Miss America 1939

Miss America 1939, the 13th Miss America pageant, was the last pageant to be held at the famed Steel Pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey.[1] The finals were held on Saturday, September 9, 1939, and Miss Michigan, Patricia Donnelly, was crowned Miss America 1939.[2] The Miss Congeniality Award was also introduced at the 1939 competition.

Miss America 1939
DateSeptember 9, 1939
VenueSteel Pier, Atlantic City, New Jersey
Entrants43
Placements15
WinnerPatricia Donnelly
 Michigan
← 1938
1940 →

Donnelly later became a singer and actress. Third runner-up Marguerita Skliris became the actress Margia Dean, who starred in such Hollywood films as Seven Women from Hell and The Quatermass Xperiment. Fourth runner-up Rose Marie Elliott had a successful musical career on the Broadway stage as Rose Marie Brown.

Results

Placements

PlacementContestant
Miss America 1939
1st Runner-Up
2nd Runner-Up
3rd Runner-Up
4th Runner-Up
Top 15

Awards

Preliminary awards

AwardContestant
Talent

Other awards

AwardContestant
Miss Congeniality

Contestants

TitleNameHometownAgeTalentPlacementAwardsNotes
BirminghamFlorine HoltBirminghamVocal, "Moonglow" & "A Little Bit of Heaven"Top 15
ArkansasJean ThompsonHelena
CaliforniaMarguerita SklirisSan FranciscoDramatic Monologue, "The Poison Scene" from Romeo and Juliet3rd Runner-upPreliminary Talent AwardLater known as actress Margia Dean
Central ConnecticutCatherine HarrisonDerby
CharlotteMarguerite TaylorCharlotte
ConnecticutFrieda LamparBridgeport
Coney IslandGrayce M. Reilly
District of ColumbiaEvelyn Foster19Ballet en Pointe
Eastern New YorkClaire E. FoleyVocal Comedy & DanceTop 15
Eastern OhioMaxine Drumm
Eastern PennsylvaniaEmma Louise KnoellPhiladelphia
FloridaRose Marie MagrillMiamiTap DanceTop 15
GeorgiaMary DurranceGlennvilleVocal
IllinoisEthel Lorraine LodbellChicagoMonologue, "From the Diary of a Contestant"Top 15
KansasRosemary WinslowSalina
KentuckyLouise HolmanPineville
LexingtonMattigene PalmoreLexington
MarylandElaine PasquallaCrisfield
MiamiIrmigard DietelMiamiVocal Medley, "See You Again", "Blue Evening", & "Solitude"Top 15
MichiganPatricia DonnellyDetroit19Vocal/Bass Fiddle, "To You" & "Ol' Man Mose"Winner
MinnesotaMarion RudeenMinneapolisAcrobatic DanceTop 15Preliminary Talent Award
MississippiDoris CogginsBaldwynMiss Congeniality
MissouriMargaret LeySt. Louis
MontanaLucille ChouinardFort Peck
MontgomeryLouise RobertsonMontgomery
Myrtle BeachMary Eleanor ParishMyrtle Beach
New HampshireLois Marjorie TruaxNashua
New JerseyMargo LundgrenHarrisonWhistling Tunes Vocal, "Don't Worry About Me"Top 15
New OrleansFrances Helen AnelloNew Orleans
North CarolinaMargaret WoodVocal, "If I Didn't Care"Top 15Preliminary Talent Award
OhioJeanne SabodaCleveland
OklahomaBettye Cornelia AvertOklahoma CityOriginal Piano & Vocal, "Wondering & Dreaming"1st Runner-up
PennsylvaniaRuth Phyllis WillockPittsburgh
PhiladelphiaNancy LeePhiladelphia
South CarolinaMargaret Allan ShealyClintonVocal, "Especially for You"
Staten IslandLillian Evelyn HessenAnnadale
Sun ValleyLouise FletchnerClarinet, "Stardust"Top 15
TennesseeJudy JonesTracy CityVocal Medley, "I Surrender" & "Come True"
TexasCharmayne SmithDallasVocal, "Round Up Time in Texas"Top 15
VirginiaRose Marie ElliotSulfolkVocal, "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"4th Runner-upLater known on Broadway as Rose Marie Brown
WashingtonAnna Mae SchoonoverSeattleDramatic Monologue from Accent on Youth2nd Runner-up
Western TennesseeLouise BussartEtowah

References

Secondary sources

  • Saulino Osborne, Angela (1995). "Miss Americas and their Courts". Miss America The Dream Lives On. Taylor Publishing Company. ISBN 0-87833-110-7.