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1979 in the United States
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Decades:
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See also:
History of the United States (1964–1980)
Timeline of the history of the United States (1970-1990)
List of years in the United States by state or territory
v
t
e
Events from the year 1979 in the United States.
Incumbents
[edit]
Federal government
[edit]
President: Jimmy Carter (D-Georgia)
Vice President: Walter Mondale (D-Minnesota)
Chief Justice: Warren E. Burger (Virginia)
Speaker of the House of Representatives: Tip O'Neill (D-Massachusetts)
Senate Majority Leader: Robert Byrd (D-West Virginia)
Congress: 95th (until January 3), 96th (starting January 3)
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
[edit]
Governor of Alabama: George Wallace (Democratic) (until January 15), Fob James (Democratic) (starting January 15)
Governor of Alaska: Jay Hammond (Republican)
Governor of Arizona: Bruce Babbitt (Democratic)
Governor of Arkansas:
until January 3: David Pryor (Democratic)
January 3-January 9: Joe Purcell (Democratic)
starting January 9: Bill Clinton (Democratic)
Governor of California: Jerry Brown (Democratic)
Governor of Colorado: Richard Lamm (Democratic)
Governor of Connecticut: Ella T. Grasso (Democratic)
Governor of Delaware: Pierre S. du Pont, IV (Republican)
Governor of Florida: Reubin Askew (Democratic) (until January 2), Bob Graham (Democratic) (starting January 2)
Governor of Georgia: George Busbee (Democratic)
Governor of Hawaii: George Ariyoshi (Democratic)
Governor of Idaho: John V. Evans (Democratic)
Governor of Illinois: James R. Thompson (Republican)
Governor of Indiana: Otis R. Bowen (Republican)
Governor of Iowa: Robert D. Ray (Republican)
Governor of Kansas: Robert F. Bennett (Republican) (until January 8), John W. Carlin (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Governor of Kentucky: Julian M. Carroll (Democratic) (until December 11), John Y. Brown Jr. (Democratic) (starting December 11)
Governor of Louisiana: Edwin W. Edwards (Democratic)
Governor of Maine: James B. Longley (Independent) (until January 3), Joseph E. Brennan (Democratic) (starting January 3)
Governor of Maryland: Marvin Mandel (Democratic) (until January 17), Harry R. Hughes (Democratic) (starting January 17)
Governor of Massachusetts: Michael Dukakis (Democratic) (until January 4), Edward J. King (Democratic) (starting January 4)
Governor of Michigan: William Milliken (Republican)
Governor of Minnesota: Rudy Perpich (Democratic) (until January 4), Al Quie (Republican) (starting January 4)
Governor of Mississippi: Cliff Finch (Democratic)
Governor of Missouri: Joseph P. Teasdale (Democratic)
Governor of Montana: Thomas Lee Judge (Democratic)
Governor of Nebraska: J. James Exon (Democratic) (until January 4), Charles Thone (Republican) (starting January 4)
Governor of Nevada: Mike O'Callaghan (Democratic) (until January 1), Robert List (Republican) (starting January 1)
Governor of New Hampshire: Meldrim Thomson Jr. (Republican) (until January 4), Hugh J. Gallen (Democratic) (starting January 4)
Governor of New Jersey: Brendan Byrne (Democratic)
Governor of New Mexico: Jerry Apodaca (Democratic) (until January 1), Bruce King (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Governor of New York: Hugh Carey (Democratic)
Governor of North Carolina: Jim Hunt (Democratic)
Governor of North Dakota: Arthur A. Link (Democratic)
Governor of Ohio: Jim Rhodes (Republican)
Governor of Oklahoma: David L. Boren (Democratic) (until January 8), George Nigh (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Governor of Oregon: Robert W. Straub (Democratic) (until January 8), Victor G. Atiyeh (Republican) (starting January 8)
Governor of Pennsylvania: Milton Shapp (Democratic) (until January 16), Dick Thornburgh (Republican) (starting January 16)
Governor of Rhode Island: J. Joseph Garrahy (Democratic)
Governor of South Carolina: James B. Edwards (Republican) (until January 10), Richard Riley (Democratic) (starting January 10)
Governor of South Dakota: Harvey L. Wollman (Democratic) (until January 1), William J. Janklow (Republican) (starting January 1)
Governor of Tennessee: Ray Blanton (Democratic) (until January 17), Lamar Alexander (Republican) (starting January 17)
Governor of Texas: Dolph Briscoe (Democratic) (until January 16), Bill Clements (Republican) (starting January 16)
Governor of Utah: Scott M. Matheson (Democratic)
Governor of Vermont: Richard A. Snelling (Republican)
Governor of Virginia: John N. Dalton (Republican)
Governor of Washington: Dixy Lee Ray (Democratic)
Governor of West Virginia: Jay Rockefeller (Democratic)
Governor of Wisconsin: Martin J. Schreiber (Democratic) (until January 3), Lee S. Dreyfus (Republican) (starting January 3)
Governor of Wyoming: Edgar J. Herschler (Democratic)
Lieutenant governors
[edit]
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama: Jere Beasley (Democratic) (until January 15), George McMillan (Democratic) (starting January 15)
