Showing posts with label Butch O'Hare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butch O'Hare. Show all posts

Friday, April 9, 2021

May 1, 1942: Japanese Take Mandalay

Friday 1 May 1942

KV-1 tanks on parade 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Soviet KV-1 tanks on parade at the Palace Square in Leningrad, Russia, 1 May 1942 (Boris Kudoyarov, Russian International News Agency).
Battle of the Pacific: A cataclysmic clash is brewing in the South West Pacific Theater on 1 May 1942, with both sides moving large forces into position to contest the seas around Port Moresby, New Guinea. In Operation Mo, the Japanese plan to occupy Port Moresby and Tulagi in the Solomon Islands. Allied naval intelligence staffers in Melbourne, Australia, have a good idea of Japanese plans from radio intercepts and are putting this knowledge to good use. The Allies hope to take the Japanese invasion forces by surprise based on their radio intercepts and thereby stop the landings despite being numerically inferior.

Today, both sides take major steps in arranging their forces for the confrontation. Two US Navy task forces, TF 11 (USS Lexington) and TF 17 (Yorktown) rendezvous about 300 nautical miles (350 miles, 560 km) northwest of New Caledonia. Vice Admiral Jack Fletcher, in overall command aboard the Yorktown, knows he has some time and, having refueled his own ships, detaches TF 11 to refuel. Meanwhile, the Japanese send the Carrier Strike Force, including aircraft carriers Shōkaku and Zuikaku, from the fleet base at Truk. They are under the command of Vice-Admiral Takeo Takagi.
USS Neosho refuels USS Yorktown, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Tanker USS Neosho refuels fleet carrier USS Yorktown, 1 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-464653).
The Carrier Strike Force plans to sail down the eastern side of the Solomon Islands. The Japanese Tulagi Invasion Force under Rear Admiral Shima, which today pauses briefly at the Shortland Islands, Bougainville, to set up a seaplane base, will take Tulagi along the way. The Carrier Strike Force then will pass Guadalcanal and enter the Coral Sea. From there, it will cover the landings at Port Moresby. Vice-Admiral Takagi, of course, has no idea that Fletcher's two fleet carriers are waiting for him.

To soften Tulagi up, the Japanese today raid it and nearby Gavutu Islander, where Australian forces maintain a seaplane base. They badly damage a Catalina flying boat. This attack induces the Australians to evacuate the remaining serviceable Catalinas during the day.

US Navy submarine USS Grenadier (SS-210, LtCdr Willis Lent), on her second patrol out of Pearl Harbor, torpedoes and sinks 5761-ton Soviet freighter SS Angarstroi about 90 miles (145 km) southwest of Nagasaki, Japan. The Soviet commander, en route from Vladivostok to San Francisco, had decided to take a shortcut through the war zone to save coal. Along the way, the ship had been inspected for contraband in Kushimoto, but it was only carrying 7555 tons of sugar. All 60 people on board survive the sinking. Japanese merchant ship Koya Maru picks up the survivors about five hours later. While Commander Lent of the Grenadier does not take credit for this (mistaken) sinking (of an ally's ship), a postwar examination of documents during the Tokyo trials in 1946 points to the Grenadier as the likely culprit. The captain of the ship also writes a detailed account of the sinking for a Russian publication ca. 1990.

US Navy submarine Drum torpedoes and sinks 10,929-ton Japanese seaplane tender Mizuho 40 miles off Omae Zaki (Omaezaki), Japan. There are 101 deaths and 472 survivors, including her commanding officer, who are rescued by cruiser Takao. The tender actually sinks just after midnight on the 2nd.

US Navy submarine Triton torpedoes and sinks 5338-ton Japanese freighter Calcutta Maru off Wenchow, China, in the East China Sea. There are 54 dead, with an unknown number of survivors rescued by Japanese freighters Boko Maru and Kaisoku Maru.
Butch O'Hare, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Lieutenant Commander “Butch” O’Hare and F4F-4 at Norfolk, Virginia, May 1, 1942 (US Navy).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British have withdrawn their troops north of Mandalay, the second-largest city in Burma, so Japanese troops of the 18th Infantry Division have little difficulty occupying it on 1 May 1942. Mandalay, the last royal capital of the Konbaung Dynasty, has great symbolic importance in the country despite being eclipsed in size and economic importance by Rangoon. Japanese troops are already to the west of Mandalay, where they block the road at Monywa on the Chindwin River from units of the 1st Burma Division. This traps some British troops to their south.

