|
Year 1961 (MCMLXI) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar.
As MAD Magazine pointed out on its cover for the March 1961 issue, this was the first "upside-up" year—i.e., one in which the numerals that form the year look the same as when the numerals are rotated upside down—since 1881, and the last until 6009.
[edit] Events of 1961
[edit] January
- January 20 - John F. Kennedy becomes the 35th President of the United States.
- January 24
- January 25 - In Washington, DC John F. Kennedy delivers the first live presidential news conference. In it, he announces that the Soviet Union has freed the 2 surviving crewmen of a USAF RB-47 reconnaissance plane shot down by Soviet flyers over the Barents Sea July 1, 1960. (see RB-47H shot down)
- January 25 - Acting to halt 'leftist excesses,' a junta composed of 2 army officers and 4 civilians takes over El Salvador, ousting another junta that had ruled for 3 months.
- January 26 - John F. Kennedy appoints Janet G. Travell to be his physician, the first woman to hold this appointment.
- January 30 - President John F. Kennedy delivers his first State of the Union Address.
- January 31 - Ham, a 37 pound male chimpanzee, is rocketed into space aboard Mercury-Redstone 2, in a test of the Project Mercury capsule, designed to carry United States astronauts into space.
[edit] February
- May 3 - French phenomenological philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty dies, age 53, of a stroke, apparently while preparing for a class on Descartes.
- May 4 - Freedom Riders: 13 black and white students with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) leave Washington DC on 2 buses, to test integration laws in bus stations throughout the deep South.
- May 5 - Mercury program: Alan Shepard becomes the first American in space aboard Mercury-Redstone 3.
- May 6 - Tottenham Hotspur F.C. become the first team in the 20th century to win the league and cup double.
- May 8 - Briton George Blake is sentenced to 42 years imprisonment for spying.
- May 14 - American civil rights movement: A Freedom Riders bus is fire-bombed near Anniston, Alabama and the civil rights protestors are beaten by an angry mob.
- May 15 Heinrich Matthaei alone performed the Poly-U-Experiment and was the first human to recognize and understand the genetic code This is the birthdate of modern genetics Hans-Jörg Rheinberger - "Experimentalsysteme - Eine Geschichte der Proteinsynthese im Reagenzglas" Wallstein ISBN 3-89244-454-4
- May 16 - A military coup in South Korea - Park Chung Hee takes over.
- May 19 - Venera program: Venera 1 becomes the first man-made object to fly-by another planet by passing Venus (however, the probe had lost contact with Earth a month earlier and did not send back any data).
- May 21 - American civil rights movement: Alabama Governor John Patterson declares martial law in an attempt to restore order after race riots break out.
- May 24 - American civil rights movement: Freedom Riders are arrested in Jackson, Mississippi for "disturbing the peace" after disembarking from their bus.
- May 25 - Apollo program: President Kennedy announces before a special joint session of Congress his goal to put a man on the Moon before the end of the decade.
- May 27 - Tunku Abdul Rahman, Prime Minister of Malaya, holds a press conference in Singapore, announcing his idea to form the Federation of Malaysia, comprising Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak, Brunei and North Borneo (Sabah).
- May 28 - Peter Benenson's article "The Forgotten Prisoners" is published in several internationally read newspapers. This will later be thought of as the founding of the human rights organization Amnesty International.
- May 30 - Rafael Leónidas Trujillo, totalitarian despot of the Dominican Republic since 1930, is killed in an ambush, putting an end to the second longest-running dictatorship in Latin American history.
- May 31
[edit] August
[edit] September
[edit] October
[edit] November
[edit] December
- December 1 - Netherlands New Guinea raises the new Morning Star flag and changes its name to West Papua.
- December 2 - Cold War: In a nationally broadcast speech, Cuban leader Fidel Castro declares he is a Marxist-Leninist, and that Cuba will adopt Communism.
- December 5 - U.S. President John F. Kennedy gives support to the Volta Dam project in Ghana.
- December 9
- December 10
- December 11
- The Vietnam War officially begins, as the first American helicopters arrive in Saigon along with 400 U.S. personnel.
- Adolf Eichmann is pronounced guilty of crimes against humanity by a panel of 3 Israeli judges.
- December 15 - An Israeli war crimes tribunal sentences Adolf Eichmann to die for his part in the Jewish Holocaust.
- December 17
- December 18 - India occupies Portuguese colonies of Goa, Damao and Diu
- December 19
- Goa is officially ceded to India after 400 years of Portuguese rule.
- Sukarno announces that he will take West Irian by force if necessary.
- December 21 - In Congo, Katangan prime minister Moise Tshombe recognizes the Congolese constitution.
- December 23 - Luxembourg's national holiday, the Grand Duke's Official Birthday, is set on June 23 by Grand Ducal decree.
- December 30 - Congolese troops capture Albert Kalonji of South Kasai (who soon escapes).
- December 31
- The Marshall Plan expires, after having distributed more than $12 billion in foreign aid to rebuild Europe.
- Ireland's first national television station, Telefís Éireann (later RTÉ), begins broadcasting.
[edit] Undated
- "Barbie" gets a boyfriend when the "Ken" doll is introduced.
[edit] Ongoing
[edit] Births
[edit] January-February
- January 1
- January 2
- January 5 - Iris DeMent, American singer-songwriter
- January 8 - Calvin Smith, American athlete
- January 11 - Karl von Habsburg-Lothringen (Károly), Archduke, Prince Imperial of Austria, Prince Royal of Hungary
- January 13 - Julia Louis-Dreyfus, American actress
- January 13 - Suggs, British singer (Madness)
- January 17 - Maia Chiburdanidze, Georgian chess player
- January 18 - Mark Messier, Canadian hockey player
- January 24 - Nastassja Kinski, German-born actress
- January 26 - Wayne Gretzky, Canadian hockey player ("The Great One")
- January 30 - Dexter Scott King, son of Martin Luther King, Jr.
- January 31 - Lloyd Cole, British singer and songwriter
- February 1 - Volker Fried, German field hockey player
- February 3
- February 8 - Vince Neil, American singer
- February 9
- February 10 - George Stephanopoulos, American political consultant and commentator
- February 11
- February 13
- February 14 - Latifa, Tunisian singer
- February 16 - Andy Taylor, British musician (Duran Duran)
- February 22 - Akira Takasaki, Japanese guitarist
- February 25 - Davey Allison, American race car driver (d. 1993)
- February 27 - James Worthy, American basketball player and analyst
- February 28 - Mark Latham, Australian politician
[edit] March-April
|