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska: Terry Miller (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas: Joe Purcell (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of California: Mervyn M. Dymally (Democratic) (until January 8), Mike Curb (Republican) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: George L. Brown (Democratic) (until January 10), Nancy E. Dick (Democratic) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: Robert K. Killian (Democratic) (until January 3), William A. O'Neill (Democratic) (starting January 3)
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware: James D. McGinnis (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Florida: J.H. Williams (Democratic) (until January 2), Wayne Mixson (Democratic) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Georgia: Zell Miller (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii: Jean King (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho: William J. Murphy (Democratic) (until January 1), Phil Batt (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: Dave O'Neal (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: Robert D. Orr (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Arthur A. Neu (Republican) (until January 12), Terry E. Branstad (Republican) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: Shelby Smith (Republican) (until January 8), Paul V. Dugan (Democratic) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: Thelma Stovall (Democratic) (until December 11), Martha Layne Collins (Democratic) (starting December 11)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: Jimmy Fitzmorris (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Maryland: Blair Lee III (political party unknown) (until January 17), Samuel Bogley (Democratic) (starting January 17)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Thomas P. O'Neill III (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: James Damman (Republican) (until month and day unknown), James H. Brickley (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Alec G. Olson (Democratic) (until January 3), Lou Wangberg (Republican) (starting January 3)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: Evelyn Gandy (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: William C. Phelps (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Montana: Ted Schwinden (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska: Gerald T. Whelan (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), Roland A. Luedtke (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Robert E. Rose (Democratic) (until January 1), Myron E. Leavitt (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico: Robert E. Ferguson (Democratic) (until January 1), Roberto Mondragón (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: Mario Cuomo (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: James C. Green (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota: Wayne G. Sanstead (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio:
until January 8: Dick Celeste (Democratic)
January 8-November: George Voinovich (Republican)
starting November: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma: George Nigh (Democratic) (until January 3), Spencer Bernard (Democratic) (starting January 3)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: Ernest P. Kline (Democratic) (until January 16), William Scranton, III (Republican) (starting January 16)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Thomas R. DiLuglio (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: W. Brantley Harvey Jr. (Democratic) (until January 10), Nancy Stevenson (Democratic) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota: vacant (until January 1), Lowell C. Hansen II (Republican) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: John S. Wilder (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas: William P. Hobby Jr. (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Utah: David Smith Monson (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: T. Garry Buckley (Republican) (until January 10), Madeleine M. Kunin (Democratic) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: Chuck Robb (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Washington: John Cherberg (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: Martin J. Schreiber (Democratic) (until January 3), Russell A. Olson (Republican) (starting January 3)
Events
[edit]
January
[edit]
January 1 – The United States and the People's Republic of China establish full diplomatic relations.
January 4 – The State of Ohio agrees to pay $675,000 to families of those who were dead or injured from the Kent State shootings.
January 9 – The Music for UNICEF Concert is held at the United Nations General Assembly to raise money for UNICEF and promote the Year of the Child. It is broadcast the following day in the United States and around the world. Hosted by The Bee Gees, other performers include Donna Summer, ABBA, Rod Stewart and Earth, Wind & Fire. A soundtrack album is later released.