Meanwhile, Japanese troops advancing from the recently-captured Lashio clash at Hsenwi with rearguard troops from the Lashio battle. The Northern Shan States Battalion, Burma Frontier Force (with elements of a detachment of the Chin Hills Battalion), holds a bridge over the Shweli River at Manwing. The Japanese need it in order to drive north to the regional center of Bhamo, so a fierce battle breaks out. The defenders hold their ground throughout the day.
Hitler cartoon, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
This cartoon in the 1 May 1942 Daily Mirror suggests that Hitler, busy with plans in the Soviet Union, has to look over his shoulder at the possibility of a Second Front. 
Eastern Front: While both the Germans and the Red Army are preparing offensives against each other along the Parpach Narrows on the Crimea, another battle to the German rear continues. General Erich von Manstein's 11th Army continues to try to breach the Soviet defenses around Sevastopol. The Wehrmacht has brought its heaviest artillery, including the 800mm Dora cannon, up to pound the fortresses guarding the port's perimeter. Luftflotte 7, under the command of General Wolfram von Richthofen, has been enlarged to the size of an air fleet (which usually accompanies an entire army group) and is sending up to 1000 sorties a day against the same targets. These planes will be turned around against the Red Army line on the Parpach Narrows when Manstein is ready to launch his offensive in about a week.

Soviet attacks against the perimeters at Kholm and Demyansk continue despite the German success in forming a supply corridor through Ramushevo to the latter town. The Kholm pocket is in crisis and has shrunk to a tiny size. However, knowing that relief is at hand props up German morale and the Soviet attacks are repelled with great difficulty.

General Franz Halder, having spent his time on leave since 26 April, leaves by train in the evening to return to the Fuhrer Headquarters in East Prussia.

European Air Operations: It is a relatively quiet day on the Channel Front, perhaps due to poor weather. The only major activity by either side is an attack by a dozen Boston bombers during the day against a parachute factory at Calais and the railway station at St. Omer. All planes return safely.
HMS Punjabi, sunk on 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Punjabi, sunk on 1 May 1942 (© IWM FL 25824).
Battle of the Atlantic: The battle over two Allied convoys passing north of Norway in the Barents Sea heats up on 1 May 1942. The Luftwaffe sends six Junkers Ju 88 medium bombers against PQ 15 sailing east toward Murmansk. The attack fails and only five of the planes make it back to base.

However, all is not well for the Allies despite the failed Luftwaffe raid. Royal Navy battleship HMS King George V, leading Distaff Force east of Iceland, collides with 1891-ton destroyer Punjabi in heavy fog, sinking the destroyer and damaging the battleship. There are 49 deaths and 209 survivors on the Punjabi. Also damaged is the battleship USS Washington, which blunders into the wreckage site in the fog. As Punjabi sinks, its depth charges explode, damaging Washington's fire control systems. The damage to King George V forces the Admiralty to send the battleship Duke of York up from Scapa Flow as a replacement.

The Kriegsmarine also gets into the act when three of its destroyers dispatched from port on 30 April - Zerstörergruppe "Arktis" (Z7 Hermann Schoemann, Z24 and Z25) under the command of Kapitän zur See Alfred Schulze-Hinrichs - reach convoy QP 11 sailing west from Murmansk. A classic naval battle develops between the German destroyers and the Allied convoy escorts, which form up between the attackers and the convoy. 
German Navik-class destroyer worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A German Narvik-class destroyer, similar to Z-24 and Z-25 (National Museum of the U.S. Navy - Lot-2275-44).
The German destroyers open fire at 14:05 and get the better of the engagement, They badly damage 2847-ton Soviet freighter Tsiolkolvsy using torpedoes (27 dead and 14 survivors rescued by HMT Lord Middleton). The crippled freighter eventually is sunk later in the day by U-589 (some accounts have this the other way around and claim it was damaged by the U-boat and finished off by the destroyers, but either way it sinks). During the engagement, the Germans also badly damage the old destroyer HMS Amazon with two hits. However, the Allied escorts do their job by protecting (most of) the convoy. The German destroyers depart as darkness closes in at 17:50 to look for badly damaged Royal Navy cruiser Edinburgh, which had its stern blown off on 30 April and is limping back to Murmansk at only two knots.

U-162 (FrgKpt. Jürgen Wattenberg), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes, shells, and sinks 6692-ton Brazilian freighter Parnahyba off Trinidad in the Caribbean. There are seven dead and 65 survivors who are rescued by Canadian freighter Turret Cape.

U-109 (Kptlt. Heinrich Bleichrodt), on its fifth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6548-ton British freighter La Paz off Cape Canaveral, Florida. The ship is later salvaged, repaired, and returned to service in the US Maritime Commission.

