All Events

English author L.P. Hartley sets his novel The Go-Between in the summer of 1900

Black American Malcolm Little, who has joined the Nation of Islam while in prison, adopts the surname X to symbolize his rejection of his slave name

Jomo Kenyatta, charged with having organized the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya, is sentenced to seven years in prison

US microbiologist Jonas Salk announces the discovery of an effective vaccine against polio

Imre Nagy becomes prime minister of Hungary, but is driven out of office two years later by hard-line Communists because of his relative liberalism

Alfred Charles Kinsey completes his study of human sexuality with the publication of Sexual Behaviour in the Human Female

New Zealander Edmund Hillary and the Sherpa Tenzing Norgay stand together on the top of Everest

US author James Baldwin publishes his first novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, set in Harlem

English composer William Walton writes Orb and Sceptre for the coronation of Elizabeth II

The new queen of the United Kingdom, Elizabeth II, is crowned like all her predecessors since 1066 in Westminster Abbey

US abstract expressionist Willem de Kooning exhibits his series Women nos I-VI, on which he has been working since 1938

William Wyler directs Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn in Roman Holiday, a beguiling comedy about a princess's romance in Rome

Dmitry Shostakovich's Tenth Symphony has its first performance in Leningrad nine months after the death of Stalin

South African author Nadine Gordimer publishes her first novel, The Lying Days

French composer Olivier Messiaen uses birdsong with piano and orchestra in his Waking of the Birds

Anglican vicar Chad Varah, using the crypt of a London church, sets up the first branch of what becomes the Samaritans

French actor Jacques Tati directs and stars in the zany comedy Mr Hulot's Holiday

US golfer Ben Hogan wins the US Open, the US Masters and the British Open in a single year

Within the year Marilyn Monroe stars in Niagara, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and How to Marry a Millionaire

Arthur Miller's play The Crucible uses the Salem witch trials as a metaphor for the contemporary paranoia of McCarthyism

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