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{{user draft|date=March 2019}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:List of ''Pop Memories'' number-one singles of the 1930s}}
{{main other|{{DISPLAYTITLE:List of ''Pop Memories'' number-one singles of the 1930s}}}}
[[File:Tommy dorsey playing trombone.jpg|170px|thumbnail|right|[[Tommy Dorsey]] ''(pictured)'' achieved the first ''Billboard'' number-one single with "[[I'll Never Smile Again]]", which topped the chart for twelve consecutive weeks.]]
[[File:Tommy dorsey playing trombone.jpg|170px|thumbnail|right|[[Tommy Dorsey]] ''(pictured)'' achieved the first ''Billboard'' number-one single with "[[I'll Never Smile Again]]", which topped the chart for twelve consecutive weeks.]]
This is a '''list of number-one singles''' in the United States during the 1930s according to music historian [[Joel Whitburn]].
This is a '''list of number-one singles''' in the United States during the 1930s according to music historian [[Joel Whitburn]].
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|align="center"|5
|align="center"|5
|-
|-
|}
[[File:Glenn Miller.jpg|right|thumb|220px|[[Glenn Miller]] and [[Glenn Miller Orchestra|His Orchestra]] has the record for most number-one hits in a single year, with seven reaching the top spot in 1939.]]
{|class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable"
|-
! <span id="1940"></span>Reached<br/>number one
! Artist(s)
! Single
! Record label
! Weeks at<br/>number one
! Ref
|-
! colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}[[List of number-one singles of 1940 (U.S.)|1940]]
|-
| July 27, 1940 || align="center"|[[Tommy Dorsey]] || "[[I'll Never Smile Again]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|12 || rowspan="3" align="center"|<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite web|url=http://www.bobborst.com/popculture/number-one-songs-by-year/|title=US Number One Songs - 2017|website=Bob Borst's Home of Pop Culture}}</ref>
|-
| October 19, 1940 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] || "[[Only Forever (song)|Only Forever]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|9
|-
| December 21, 1940 || align="center"|[[Artie Shaw]] || "[[Frenesi]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|12
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1941"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1941 (U.S.)|1941]]
|-
| March 15, 1941 || align="center"|[[Glenn Miller]] || "[[The Song of the Volga Boatmen|Song of the Volga Boatmen]]" || align="center"|Bluebird || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 22, 1941 || align="center"|[[Artie Shaw]] || "[[Frenesi]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 29, 1941 || align="center" rowspan="3"|[[Jimmy Dorsey]] || "[[Amapola (song)|Amapola (Pretty Little Poppy)]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="3">Decca || align="center"|10 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 7, 1941 ||"[[My Sister and I (song)|My Sister and I]]" || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 14, 1941 || style:"height:3em"|"[[Maria Elena]]" || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 21, 1941 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[Daddy (Sammy Kaye song)|Daddy]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 28, 1941 || rowspan="2"|[[Jimmy Dorsey]] || "[[My Sister and I (song)|My Sister and I]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Decca || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 5, 1941 || "[[Maria Elena]]" || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 12, 1941 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[Daddy (Sammy Kaye song)|Daddy]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 30, 1941 || rowspan="2" align="center"|[[Jimmy Dorsey]] || "[[Green Eyes (Aquellos Ojos Verdes)]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Decca || align="center"|4 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 27, 1941 || "[[Blue Champagne]]" || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 4, 1941 || align="center"|[[Freddy Martin]] || "[[Piano Concerto No. 1 (Tchaikovsky)|Piano Concerto in B Flat]]" || align="center"|Bluebird || align="center"|8 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 29, 1941 || rowspan="3" align="center"| [[Glenn Miller]] || "[[Chattanooga Choo Choo]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="3">Bluebird || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 20, 1941 || "[[Elmer's Tune]]" || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 27, 1941 || "[[Chattanooga Choo Choo]]" || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1942"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1942 (U.S.)|1942]]
|-