U-69 (Oblt. Ulrich Gräf), on its eighth patrol out of St. Nazaire, spots 671-ton Canadian schooner James E. Newsom about 370 nautical miles (690 km) northeast of Bermuda. The U-boat uses its deck gun to sink the ship. All nine crewmen survive.
Hitler, Eva Braun, and Uschi Schneider, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler, likely at the instigation of Eva Braun, right, poses for pictures with Uschi Schneider in the Berghof great hall on 1 May 1942. Uschi is the daughter of Eva's childhood friend Herta Schneider and he takes many photos with her.
Battle of the Mediterranean: A Lockheed Hudson (RAF No. 233 Squadron) spots U-573 (Kptlt. Heinrich Heinsohn), on its fourth patrol out of Pola, sailing on the surface north of El Marsa, Algeria. It drops depth charges and damages the submarine, with one crewman killed. The crippled U-boat puts into the neutral Spanish port of Cartagena and is interned. In August 1942, the Kriegsmarine sells it to the Spanish Navy (Armada Espanola), where it serves until 1970. U-573 ends its wartime career having sunk one ship of 5289 tons (Norwegian freighter Hellen on 21 December 1941).

At Malta, Axis bombers focus on Luqa Airfield. They attack work crews constructing pens to shelter fighters and drop delayed-action bombs to hinder later work efforts. Throughout the day, Italian Cant and Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88 bombers attack many points on the island with a clear priority of bombing airfields. Governor Dobbie congratulates the anti-aircraft crews for claiming 110 Axis planes during the month of April 1942.

US/Vichy France Relations: The last US ambassador to Vichy France, Admiral William D. Leahy, departs on his journey home via Lisbon. The embassy will remain open under a chargé d'affaires until the US/British/Free French invasion of North Africa in November 1942.
HMCS Woodstock commissioned, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMCS Woodstock, a Flower-class corvette, is commissioned at Collingwood Shipyards Ltd. in Collingwood, Ontario, on 1 May 1942.
US Military: Pursuant to an agreement with the British government, the US Navy establishes the Naval Base and Naval Auxiliary Air Facility, Great Exuma, Bahama Islands, and Naval Base, Grand Cayman, British West Indies. Also established around this time is a company of the Jamaican Home Guard recruited from the Cayman Islands. The Home Guard maintains 24-hour coastal patrols for U-boats.

Soviet Government: It is May Day, so Joseph Stalin issues an Order of the Day celebrating it. He notes that:

It is beyond doubt, first, that in this period fascist Germany and its army have become weaker than they were 10 months ago. The war has brought grave disillusionments, millions of human sacrifices, starvation and poverty to the German people. The end of the war is not in sight, and reserves of manpower are coming to an end, oil is coming to an end, raw materials are coming to an end. The realization that Germany's defeat is inevitable is growing on the German people.

Stalin further notes that "our country has become stronger than it was at the beginning of the war." Notably, he praises the United States and Great Britain for taking "First place" among peoples of the world who "have joined forces against German imperialism." Such effusive praise will notably diminish as the war goes on.

American Homefront: A United Airlines Mainliner DC-3 crashes near Salt Lake City, Utah, within seven miles of Municipal Airport while en route from San Francisco to New York. The crash puzzles investigators because an eyewitness observed it heading straight into Ensign Peak of the Wasatch Mountains while circling for a landing. Poor weather may have been a factor, along with engine trouble. All 17 people on board, including a 1-year-old baby, perish.

Metro Goldwyn Mayer releases "Tarzan's New York Adventures." It stars Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen Sullivan. This is Maureen Sullivan's last film until 1948 as she raises her seven children, including future actress Mia Farrow.
Der Adler, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A peek inside the Der Adler magazine of 1 May 1942.

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

May 1942


2021

Saturday, March 27, 2021

April 25, 1942: Bath Devastated in Baedeker Blitz

Saturday 25 April 1942

Würzburg Evacuation 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German soldiers escort a column of Jewish residents of Würzburg to a waiting train for their evacuation to the extermination camp at Sobibor on 25 April 1942. Photo: State Archives Würzburg.
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese attempt to bomb Darwin in northern Australia again on 25 April 1942, but they get a hot reception. The 49th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) of Fifth Air Force is now at full strength there. Flying Curtiss P-40 Warhawks, the Group shoots down 10 Japanese bombers and 3 Zero fighters at no loss to themselves. Gradually, the Allied air defenses in the region are firming and are much more effective than just a few weeks earlier.

US Navy submarine USS Spearfish torpedoes 7296-ton Japanese freighter (requisitioned by the Navy) Toba Maru northwest of Luzon, Philippines. The ship's crew manages to beach the ship 10 km west of Cape Candon, Luzon. It is later refloated and towed to Kirun for repair.

US Navy submarine Pickerell (SS-177), on her fourth wartime patrol, torpedoes and damages Japanese hospital ship Takasugo Maru in Manipa Strait, Malay Archipelago (Indonesia).

