Showing posts with label Hamburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamburg. Show all posts

Sunday, April 11, 2021

May 3, 1942: Japanese Take Tulagi

Sunday 3 May 1942

HMS_King_George_V_3_May_1942_worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Royal Navy battleship HMS King George V arrives in Seidesfjord, Iceland, on 3 May 1942 after a collision that sank the destroyer Punjabi on 1 May 1942. The battleship must proceed to Gladstone Dock, Liverpool, for repairs (© IWM A 9495). 
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese score their first major success of Operation Mo on 3 May 1942 when they capture the island of Tulagi. Just before they arrive 08:00, all Allied personnel at the seaplane base there evacuate on two small ships bound for Vila, New Hebrides. The 3rd Kure Special Naval Landing Force occupy the island soon after the Australian troops leave and immediately begin building their own infrastructure on Tulagi and nearby Gavutu-Tanambogo, where the seaplanes actually dock. While Tulagi is a pinprick on the map of the Solomon Islands, its location is ideal for a seaplane base to cover future landings on nearby Guadalcanal and other islands.

With the Tulagi operation completed, the Japanese aircraft carriers covering the landings under the command of Rear Admiral Aritomo Goto depart at 11:00 for Queen Caroline Harbor, Buka Island, to refuel. Once that is completed, the carriers will sail on to the northwest to cover the next phase of Operation Mo.
Photo of officers that seized Tulagi on 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Officers and petty officers of the 3rd Kure Special Naval Landing Force that seized Tulagi and Gavutu on 3 May 1942.
The Allies have been following the Japanese movements both via coastwatchers and radio decrypts. US Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher controls two fleet aircraft carriers, USS Yorktown (Task Force 17) and Lexington (TF 11), and is stationed about 300 nautical miles (350 miles, 560 km) northwest of New Caledonia. Informed of the Japanese moves late in the afternoon, Fletcher brings his TF 17 closer to Tulagi in order to launch airstrikes against Tulagi at dawn on the 4th. Lexington and TF 11, meanwhile, are still refueling and will not be available to join him until sometime on the 4th.

The Japanese have bigger plans than just the capture of Tulagi. They also intend to send the Operation Mo Invasion Force from the fleet base at Rabaul. Scheduled to leave early on the 4th, it will sail for the Australian base at Port Moresby with five thousand soldiers of the South Seas Force and five hundred of the 3rd Kure Special Naval Landing Force. Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, in overall command, hopes to bring the US Pacific Fleet to battle over the invasion of Port Moresby and decisively defeat it. Fletcher, privy to many of Yamamoto's plans, aims to grant his wish of a major battle.

Air battles continue over Port Moresby as the Japanese try to soften the base up for the upcoming landings. The RAAF loses a P-39D in the melee.
Malinta Tunnel on Corregidor 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The hospital in Malinta Tunnel on Corregidor, 1942 (US Army Center of Military History).
US Navy submarine USS Spearfish (SS-190) arrives at Corregidor during the evening of 3May 1942. It can only take aboard 27 lucky people of the thousands left on the fortress island, 13 of them nurses. Navy nurse and Legion of Merit recipient Ann A. Bernatitus is among the 27 rescued by Spearfish. Most of the remaining personnel are crowded together in Malinta Tunnel because shells and bombs continually rain down on the island.

The Spearfish's visit is a major event for the garrison. Everyone knows it is possibly the last ride out for anyone (and that turns out to be the case), as visits from the outside world have become increasingly rare. Commanding officer General Jonathan M. Wainwright sees the submarine off. He tells the submarine's skipper "They will have to come and get us… They will never get us any other way." However, supplies of food and water are running short, and Wainwright knows he only has five more days of potable water available.

The Japanese air attacks are gradually whittling away at Wainwright's remaining resources. Today, they bomb and damage 1130-ton U.S. Army mine planter Colonel George F.E. Harrison off Corregidor. The ship is a write-off and is scuttled on the fourth in Mariveles Bay, Luzon. There are four deaths. The Japanese later raise and repair the ship and put her back into service as the Harushima.

Elsewhere in the Philippines, the Japanese land troops on the north coast of Mindanao Island.