January 19 – Former U.S. Attorney General John N. Mitchell is released on parole after 19 months at a federal prison in Alabama.
January 21 – Super Bowl XIII: The Pittsburgh Steelers defeat the Dallas Cowboys 35–31 at the Miami Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida.
January 29 – Brenda Ann Spencer opens fire at a school in San Diego, California, killing two faculty members and wounding eight students. Her response to the action, "I don’t like Mondays," inspired the Boomtown Rats to make a song of the same name.
January 1–31
Averaged over the contiguous United States, this is the coldest month since at least 1880 with a mean temperature of 21.92 °F or −5.60 °C as against an 1895 to 1974 January mean of 29.99 °F or −1.12 °C.[1]
The maximum temperature at 31.26 °F or −0.41 °C is also the coldest on record for any month and the only occasion when the area-averaged contiguous US mean maximum has fallen below freezing.[2]
February
[edit]
February 13 – The intense February 13, 1979 Windstorm strikes western Washington and sinks a 1/2-mile-long section of the Hood Canal Bridge.
February 14 – In Kabul, Muslim extremists kidnap the American ambassador to Afghanistan, Adolph Dubs, who is later killed during a gunfight between his kidnappers and police.
February 20 – This Old House premieres on PBS.
February 26 – A total solar eclipse occurred in North America.
February 27 – The annual Mardi Gras celebration in New Orleans, Louisiana is canceled due to a strike called by the New Orleans Police Department.
February 1–28 – With a statewide water-equivalent precipitation average of only 0.72 inches (18.3 mm), this is Alaska's driest month since records began in 1925, and first driest month since being admitted to statehood in 1959.[a][3]
March
[edit]
March 4 – The U.S. Voyager I space probe photos reveal Jupiter's rings.
March 25 – The first fully functional Space Shuttle orbiter, Columbia, is delivered to the John F. Kennedy Space Center, to be prepared for its first launch.
March 26 – In a ceremony at the White House, President Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel sign the Egyptian–Israeli Peace Treaty.
March 29 – America's most serious nuclear power plant accident at Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania.
April
[edit]
April 1: President Jimmy Carter leaving Three Mile Island for Middletown, Pennsylvania
April 1 – Nickelodeon debuts on cable television, playing children's television shows 24 hours a day. Pinwheel, which first premiered on the channel C-3 in 1977, was one of the first shows to be broadcast on the channel.
April 2 – Major League Baseball umpires go on strike, forcing replacements from the minor leagues, college and high school to be used for the first seven weeks of the season. Union umpires return to work May 18.
April 9 – The 51st Academy Awards ceremony, hosted by Johnny Carson, is held at Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles. Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter wins five awards, including Best Picture and Best Director for Cimino. The film is also tied with Warren Beatty and Buck Henry's Heaven Can Wait in receiving nine nominations each. The ceremony marks the final public appearances of actors Jack Haley and John Wayne; they would both die two months later.
April 10 – A tornado hits Wichita Falls, Texas, killing 42.
April 20 – President Jimmy Carter is attacked by a swamp rabbit while fishing in his hometown of Plains, Georgia.
April 22 – The Albert Einstein Memorial is unveiled at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, DC.
May
[edit]
May – The unemployment rate drops to 5.6%, the low point for the late 1970s business cycle and the lowest since July 1974.
May 9 – A Unabomber bomb injures Northwestern University graduate student John Harris.
May 21
In San Francisco, gay people riot after hearing the verdict for Dan White, assassin of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk.
The Montreal Canadiens defeat the New York Rangers 4 games to 1 in the best-of-seven series, winning the Stanley Cup.
May 25
American Airlines Flight 191: In Chicago, a DC-10 crashes during takeoff at O'Hare International Airport, killing 271 on board and 2 people on the ground. It is the deadliest aviation accident to have occurred in the United States.
John Spenkelink is executed in Florida, in the first use of the electric chair in America after the reintroduction of death penalty in 1976.
Six-year-old Etan Patz disappears in New York City. The incident helps spark the missing children's movement.
May 27 – Indianapolis 500: Rick Mears wins the race for the first time, and car owner Roger Penske for the second time.
June
[edit]
June – McDonald's introduces the Happy Meal, there was no toy as seen from the commercial.