Aircraft of unknown nationality damage Japanese transport No. 2 Nankai Maru near Shortland Island in the western Solomons.
Saturday Evening Post 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The lead story in the 25 April 1942 Saturday Evening Post is "Japan's Islands of Mystery."
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British continue bugging out from positions they never expected to be in any jeopardy. The Bush Warfare School at Maymyo is forced today to leave for Sagaing and is activated for combat there. While the Chinese 200th Division has recaptured Loilem and neared Hopong, the Japanese continue advancing around them and are on the verge of occupying all of the Shan States. This would open a path to northern Burma via Bhamo and Myitkyina. 

General Alexander observes the Japanese advancing on Mandalay and orders all Allied troops to withdraw to the north of that city. This means the Chinese must abandon their defenses at Pyawbwe, south of Mandalay. General Chang, commander of the Chinese Sixty-Sixth Army, arrives in Lashio and takes command of all Chinese troops in the area, but it does not appear the Allies can hold the city for long.
Zec cartoon 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Zec cartoon in the 25 April 1942 Daily Mirror is all about bombs raining down on Germany. However, just as many bombs have been raining down on England recently. That's not quite so humorous, though.
Eastern Front: General Franz Halder compiles a casualty list from the start of Operation Barbarossa to 20 April 1942. The list shows that 34,039 officers and 1,114,914 men of other ranks have become casualties. Considering that the Heer (Army) began the campaign with a total of 3.2 million men of all ranks, that means that a full third of the army (35.9%, as Halder notes) that invaded the Soviet Union has become casualties - so far. The totals of those killed are 9,077 officers and 232,236 other ranks, with another 874 officers and 53,787 "missing." While Halder does not comment on the figures, this obviously was not how the campaign was supposed to turn out. These casualty figures are far in excess of anything the German Army has experienced before in the war.

The spring thaw ("Rasputitsa") is in full swing, so not much is happening along the Eastern Front. Halder laconically notes, apparently without irony, "All quiet along the entire front. Local enemy probing on the front of the Second Army."

Obstlt. Hans-Ekkehard Bob of JG 54 shoots down a MiG-3 over Leningrad for his 40th victory. During the raid, the Luftwaffe sinks 893-ton Estonian freighter VT-510 (formerly the Vahur, seized by the USSR in 1940).
Winnipeg Free Press 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
As this 25 April 1942 edition of the Winnipeg Free Press shows, the RAF raids on Rostock receive a lot of press, the Luftwaffe raids on Exeter, not so much. Perhaps that is due to security concerns.
European Air Operations: The Luftwaffe "Baedeker Raids" continue. After two nights of attacking Exeter with mediocre results, tonight's new Luftwaffe target is Bath, which has been largely untouched so far in the war. This raid by 80 aircraft is much more successful than the Exeter raids, causing widespread damage and 400 casualties. Many citizens don't bother seeking cover because previous Luftwaffe missions have overflown the city on the way to the aircraft factories at Bristol. However, the German pathfinders drop their flares over Bath and that leads to a night of horror. The first bombs fall just before 23:00 and the raid lasts for two hours. As is their custom, the Luftwaffe bombers then return a few hours later after refueling and rearming in France, causing more damage and catching people by surprise again after the "all clear" has sounded. Many historic buildings are destroyed among the roughly 19,000 buildings hit in some way during the Bath raids. The Luftwaffe loses four aircraft in this raid.

RAF Bomber Command raids the north German port of Rostock again with 128 bombers. As they have on previous nights, the bombers split up, with 110 heading downtown and 18 to the Heinkel factory on the outskirts of town. For the first time, some hits are scored on the Heinkel factory by Manchester bombers of RAF No. 156 Squadron under the command of Wing Commander Guy Gibson. No planes are lost on this mission.

In a subsidiary attack, half a dozen Stirling bombers attack the Skoda armaments factory in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia. They lose one bomber. Another 32 bombers do a "milk run" to Dunkirk, while 2 Blenheim intruders attack targets inland and 5 bombers drop leaflets over France.

Johannes Seifert of I./JG-26, a top Luftwaffe ace on his way to 57 aerial victories, shoots down a Spitfire five miles northwest of Berck-sur-Mer, killing the pilot.
Liberty Magazine 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The 25 April 1942 Liberty magazine's lead story is about "Hitler's No. 1 Headache," which is revealed to be a certain Yugoslav Serb general leading Chetnik detachments. In actuality, the Chetniks were hardly Hitler's biggest problem because many collaborated with the Third Reich. Due to his alleged collaboration, this "headache," Dragoljub "Draža" Mihailović, was convicted of high treason after the war and executed by firing squad in Belgrade (the true extent of his culpability is disputed and his conviction was expunged long after his death).
Battle of the Atlantic: U-108 (KrvKpt. Klaus Scholtz), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 3849-ton British (formerly Finnish) freighter Modesta in the mid-Atlantic 110 miles northwest of Bermuda. There are 18 deaths and 23 survivors, who are rescued by Belgian freighter Belgian Airman. 

