Showing posts with label A Detachment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Detachment. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2021

May 21, 1942: U-106 Sinks the Wrong Tanker

Thursday 21 May 1942

P-36C that ran off the runway in Connecticut, 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
P-36C Ser. No. 38-204, 61st Pursuit Squadron, skids off the runway after mechanical failure at Bridgeport Airport in Connecticut, 21 May 1942. The pilot, Lt. George D. Hobbs, is uninjured.
Battle of the Pacific: Japanese Admiral Nagumo sails his Kido Butai carrier force out of the inland sea port of Sasebo on 21 May 1942. His crews spend the day practicing fleet maneuvers as they head through the Bungo Strait. Badly damaged at the Battle of the Coral Sea, aircraft carrier Zuikaku limps into Kure today. It is unavailable for the upcoming attack on Midway.

The Americans remain in doubt about the next target of Japanese aggression, though many officers in naval intelligence suspect it is Midway. Seeking definitive proof, decryption teams in Washington, D.C., Honolulu, and Melbourne, Australia spend the day working on a stack of intercepted Japanese radio messages. These include one long message that has been flagged for priority processing. Japanese radio intelligence operators, meanwhile, also notice an increase in American radio traffic out of Hawaii. They intercept 180 messages and note that 72 are marked as urgent.

The Japanese continue their gradual occupation of the Philippines. After landings in the Leyte Gulf, they enter the city of Bacolod, Leyte, and Samar. Organized Allied resistance ended with the fall of Corregidor, so the Japanese only have to contend with occasional guerrillas.

US Army Air Force B-26 bombers attack Lae, New Guinea.
I-10 in port at Penang, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
I-10 at Penang sometime in 1942.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Japanese submarine I-10, part of A Detachment which is scouting the Indian Ocean for targets, surfaces off Durban, South Africa. The crew launches its E14Y1 floatplane to perform reconnaissance. The pilot spots no targets and quickly flies back to the submarine when challenged by Allied forces over the radio. This is the first Japanese venture to Africa during the war.

Eastern Front: Marshal Timoshenko, belatedly concerned about the mortal danger to his forces south of Kharkov posed by German counterattacks, spends the day regrouping his forces. The Luftwaffe has complete aerial supremacy and wrecked Red Army vehicles block many roads. 

At Fuhrer Headquarters, General Franz Halder notes that "The situation at Kharkov continues to develop to our satisfaction." After writing that an encircled German force at Ternovaya (northeast of Kharkov) has been relieved, he continues that "We can now take out forces from this sector [north of Kharkov] and get them ready to meet Kleist, converging from the north." He concludes that Kleist's advance is taking "a gratifying course" and "we are now recapturing the initiative." Throughout the middle years of the war, "having the initiative" is a major aim of both sides, sometimes to their detriment.
German magazine Illustrierter Beobachter, 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Supply difficulties on the Eastern Front are shown on the cover of the 21 May 1942 Illustrierter Beobachter. 
Southeast of Kharkov, Kleist's panzers of the 14th Panzer Division advance another four miles. This reduces the Soviet breakout point through which all of their supplies flow to Timoshenko's troops to the west from 12 to 8 miles. The Germans remain puzzled that the Red Army on either side still has not attempted to pierce the thin line that the Wehrmacht is establishing east of Timoshenko's armies.

Halder sums up Manstein's victory in Operation Trappenjagd: "Kerch operation concluded. Regrouping at Sevastopol, where the enemy is evidently making preparations against our impending attack."

There is an oblique but telling reference in Halder's diary to the German high command's condescending attitude toward its allies. He writes that the Hungarian military attache visited during the day and requested information about the Kharkov battle. Halder notes simply, "I politely refuse." This is a peculiar attitude considering the key role that the allied troops are projected to play in the upcoming "decisive" summer offensive, Case Blau. However, it also is quite common in the Wehrmacht.

European Air Operations: An extended spring lull continues for both sides over the Channel Front. The only major action is the RAF sending 33 Wellington and 15 Stirling bombers of No. 3 Group to lay mines at the Biscay ports. However, poor weather permits only 18 bombers to complete the mission. No aircraft are lost.
U-106 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U-106. Its sinking of a Mexican oil tanker on 21 May 1942 leads to a declaration of war.
Battle of the Atlantic: U-106 (Kptlt. Hermann Rasch), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6067-ton Mexican oil tanker Faja de Oro. There are ten deaths and 21 survivors. This sinking, along with other events, leads Mexico to declare war on Germany.