June 1 – The Seattle SuperSonics win the NBA Championship against the Washington Bullets.
June 18 – Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev sign the SALT II agreement in Vienna.
June 20 – A Nicaraguan National Guard soldier kills ABC TV news correspondent Bill Stewart and his interpreter Juan Espinosa. Other members of the news crew capture the killing on tape.
July
[edit]
July 2 – The Susan B. Anthony dollar is introduced in the U.S.
July 3 – President Jimmy Carter signs the first directive for secret aid to the opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul.
July 8 – Los Angeles passes its gay and lesbian civil rights bill.
July 11 – NASA's first orbiting space station Skylab begins its return to Earth, after being in orbit for 6 years and 2 months.
July 12 – A Disco Demolition Night publicity stunt goes awry at Comiskey Park, forcing the Chicago White Sox to forfeit their game against the Detroit Tigers. Local Rock Radio station WLUP attended the event
July 15 – President Carter speaks to Americans about ‘'a crisis of confidence.'’ The speech will come to be known as ‘'the malaise speech,’’ though Carter never used the word ‘'malaise.'’
July 17 – Nicaraguan dictator General Anastasio Somoza Debayle resigns and flees to Miami, Florida.
July 19 – The Sandinista National Liberation Front concludes a successful revolutionary campaign against the U.S.-backed Somoza dictatorship and assumes power in Nicaragua.
August
[edit]
August 2 – New York Yankees catcher and team captain Thurman Munson is killed in an airplane crash at age 32 during touch-and-go landings in Canton, Ohio.
August 6 – The 5.7 Mw Coyote Lake earthquake affected the South Bay and Central Coast areas of California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII (Very strong), causing 16 injuries and $500,000 in damage.
August 9 – Raymond Washington, co-founder of the Crips, today one of the largest, most notorious gangs in the United States, is shot and killed 5 months after his arrest for quadruple murder (his killers have not yet been identified).
August 10 – Michael Jackson releases his first breakthrough album Off the Wall. It sells 7 million copies in the United States alone, making it a 7× platinum album.
August 29 – A national referendum is held in which Somali voters approve a new liberal constitution, promulgated by President Siad Barre to placate the United States.
September
[edit]
September 1 – The U.S. Pioneer 11 becomes the first spacecraft to visit Saturn, when it passes the planet at a distance of 21,000 km.
September 12 – Hurricane Frederic makes landfall at 10:00 p.m. on Alabama's Gulf Coast.
September 16 – The Sugarhill Gang release Rapper's Delight, the first rap single to become a Top 40 hit on the Billboard Hot 100.
September 23 – The largest anti-nuclear demonstration to date is held in New York City, where almost 200,000 people attend.[4]
October
[edit]
October 1–6 – Pope John Paul II visits six cities in the United States.
October 14 – A major gay rights march in the United States takes place in Washington, D.C., involving many tens of thousands of people.
October 15 – The 6.4 Mw Imperial Valley earthquake affected Southern California and northern Baja California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of IX (Violent), causing 91 injuries and $30 million in damage.
October 17
President Jimmy Carter signs a law establishing the Department of Education.
1979 World Series: The Pittsburgh Pirates defeat the Baltimore Orioles, 4 games to 3, to win their 5th World Series Title.
November
[edit]
November 1 – Iran hostage crisis: Iranian Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini urges his people to demonstrate on November 4 and to expand attacks on United States and Israeli interests.
November 2 – Assata Shakur (ne' Joanne Chesimard), a former member of Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army, is liberated from a Clinton, New Jersey prison and soon shuttled off to Cuba where she remains under political asylum.
November 3 – Greensboro massacre in Greensboro, North Carolina, five members of the Communist Workers Party are shot to death and seven are wounded by a group of Klansmen and neo-Nazis, during a "Death to the Klan" rally.
November 4 – Iran hostage crisis begins: 3,000 Iranian radicals, mostly students, invade the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and take 90 hostages (53 of whom are American). They demand that the United States send the former Shah of Iran back to stand trial.
November 6 – Kentucky Fried Chicken magnate and former Boston Celtics owner John Y. Brown Jr. is elected Governor of Kentucky.