RAF aircraft bomb and sink German freighter Leesee off Norway.

US 770-ton freighter Wellesley catches fire and is a total loss in the Oakland Estuary, California.

British 248-ton trawler HMT Daisy is lost in a storm in the Clyde. Boom defense vessel HMT Chorley also springs a leak and is lost, with three dead.
Finnish soldier and dog 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Finnish soldier and dog in position near Kiestinki, 25 April 1942. Photographer: Erkki Viitasalo. SA-Kuva.
Battle of the Mediterranean: The Axis continues to bomb Malta with overpowering numbers. An estimated 246 enemy raiders make 19 attacks today, dropping 1000 bombs totaling 317,486kg. The bombers target the Pembroke area, including No. 45 General Hospital at St. Patrick's and No. 39 General Hospital at St. Andrews. There are reports by some witnesses (including Lieutenant George Carroll, a bomb disposal officer being treated at No. 45 General Hospital) that the planes are specifically targeting the hospitals.
Anzac Day celebration in Jerusalem 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Anzac Day celebration in Jerusalem, 25 April 1942 (Library of Congress matpc 21260).
POWs: A full week after French General Henri Giraud's escape from Königstein Fortress, Berlin radio finally announces it. They offer a 100,000 mark reward for information that leads to his capture. Giraud, however, already is in neutral Switzerland, which the Germans probably know from their Swiss spies. Just to make sure that everyone knows that Germany is upset about the escape, word then is put out that Giraud's relatives are being arrested. It is a nice propaganda victory for the Allies and plays out exactly as one would expect.

The entire tale of Giraud's escape from an "inescapable" prison and subsequent events, however, is very odd. Tellingly, after Giraud brazenly returns to Vichy France, the Germans do not compel Premier Petain to return him to Germany for punishment despite German domination of the French state. Getting nowhere with Petain, Giraud quickly goes over to the Free French side despite his well-known antipathy for the British. He receives prominent posts but becomes embroiled in disagreements with Charles de Gaulle about strategy and finally is dismissed from all commands.

Giraud's escape ultimately proves only to be a major distraction for the Allies - which may have been the intent all along. On its face, Giraud's tale of scaling down a prison wall using bedclothes seems like a bit of brilliant derring-do, and that is how the history books treat it. However, while there is no proof of German complicity, the "escape" has the hallmarks of a Gestapo operation.

US Military: US troops arrive in New Caledonia. Its capital of Nouméa quickly becomes the main South Pacific Fleet base of the United States Navy in the region. About 50,000 US troops eventually are garrisoned on New Caledonia. 
Würzburg Evacuation 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Jews being marched down Schweinfurter Strasse in Würzburg to a waiting train (Photo: State Archives Würzburg).
Holocaust: The Würzburg Gestapo orders about 800 Jews from 19 different sub-districts and three different counties (a total of 80 different communities) to assemble in Platz’schen-Garten. Another group from Würzburg itself also is ordered to appear. They are searched and relieved of any valuables, including all currency. At about 15:00, the group boards a train and leaves on an "evacuation." This is the third deportation from Würzburg to the East. Their initial destination is Krasnystaw in the Lublin district of Poland, where they are marched on foot to Krasniczin. Eventually, the survivors are taken to Sobibor on 6 July 1942.

At Auschwitz, 100 Poles from Cracow are registered. This particular group was arrested on 16 April 1942 while at the Café of Artists and includes four painters (Tadeusz Mróz, Ludwik Puget, Tadeusz Różycki, and Karol Siwek). All four are shot on 27 May 1942.

British Homefront: Princess Elizabeth, 16, registers for war service. She eventually will serve in a motor pool.
Japanese Americans in San Francisco worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Two Japanese-Americans play a game while waiting on 25 April 1942 to be picked up by the War Relocation Authority (WRA) in San Francisco, California (Dorothea Lange).
American Homefront: "Moonlight Cocktail" by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra with Ray Eberle and the Modernaires is the No. 1 song on the Billboard Charts today for the ninth week in a row. It will spend one more week at No. 1 and be the number two record for 1942 after Bing Crosby's "White Christmas."

Future History: Jon Llewellyn Kyl is born in Oakland, Nebraska. He becomes a prominent politician in Arizona, serving in its House delegation from 1987-1995 and later as a senator from 1995-2013 and again in 2018.

