Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1947
Alfred Horstmann
José Pardo y Barreda
José Simón Pardo y Barreda fue un abogado, diplomático y político peruano, que ocupó la Presidencia del Perú en dos ocasiones: entre 1904 y 1908 y entre 1915 y 1919.
John Henry Patterson
John Henry Patterson, known as J. H. Patterson, was a British soldier, hunter, author and Christian Zionist, best known for his book The Man-Eaters of Tsavo (1907), which details his experiences while building a railway bridge over the Tsavo River in British East Africa in 1898–1899. The book has inspired three Hollywood films: Bwana Devil (1952), Killers of Kilimanjaro (1959) and The Ghost and the Darkness (1996).
Ettore Bortolotti
Ettore Bortolotti was an Italian mathematician.
William Berryman Scott
William Berryman Scott was an American vertebrate paleontologist, authority on mammals, and principal author of the White River Oligocene monographs. He was a professor of geology and paleontology at Princeton University.
Alphonzo Edward Bell
Alphonzo Edward Bell Sr. fue un jugador de tenis estadounidense que compitió en los Juegos Olímpicos de 1904 en Saint Louis.
Lee Zahler
Lee Zahler was an American composer and musical director of films, starting in the 1920s and well into the 1940s.
H. L. Mellersh
Herbert Lewis Mellersh (1869-1947), was a male badminton player from England.
Richard Bedford Bennett
Richard Bedford Bennett, primer vizconde de Bennett; abogado y político canadiense. Nació el 3 de julio de 1870 en Hopewell Hill, Nuevo Brunswick. Falleció el 26 de junio 1947 en Inglaterra.
Dušan Samo Jurkovič
Dušan Samo Jurkovič was a Slovak architect, furniture designer, artist and ethnographer. One of the best-known promoters of Slovak art in 20th century Czechoslovakia, he is remembered mostly due to his projects of numerous World War I cemeteries in Galicia and thanks to his wooden works of spa complex in Luhačovice and mountain cottage hotel Maměnka and canteen Libušín Pustevny na Radhošti. Thanks to his artistic work with wood, he is referred to as "the poet of timber". His architectonic style was a unique fusion of folk architecture and then-popular architectonic styles, mostly associated with Art Nouveau. Jurkovič repeatedly stressed: "The work of art is rooted in the time. I also have always cautiously listened to its voice."