The US Navy sends light cruiser Nashville (Cl-43) from Pearl Harbor to the Japanese fishing grounds off the Kamchatka Peninsula. Its first stop is at Midway Island to refuel. Submarines S-34 (SS-139) and S-35 (SS-140) are to operate in support of this operation.
The Wacky Wabbit released 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"The Wacky Wabbit" from Merrie Melodies is released on 3 May 1942, starring, of course, Bugs Bunny.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: After the Japanese have been held up for several days at the bridge over the Shweli River by scratch troops of the Northern Shan States Battalion, Burma Frontier Force, and also elements of a detachment of the Chin Hills Battalion, they finally break the stalemate. The Japanese are able to bring up a column of trucks equipped with machine guns that disperses the defenders. While the bridge is rigged with demolition charges, none of the defenders knows how to activate them and, in any event, they are damp and cannot ignite. Thus, the Japanese troops capture the critical bridge intact and the way is open to the regional center Bhamo to the northwest.

The Japanese 33rd Infantry Division at Monywa, Burma, counterattacks against the 1st Burma Division, which has been trying to break through to rejoin the main Allied forces north of Mandalay. The Japanese press the Allied troops back in the opposite direction, to the Alon area to the southwest.

Eastern Front: General Franz Halder once again notes an eerily quiet front, writing, "Situation: No change. All quiet along the entire front." In the afternoon, he has a meeting about the upcoming operation Case Blue with his supply chief. He notes cryptically that, 

As to trucks, we shall somehow be able to manage. But we shall not be able to cover our requirements for prime movers, even if our targets are scaled down to the utmost.

Halder ends the entry by noting that certain artillery units are going to have to be reduced from four guns to three, an ominous sign before a decisive campaign.
Raising HMS Caledonia from the Firth of Forth on 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Salvaging HMS Caledonia from the From Firth of Forth on 3 May 1942 for scrap metal. © IWM A 9766.
European Air Operations: After a lull in operations lasting several days, the Luftwaffe resumes its Baedeker Blitz raids with an attack on Exeter. As usual with these moderately sized raids, the attack causes an unusually large number of casualties and 164 deaths. There is extensive damage to the city center.

After sending half a dozen Boston bombers to attack the Dunkirk docks during the day without loss, RAF Bomber Command sets Hamburg as the night's major objective. The weather is a bit sketchy, so only 81 aircraft (43 Wellingtons, 20 Halifaxes, 13 Stirlings, and 5 Hampdens) are sent. The RAF loses five bombers (3 Halifaxes, 2 Wellingtons) on this raid. Hamburg is covered with clouds and only 54 bombers actually make attacks, but the results are better than expected. The Reeperbahn area, a dockside warehouse, and a street junction in an old residential area take the most punishment. There are 77 deaths and 243 injured, with 1,624 people made homeless.

In subsidiary operations, the RAF also sends nine bombers to raid the U-boat pens at St. Nazaire, an additional four Blenheims as Intruders, two minelayers off Heligoland, and eight bombers on leaflet flights, without loss.
Battleship USS Washington on patrol in the Barents Sea ca. 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
USS Washington, as seen from HMS Victorious, ca. 3 May 1942. She was damaged in the collision between King George V and Punjabi but the damage was relatively minor and she was able to remain on station (© IWM A 9486).
Battle of the Atlantic: The Arctic sun provides enough light at 01:30 for six Heinkel He 111 torpedo bombers of 1. Gruppe, Kampfgeschwader 26, to attack Convoy PQ 15, which is passing south of Bear Island on the way to Murmansk. This is the first Luftwaffe torpedo bomber attack of the war, and it achieves significant results. The bombers hit three British freighters:
  1. Botavon (5848 tons) badly damaged and later sunk by convoy escort
  2. Cape Corso (3807 tons) sunk
  3. Jutland (6153 tons) badly damaged and later sunk by U-251 (Kptlt. Heinrich Timm), one dead and 61 survivors rescued by HMS Badsworth.
The Germans lose three planes, a not-insignificant number considering they only have a dozen Heinkels available.

After this attack, the weather begins to turn. An Arctic gale leads to a snowstorm which provides Convoy PQ 15 with much-needed cover. Convoy QP 11 also is in the vicinity headed in the opposite direction, and it, too, is helped by this fortuitous weather event.

