space and returned safely to Earth. Able, a 7-pound (3.2 kg) rhesus, and Baker, a 1-pound (0.45 kg) spider monkey, were placed in the nose cone of a Jupiter rocket and sent 300 miles (480 km) aloft from Cape Canaveral, and recovered, unharmed, in the Caribbean Sea 1,100 miles (1,800 km) away.
  • A train derailment killed 85 people in Indonesia, when the passenger train fell into a ravine near Tasikmalaya in the West Java province. Sabotage of the tracks was suspected in the crash.
  • A quick-release, side exit hatch design was approved for the Mercury spacecraft. The design consisted of a continuous double explosive train to assure that all bolts were actually broken upon activation of the device. Factors in the design included the specific measurements of the largest Mercury Seven astronauts in fully-pressurized suits, and an astronaut's ability to reach any control under both routine and emergency conditions.
  • North American Aviation delivered the first two Little Joe booster airframes, and noted that the four remaining were on fabrication schedule. The planned program was moving smoothly, for rocket motors to be used in the first flight were available at Wallops Station, Virginia, the test flight launching site. In addition, procurement of the test spacecraft incorporating Mercury flight items was on schedule, and Space Task Group personnel had instrumented the first spacecraft.

May 29, 1959 (Friday)

May 30, 1959 (Saturday)

  • The Auckland Harbour Bridge, 1020 meters (3,348 feet) long, opened in New Zealand.
  • In elections in Singapore, the Peoples Action Party, led by Lee Kuan Yew, won in a landslide, capturing 43 of the 51 seats in Parliament.
  • After the calling off of the 1955 Anglo-Iraqi Agreement, the last British troops in Iraq left peacefully.
  • The first trial of a hovercraft took place at Cowes in Britain.
  • American driver Rodger Ward won the 1959 Indianapolis 500.
  • Louisiana Governor Earl K. Long voluntarily entered a mental hospital in Texas and spent the next four weeks fighting efforts to have him committed.
  • Nicaragua was invaded when two planes with rebel soldiers, under the direction of Nicaraguan-exile Enrique Lacayo Farfan, landed and fought with government troops. The rebellion was put down by June 12.
  • Died: Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, 61, Argentinian journalist

May 31, 1959 (Sunday)

  • Memorial Day Weekend closed at midnight, and was counted as a two-day holiday weekend for the last time, with May 30 falling on a Saturday. The accidental death toll broke the record for a 54-hour weekend. The 310 traffic fatalities recorded by the National Safety Council from 6 pm Friday to Midnight Sunday far exceeded the 1953 record of 241. There were 150 more accidental deaths, including 101 drownings, for a total of 460 dead in 54 hours. When May 30 fell on a Saturday again in 1964, Memorial Day weekend was counted as a three-day period starting on Thursday evening.

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