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March 1939
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The following events occurred in March 1939:

March 1, 1939 (Wednesday)

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March 2, 1939 (Thursday)

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  • Cardinal Secretary of State Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli was elected the new pope. He took the name of Pius XII.
  • France named 82-year-old Philippe Pétain as the ambassador to Francoist Spain.[3]
  • A book titled The Strange Death of Adolf Hitler was published in the United States, immediately drawing worldwide attention. Written anonymously, the book claimed that high officials within the Nazi Party assassinated Hitler the night before the Munich Conference by arranging for his omelette to be poisoned. The book claimed that Hitler was now being impersonated by body doubles.[4][5] The book was made into a film of the same name in 1943.
  • Died: Howard Carter, 64, English archaeologist

March 3, 1939 (Friday)

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March 4, 1939 (Saturday)

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March 5, 1939 (Sunday)

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March 6, 1939 (Monday)

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March 7, 1939 (Tuesday)

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March 8, 1939 (Wednesday)

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March 9, 1939 (Thursday)

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March 10, 1939 (Friday)

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March 11, 1939 (Saturday)

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  • A new cabinet was formed in Slovakia without including a single member of the old Tiso government.[16]
  • Died: William Miller, 92, Australian multisport athlete

March 12, 1939 (Sunday)

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March 13, 1939 (Monday)

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  • Jozef Tiso went to Berlin and met with Adolf Hitler. Tiso agreed to call a meeting of the Slovak parliament and proclaim independence.[18]
  • The Pan-German League was dissolved.[19]
  • Born: Neil Sedaka, singer, pianist and record producer, in Brooklyn, New York
  • Died: Otto Rahn, 35, German writer, medievalist and SS officer (found frozen to death, ruled suicide)

March 14, 1939 (Tuesday)

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  • Tiso returned to Bratislava and addressed the Slovak parliament, which then unanimously approved the declaration of an independent Slovak Republic.[20]
  • Czechoslovak president Emil Hácha went to Berlin to see Hitler, arriving shortly before midnight.[21]
  • The first trial of the Philadelphia poison ring case began. Herman Petrillo, one of four defendants charged with a total of fifty counts of murder, conspiracy and fraud, was the first to go on trial.[22]

March 15, 1939 (Wednesday)

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  • Adolf Hitler and Emil Hácha met in the Reich Chancellery after midnight. Hitler announced that the German army had orders to invade Czechoslovakia at 6:00 a.m. and unless Hácha ordered the Czechoslovak military to refrain from offering any resistance, the country would face massive destruction. Hácha collapsed during the harangue, but recovered enough to sign a document claiming that he had "confidently placed the fate of the Czech people and country in the hands of the Führer and German Reich." At 4:30 a.m. Hácha broadcast a radio message to his people urging them to remain calm.[20][21]
  • The Nazis marched unopposed into Czechoslovakia. That evening, Hitler and other Nazi leaders entered Prague.[21]
  • The Ruthenian region of Czechoslovakia declared independence as Carpatho-Ukraine.
  • Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and Fawzia Fuad of Egypt were married in Cairo.[23]
  • Born: Alicia Freilich, writer, in Caracas, Venezuela

March 16, 1939 (Thursday)

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  • The dismemberment of Czechoslovakia was completed with the proclamation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.[21]
  • Hungarian soldiers marched into the Carpatho-Ukrainian capital of Khust with little resistance.[24]
  • German troops marched into Prešov. There had been some question as to whether the city was Slovak or Ruthenian territory, but the Germans settled the matter by getting there before the Hungarians did.[24]
  • The Reich Propaganda Ministry sent a confidential note to the German daily press explaining that the term "Großdeutsches Weltreich ("Greater German Empire") was undesirable because it was "reserved for future opportunities."[25]
  • Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí discovered that the store window display he had designed for Bonwit Teller on Fifth Avenue had been altered without his knowledge. Two mannequins, one of which had been scantily attired in a negligee of green feathers, had been replaced by mannequins dressed in suits. Dalí cursed out the management, entered his window display and pulled a bathtub (which was also part of the display) free from its moorings, accidentally causing the tub to slip free and crash through the window along with Dalí himself. The artist was arrested for mischief but later cleared of charges.[26]
  • Principal photography of The Wizard of Oz ends.
  • Born: Carlos Bilardo, footballer and manager, in Buenos Aires, Argentina

March 17, 1939 (Friday)

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March 18, 1939 (Saturday)

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March 19, 1939 (Sunday)

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March 20, 1939 (Monday)

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  • Germany issued an ultimatum to Lithuania demanding the Klaipėda Region, also known as the Memel Territory.
  • Casado's representatives met with Nationalists at an airport near Burgos to discuss an armistice.[10]
  • The United States withdrew its ambassador to Germany over the Nazi seizure of Czechoslovakia.[7]
  • More than 5,000 works of "Degenerate Art" were allegedly burned in the yard of the Berlin fire station. However, there are no official records of the event (in contrast to the Nazi book burnings, which were held in public and well documented), and so little is known about the burning that it is not even certain whether it actually took place.[30]
  • Born: Brian Mulroney, 18th Prime Minister of Canada, in Baie-Comeau, Quebec (d. 2024)

March 21, 1939 (Tuesday)

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March 22, 1939 (Wednesday)

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March 23, 1939 (Thursday)

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  • Between 5 and 7 a.m. German troops crossed into Memel. 31 ships of the German fleet arrived at the port at 10:20 a.m. Aboard the Deutschland, Hitler signed the decree formally turning the Territory over to Germany.[34]
  • Hungarian troops marched into the Slovak Republic.[7]

March 24, 1939 (Friday)

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March 25, 1939 (Saturday)

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  • Italy gave Albania an ultimatum demanding that a protectorate be established over the country and Italian troops be stationed within Albanian borders.[38]
  • Born: Toni Cade Bambara, author, filmmaker and activist, in New York City (d. 1995)

March 26, 1939 (Sunday)

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March 27, 1939 (Monday)

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March 28, 1939 (Tuesday)

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March 29, 1939 (Wednesday)

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March 30, 1939 (Thursday)

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March 31, 1939 (Friday)

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References

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