U-455 (Kptlt. Hans-Heinrich Giessler), on her third patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 6994-ton British tanker British Workman southeast of Cape Race, Newfoundland. There are six deaths and 47 survivors, who are picked up by HMCS Alberni and Assiniboine.

U-109 (Kptlt. Heinrich Bleichrodt), on her fifth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5825-ton Dutch freighter Laertes southeast of Cape Canaveral, Florida. There are 18 deaths and 48 survivors, who either make it to shore themselves or are picked up by a patrol aircraft. The wreck is in shallow water and must later be reduced with demolitions to cease being a hazard to navigation.

U-564 (Kptlt. Reinhard Suhren), on her fifth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 7174-ton freighter ("Ocean Ship") Ocean Venus about 12 nautical miles (22 km) southeast of Cape Canaveral, Florida. There are five deaths and 42 survivors. This wreck, too, must later be reduced to allow safe passage. "Ocean Ships" are 60 freighters obtained by the British Purchasing Commission.

U-506 (Kptlt. Erich Würdemann), on her second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 567-ton Nicaraguan freighter Sama southeast of Miami, Florida, roughly a third of the way to the Bahamas. All 14 crewmen survive, picked up by British freighter Athelregent.

U-125 (Kptlt. Ulrich Folkers), on her fourth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 1973-ton Dominican Republic freighter San Rafael midway between Jamaica and the Cayman Islands. There are 37 survivors and one death.

RAF aircraft of No. 608 Squadron bomb and sink 5843-ton German freighter Konsul Carl Fisser near Ålesund, Norway, at the entrance to the Geirangerfjord. Everybody survives.
Portrait of Diekmann 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A 3 May 1942 portrait of First Lieutenant (Oberleutnant) Diekmann, serving with the Afrika Korps in North Africa (Zwilling, Ernst A., Federal Archive Image 101I-442-1491-13).
Battle of the Mediterranean: The daily air raids begin at noon on Malta, The Axis targets continue to be the RAF's airstrips, damaging several fighters on the tarmac.

US Military: Admiral Chester Nimitz completes his visit to Midway Island and returns to Hawaii.

USS Radford (DD-446), a Fletcher-class destroyer, is launched at Kearny, New Jersey. It goes on to earn 12 battle stars for World War II service and serves into the Vietnam War.

US Government: The War Department provides a summary of the Doolittle Raid of 18 April 1942 to President Roosevelt, who was not informed of the raid at the time. It provides the particulars of the raid and notes that:

At 1:30 P.M., in the midst of an English propaganda broadcast from Japan in which a woman was telling how safe Japan was from bombing, the broadcast was cut off and another broadcast made giving information that fast, low flying bombers were at that time bombing Japan.

The report notes that Tokyo Radio later stated that "casualties amounted to three to four thousand.

Holocaust: Pursuant to an order of 29 April 1942, all Dutch Jews henceforth are required to wear a six-pointed yellow Star of David with the word "Jew" in the middle. All Jews are ordered to buy four of the badges, and children from the age of 6 are required to wear them.

Colombian Homefront: In Presidential elections, Alfonso López Pumarejo of the Liberal Party receives 58.6% of the vote. Pumarejo also receives the support of the Communist Party.
Christening USS Fletcher 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"USS Fletcher (DD-445), May 1942. Mrs. Frank Friday Fletcher, Ship’s Sponsor, christening the lead-ship destroyer on May 3, 1942, at Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company, Kearny, New Jersey. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives 80-G-1049792."
American Homefront: The Western Defense Command and Fourth Army Wartime Civil Control Administration (General DeWitt) orders all persons of Japanese ancestry to evacuate from large sections of Los Angeles, California. They are to depart by noon on 9 May 1942. "No pets of any kind will be permitted." This is Civilian Exclusion Order 34. A resident, Fred Korematsu, refuses to comply with this order and is later arrested on 30 May 1942. His case becomes the basis for Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214 (1944), which upholds his conviction. This case begins a decades-long legal battle that culminates in the overturning of his conviction in the 1980s and an award of the Congressional Gold Medal, awarded posthumously after Korematsu's death in 2005.

Tonight's Jack Benny Program features actress Ann Sheridan.

It's the opening night of the 1942 racing season at the West Side Speedway in Wichita, Kansas.