It isn't really Rasch's fault that this leads to war, of course. He is just doing the job asked of him and the sinking of neutral ships is quite common by 21 May 1942. In fact, if U-106 didn't sink Faja de Oro, another U-boat was in a position to do so. U-754 was stalking Faja de Oro and watched as U-106 torpedoed it. Two U-boats were ready to do the deed. So, the tanker was doomed and Mexico was fated to declare war.

U-103 (Kptlt. Werner Winter), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 3372-ton US freighter Clare 40 nautical miles (74 km) south of easternmost Cuba. All 40 crewmen survive, either reaching land in their lifeboats or picking up by a Cuban naval vessel.

U-103 also torpedoes and sinks 4727-ton US freighter Elizabeth about 30 nautical miles (56 km) south of Cape Corrientes, Cuba. There are six deaths and 36 survivors.
U-201 entering port at Brest, France, 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U-201 returning to Brest, 21 May 1942. the crew has the binoculars out to see what is in port (Leskin, Federal Archive Image 101II-MW-4939-22).
U-159 (Kptlt. Helmut Friedrich Witte), on its second patrol out of Lorient, gets its first two victories of the war today. It torpedoes and damages 2646-ton Royal Fleet Auxiliary RFA Montenol 140 nautical miles (260 km) southeast of Santa Maria Island, Azores. RFA Montenol is with convoy OS 28. There are three deaths and 61 survivors, who are rescued by HMS Woodruff. RFA Montenol is deemed unsalvageable and is scuttled by HMS Wellington.

U-159 also torpedoes and sinks 6529-ton British freighter New Brunswick 140 nautical miles (260 km) southeast of Santa Maria Island, Azores. New Brunswick is part of Convoy OS 28. There are three dead and 59 survivors, who are rescued by British freighter Inchaga, HMS Totland, HMS Weston, and HMS Woodruff.
Canadian freighter Troisdoc, sunk on 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Canadian freighter Troisdoc, sunk by U-558 on 21 May 1942.
U-558 (Kptlt. Günther Krech), on its seventh patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 1925-ton Canadian freighter Troisdoc west of Jamaica. All 18 crewmen survive and are rescued by USCGC Mohawk.

U-156 (Kptlt. Werner Hartenstein), on its third patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 1738-ton Dominican Republic freighter Presidente Trujillo off Fort-de-France, Martinique. There are 24 dead and 15 survivors.

U-69 (Oblt. Ulrich Gräf), on its eighth patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 1927-ton Canadian freighter Torondoc 60 nautical miles (110 km) northwest of Martinique. All 22 crewmen perish.

After two weeks at sea, four survivors of Neosho (AO-23) are rescued by the destroyer USS Helm (DD-338).

Convoy PQ 16 departs Iceland, bound for Murmansk.
German magazine Beobachter Illustrierter, 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
An article about expressive dance in the 21 May 1942 Illustrierter Beobachter.
Battle of the Mediterranean: British troops in Malta find a man in bad condition in a cave beneath the Dingli cliffs and bring him to Imtarfa military hospital for treatment. He identifies himself under a phony name, Caio Borghi. By chance, he is recognized at the hospital by a boyhood neighbor who now is a captain in the British Army. The man, Carmelo Borg Pisani, then admits to being an Axis spy sent to report on conditions on Malta.

The Luftwaffe continues its recent pattern of sending Bf 109 fighter-bombers on sweeps over Malta. The RAF attempts to intervene, but is usually too slow to arrive. On one of these attacks over Hal Far aerodrome, they kill two men and wound three others. One of the deaths is Sgt. Dewhurst, recently awarded the Military Medal.
Postcard commemorating the laying of the keel of USS Pargo on 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A postcard commemorating the laying of the keel of USS Pargo on 21 May 1942.
US Military: Having been greatly reinforced in recent days by troops brought over to Northern Ireland by liner Queen Mary and other transport ships,  US Army medical battalions begin taking over some facilities. These include hospitals at Musgrave Park on the outskirts of Belfast and at Irvinestown.

North Pacific Force is established in Alaska. It controls all US and Canadian forces in the region. Its first commander is Rear Admiral Robert A. Theobald.