Katsuji Adachi is born in Tennōji-ku, Osaka, Japan. As "Mr. Hito," Adachi becomes a famous wrestler, best known as the tag-team partner of American/Canadian wrestler "Mr. Moto" (McRonald Kamaka).
Butch O'Hare in St. Louis 25 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Medal of Honor winner Edward H. "Butch" O'Hare receives a ticker-tape homecoming parade along with his wife Rita in his native St. Louis, Missouri, 25 April 1942 (St. Louis Dispatch).

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

2021

Monday, January 25, 2021

April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

Tuesday 21 April 1942

Soviet loudspeaker on Eastern Front 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Soviet soldier sets up a loudspeaker to broadcast propaganda to German soldiers somewhere in Russia, 21 April 1942 (AP Photo).
Battle of the Pacific: From a safe house in Chuchow (Quzhou), China, Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle manages to get a message out to Washington, D.C. on 21 April 1942. In the message, he tells his superior officer, General "Hap" Arnold, that:

[The] mission to bomb Tokyo has been accomplished. On entering China, we ran into bad weather and it is feared that all planes crashed. Up to the present five fliers are safe.

Hap Arnold himself is receiving other information that indicates that most of the other Doolittle crewmen are safe, but that the Japanese also had captured a few. Doolittle himself is apprehensive that he faces a court-martial when he returns to the States due to the likely loss of all of the bombers in the mission (only one survives intact but is interred in the Soviet Union near Vladivostok).

President Roosevelt finally addresses the press today about the Doolittle raid. He confirms that US planes indeed had bombed Japan but for national security reasons gives few details. When a reporter asks Roosevelt what "base" the bombers had flown out of, Roosevelt takes the advice of an aide (Samuel Rosenman) and replies, "They came from our new secret base at Shangri-La." Of course, everyone at the time realizes that this was the fictional location in James Hilton's recent best-selling novel "Lost Horizon." Doolittle himself is not mentioned and the public is not given any more details about the raid until April 1943.

In China, the Japanese occupation forces carry out a retaliatory action for the Doolittle Raid known as the Zhejiang-Jiangxi Campaign. This leads to the deaths of an estimated 250,000 Chinese people over the course of the next month.
Chinese escorting Doolittle crewmen ca. 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Chinese civilians helping downed airmen of the Doolittle raid ca. 21 April 1942. The Japanese occupation authorities were not pleased with this sort of assistance and launched a retaliatory campaign that led to many Chinese deaths (AP Photo/US Army Air Force).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The Japanese advance in Burma continues as the Allies slowly retreat northwest toward India. Kyidaunggan on the road to Mandalay falls to the Japanese 18th Infantry Division.

Eastern Front: A German relief force under General Seydlitz (Operation Brückenschlag) manages to push through fading Soviet resistance in Ramushevo and reach the Lovat River. This creates a corridor (over the river) to the besieged garrison of almost 100,000 troops in the Demyansk pocket for the first time in ten weeks. The men of SS "Totenkopf" trapped in the pocket have battled their way to the river through the deepening spring thaw ("Rasputitsa") that makes any troop movement through the woods extremely difficult. This is a major German victory that deepens Adolf Hitler's belief that surrounded troops can always be rescued given sufficient will within leadership to do so.

General Franz Halder, not yet informed of the success at Demyansk, notes blandly in his war diary, "On the whole quiet, except for new attacks on the Volkhov."

In Crimea, the enhanced Luftwaffe forces remain very active. General Wolfram von Richhtofen has built the air force's Fliegerkorps VIII presence there up to the standards of an entire air fleet as planes and pilots return from the Reich after being restored to top service over the winter. Planes of KG 55 today damage the Soviet minesweeper Komintern and sink 4156-ton transport ship Kalinin at Novorossiysk. These raids are greatly interfering with Soviet General Kozlov's attempts to supply and reinforce his troops on the Kerch peninsula.
U-471 and U-459 at sea on 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U-571 and U-459 at sea, with a supply submarine refueling another submarine using a fuel hose (which the crew is grabbing with a hook), 21 April 1942 (Jostling, Federal Archive Fig. 101II-MW-4835-12).
In a rare display of independence, the Soviet Stavka (military high command) notes the obvious trends in Crimea and asks Stalin to consider evacuating the Kerch position. Stalin refuses and today orders preparations for yet another offensive against the German 11th Army units holding the Parpach Narrows to break through to Sevastopol. Stalin also refuses to send any more reinforcements, considering the forces he already has allocated to Crimea to be adequate for the mission. General Kozlov now is placed in an impossible position, with inadequate forces for an offensive, no hope of getting any more, and orders to put his forces into an attack orientation that will make them vulnerable to an attack. German General Manstein is planning exactly such an attack for the earliest time after the Rasputitsa subsides.