Future History: Věra Čáslavská is born in Prague, Czechoslovakia. She becomes the most decorated gymnast in Czech history and also a symbol of resistance to Soviet rule when she looks down and away while the Soviet national anthem is played after one of her victories. This act of defiance leads to her enforced retirement and various other penalties by the Soviet regime. Věra Čáslavská passes away on 30 August 2016.
Evacuation Order of 3 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Evacuation Order for Los Angeles dated 3 May 1942.

May 1942


2021

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid

Friday 17 April 1942

Douglas SBD "Dauntless" aboard the USS Enterprise (CV-6) April 17, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Douglas SBD "Dauntless" aboard the USS Enterprise (CV-6) April 17, 1942 (US Navy).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British retreat in Burma accelerates on 17 April 1942 as the Japanese take Yenangyaung, the site of Britain's largest overseas oil fields. The British have skillfully destroyed the 6000-well oil field, which continues to blaze away. The Japanese 214th Regiment has blocked the British Burma Division's retreat route to the north, so the 1st Battalion The Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers in Yenangyaung is forced to retreat south - toward the main body of the Japanese force. Things do not look good for them as the Japanese have infiltrated through the jungle and all the roads are blocked.

Fortunately for the British, help is on the way in the form of part of the Chinese 38th Division. While he is under orders not to help the British, Chinese General Sun Li-jen disobeys and sends his 113th Regiment (1121 men) south toward the trapped British. British Lieutenant-General William Slim chips in the 7th Armored Brigade (Brigadier John Anstice) with two regiments of American M3 Stuart tanks and a battery of 25-pounder guns to help General Sun's infantry. This combined force battles its way south toward the trapped British infantry, making good progress in 114-degree Fahrenheit heat.
Ironwood Daily Globe, 17 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Ironwood (Michigan) Daily Globe, 17 Aprl 1942. The public knows there are a lot of prisoners in Bataan, but they do not know what is happening to them in the Bataan Death March. That is not disclosed until early 1944.
Battle of the Pacific: The Bataan Death March continues in the Philippines. Prisoners who have survived the roughly 65-mile (105 km) walk to Camp O'Donnell under brutal conditions find little relief there. Men collapse at the camp and many die of exposure. The roads to the south remain clogged with shuffling columns of underfed and dehydrated men hoping they won't fall behind the slow pace and be bayoneted by pitiless Japanese guards. The sides of the roads are littered with dead bodies. Of the 80,000 Allied POWs who began the march, only about 54,000 even make it to the camp.

About 1000 miles (1500 km) east of Japan, Admiral "Bull" Halsey's Task Force 16 continues preparing for the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo. The deck crew of USS Hornet pulls the 16 B-25 bombers to the rear of the flight deck, loads them with four 500-lb bombs apiece and ammunition, and fuels them. The bombers also are fitted with broomsticks painted black in their tails to look like machine guns. All plane systems are checked even though the operation is not scheduled to begin for a couple of days. 

Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle and the Hornet's Captain Marc Mitscher hold a small ceremony on the Hornet's flight deck with the aircrew. They tie "friendship medals" given to the United States by Japan before the war - this apparently was President Roosevelt's idea, who wanted to return the medals in proper fashion. The fleet oilers refuel the ships and then withdraw with the destroyers to the east. The two aircraft carriers, Hornet and Enterprise, continue heading west at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) in radio silence.
Lieutenant Colonel Doolittle, 17 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle pins a Japanese "Peace and Friendship" medal to a bomb destined to be dropped on Tokyo, 17 April 1942 (US Navy).
Eastern Front: General Franz Halder notes in his war diary that there are "confused movements and radio silence" opposite General Kleist's front along the Mius River from south of Kharkiv to Taganrog on the Sea of Azov. While Halder does not flesh this out, it is well known among German commanders that Soviet radio silence usually presages an attack.

Following Hitler's lead, Halder is becoming busy preparing for Operation Blau, the upcoming offensive in Kleist's area toward the Caucasus. Troops are being transferred from Army Group Center to the south (held in reserve for now) and they need support. Today, Halder meets with Reichsleiter Konstantin Hierl, head of the Reich Labour Service (Reichsarbeitsdienst; RAD), to arrange support services for Operation Blau. At some point, Halder notes in his diary, these Labour Service personnel face "incorporation into Army." Halder also meets with the Italian transportation chief, General de Raimondo, and discusses strategy for Blau with General von Sodenstern, the chief of staff for Army Group South.