Holocaust: German forces deport 4300 Jewish residents of Chelm to the death camp at Sobibor. All are gassed to death.

German firm IG Farben establishes a factory outside the Auschwitz extermination camp in order to profit from slave labor.
Deportation of Slovak Jews from Czechoslovakia on 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Deportation of Slovak Jews. Stropkov, Czechoslovakia, May 21, 1942.
American Homefront: MGM releases "Tortilla Flat," directed by Victor Fleming and starring Spencer Tracy, Hedy Lamarr, John Garfield, Frank Morgan, and Akim Tamiroff. Morgan is nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

In her 'My Day" syndicated column, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt notes that many women in New Mexico have volunteered and been trained as nurses. They now are "being used in all clinics and hospitals throughout the state." This frees up trained nurses and doctors for other tasks.

Ted Williams goes 3-5 with a home run and four RBIs in an 8-3 Boston Red Sox victory over Cleveland. This is his last game before joining the U.S. Navy on 22 May. After being sworn in, Williams returns to the Red Sox and finishes out the season, coming in second in MVP voting to NY Yankees second baseman Joe Gordon.

Future History: Danny Ongais is born in Kahului, Hawaii. He serves in the US Army in Europe in the late 1950s as a paratrooper, then returns to Hawaii and enters motor racing. He becomes a top drag racer, winning the AA Gas Dragster Championship in 1963 and 1964, and in the National Hot Rod Association AA Dragster championship title in 1965. He enters Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) in 1979 and races in several Indianapolis 500 races. To date, Ongais, who becomes known as the "Flyin' Hawaiian" due to his flamboyant personality, is the native Hawaiian to race in the Indianapolis 500. Danny Ongais is inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2000 and retires from racing in the late 1980s, though he returns for a final race in 1996 and remains associated with the sport for years afterward.
Internees in Arizona making mattresses with straw on 21 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Internees at the Poston internment camp in Arizona filling mattresses with straw, 21 May 1942 (Fred Clark, National Archives and Records Administration, Ctrl. #: NWDNS-210-G-A145, NARA ARC #: 536112).

May 1942


2021

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

May 15, 1942: Germans Take Kerch

Friday 15 May 1942

Hermann Graff 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Luftwaffe pilot Hermann Graf (right), Staffelkapitan 9./JG 52, stands before his Messerschmitt Bf-109F-4 at the Kharkov-Rogan airfield after achieving his 100th victory, May 15, 1942.
Battle of the Pacific: A Japanese Kawanishi reconnaissance aircraft based at Tulagi sights Admiral "Bull" Halsey's Task Force 16 on 15 May 1942. The task force, which includes aircraft carriers USS Enterprise and Hornet, is 445 nautical miles (512 miles, 824 km) east of the Solomon Islands. The presence of the two US carriers convinces Japanese Vice Admiral Shigeyoshi Inoue to cancel Operation RY, the planned invasion of Nauru and Ocean Island. This is exactly what Admiral Chester Nimitz intended, as he wants Halsey's force to return to Pearl Harbor for the looming battle at Midway without being forced into any more actions.

The two Japanese carriers that survived the Battle of the Coral Sea, Zuikaku and Shōkaku, are proceeding back to Japan and cannot be ready for the Midway battle due to the damage they have sustained. Shōkaku almost sinks in foul weather, while Zuikaku stops today at the base at Truk before continuing on to Japan. The US Navy knows their general routes and stations eight submarines in position to intercept the carriers, but no sightings are made.

US Fifth Air Force sends B-25 and B-26 bombers to raid Lae and the Japanese seaplane base at Deboyne. They cause damage at Lae, but the Japanese already have evacuated Deboyne.
Nimitz on the cover of Time, 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Time, 15 May 1942: "Nimitz, Commander in the Pacific."
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Retreating British troops in Burma are consolidating on the western border. Today, they reach Assam in northeastern India. Other Allied troops are assembling at Tamu to the south. The Japanese continue to occupy Burma and have no plans at this time to invade India.

In the Indian Ocean, the ships of Ko ("A") Detachment that is to attack Royal Navy ships at Madagascar and other points refuel at sea from supply ships Aikoku and Hokoku Maru. This force includes submarines I-10, I-16. I-18, I-20, I-30, I-27, and I-28, most converted to carry Type A Kai 1 midget submarines. I-10 and I-30 carry floatplanes instead. This is more an expedition of opportunity than a well-planned operation.