November 7 – U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy announces that he will challenge President Jimmy Carter for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination.
November 9 – Nuclear false alarm: the NORAD computers and the Alternate National Military Command Center in Fort Ritchie, Maryland detected purported massive Soviet nuclear strike. After reviewing the raw data from satellites and checking the early warning radars, the alert was cancelled.[5]
November 12 – Iran hostage crisis: In response to the hostage situation in Tehran, U.S. President Jimmy Carter orders a halt to all oil imports into the United States from Iran.
November 14 – Iran hostage crisis: U.S. President Jimmy Carter issues Executive Order 12170, freezing all Iranian assets in the United States and U.S. banks in response to the hostage crisis.
November 17 – Iran hostage crisis: Iranian leader Ruhollah Khomeini orders the release of 13 female and African American hostages being held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.
November 21 – After false radio reports from the Ayatollah Khomeini that the Americans had occupied the Grand Mosque in Mecca, the United States Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan is attacked by a mob and set afire, killing four (see Foreign relations of Pakistan).
December
[edit]
December 3
Eleven fans are killed during a stampede for seats before a The Who concert at the Riverfront Coliseum in Cincinnati, Ohio.
The United States dollar exchange rate with the Deutsche Mark falls to 1.7079 DM, the all-time low so far; this record is not broken until November 5, 1987.
December 6 – The world premiere for Star Trek: The Motion Picture is held at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
December 8 – U.S. Representative David C. Treen is elected Governor of Louisiana, becoming Louisiana's first Republican elected Governor in over 100 years.
December 21 – Chrysler receives government loan guarantees upon the request of CEO Lee Iacocca.[6]
December 1, 1978 to February 28, 1979
[edit]
This is the coldest winter over the contiguous US since at least 1895 with a mean temperature of 26.62 °F or −2.99 °C as against an 1895/1896 to 1973/1974 seasonal mean of 31.94 °F or −0.03 °C.[7] Except for normally frigid upstate Maine, all of the conterminous United States was below average for the winter, an occurrence previously seen only in 1898/1899 and 1909/1910.[8]
Both the contiguous US winter mean maximum temperature at 36.73 °F or 2.63 °C (1895/1896 to 1973/1974 mean 42.44 °F or 5.80 °C)[9] and the minimum temperature at 16.51 °F or −8.61 °C (1895/1896 to 1973/1974 mean 21.44 °F or −5.87 °C)[10] are the coldest since at least 1895.
May 9 – Eddie Jefferson, American jazz musician (b. 1918)
May 11
Joan Chandler, American actress (b. 1923)
Lester Flatt, American musician (b. 1914)
Barbara Hutton, American socialite (b. 1912)
May 16 – A. Philip Randolph, African American labor union leader (b. 1889)
May 19 – Benjamin W. Fortson Jr, American politician, Georgia Secretary of State (b. 1904)
May 29 – Mary Pickford, Canadian-American actress and producer (b. 1892)
June
[edit]
John Wayne
June 1 – Jack Mulhall, American actor (b. 1887)
June 2 – Jim Hutton, American actor (b. 1934)
June 6 – Jack Haley, American actor (b. 1898)
June 11
Loren Murchison, American Olympic athlete (b. 1898)
John Wayne, American actor and film director (b. 1907)
June 13
Darla Hood, American actress (b. 1931)
Billy Nelson, actor (b. 1903)
June 15 – Laurie Bird, American actress and photographer (b. 1953)
June 22 – Hope Summers, American actress (b. 1902)
June 25 – Dave Fleischer, American animator (b. 1894)
June 29 – Lowell George, American singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer (b. 1945)
July
[edit]
Robert Burns Woodward
July 4 – Theodora Kroeber, American writer and anthropologist (b. 1897)
July 6 – Van McCoy, American accomplished musician; noted for his 1975 hit The Hustle (b. 1940)
July 7 – Morris Talpalar, sociologist (b. 1900)
July 8
Elizabeth Ryan, American 30 Grand Slam (tennis) Tennis Champion (b. 1892)