The Luftwaffe continues building up its strength in the Black Sea region in order to support General Manstein's 11th Army, and this is producing results. KG 26 sinks 4125-ton transport Svanetiya as it is trying to bring reinforcements to Sevastopol, leading to the death of about 535 Soviet soldiers. Luftwaffe General Wolfram von Richthofen is bringing an entire air fleet - which usually supports an entire army group - into the area as units return from winter quarters in the Reich. While the ground contest is fairly even, there is no question that the Luftwaffe dominates the air over the Crimea.
Douglas F-3 "Havoc" aerial reconnaissance aircraft, April 17, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Douglas F-3 "Havoc" aerial reconnaissance aircraft, April 17, 1942.
European Air Operations: During the day, Arthur "Bomber" Harris decides to try something new to address the poor accuracy of his bomber force. He sends a dozen Lancaster bombers to Augsburg while 30 Boston bombers stage a diversionary raid to northern France. The controversial Augsburg raid succeeds in one respect - the eight bombers that get through do make accurate bombing runs. However, the Luftwaffe has something to say about all this, and its pilots shoot down four of the Lancasters en route to the target and three others over Augsburg itself. An additional Boston is lost during the diversionary raid. Many of the bombers that do make it back are damaged. Squadron Leader J.D. Nettleton of RAF No. 44 Squadron, flying one of the five damaged planes that make it back from Augsburg, receives the Victoria Cross for his heroism during this raid.

After dark, RAF Bomber Command does a normal nighttime mission and sends 173 bombers (134 Wellingtons, 23 Stirlings, 11 Halifaxes, 5 Manchesters, and 7 Manchesters) over Hamburg. As is standard with these night raids, bombing accuracy is poor. The bombs start 75 fires, 33 large, in Hamburg, with 23 people killed and 66 injured. In minor operations, 22 Whitleys bomb St. Nazaire, four bomb Le Havre, six Blenheims attack targets in Holland, and nine bombers lay mines off Heligoland.

Overall, it is a bad day for the RAF. Out of 214 sorties, it loses 10 aircraft. This loss ratio of 4.7% is too high for sustainable operations. Thus, Harris decides to end his experimental daylight raids to focus exclusively on night attacks.
The crew of HMS UPRIGHT with their Jolly Roger Flag recording their successes, Holy Loch, 17 April 1942, www.filminspector.com
"The crew of HMS UPRIGHT with their Jolly Roger Flag recording their successes." Holy Loch, 17 April 1942. © IWM A 8426.
Battle of the Atlantic: U-123 (Kptlt. Reinhard Hardegen), on its eighth patrol out of Lorient, completes one of the war's best patrols by sinking 4834-ton US freighter Alcoa Guide about 300 miles east of Cape Hatteras. Out of torpedoes, Hardegen maneuvers close to the freighter and uses the last of his deck-gun ammunition to shell the ship from only 400 yards. The Alcoa Guide's master, Leroy Cobb, tries to ram the U-boat but fails, so the crew abandons the ship, which sinks at 05:23. There are six dead and 28 survivors. One survivor is at sea until 18 May when he is picked up by freighter Hororata.

During this patrol, U-123 has sunk 8 ships of 39,917 tons and damaged three more of 24,310 tons for a total of 64,227 tons. It is because of successes like this along the east coast of the United States that Admiral Doenitz extends his Operation Paukenschlag through the summer.
A fleet tanker refueling the ships of the Doolittle Raid, 17 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A fleet tanker refueling the ships of the Doolittle Raid, 17 April 1942 (US Navy).
U-66 (KrvKpt. Richard Zapp), on its fifth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 11,020-ton Panamanian tanker Heinrich von Riedemann between Grenada and Isla La Blanquilla. All 44 men on board survive in lifeboats, with 15 men landing at Blanquilla and 29 picked up by passing freighter Karmt the same day as the sinking.