US submarine USS Tuna torpedoes and sinks 805-ton Japanese freighter Toyohara Maru 65 miles off Sohuksando, Korea. There are 21 deaths.
Duke of Gloucester, 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Inspection of Australian Guard of Honour at Government House by the Duke of Gloucester on May 15, 1942. The Duke and party are leaving (Matson Collection, Library of Congress #matpc.21541).
Eastern Front: The Red Army renews its struggling offensive in the northern pincer above Kharkov, but the Wehrmacht now has had time to regain its footing. German fortresses such as at Ternovaya continue to hold out due to a lack of Soviet heavy artillery. The Soviets advance only five kilometers during the day against stiffening German resistance. General Franz Halder at Fuhrer Headquarters writes that "the main thrust of the enemy offensive in the direction of Kharkov appears to be checked."

South of Kharkov, the situation is a little more dangerous. General Halder notes that "Here we may yet witness further enemy advances." However, while the Red Army has openings to the west and south, there are no strategic objectives within reach in those directions. The Germans are guarding Kharkov itself fiercely and, for the time being, are content to let the Soviet troops under General Semyon Timoshenko wander about in the undeveloped country south of the city where they can do little damage. General Ewald von Kleist is preparing a counteroffensive with his First Panzer Army to close off the Soviets' supply corridor, but that will take a couple of days to assemble.

In Crimea, the German 11th Army take the key port of Kerch. This eliminates the main Soviet escape route to the Taman peninsula on the mainland - which they cannot use anyway because Stalin has not authorized a general retreat - and decides the campaign. The Soviets now only hold Sevastopol on Crimea, to which General Erich von Manstein now can turn his full attention.
Toni Frissell, Vogue, 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Photo in Vogue by Toni Frissell (Antoinette Frissell Bacon), 15 May 1942.
At Fuhrer Headquarters, General Halder writes that "The Kerch offensive may be considered closed. Town and harbor are in our hands." However, there is still Soviet resistance south of Kerch. These holdouts have no chance of escaping the POW camps for long, but they still take almost a week to subdue. The Red Air Force is losing planes at a rate of 10-1 to the Luftwaffe, and infantry losses are at an even greater disadvantage to the Soviets.

European Air Operations: Operations remain light. Aside from coastal sweeps, the RAF only sends 50 bombers to lay mines in the Western Baltic. Two Hampdens and two Wellingtons fail to return.

A Bf 109F of 9./JG 11 crash lands in a field near Tarm, Denmark. With great efficiency, the plane is quickly prepared for transport by removing the wings and returned to a Luftwaffe base for its return to service.
WAAC poster, 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Women may volunteer for the Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps as of 15 May 1942.
Battle of the Atlantic: The Luftwaffe attacks Murmansk and scores a direct hit on US freighter Yaka. While there are no casualties of the 49 men on board, the ship must be beached to prevent it from sinking.

U-156 (Kptlt. Werner Hartenstein), on its third patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 4382-ton Yugoslavian freighter Kupa in the Atlantic northeast of Barbados. There are two dead and 68 survivors.

U-156 also torpedoes and sinks 4301-ton Norwegian freighter Siljestad northeast of Barbados. There are two dead and 31 survivors.

The Lockheed Hudson bombers of RAF Nos. 320 and 407 Squadron make a successful anti-shipping sweep off the French coast. The RAF bombs and sinks 713-ton German minesweepers M 26 and M 256 off Cap de La Hogue, France. M 256 is later raised and returned to service. The bombers also sink German 464-ton vorpostenboot V 2002 Madeleine Louise off Terschelling, Netherlands, along with 6698-ton Norwegian freighter Selje. There are 14 deaths of the 62 people on board Selje.

British 6677-ton freighter Soudan, traveling with Convoy WS 15, hits a mine and sinks near Cape Agulhas, South Africa. There is one death.

British light cruiser HMS Trinidad, badly damaged in the Barents Sea by Luftwaffe attacks, is scuttled. There are 62 dead.
Ration stamps during World War II worldwartwo.filminspector.com
World War II ration stamps. Gasoline rationing goes into effect on 15 May 1942.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Winston Churchill sends Malta commander Lord Gort a telegram appointing him as "Supreme Commander of the Fighting Services and Civil Administration in Malta." Rome radio today announces that Gort was wounded by a bomb splinter, but it is unclear if this is true as there has been no official announcement.

