Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1947
Howard Mason Gore
Howard Mason Gore was an American politician. He served as the 8th Secretary of Agriculture from 1924 to 1925, during the administration of President Calvin Coolidge, and he served as 17th Governor of West Virginia from 1925 to 1929.
Elek Magyar
Alexander Löhr
Alexander Löhr fue un comandante de la Fuerza Aérea Austriaca durante los años 30 y, tras la «Unión Política de Alemania y Austria» (Anschluss), comandante de la Fuerza Aérea Alemana (Luftwaffe) durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
José VI Manuel II Tomás
José Manuel II Tomás . Fue Patriarca de Babilonia de los Caldeos, en Mesopotamia, y cabeza de la Iglesia católica caldea.
Léonce Rosenberg
Léonce Rosenberg was an art historian, art collector, publisher and one of the most influential French art dealers of the 20th century. The son of an antique dealer Alexander Rosenberg and brother of the gallery owner Paul Rosenberg, Léonce, a prominent gallery owner in Paris at the end of World War I, would become one of the world's major dealers of Modern art.
Jean-Richard Bloch
Jean-Richard Bloch fue un escritor francés nacido en París el 25 de mayo de 1884 y fallecido el 15 de marzo de 1947 en su ciudad natal.
Ernst Simmel
Ernst Simmel was a German-American neurologist and psychoanalyst.
Emil Racovita
Emil G. Racoviţă (pronunciado, a menudo escrito en estilo francés como Émile Gustave Racovitza fue un biólogo, zoólogo, oceanógrafo, y espeleólogo pionero rumano. Fue explorador de la Antártida y se le considera uno de los padres de la bioespeleología.
John Page
John Ferguson "Jack" Page was a British figure skater who competed in the 1924 Winter Olympics and in the 1928 Winter Olympics. He was born in Brooklands, Sale, Manchester, and died in Manchester. In 1924 he finished fifth in the singles event. In the pairs competition he and his partner Ethel Muckelt finished fourth. Four years later he finished ninth in the singles event at the St. Moritz Games and with his partner Ethel Muckelt he finished seventh in the pairs competition.
Paul Huldschinsky
Paul Huldschinsky was a German-Jewish architect and set decorator. After imprisonment in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in 1938 he fled Nazi Germany in 1939 for California. He won an Oscar in the category Best Art Direction for the film Gaslight.