| February 7, 1942 || align="center"|[[Glenn Miller]] || "[[A String of Pearls (song)|A String of Pearls]]" || align="center"|Bluebird || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| February 14, 1942 || align="center"|[[Woody Herman]] || "[[Blues in the Night|Blues in the Night (My Mama Done Tol' Me)]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| February 21, 1942 || rowspan="2"|[[Glenn Miller]] || "[[A String of Pearls (song)|A String of Pearls]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Bluebird || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| February 28, 1942 || "[[Moonlight Cocktail]]" || align="center"|10 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 9, 1942 || align="center"|[[Jimmy Dorsey]] || "[[Tangerine (1941 song)|Tangerine]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 20, 1942 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[By the Sleepy Lagoon|Sleepy Lagoon]]" || align="center"|[[Columbia Records|Columbia]] || align="center"|4 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 18, 1942 || align="center"|[[Kay Kyser]] || "[[Jingle Jangle Jingle]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|8 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 12, 1942 || align="center"|[[Glenn Miller]] || "[[(I've Got a Gal In) Kalamazoo]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 31, 1942 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] || "[[White Christmas (song)|White Christmas]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|11 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1943"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1943 (U.S.)|1943]]
|-
| January 16, 1943 || align="center"|[[Tommy Dorsey]] || "[[There Are Such Things]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|4 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| February 13, 1943 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[I Had The Craziest Dream]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| February 27, 1943 || align="center"|[[Tommy Dorsey]] || "[[There Are Such Things]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 6, 1943 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[I've Heard That Song Before]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|12 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 29, 1943 || align="center"|[[Glenn Miller]] || "[[That Old Black Magic]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 5, 1943 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[I've Heard That Song Before]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Columbia || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 12, 1943 || align="center"|[[Benny Goodman]] || "[[Taking A Chance On Love]]" || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 3, 1943 || align="center"|[[The Song Spinners]] || "[[The Song Spinners|Comin' In On A Wing And A Prayer]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 24, 1943 || align="center"|[[Dick Haymes]] || "[[You'll Never Know]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|4 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 21, 1943 || align="center"|[[Tommy Dorsey]] || "[[In the Blue of Evening]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 11, 1943 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] || "[[Sunday, Monday Or Always]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 30, 1943 || align="center"|[[Al Dexter]] || "[[Pistol Packin' Mama]]" || align="center"|[[OKeh Records|Okeh]] || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 6, 1943 || align="center"|[[Mills Brothers]] || "[[Paper Doll (song)|Paper Doll]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|12 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1944"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1944 (U.S.)|1944]]
|-
| January 29, 1944 || align="center"|[[Glen Gray]] || "[[My Heart Tells Me (Should I Believe My Heart?)]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Decca || align="center"|5 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 4, 1944 || align="center"|[[Jimmy Dorsey]] || "[[Bésame Mucho|Besame Mucho (Kiss Me Much)]]" || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| April 22, 1944 || align="center"|[[Guy Lombardo]] || "[[It's Love-Love-Love]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 6, 1944 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] || "[[I Love You (Cole Porter song)|I Love You]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|5 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 10, 1944 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[I'll Get By (As Long as I Have You)]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 1, 1944 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] || "[[I'll Be Seeing You (song)|I'll Be Seeing You]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 8, 1944 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[I'll Get By (As Long as I Have You)]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 15, 1944 || rowspan="2" align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] || "[[I'll Be Seeing You (song)|I'll Be Seeing You]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="3">Decca || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 5, 1944 || "[[Swinging On A Star]]" || align="center"|9 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 7, 1944 || align="center"|[[Mills Brothers]] || "[[You Always Hurt The One You Love]]" || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 14, 1944 || align="center"|[[Dinah Shore]] || "[[I'll Walk Alone]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 21, 1944 || align="center"|[[Mills Brothers]] || "[[You Always Hurt The One You Love]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 4, 1944 || align="center"|[[Dinah Shore]] || "[[I'll Walk Alone]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 25, 1944 || align="center"|[[Mills Brothers]] || "[[You Always Hurt The One You Love]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Decca || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 9, 1944 || align="center"|[[The Ink Spots]] and [[Ella Fitzgerald]] || "[[I'm Making Believe]]" || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 23, 1944 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] and [[The Andrews Sisters]] || "[[Don't Fence Me In (song)|Don't Fence Me In]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|8 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1945"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1945 (U.S.)|1945]]