Costa Rican/Hungary/Romania Relations: Costa Rica breaks diplomatic relations with Romania and Hungary.

US Military: Insignia on US military aircraft are changed by eliminating the red disc in the center of the star. All red and white rudder stripes are removed from navy aircraft. In addition, US Army Air Force pursuit units are renamed fighter units today.

Legislation signed by President Roosevelt on 14 May 1942 goes into effect today creating the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC). The service is voluntary and evolves into the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) in 1943.

The War Department leases nearly eight and a half acres of Fort McHenry for the Coast Guard to use as a fire control and port security training facility. There will be a five or six-week course, after which members will be stationed along the coast at key facilities and for training others.
Fritz Sauckel in Paris, 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The opening of an Arno Breker exhibition in Paris, France, on 15 May 1942. Breker is a popular sculptor in the Third Reich and, among other things, accompanied Adolf Hitler during his tour of Paris. At the center is Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel (Schodl, Georg, Federal Archive Image 101I-357-1885-13A).
Holocaust: The Slovak parliament issues Decree 68/1942. This retroactively legalizes the deportation of Jews, legalizes the removal of their citizenship, and regulates exemptions for such actions. An agreement is reached with the Reich wherein the Slovaks will pay 500 Reichsmarks per individual deported to Germany and an additional train fare to the Reichsbahn to defray expenses. In return, Germany agrees to never return the deported individuals and Slovakia is allowed to keep all confiscated property.

Within parliament, there is no opposition to this legislation and general agreement about its terms. The official Catholic representative, Ján Vojtaššák, only asks for special consideration for Jews who have converted to Christianity. Trains carrying victims have been running to the camps at Auschwitz and Majdanek since 25 March 1942.

American Homefront: Mandatory gasoline rationing goes into effect for non-essential vehicles in the first seventeen states. Usage is limited to three gallons per week. Eight million motorists register for ration cards. The average motorist receives an "A" classification, while business owners, doctors, truckers, and those with necessary transportation jobs are issued either “B,” “C,” “T,” or “X” stickers that would ensure they received the proper amount of gas for their duties. Rubber for tires also is being rationed. A national speed limit of 35 mph is imposed, called the Victory Speed. Even with rationing, long lines arise at the few gasoline stations that have supplies.
Vogue, 15 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Vogue, 15 May 1942.

May 1942


2021

Monday, April 19, 2021

May 10, 1942: Spitfires Rule Over Malta

Sunday 10 May 1942

USS Long Island, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Curtiss SOC-3A of VGS-1 parked on the flight deck of escort carrier USS Long Island (AVG-1), 10 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-14521).
Battle of the Pacific: USAAF B-25 and B-26 bombers based in Port Moresby attack the new Japanese seaplane base at the Deboyne Islands on 10 May 1942 for the second day in a row, losing one of each type of bomber. The Japanese seaplane tender Kamikawa Maru is badly damaged and departs for repairs. Without the tender, the base is difficult to sustain. Thus, the Japanese begin evacuating the Deboyne base today due to its vulnerability and the failure of Operation Mo to invade Port Moresby. However, the seaplanes based there remain operational and spend the morning searching for Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher's Task Force 17 (USS Yorktown) without success. B-17 bombers also bomb the port of Kessa, Buka, in the Northern Solomon Islands.

Rear Admiral Fletcher already has departed the area, taking TF 17 south of New Caledonia. At 01:00, Australian Rear Admiral John Crace, commanding TF 44, also orders his cruisers back to Australia after losing communication with Fletcher. Unable to find the Allied carrier fleet, Vice Admiral Takeo Takagi takes most of his fleet back to Rabaul and sends his remaining aircraft carrier, Zuikaku, back to Japan to replenish its air units.