The Wehrmacht requests Italian naval forces for an unusual mission that will go under the code name Operation Hobgoblin. This is an attempt to interdict Soviet naval traffic across Lake Ladoga that is keeping Leningrad from surrendering. The Soviets are believed to have a large force of 6 gunboats, 2 large and 5 small torpedo boats, 32 armed minesweepers, 9 armed transport ships, 17 armed tugboats, and one submarine, plus another 25 other boats on the lake. The Italians are renowned for their small-boat force and immediately agree to supply four torpedo boats (MAS 526 to 529) of the 12th MAS Flotilla, commanded by Capitano di Corvetta (Lt-Commander) Bianchini. He has four officers, 19 NCO's, and 63 other ranks. These forces will be supplemented by Kriegsmarine Siebel ferries once the ice on the lake melts.
Personal aircraft of C-I-C Western Approaches on 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Commander-in-Chief Western Approaches Admiral Sir Percy Noble's personal aircraft, photographed on 21 April 1942. "The Admiral's plane, An Airspeed AS 6J Envoy III (P5629). Note the Admiral's flag on the nose." Note the overcast skies and rainwater on the airstrip, foul weather that day on the Channel Front (© IWM A 8386).
European Air Operations: For the second day in a row, there are no operations due to ground haze and light rain.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-576 (Kptlt. Hans-Dieter Heinicke), on its fourth patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 5102-ton US freighter Pipestone County about 475 (880 km) miles east of Cape Henry, Virginia. The U-boat stops and gives provisions to one of the four lifeboats after questioning the survivors. All 46 aboard survive, rescued by USCGC Calypso, fishing vessel Irene and May, and Norwegian freighter Tropic Star.

U-201 (Kptlt. Adalbert Schnee), on its sixth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 2027-ton Norwegian freighter Bris about 475 miles southeast of Wilmington, North Carolina. There are 4 deaths and 21 survivors.

U-84 (Oblt. Horst Uphoff), on its fourth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 3014-ton Panamanian freighter Chenango about 60 nautical miles (110 km) southeast of Cape Henry, Virginia. There are 31 deaths and one survivor who is picked up by a Consolidated PBY Catalina of the US Coast Guard.
Duke of Gloucester on 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"The Duke of Gloucester inspects the Royal Marine Guard of Honour onboard HMS CLEOPATRA." Alexandria, Egypt, 21 April 1942 (© IWM A 8773).
Battle of the Mediterranean: Heavy Luftwaffe attacks on Malta continue. Of the 47 Spitfire fighters flown to the island from USS Wasp (CV-7) in Operation Calendar on the 20th, already about 30 have been destroyed and many others damaged. The Axis planes also sink 392-ton Royal Navy trawler HMT Jade in Grand Harbor, Malta.

Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, noting Malta's crumbling defenses, asks Hitler to take the island using paratroopers (Fallschirmjaeger). This is something that Luftwaffe General Albert Kesselring has been urging as well. Hitler, however, refuses to use paratroopers in an offensive role due to the heavy losses on Crete. This may be a wise decision because the British intelligence services could prepare a hot welcome for paratroopers dropping on British-controlled territory just as they did on Crete due to the secret Enigma codebreaking team.

Royal Navy submarine HMS Torbay shells and sinks 170-ton Kriegsmarine patrol boat 13V2 Delpa II off Cape Drepano near the Corinth Canal.
Sherman tank assembly line on 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Assembly line for the M4A1(75) at Pacific Car & Foundry of Renton, Washington, 21 April 1942. The completed tanks first rolled off the line in May of 1942, and the tank nearest to the camera was the pilot tank. PCF was the only West Coast manufacturer of Sherman tanks, with many used for training purposes in California and others sent overseas to fight the Japanese.
Special Forces: No. 4 Commando, in conjunction with 50 men from the Canadian Carleton and York Regiment, (2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade) and some Royal Engineers conduct Operation Abercrombie. This is an overnight reconnaissance in force begun after dark on 21 April 1942 in the vicinity of the French coastal village of Hardelot. Continuing a pattern of widely varying results of these commando raids, the raid accomplishes very little after a great deal of effort and planning. Among other issues, the Canadian contingent loses its way in the night and has to completely abort its participation in the mission. 

While no meaningful opposition is encountered, the Commandos lack time to accomplish minimal mission objectives such as destroying a nearby searchlight array. There are no casualties on either side. The raid is most notable for being the first time that the new LCS (Landing Craft Support) is used, providing valuable experience for future missions.