|-
| February 17, 1945 || align="center"|[[The Andrews Sisters]] || "[[Rum and Coca-Cola]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| April 7, 1945 || rowspan="2" align="center"|[[Les Brown (bandleader)|Les Brown & Doris Day]] || "[[My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 26, 1945 || "[[Sentimental Journey (song)|Sentimental Journey]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|9 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 28, 1945 || align="center"|[[Johnny Mercer]] || "[[On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe]]" || align="center"|[[Capitol Records|Capitol]] || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 15, 1945 || align="center"|[[Perry Como]] || "[[Till the End of Time (Buddy Kaye and Ted Mossman song)|Till The End Of Time]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|9 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 17, 1945 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[Chickery Chick]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 24, 1945 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[It's Been A Long, Long Time]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 8, 1945 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] and [[Les Paul|The Les Paul Trio]] || "[[It's Been A Long, Long Time]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 15, 1945 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[Chickery Chick]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 22, 1945 || align="center"|[[Harry James]] || "[[It's Been A Long, Long Time]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 29, 1945 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[Chickery Chick]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1946"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1946 (U.S.)|1946]]
|-
| January 5, 1946 || align="center"|[[Freddy Martin]] || "[[Symphony (Freddy Martin song)|Symphony]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| January 19, 1946 || align="center"|[[Bing Crosby]] and [[Carmen Cavallaro]] || "[[I Can't Begin To Tell You]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| January 26, 1946 || align="center"|[[Vaughn Monroe]] || "[[Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!]]" || align="center"|Victor || align="center"|5 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 2, 1946 || align="center"|[[Betty Hutton]] || "[[Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief]]" || align="center"|Capitol || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 9, 1946 || align="center"|[[Johnny Mercer]] || "[[Personality (1946 song)|Personality]]" || align="center"|Capitol || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 16, 1946 || align="center"|[[Frankie Carle]] || "[[Oh! What it Seemed to Be]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| April 27, 1946 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[I'm A Big Girl Now]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 4, 1946 || align="center"|[[Perry Como]]
|bgcolor=#FFFF99|"[[Prisoner of Love (Russ Columbo song)|Prisoner of Love]]"♪ <small>(1946)</small> || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 25, 1946 || align="center"|[[The Ink Spots]] || "[[The Gypsy (song)|The Gypsy]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|10 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 3, 1946 || align="center"|[[Perry Como]] || "[[Surrender (Perry Como song)|Surrender]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 10, 1946 || align="center"|[[Eddy Howard]] || "[[To Each His Own (Jay Livingston and Ray Evans song)|To Each His Own]]" || align="center"|Majestic || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 31, 1946 || align="center"|[[Freddy Martin]] || "[[To Each His Own (Jay Livingston and Ray Evans song)|To Each His Own]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 14, 1946 || align="center"|[[Frank Sinatra]] || "[[Five Minutes More]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 21, 1946 || align="center"|[[The Ink Spots]] || "[[To Each His Own (Jay Livingston and Ray Evans song)|To Each His Own]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 28, 1946 || align="center"|[[Frank Sinatra]] || "[[Five Minutes More]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 5, 1946 || align="center"|[[Eddy Howard]] || "[[To Each His Own (Jay Livingston and Ray Evans song)|To Each His Own]]" || align="center"|Majestic || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 19, 1946 || align="center"|[[Frankie Carle]] || "[[Rumors Are Flying]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Columbia || align="center"|8 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 14, 1946 || align="center"|[[Kay Kyser]] || "[[Ole Buttermilk Sky]]" || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 28, 1946 || align="center"|[[Sammy Kaye]] || "[[The Old Lamp-Lighter]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1947"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1947 (U.S.)|1947]]
|-