The Japanese, as a follow-up to their intricate Operation Mo, have planned to invade Nauru and Ocean Island. This is Operation Ry. The ships assigned to this operation are planning to set out, but the failure of Operation Mo makes this a much riskier proposition. Takagi is to command a critical component of this operation, too, though his 5th Cruiser Division will have no carrier support.
Kualoa Airfield, Hawaii, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Kualoa Airfield, Oahu, Hawaii, 10 May 1942.
Major General Jonathan Wainwright officially surrenders to Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma today. This is more symbolic and a formality, as Wainwright has been in captivity for several days and no longer has the authority to order surrenders. However, Major General William Sharp, in command of remaining Allied troops in the Philippines based primarily in Mindanao, decides to follow Wainwright's lead out of fears of a massacre of Wainwright's men if he does not. Right after Wainwright's radio speech, he orders the surrender of all remaining troops. Many of Sharp's Filipino troops decide to join the guerilla forces of Colonel Wendell Fertig instead rather than surrender. Like Wainwright, Sharp ultimately is sent to confinement in Mukden (Shenyang), Manchuria. This marks the end of the Philippine Campaign. The Allies have lost 140,000 lives and there are about 12,500 Allied prisoners of war. They are treated with great brutality.

US Navy submarine USS Silversides (SS-236) is operating 540 miles north of Marcus Island when it gets into a surface battle with Japanese guard boat No. 5 Ebisu Maru. The battle ends in a draw, with the heavily damaged Japanese boat making it back to port and the submarine losing one crewman when it is raked with machine gunfire.
President Roosevelt, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
President Franklin Roosevelt at an early-morning "birding party" near Pine Plains, New York. FDR is a big bird lover and Margaret "Daisy" Suckley, lower right, organized this one on 10 May 1942 (FDR Presidential Library 62-383).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: A new player enters the war in Burma when the Thai Phayap Army invades Shan State as a Japanese ally. There aren't many Allied troops left there, though, just scattered troops left behind during retreats who cause little trouble to the Axis troops. In western Burma, the British are retreating as fast as they can. Gurkha units are performing rearguard duties before they, too, retreat.

Japanese bombers attack Imphal, India. It is the first attack of the war on Imphal. The Japanese later claim that they were bombing an airfield, but the city has no airfield. At least 70 civilians are killed and another 80 wounded. The local population flees the city after the bombing and does not return for several days.

The Japanese attack the 17th Indian Division, about 10,000 men, at Shwegyin Chaung near the Chindwin River. This forces the 17th Division to withdraw up the Kabaw Valley to the border town of Tamu. The Japanese do not follow and instead fall back on their base.

To cover the retreating Allied forces, the 10th Air Force sends four B-17s to bomb Japanese planes parked at the Myitkyina Airfield. They destroy several planes and cause damage to the runway.

The Japanese have sent some ships in the "A Detachment" into the Indian Ocean for another raid on merchant ships from Penang. The A Detachment includes submarines I-10, I-30, I-16, I-18, and I-20, as well as tender Nisshin. Among the objectives is to reconnoiter the East African coast for potential invasion location. Some of the submarines carry reconnaissance planes, others Kai 1 (tiny) submarines. Today, the A Detachment refuels at sea from tankers Aikoku Maru and Hokoku Maru.

Illustrating the global nature of the conflict, aircraft carrier USS Ranger launches 60 P-40 Warhawk fighters off the African Gold Coast. The planes fly to Accra and then on to Karachi, India, where they are to join the 10th Air Force for operations out of India.
Soviet prisoners of war stacking bales of hay, May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Soviet POWs stacking bales of hay for the Germans, May 1942 (Schürer, Federal Archive Image 183-B19683).
Eastern Front: General Franz Halder, who generally takes a cautious or even pessimistic view of developments of the front, writes in his war diary: "The Kerch offensive, which was going on so well, has been slowed down by adverse weather. Other fronts quiet." The Kerch Offensive he's referring to is Operation Trappenjagd.

The truth isn't quite so miserable for the German cause as Halder implies. Luftwaffe Fliegerkorps VIII greets the morning, during which light rain continues drizzling down until noontime, by attacking Soviet tanks desperately trying to stop the German breakthrough. This includes 11 KV-1 tanks, which are heavily armored but slow and ponderous. Another part of Fliegerkorps VIII, KG 55, sends its Heinkel He 111 bombers to attack the infantry. While 8 of the slow bombers are shot down, they drop enough anti-personnel bombs (SD-2) to decapitate the forward Soviet units. Luftwaffe General Wolfram von Richthtofen sends other bombers to attack the Soviet supply lines from Kerch to the mainland. During these attacks, they sink three transport ships carrying 900 wounded, a gunboat, six patrol boats, and assorted other vessels.