Partisans: The German authorities in France shoot 20 French hostages in retaliation ("complicity") for the successful British Commando raid on St. Nazaire in March 1942. Shooting hostages for attacks on German soldiers already has become an established practice by the occupation authorities.
Grumman Martlet on 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A British Royal Navy Grumman Martlet IV (Grumman F4F-4B) at Naval Air Station, Anacostia, Washington D.C. (USA), on 21 April 1942, after application of British markings. Official U.S. Navy photo NH 89676 from the U.S. Navy Naval History and Heritage Command.
POWs: French General Henri Giraud reaches the presumed safety of Switzerland after a daring escape from the high-security POW camp at Königstein Castle near Dresden. Giraud accomplished his escape by using bedsheets and other articles to make a 150-foot (46 m) rope to lower himself down from his prison cell. Giraud had the advantage that many other POWs did not of having established a simple code in his letters home to inform his family of his plans. A Special Operations Executive (SOE) officer then met him and escorted him to Switzerland.

Giraud is stopped at the border by two Swiss border guards. At times these guards are known to have returned POWs to the German authorities, but these guards take this prize prisoner to Basel instead. News of Giraud's escape creates a sensation in France. Giraud then becomes a murky figure in murky French politics, remaining loyal to Pétain and the Vichy government but refusing to cooperate with the German authorities. Heinrich Himmler eventually tries to have the Gestapo assassinate Giraud but fails. Giraud refuses Pierre Laval's attempts to force him to cooperate with the Germans, but Laval does not turn Giraud over to the Gestapo when he has the chance. The Allies give Giraud the codename Kingpin and plan to make use of him when they invade French North Africa. After a long series of important appointments and politically charged events, they find out that Giraud is a loose cannon and cut their ties with him.
O'Hare receives Medal of Honor on 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
President Roosevelt awards Lieutenant (j.g.) Edward H. O'Hare the Medal of Honor at a White House ceremony, 21 April 1942. In the background are Secretary of the Navy William Franklin Knox, Admiral Ernest J. King, U.S. Navy, Chief of Naval Operations, and Mrs. O’Hare (US Navy).
US Military: US Navy aviator Lt. Edward "Butch" O'Hare becomes the first naval recipient of the Medal of Honor. O'Hare receives the award for exploits on 20 February 1942 that his commanding officers, including Vice Admiral Wilson Brown (commander of Task Force 11) and Captain Frederick C. Sherman, believed may have saved his aircraft carrier USS Lexington from destruction. O'Hare Airport in Chicago, Illinois, is named after Lt. O'Hare, who later went missing near the Gilbert Islands on 26 November 1943 and was declared dead exactly one year later.

US Government: President Roosevelt orders the seizure of all patents owned or controlled by enemy nations. This action is mainly directed against Germany, which has close ties to several important US industries.

The Roosevelt administration okays the "Big Inch" pipeline from Texas to New York. This is in response to the recent loss of many oil tankers off the US east coast during German Operation Drumroll (Paukenschlag).

The wife of the last US ambassador to Vichy France, Louise Leahy, passes away unexpectedly of an embolism. Admiral Leahy already has been ordered to return to the United States at the end of the month and this is a crushing experience to him. He will leave France at the beginning of May 1942.
Japanese-American internees at Puyallup camp in 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Japanese American evacuees, Camp Harmony (Puyallup Assembly Center), 1942 Photo by Howard Clifford, Courtesy UW Special Collections (UW526).
American Homefront: In Seattle, Washington, evacuation announcements are posted on telephone poles, bulletin boards, and other highly visible public places. These direct Japanese-American to leave the city in three groups on the following Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday. The Japanese population of Seattle is around 7,000 people, with about another 7,000 living in the remainder of Washington State. Of these 14,000, a total of 12,892 persons of Japanese ancestry wind up in internment camps, first in the Puyallup assembly center and then to Minidoka in Idaho. The FBI already is arresting members of this community.

The San Francisco News on 21 April 1942 prints a report by Harry Ferguson of United Press giving an eyewitness account of the Manzanar internment camp. Ferguson reports that newcomers "found comfortable wooden buildings covered with tar paper, bathhouses and showers and plenty of wholesome food." He quotes an internee who calls Manzanar a "Nice place to live" that is "better than Hollywood." However, "Those whose sympathies lie with Japan are keeping quiet about it."

In another article in the San Francisco News today, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors is reported as suggesting "rehabilitation" of "Little Tokio." This "rehabilitation" actually means obliterating it. The article states:
All parties concerned have endorsed the idea of slum clearance programs for the section, but there have been differences over whether Federal or private money should be used.
The article suggests that there is some urgency to the matter as other minorities are quickly moving into the areas abandoned by the Japanese-Americans.
Look magazine 21 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Look magazine, 21 April 1942.

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

2021