Activity remains bustling along the Arctic convoy route even though no action takes place today. Soviet submarines K-21, S-1010, and ShCh-401 begin a patrol along the Arctic coast and two Soviet destroyers join Convoy PQ-14 to help it into port. U-376, meanwhile, is shadowing the convoy and fires torpedoes at Royal Navy cruiser HMS Edinburgh east of Bear Island, but misses. German U-boat commanders routinely complain about defective torpedoes during this stage of the war, with the problem ultimately traced to the magnetic detonators being triggered prematurely due to variations in the earth's magnetic field.
Mobile canteen in Benghazi, 17 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"One of a fleet of YMCA mobile canteens presented by the Women of India distributing free chocolate to troops in Benghazi." © IWM K 1930.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Luftwaffe General Albert Kesselring's air offensive against Malta, begun on 20 March 1942, is over for the time being. With the skies temporarily clear, the British issue orders today for troops from Army infantry brigades to help clear and restore airfields for operations.

POWs: French General Henri Giraud, held in Königstein Castle near Dresden, escapes by making a 150-foot (46 m) rope out of torn bedsheets, twine, and copper wire. Giraud has alerted his family back in France of his plans in letters using a simple code, so they have placed a British Special Operations Executive (SOE) contact at Schandau. Giraud makes it to Schandau and, supplied there with identity papers and clothes, continues on to the Swiss border.

Resistance: The Gestapo reports that there has been an increase in resistance activities in the Rhineland. These include anti-German graffiti and "V for Victory" signs.

US/Vichy French Relations: In the evening, President Roosevelt announces that he is recalling the US Ambassador to France, Admiral William Leahy (Retired), due to Marshal Pétain's appointment of arch-collaborator Pierre Laval as Vice-Premier (and effective head of the French government). Leahy will remain in France through the end of the month.
Pentagon site, 17 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
This photo was taken on 17 April 1942. It shows the area being cleared for the Pentagon. "Army Blitz levels Arlington Area-Government operations rather than a bomb caused this shell of a house and other wreckage near the new War Department Building in Arlington, Va. Workmen yesterday fired several houses, mostly frame, to clear the way for the network of roads which will surround the Federal structure, shown in the background. Colored families have moved into trailers supplied by the Government." Washington Star, 18 April 1942.
US Military: The US Army Air Force 5th Air Force transfers the 8th Pursuit Squadron (Interceptor), 49th Pursuit Group (Interceptor), from Canberra to Darwin, Australia. 

Holocaust: It is "Bloody Friday" in the Jewish District of Warsaw. In the evening, German officers and non-commissioned officers from the police, SS, Gestapo, and Jewish employees of the Jewish Ghetto Police undertake a "hunt" under the direction of SS leader Karl Brandt. The President of the Warsaw Judenrat, Adam Czerniaków, writes in his diary:
There is panic in the district. The shops are being closed. The population is gathering in the street in front of the houses. I went out onto the street and walked through several streets to calm the people down.
Cars containing armed Germans each assisted by a Jew of the Jewish Ghetto Police round up individuals and families based on a list of obscure derivation. The victims are given a few minutes to round up a very few possessions (to allay their suspicions) and then driven to a central spot and executed. A total of 52 people (both women and men) are shot. By the standards of the Holocaust, this is not a lot, but the entire city's Jewish population is terrorized. "Bloody Friday" is considered a prelude to the worst extermination campaigns that begin soon after.

American Homefront: In an article by H. Dyson Carter in The Family Circle magazine, the question is raised of whether comics are bad for children. Carter's answer is a resounding 'No." She (presumably, given the first name is shown as an initial and this is a woman's magazine) writes about the popularity of comics with children:
Yes, you say, but is this healthy? And what you mean is: Isn’t it dangerous to put so much faith in fantasy?  Isn’t this escapism?  Doctors Baker and Lourie answer no to both questions.  Your child isn’t wrong.  It’s you who are wrong.  You’ve lost touch, as adults invariably do, with the essence of childhood-which is a magic compound of imagination and fantasy.  It isn’t so much his faith that a child puts into these comic book stories.  It’s his gathering emotions, his craving for self-expression, his desire to be a part of great adventures.  And great adventures, at his age, are limited only by the limits of his imagination.  And where his imagination leaves off, Superman begins.
This article is the first shot in a long war about this particular issue. In the 1950s, Senator Estes Kefauver and Fredric Wertham will lead a crusade against comic books, so there is hardly unanimity on this topic. It is worth pointing out that the "Batman" and "Superman" comic series are both relatively new in 1942, with a classic serial of "The Batman" running in theaters. In the long run, the view expressed in this 1942 article ultimately prevails.
Family Circle magazine, 17 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Family Circle magazine, 17 April 1942, asks the eternal question: Are comics bad for kids.

