March 1954

March 1, 1954 (Monday)

  • U.S. officials announce that a hydrogen bomb test (Castle Bravo) has been conducted on Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean.
  • U.S. Capitol shooting incident: Four Puerto Rican nationalists open fire in the United States House of Representatives chamber and wound five; they are apprehended by security guards.

March 2, 1954 (Tuesday)

March 3, 1954 (Wednesday)

March 4, 1954 (Thursday)

March 5, 1954 (Friday)

March 6, 1954 (Saturday)

March 7, 1954 (Sunday)

  • Died:

March 8, 1954 (Monday)

March 9, 1954 (Tuesday)

March 10, 1954 (Wednesday)

March 11, 1954 (Thursday)

March 12, 1954 (Friday)

  • Finland and Germany officially end their state of war.

March 13, 1954 (Saturday)

March 14, 1954 (Sunday)

March 15, 1954 (Monday)

March 16, 1954 (Tuesday)

March 17, 1954 (Wednesday)

March 18, 1954 (Thursday)

March 19, 1954 (Friday)

  • Joey Giardello knocks out Willie Tory at Madison Square Garden, in the first televised boxing prize fight to be shown in color.

March 20, 1954 (Saturday)

March 21, 1954 (Sunday)

March 22, 1954 (Monday)

March 23, 1954 (Tuesday)

  • In Vietnam, the Viet Minh capture the main airstrip of Dien Bien Phu. The remaining French Army units there are partially isolated.

March 24, 1954 (Wednesday)

March 25, 1954 (Thursday)

  • The 26th Academy Awards ceremony is held.
  • RCA manufactures the first color television set (12-inch screen; price: $1,000)
  • The Soviet Union recognises the sovereignty of East Germany. Soviet troops remain in the country.

March 26, 1954 (Friday)

March 27, 1954 (Saturday)

March 28, 1954 (Sunday)

  • Puerto Rico's first television station, WKAQ-TV, commences broadcasting.
  • Trial of A. L. Zissu and 12 other Zionist leaders ends with harsh sentences in Communist Romania.
  • The British troopship HMT Empire Windrush suffers an engine-room explosion and fire. Four crew are killed but 1494 crew and passengers are saved. The abandoned ship sinks two days later.

March 29, 1954 (Monday)

  • A C-47 transport with French nurse Geneviève de Galard on board is wrecked on the runway at Dien Bien Phu.
  • Born:Karen Ann Quinlan, American right-to-die cause célèbre (d. 1985)

March 30, 1954 (Tuesday)

March 31, 1954 (Wednesday)

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gollark: The best you could do is some sort of web interface which you can access on your phone which lets you receive/send messages.
gollark: Some mobile carriers let you email certain addresses to send texts to people using them, but not *all*, and I don't think you could receive any.
gollark: I mean, you probably couldn't do SMS (texts) to real-world phones unless you paid for it with something or other, but yes.
gollark: Yes.

References

  1. History Study Board of The General Staff (1991). History of the General Staff in the Resistance War against the French 1945–1954 (in Vietnamese). Ha Noi: People's Army Publishing House. p. 799.
  2. Kristian Sotriffer (1972). Expressionism and Fauvism. McGraw-Hill. p. 133.
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