Events relating to north america

Delegates from 39 nations meet at Dumbarton Oaks, near Washington DC, to plan the future United Nations

Igor Stravinsky's Symphony in Three Movements, premiered in New York, derives from music written for or inspired by films

Russian-born novelist Vladimir Nabokov becomes a US citizen

President Franklin D. Roosevelt dies and is succeeded by his vice-president, Harry S. Truman

US scientists succeed in exploding an atom bomb at Alamogordo, a test site in the New Mexican desert

TheAllies celebrate V-J Day – victory over Japan and the end of the war

Wernher von Braun and his team of scientists are taken to the USA to develop the German V-2 rocket into an intercontinental ballistic missile

Richard Wright publishes Black Boy, an account of his early life in Mississippi and then Chicago

Eudora Welty sets her novel Delta Wedding in a contemporary southern plantation

A new style of American painting, involving artists such as Arshile Gorky and Jackson Pollock, is given the name Abstract Expressionism

US pediatrician Benjamin Spock recommends a permissive approach in his Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care

Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh, set in a down-and-out bar of the kind he had known in his youth, is performed in New York

The marriage of George Balanchine and Maria Tallchief unites two major stars of the US ballet scene

Robert Lowell's second collection, Lord Weary's Castle, contains 'The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket' and 'Mr Edwards and the Spider'

ENIAC is the world's first general-purpose electronic calculator

Ezra Pound, charged with treason for his wartime broadcasts, begins twelve years in a US hospital for the criminally insane

US poet Elizabeth Bishop publishes her first collection of poems, North and South

John D. Rockefeller Jr. gives land along the East River in New York for a permanent United Nations headquarters

US scientist Edwin Land demonstrates a new device, the Polaroid camera, to the Optical Society of America

The US Congress passes a National Security Act, setting up the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

President Truman defines postwar US policy by pledging support for any nation defending itself against Communism

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