The following events occurred in August 1955:
Norway's Ministry of Pay and Prices is established, headed by Gunnar Bråthen.
Died: Wallace Stevens, 75, American poet
The English-language première of Samuel Beckett's play Waiting for Godot, directed by Peter Hall, takes place at the Arts Theatre, London.
The 1955 Mitropa Cup football competition is won by Vörös Lobogó, with ÚDA Praha as runners-up after the second leg of the final.
While her act is being filmed for NBC variety series The Jimmy Durante Show, Carmen Miranda complains of feeling ill and out of breath, but finishes her performance.
Died: Carmen Miranda, 46, Portuguese Brazilian singer and actress (pre-eclampsia)
The French Southern and Antarctic Territories are created, as an overseas territory of France.
The French département of Bône is created out of the eastern extremity of the former département of Constantine in Algeria.
Composer Luigi Nono marries Arnold Schoenberg's daughter Nuria in Venice.
Died: Grace Hartman, 48, American actress
The Canadian National Railway opens its part of Walkley Yard in Ottawa, Canada.
Born: Maud Olofsson, Swedish politician, in Arnäsvall
The Division of Stirling is created in a Western Australia electoral redistribution.
As a formation of nine United States Air Force Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcars flies over Edelweiler, near Stuttgart, West Germany, on a training mission carrying troops, one of them, a C-119G, experiences engine trouble, loses altitude momentarily, pulls upward abruptly, and collides with another C-119G. Both aircraft crash, killing all 19 people aboard one and all 47 aboard the other. The combined death toll of 66 makes it the worst aviation accident in German history at the time and the deadliest ever involving any variant of the C-119. It will tie with the March 22 crash of a United States Navy R6D-1 Liftmaster in Hawaii and the October 6 crash of United Airlines Flight 409 in Wyoming as the deadliest air accident of 1955.
Burhanuddin Harahap becomes Prime Minister of Indonesia.
Died:
Thomas Mann, 80, German novelist, Nobel Prize laureate
James B. Sumner, 67, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
Died Florence Easton, 72, English-born operatic soprano
The US schooner Levin J. Marvel capsizes and sinks in Chesapeake Bay with the loss of twelve of the 24 people on board. It was lost during high waves in Hurricane Connie.
Rear Admiral Royce de Mel becomes the first native Commander of the Royal Ceylon Navy. He would later be implicated in the 1962 Ceylonese coup d'état attempt.
A new world record glider speed of 67.304km/h over a triangular course of 200km is set by Edward Makula, the first of seven world records Makula would hold in the course of his career.
Died: Fernand Léger, 74, French painter and sculptor
The First Sudanese Civil War begins.
First meeting of the Organization of Central American States (Organización de Estados Centroamericanos, ODECA), in Antigua Guatemala.
Hurricane Diane hits the northeastern United States, killing over 200 people, and causing over $1.0 billion in damage.
Hundreds of people are killed in anti-French rioting in Morocco and Algeria.
Flying a U.S. Air Force North American F-100C Super Sabre, Horace A. Haines sets a world speed record of 822.135 mph (1,323.889 km/h).
Eleven schoolchildren are killed when their school bus is hit by a freight train in Spring City, Tennessee, United States after the driver disregards a crossing signal; a further 39 are injured.
The Westland Widgeon helicopter makes its maiden flight.
Died: Rudolf Minger, 73, Swiss politician
In China, the Sufan movement issues its "Directive on the thorough purge and cleansing of hidden counter-revolutionaries"
The last Soviet Army occupation forces leave Austria.
Satyajit Ray's film Pather Panchali is released in Calcutta, India, receiving a poor initial response but quickly attracting audiences to become a classic of Indian cinama.
The first edition of the Guinness Book of Records is published, in London, compiled by Norris and Ross McWhirter.
Born: Sergey Khlebnikov, Soviet speed skater (d. 1999)
Died: Augusto Turati, 67, Italian fascist politician
The Challenge Round of the 1955 Davis Cup tennis competition is won by Australia at the West Side Tennis Club, Forest Hills, New York, USA.
Died: Emmett Till, 14, African-American teenager, murdered in Mississippi for speaking to a white woman.
A British Royal Air Force English Electric Canberra sets a new world altitude record of 65,876 ft (20,079 m).
The 1955 CCCF Championship soccer competition ends in victory for Costa Rica.
Grodno Zoo, in Belarus, receives its first Asian elephant, from Vietnam.
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation engineering test pilot Stanley Beltz is killed in a crash near Lancaster, California, USA, while piloting an F-94B Starfire modified to test the nose section of the BOMARC missile.
The Hudson and Manhattan Railroad begins experiments with air conditioning on its subway cars, a technology that the New York City Subway system declared impractical before then. This experiment results in the first successful production application of air conditioning in a rapid transit car, 50 cars (20 owned by H&M, 30 by H&M parent PRR) built by St. Louis Car Company in 1958.
August 1955 Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA