1948: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Sports: Update Vulcan Bowl location)
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===Sports===
===Sports===
* [[January 1]]: [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] lost to Texas 27-7 in the Sugar Bowl.
* January 1: Central State (Ohio) defeated Grambling State 27-21 at [[Rickwood Field]] in the seventh [[Vulcan Bowl]].
* January 1: Arkansas defeated William & Mary 21-19 in the first [[Dixie Bowl]] at [[Legion Field]].
* [[August 31]]: [[Jim Wasdell]] recorded a [[Birmingham Barons records|Barons record]] six hits against Chattanooga.
* [[December 4]]: The [[1948 Iron Bowl]], won by [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] 55-0, was the first to be held at [[Legion Field]].
* The [[Southeastern Conference]] moved its headquarters to [[Birmingham]].
* The [[Southeastern Conference]] moved its headquarters to [[Birmingham]].
* The [[1948 Birmingham Barons]] drew 445,926 to [[Rickwood Field]] and won the Dixie Series over Fort Worth.
* The [[1948 Birmingham Barons]] drew 445,926 to [[Rickwood Field]] and won the Dixie Series over Fort Worth.
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* The [[Birmingham Vulcans (SPBL)|Birmingham Vulcans]] and [[Bessemer Whiz Kids]] of the Southern Professional Basketball League played their final seasons.
* The [[Birmingham Vulcans (SPBL)|Birmingham Vulcans]] and [[Bessemer Whiz Kids]] of the Southern Professional Basketball League played their final seasons.
* [[Ted McCrary]] coached the [[Samford Bulldogs football|Samford Bulldogs]] to a 4-4-0 season.
* [[Ted McCrary]] coached the [[Samford Bulldogs football|Samford Bulldogs]] to a 4-4-0 season.
* [[January 1]]: [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] lost to Texas 27-7 in the Sugar Bowl.
* [[January 1]]: Central State (Ohio) defeated Grambling State 27-21 in the 7th [[Vulcan Bowl]] at [[Legion Field]].
* January 1: Arkansas defeated William & Mary 21-19 in the first [[Dixie Bowl]] at [[Legion Field]].
* [[August 31]]: [[Jim Wasdell]] recorded a [[Birmingham Barons records|Barons record]] six hits against Chattanooga.
* [[December 4]]: The [[1948 Iron Bowl]], won by [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] 55-0, was the first to be held at [[Legion Field]].


==Individuals==
==Individuals==

Revision as of 07:33, 15 May 2015

1948, a leap year, was the 77th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Media

Sports

Individuals

Births

Graduations

Marriages

Awards

Deaths

Works

Jupe, created in 1948

Buildings

Music

Film, Radio and TV

Context

In 1948 the first color newsreel was produced. Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated. The winter olympics were held in St Moritz, Switzerland and the summer olympics in London, England. The Supreme Court ruled that religious instruction in schools is unconstitutional. The Hell's Angels gang was founded. President Truman signed the Marshall Plan. The U. S. House Un-American Activities Committee held its first televised hearings. The Cleveland Indians won the World Series over the Boston Braves. Harry Truman was reelected over Thomas Dewey and Strom Thurmond. The UN adopted its Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Notable 1948 births include those of musicians Stevie Nicks, Robert Plant, Cat Stevens and Ronnie Van Zant, actors Billy Crystal, Samuel L. Jackson and Rhea Perlman, hockey player Bobby Orr, composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, broadcaster Bryant Gumbel, politicians Howard Dean and Al Gore, and fitness guru Richard Simmons.

Among those who died in 1948 were Gandhi, inventor Orville Wright, baseball player Babe Ruth, and former First Lady Edith Roosevelt.

Notable films included The Red Shoes, The Three Musketeers, Laurence Olivier's Hamlet, and The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. The most popular singles included Pee Wee Hunt's "12th Street Rag" and Art Mooney's "I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover". The 1948 Nobel Prize for literature went to T. S. Eliot while the Pulitzer Prize went to James Michener for Tales of the South Pacific. Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Names Desire won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

1940s
<< 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 >>
Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works