Robert Burns Woodward, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1917)
July 10 – Arthur Fiedler, American conductor (Boston Pops) (b. 1894)
July 12 – Minnie Riperton, American rhythm and blues singer (Lovin' You) (b. 1947)
July 13 – Corinne Griffith, American actress and author (b. 1894)
July 28 – George Seaton, American screenwriter and director (b. 1911)
July 29 – Herbert Marcuse, German-American philosopher, sociologist and political theorist (b. 1898)
August
[edit]
Jean Seberg
August 2 – Thurman Munson, American baseball player (b. 1947)
August 9 – Walter O'Malley, American baseball executive (b. 1903)
August 10 – Dick Foran, American actor (b. 1910)
August 16 – F. Ryan Duffy, American judge and politician (b. 1888)
August 17 – Vivian Vance, American actress (b. 1909)
August 21 – Stuart Heisler, American film and television director (b. 1896)
August 22 – James T. Farrell, American novelist (b. 1904)
August 25 – Stan Kenton, American jazz pianist (b. 1911)
August 26 – Alvin Karpis, American criminal (b. 1907)
August 30 (body found on September 8) – Jean Seberg, American actress (b. 1938)
August 31 – Sally Rand, American dancer (b. 1904)
September
[edit]
September 1 – Doris Kenyon, American actress (b. 1897)
September 24 – Carl Laemmle Jr., American film studio executive (b. 1908)
September 26
John Cromwell, American film director and actor (b. 1887)
Arthur Hunnicutt, American actor (b. 1910)
September 29 – Rudy Lavik, sports coach and administrator (b. 1892)
October
[edit]
October 1 – Dorothy Arzner, American film director (b. 1897)
October 3
Claudia Jennings, American actress and model (b. 1949)
Dorothy Peterson, American actress (b. 1897)
October 6
Elizabeth Bishop, American poet (b. 1911)
Chapman Revercomb, politician and lawyer (b. 1895)
October 8 – Emmaline Henry, American actress (b. 1928)
October 13
Rebecca Helferich Clarke, British-born viola player and composer, (b. 1886)[14]
Clarence Muse, American actor, filmmaker, and musician.(b. 1889)
October 15 – Jacob L. Devers, U.S. Army general (b. 1887)
October 27 – Charles Coughlin, Canadian-American priest (b. 1891)
November
[edit]
Mamie Eisenhower
November 1 – Mamie Eisenhower, 34th First Lady of the United States (b. 1896)
November 5 – Al Capp, American cartoonist (b. 1909)
November 9 – Louise Thaden, American aviation pioneer (b. 1905
November 23 – Judee Sill, American singer and songwriter (b. 1944)
November 30 – Zeppo Marx, American actor and comedian (b. 1901)
December
[edit]
Richard Rodgers
December 7 – Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, British-born American astronomer and astrophysicist (b. 1900)
December 9 – Fulton J. Sheen, American Roman Catholic bishop and venerable (b. 1895)
December 10 – Ann Dvorak, American actress (b. 1912)[15]
December 12 – Hilo Hattie, native Hawaiian singer and actress (b. 1901)
December 13 – Jon Hall, American actor (b. 1915)
December 15 – Ethel Lackie, American Olympic swimmer (b. 1907)
December 16 – Murray Gurfein, judge of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (b. 1907)
December 22 – Darryl F. Zanuck, American film producer (b. 1902)
December 23
Peggy Guggenheim, American art collector (b. 1898)
Ernest B. Schoedsack, American film producer and director (b. 1893)
December 25
Joan Blondell, American actress (b. 1906)
Lee Bowman, American actor (b. 1914)
December 30 – Richard Rodgers, American composer (b. 1902)[16]
See also
[edit]
1979 in American television
List of American films of 1979
Timeline of United States history (1970–1989)
Notes
[edit]
^For comparison the contiguous US has had only one month drier than February 1979 in Alaska from coast to coast, namely October 1952 with only 0.54 inches or 13.7 millimetres.
^The Harley-Davidson Reader. Michael Dregni, Hunter S. Thompson, Sonny Barger, Evel Knievel, Jean Davidson, Arlen Ness. MotorBooks International, 7 Feb 2010
^Greene, David (1986). Greene's Biographical Encyclopedia of Composers. London: Collins. p. 1164. ISBN 978-0-00434-363-1.
^"Ann Dvorak". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 February 2020.