| February 15, 1947 || align="center"|[[Nat King Cole|The King Cole Trio]] || "[[(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons]]" || align="center"|Capitol || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| February 22, 1947 || align="center"|[[Count Basie]] || "[[Open the Door, Richard|Open The Door, Richard!]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="3">RCA Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 1, 1947 || align="center"|[[Freddy Martin]] || "[[Managua, Nicaragua]]" || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 15, 1947 || align="center"|[[Ted Weems]] || "[[Heartaches (song)|Heartaches]]" || align="center"|12 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 7, 1947 || align="center"|[[Art Lund]] || "[[Mam'selle]]" || align="center"|MGM || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 21, 1947 || align="center"|[[The Harmonicats]] || "[[Peg O' My Heart]]" || align="center"|Vitacoustic (original pressings); Mercury (nationwide release) || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| June 28, 1947 || align="center"|[[Perry Como]] || "[[Chi-Baba, Chi-Baba (My Bambino Go to Sleep)]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 19, 1947 || align="center"|[[The Harmonicats]] || "[[Peg O' My Heart]]" || align="center"|Vitacoustic (original pressings); Mercury (nationwide release) || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 9, 1947 || align="center"|[[Tex Williams]] || "[[Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette)]]" || align="center"|Capitol || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 20, 1947 || align="center"|[[Francis Craig]]
|bgcolor=#FFFF99|"[[Near You]]"♪ <small>(1947)</small> || align="center"|Bullet || align="center"|12 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| December 13, 1947 || align="center"|[[Vaughn Monroe]] || "[[Ballerina (Sidney Keith Russell and Carl Sigman song)|Ballerina]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|10 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1948"></span>[[List of number-one singles of 1948 (U.S.)|1948]]
|-
| February 21, 1948 || align="center"|[[Art Mooney]] || "[[I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover]]" || align="center"|MGM || align="center"|3 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 13, 1948 || align="center"|[[Peggy Lee]] || "[[Mañana (Is Soon Enough for Me)]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Capitol || align="center"|9 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 15, 1948 || align="center"|[[Nat King Cole]] || "[[Nature Boy]]" || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 3, 1948 || align="center"|[[Kay Kyser]] || "[[Woody Woodpecker#"The Woody Woodpecker Song"|Woody Wood-Pecker]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 14, 1948 || align="center"|[[Al Trace]] || "[[You Call Everybody Darlin']]" || align="center"|Regent || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| August 28, 1948 || align="center"|[[Pee Wee Hunt]] || "[[Twelfth Street Rag]]" || align="center"|Capitol || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 9, 1948 || align="center"|[[Margaret Whiting]] || "[[A Tree In The Meadow]]" || <div align="center" rowspan="2">Capitol || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 23, 1948 || align="center"|[[Pee Wee Hunt]]
|bgcolor=#FFFF99|"[[Twelfth Street Rag]]"♪ <small>(1948)</small> || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 6, 1948 || align="center"|[[Dinah Shore]] || "[[Buttons And Bows]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|9 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-class="unsortable"
!colspan=6|{{anchor|10}}<span id="1949"></span>{{anchor|10}}[[List of number-one singles of 1949 (U.S.)|1949]]
|-
| January 8, 1949 || align="center"|[[Spike Jones]] || "[[All I Want for Christmas Is My Two Front Teeth|All I Want For Christmas (is My Two Front Teeth)]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| January 15, 1949 || align="center"|[[Dinah Shore]] || "[[Buttons And Bows]]" || align="center"|Columbia || align="center"|1 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| January 22, 1949 || align="center"|[[Evelyn Knight (singer)|Evelyn Knight]] || "[[A Little Bird Told Me]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| March 12, 1949 || align="center"|[[Blue Barron]] || "[[Cruising Down the River]]" || align="center"|MGM || align="center"|2 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| April 2, 1949 || align="center"|[[Russ Morgan]] || "[[Cruising Down the River]]" || align="center"|Decca || align="center"|7 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| May 14, 1949 || align="center"|[[Vaughn Monroe]]
|bgcolor=#FFFF99|"[[(Ghost) Riders in the Sky: A Cowboy Legend|Riders In The Sky (A Cowboy Legend)]]"♪ <small>(1949)</small> || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|11 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| July 30, 1949 || align="center"|[[Perry Como]] || "[[Some Enchanted Evening]]" || align="center"|RCA Victor || align="center"|5 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| September 3, 1949 || align="center"|[[Vic Damone]] || "[[You're Breaking My Heart]]" || align="center" rowspan="3"|Mercury || align="center"|4 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| October 1, 1949 || rowspan="2" align="center"|[[Frankie Laine]] || "[[That Lucky Old Sun]]" || align="center"|8 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|-
| November 26, 1949 || "[[Mule Train]]" || align="center"|6 || <ref name=autogenerated1 />
|}
|}


