British intelligence officers announced that exhaustive investigation indicated that
Adolf Hitler and
Eva Braun had married on April 29 and then committed suicide in a Berlin bunker the following day.[1]
21 German bankers were arrested on suspicion of war crimes.[2]
Irvin Charles Mollison was sworn in as a U.S. Customs Court judge in New York City, becoming the first African-American to serve on the federal bench within the continental United States.[4]
British commander E.C. Mansergh ordered all Indonesians to surrender their arms by 6 a.m. Saturday or face "all the naval, army and air forces under my command."[7] That night President
Sukarno of the unrecognized Indonesian Republic appealed to President Truman and Prime Minister
Attlee to intervene in the conflict to prevent bloodshed.[8]
In Budapest, former Hungarian Prime Minister
László Bárdossy was sentenced to death.[9]
Regular civic air traffic began between London and New York.[9]
Indonesian republican troops counterattacked during the
Battle of Surabaya.[2] November 10 is annually celebrated as
Heroes Day to commemorate the event.
Five Germans were hanged for the murder of six American airmen in the
Rüsselsheim massacre of August 26, 1944.[10]
The
Indochinese Communist Party voluntarily dissolved itself "in order to destroy all misunderstanding, domestic and foreign, which can hinder the liberation of our country."[11]
Charles de Gaulle made a broadcast to the people of France announcing that he was handing back his mandate as president to the French Assembly because of "excessive demands regarding ministerial posts."[15] De Gaulle said he was willing to continue serving as president but would refuse to entrust a Communist with "any post related to foreign affairs."[16]
Sentencing was handed down in the
Belsen Trial.
Josef Kramer,
Irma Grese and nine others were sentenced to death on the gallows as Nazi war criminals.[17]
British Conservative Deputy Leader
Anthony Eden told the House of Commons that the first duty of the United Nations should be to "take the sting out of nationalism." Eden also said that "the United Nations ought to review their Charter in the light of the discoveries about atomic energy which were not before us when the Charter was drawn up. Nothing showed more clearly the hold that nationalism has upon us all than the decision of that Conference to retain the power of
veto. Surely in the light of what has passed since San Francisco, the United Nations ought to look at that again, and, having looked at it, I hope they will unanimously decide that the retention of such a provision in the Charter is an anachronism in the modern world."[20]
The famous
Hollywood Canteen, which catered to Allied servicemen and women during the war, shut its doors.
General
Douglas MacArthur ordered the Japanese government to submit a program to tax away all the wartime profits of Japanese firms and individuals.[23]
Zionist terrorists blew up two coast guard stations near
Tel Aviv. The attack was believed to have been made in retaliation for the seizure of the Greek schooner Dimitrius off the Palestine coast with 20 illegal Jewish immigrants.[24]
10,000 British troops swept into the
Sharon plain and forced their way into the kibbutzim of
Shefayim and
Givat Haim with clubs and tear gas bombs searching for the terrorists in the previous day's attack. They encountered some opposition and killed nine Jews and wounded 75.[2][24]
U.S. Attorney General
Tom C. Clark said that
Ezra Pound had been indicted for a second time on 19 counts of treason for accepting payment from Fascist Italy in exchange for making propaganda broadcasts during the war.[25]
Patrick J. Hurley resigned as U.S. Ambassador to China and criticized professional and career diplomats he claimed were sabotaging American foreign policy. President Truman appointed General
George C. Marshall to replace him.[26]
British fascist
John Amery surprised the nation when he pleaded guilty to high treason for making broadcasts for the Nazis, even though British law did not allow any sentence for the crime other than death. His entire hearing lasted eight minutes.[27][28]
Dynamo Moscow played the final game of its UK goodwill tour, earning a 2–2 draw against
Rangers before 90,000 fans at
Ibrox to finish the tour with two wins, no losses and two draws. Dynamo returned to Moscow as heroes, having proven that Britain was no longer the dominant football power.[29][30]
Died:Dwight F. Davis, 66, American tennis player and politician
Rudolf Hess dramatically told the tribunal at Nuremberg that he had faked amnesia, fooling Allied medical experts and his own attorney, but that he was now prepared to stand trial and "bear full responsibility for everything I have done."[31]
Died:Heinz-Wilhelm Eck, 29, German U-boat commander (executed as a war criminal for ordering his crew to shoot the survivors of the Greek merchant ship Peleus in March 1944)
References
^
abYust, Walter, ed. (1946). 1946 Britannica Book of the Year. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. p. 14.
^
abcdefghi"1945". MusicAndHistory.com. Archived from
the original on September 23, 2013. Retrieved March 28, 2016.