The 22nd Panzer Division is held up by the rain and mud and only begins moving during the afternoon. However, after that it makes good time on its drive to the northern coast to trap Soviet 51st Army and almost completes the encirclement by nightfall. General Fretter-Pico's scratch Grodeck Brigade, meanwhile, continues driving east toward Kerch without much opposition and even gets through the second main Soviet line (the Sultanovka, or Turkish Wall, Line). The Soviets had hoped to make a stand at this line by pulling troops back from the front, but the Red Army generals can only engage in recriminations on why this doesn't happen. Fretter-Pico decides late in the day to send the 132nd Infantry Division toward Kerch along the same road the Grodeck Brigade took in the morning even though there are signs the Soviets are attempting to seal that hole in the front.
Luftwaffe helper in France, May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Luftwaffe helper (Luftwaffenhelfer) at a flight control center in France, May 1942 (Lysiak, Bruno, Federal Archive Image 101I-616-2527-23A).
While the Crimea battle is going badly for it, the Red Army is preparing a major offensive by the Southwestern Front and Southern Front. It is to be aimed at Kharkiv. There are six armies in the two fronts, with hundreds of tanks and masses of artillery. In overall command is Marshal Semyon Timoshenko. His Military Commissar, who technically has equal input into tactical and strategic decisions, is Nikita Khrushchev. The attack, which has been delayed by the spring thaw ("rasputitsa"),  is scheduled to begin on 12 May.

The Wehrmacht also is planning an operation centered on Kharkiv. This is Operation Fredericus, which is to be completed by the Sixth Army under the command of General der Panzertruppe Friedrich Paulus. The goal of Operation Fridericus is to blow a hole in the Soviet line south of Kharkiv around the "Izyum Bulge," a projection of the Red Army line formed during the Soviet winter counteroffensive. This, it is hoped, will be the opening stages of "Case Blue," the decisive summer offensive spelled out in Fuhrer Directive No. 41 that is to capture the Caucasus oil fields and finish the Soviet Union as a major power. It is vital to German plans that Operation Fridericus be executed quickly and completely.

The choice of Paulus as commander of both Sixth Army and this critical operation is curious. He is well known to be primarily a staff officer with little battle experience. However, he also is known to be bright and hard-working, and that counts for a lot in the Third Reich. Paulus advanced to this position in January 1942 because he has been a protege of Field Marshal Walther von Reichenau - but Reichenau passed away the same month, leaving little reason for Paulus to fill this key position over other, battle-hardened commanders.

The Army Group South rear areas near Kharkiv are filling up with troops penciled in to serve in Case Blue. In effect, the other army groups are being deprived of troops at the expense of Army Group South. However, Hitler is adamant that these new troops are to be kept in reserve and are not to be used for any purposes other than Case Blue. So, Paulus must complete Operation Fridericus using only Sixth Army. That operation is projected to begin on 18 May. Today, Paulus submits his final draft of Operation Fridericus but warns his superiors that the Soviets may be planning a spoiling attack.

So, both sides are preparing large offensives at the same spot in the southern front, with the Soviets planning to attack first. The Germans have about 300,000 men at the front in this general area, supported by 1000 tanks and 1500 aircraft. However, a great deal of Luftwaffe strength remains fully committed in Crimea for some time.
Q-Ship Evelyn, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Q-ship Evelyn, 10 May 1942 (US Coast Guard).
European Air Operations: There are no operations by either side, most likely due to inclement weather.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-333 (Kptlt. Peter-Erich Cremer), on its second patrol out of La Pallice, torpedoes and sinks 5214-ton British freighter Clan Skene 300 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras. This is an opportunistic sinking by U-333 because it was damaged by depth charges a few days ago and was limping back to France when it spotted the unescorted freighter. There are nine deaths and 73 survivors, who are picked up by USS McKean (APD 5).

U-506 (Kptlt. Erich Würdemann), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 7050-ton US tanker Aurora about 40 nautical miles from Southwest Pass, Louisiana. There are one death and 38 survivors, who are rescued by USS Onyx and YP-157. Two tugs take the burning tanker in tow to Algiers, Louisiana, and it is eventually repaired and returned to service under the new name Jamestown.  

U-588 (Kptlt. Victor Vogel), on its third patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 4031-ton UK freighter Kitty's Brook about 35 nautical miles (65 km) east of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia. There are 25 survivors and nine deaths.