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==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}



[[:Category:Lists of number-one songs in the United States|1940]]
[[:Category:Lists of number-one songs in the United States|1940]]

Latest revision as of 15:06, 5 October 2024

Tommy Dorsey (pictured) achieved the first Billboard number-one single with "I'll Never Smile Again", which topped the chart for twelve consecutive weeks.

This is a list of number-one singles in the United States during the 1930s according to music historian Joel Whitburn.

Before the 1930s, only sporadic popular music charts appeared. In 1935, Your Hit Parade began publishing music charts, which were the first regular and consistently updated in the American music industry. Although Billboard magazine had featured charts before, in 1940, the trade paper began publishing them regularly, overtaking Your Hit Parade with its methodology and scope. Chart data is pulled from music historian Joel Whitburn, who, in addition to using Your Hit Parade and Billboard, has used historical sources such as press releases, news stories, and sales data to best represent what prospective charts would've looked like had they been regularly published.

Number ones

[edit]
Key
 ♪   – Number-one single of the year
Contents
←1920s  • 1930 • 1931 • 1932 • 1933 • 1934 • 1935 • 1936 • 1937 • 1938 • 1939 • 1940 • The first Billboard singles charts →
Glenn Miller and His Orchestra has the record for most number-one hits in a single year, with seven reaching the top spot in 1939.
Reached number one Artist(s) Single Record label Weeks at
number one
Ref
1939
January 7, 1939 Artie Shaw "They Say" Bluebird 2 [1]
January 14, 1939 Al Donahue
"Jeepers Creepers"
Vocalion
5
Artie Shaw "Thanks for Ev'rything"
Bluebird 1
February 4, 1939 Kay Kyser "The Umbrella Man" Brunswick
February 11, 1939 Larry Clinton "Deep Purple" ♪ (1939) Victor 9
March 18, 1939 Guy Lombardo "Penny Serenade" Decca 1
April 22, 1939 Glen Gray "Heaven Can Wait" 2
May 6, 1939 Tommy Dorsey "Our Love" Victor 1
May 13, 1939 Benny Goodman "And the Angels Sing" 5
May 20, 1939 Kay Kyser "(Boop-Boop Dit-Tem Dot-Tem What-Tem Chu!) Three Little Fishies (Itty Bitty Poo)" Brunswick 2
June 3, 1939 Glahé Musette
Orchestra
"Beer Barrel-Polka" Victor 4
June 10, 1939 Glenn Miller "Wishing (Will Make It So)" Bluebird
July 8, 1939 "Stairway To The Stars"
August 12, 1939 "Moon Love"
Glen Gray "Sunrise Serenade" Decca 2
September 9, 1939 Glenn Miller "Over the Rainbow" Bluebird 7
"The Man With The Mandolin" 3
September 30, 1939 "Blue Orchids" 1
October 21, 1939 Bob Crosby "Day In-Day Out" Decca
November 4, 1939 Shep Fields "South of the Border (Down Mexico Way)" Bluebird 5
November 11, 1939 The Ink Spots "Address Unknown" Decca 1
November 25, 1939 Shep Fields "Scatter-Brain" Bluebird
December 16, 1939 Glenn Miller "In the Mood"
December 23, 1939 Shep Fields "Scatter-Brain" Vocalion 6
1940
February 10, 1940 Glenn Miller "In the Mood" ♪ (1940) Bluebird 12 [1][2]
May 4, 1940 "Tuxedo Junction" 9
July 6, 1940 "The Woodpecker Song" 5

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Whitburn, Joel (2015). "The #1 Hits". Pop Memories 1900-1940. Record Research. p. 295–297. ISBN 978-0-89820-216-8.
  2. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2002). "#1 Singles". Pop Hits Singles and Albums, 1940-1954. Record Research. p. 311. ISBN 978-0-89820-198-7. [on "In the Mood"]: includes 1 week at #1 in 1939, 12/16.

1940 Category:1940 record charts Category:1940 in American music