German replenishment oiler Warmia hits a mine in the Bay of Biscay and is severely damaged.
Romanian pioneers celebrate King's Day, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Romanian pioneers celebrate the Day of the King, 10 May 1942. They are carrying Pignone model 1937 flame-throwers.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Axis spies have told the Germans and Italians in Sicily about the recent arrival of over 60 Spitfire fighters, so they try to eliminate this new force as quickly as possible. The Luftwaffe sends 20 Ju 87 Stukas and 10 Junkers Ju 88s with a heavy escort, followed by another raid by 10 Ju 88s escorted by over 30 Bf 109s. A third raid then comes in by Italian Cant Z1007 bombers escorted by 10 MC 202 and 10 Re 2001 fighters. Finally, a fourth raid by 20 Stukas with Bf 109 escorts takes place. The raids come in quick succession, but they meet heavy fighter opposition. The Spitfire fighters disperse the attacks, shoot down many bombers, and convince the Axis headquarters that daylight raids on Malta are now a very bad idea. 
Spitfires May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Spitfires of RAF No. 91 Squadron lined up at RAF Hawkinge, May 1942.
German 79-ton Schnellboot (E-boat) S-31 hits a mine and sinks in while laying mines off Sliema Point near Grand Harbour, Malta. The mines are intended to sink freighter HMS Welshman, which is carrying ammunition for the island's anti-aircraft guns, ground personnel for the recently arrived Spitfire fighters, and spare aircraft engines, among other things. Welshman gets in and out of the harbor by nightfall without damage. It is likely that S-31 hits one of the mines it had just laid that accidentally got cut from its moorings. There are 13 deaths and 13 survivors, including skipper Lt. Heinrich Haag.
HMS Welshman unloading at Malta, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Welshman at the dock in Malta, 10 May 1942. © IWM A 9507.
Battle of the Black Sea: The Luftwaffe bombs and sinks 1048-ton Soviet transport Chernomorets during a voyage from Kerch to Novorossiysk. There over 500 deaths, many of them wounded men being repatriated.

War Crimes: The Luftwaffe raids Alexandria, bombing and sinking British hospital ship Ramb IV (formerly an Italian ship but captured at the port of Massawa on 10 April 1941). There are 165 deaths, 155 of them wounded soldiers. There are always excuses for bombing hospital ships in the fog of war, but they are clearly marked. Doing so is a recognized war crime.

US Military: The US Navy holds a demonstration of towing fighter planes behind a larger aircraft in order to increase their range at the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A twin-engined Douglas BD A-20 successfully tows two Grumman F4F Wildcat fighters for an hour at 180 knots at 7000 feet. Despite the success of the demonstration, the idea does not catch on.

President Roosevelt authorizes the Air Medal to recognize meritorious achievements while flying.
Exclusion Order No. 61, issued 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Civilian Exclusion Order No. 61, issued 10 May 1942.
British Homefront: Winston Churchill gives a radio address on the second anniversary of his having replaced Neville Chamberlain as Prime Minister. He specifically warns Hitler about using poison gas, saying:

we shall treat the unprovoked use of poison gas against our Russian ally exactly as if it were used against ourselves and if we are satisfied that this new outrage has been committed by Hitler we will use our great and growing air superiority in the West to carry gas warfare on the largest possible scale far and wide against military objectives in Germany.

Churchill does not mention that both sides are developing poison gas and have been for some time. Hitler has shown no indication that he intends to use it against England, though there is evidence Germany is using it in certain instances on the Eastern Front (and in concentration camps, of course). Canada established the Suffield Field Experimental Station in Alberta in 1941 to develop and test poison gas. Beginning around this time, the Canadian government gasses about 2000 people, including many without full protective gear. Many sustain injuries, especially around the eyes.

American Homefront:  The Western Defense Command issues Civilian Exclusion Orders No. 60 and No. 61. They require every individual or family with full or partial Japanese ancestry to register at a Civil Control Station within 24 to 48 hours.

It is Mother's Day. Knott's Berry Farm sells a record 6,390 1/2 chicken dinners during the day. The demand for chicken dinners is so strong that the restaurant runs out of chickens by 17:00, with some guests waiting as long as four hours for their chicken.

President Roosevelt spends a quiet day at Hyde Park, New York, without any appointments.

May 1942


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