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

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse

Wednesday 8 April 1942

Japanese internees in San Diego, 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
An MP watches local Japanese residents board trains at the Santa Fe Depot, San Diego, California, April 8, 1942. they are among 1150 Japanese-Americans boarding a train to the Santa Anita race track for processing. They are allowed no more than a single piece of luggage. (Clara Breed, San Diego Union-Tribune).
Battle of the Pacific:  The battle in Bataan turns decisively against the Allies on 9 April 1942 as the main defensive line cracks completely and the retreat becomes a rout. The two US Army corps lose contact with their units as everyone who can walks or rolls south. Major General Edward P. King bows to the inevitable and requests a parley with Japanese Major General Kameichiro Nagano. After dark, King orders equipment destroyed in preparation for surrender. The last US air units based in Bataan that can fly flee to Del Monte Field on Mindanao.

Only a very few lucky Allied soldiers evacuate aboard minesweeper/patrol boat YAG-4 from Mariveles Naval Base, where the navy scuttles massive floating drydock "Dewey." About 2000 men sail to fortified Corregidor Island in Manila Bay. Submarine USS Snapdragon delivers supplies to Corregidor and evacuated naval radio and communications intelligence experts.

San Francisco Chronicle, 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
San Francisco Chronicle, 8 April 1942. The headline "Bataan's Peril Grows" could not be more accurate.
Japanese troops supported by light cruiser Tatsua, destroyer Mutsuki, and carried aboard Mishima Maru land on Lorengau, Manus Province, New Guinea, in the Admiralty Islands. As the soldiers of the 8th Special Base Force land at Lorengau harbor, the small group of Australian soldiers from the No. 4 Section, B Platoon, 1st Independent Company withdraw into the jungle. The Japanese quickly begin building an airstrip. Other Japanese troops occupy the town of Djailolo on Halmahera Island in the East Indies.

US Navy Admiral William "Bull" Halsey leads his Task Force 16, led by the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, out of Pearl Harbor on 8 April 1942 on a top-secret mission. His orders are to rendezvous with the USS Hornet, already at sea, and support its mission to bomb Tokyo.

San Diego Union, 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The San Diego Union of 8 April 1942 touts glorious US victories at sea while less prominently noting that "Nippon Hordes Gain in New Bataan Attacks."
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Japanese Admiral Nagumo leads his massive Kido Butai strike force north to a point east of Ceylon (Sri Lanka). A Catalina patrol plane spots the Japanese force during the afternoon and orders are sent to clear Trincomalee harbor, including Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Hermes escorted by destroyer HMAS Vampire. The British fleet is far to the southwest and cannot intervene. Japanese submarine HIJMS I-3, operating about 300 miles west of Colombo, torpedoes and sinks 5051-ton British freighter Fultala. Dutch 2073-ton freighter Van der Capellen, hit during earlier raids, also sinks today.

Fighting in Burma has paused temporarily on the ground, but it remains ferocious in the air. The American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers) sends its 1st and 3d Fighter Squadrons over Loiwing Aerodrome and they claim to shoot down a dozen Japanese fighters.
US Army Air Force Navigator who flies The Hump during WWII worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Undated photo of an unidentified US Army Air Force navigator who flies supplies to China across "The Hump" during World War II.
US Army Air Force 10 Air Force based in India sends its first supply flight over the Himalayas to China. This is the first of many dangerous flights (450+ planes lost) over the 22,000-foot peaks called "The Hump" during World War II. This route becomes an essential supply lifeline to the Chinese government that stretches the limits of aircraft of the day, primarily the Douglas C-47 Skytrain derived from the civilian Douglas DC-3 airliner.
Sevastopol, Crimea, aerial photo, 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Luftwaffe aerial reconnaissance photo of the Soviet pocket at Sevastopol, Crimea, 8 April 1942 (Federal Archive Image 168-278-030).
Eastern Front: In the Crimea, Soviet General Kozlov prepares his troops for his fourth offensive against the German line across the Parpach Narrow. The Soviets have about eight rifle divisions and 160 tanks. It is scheduled to start early on 9 April 1942.

European Air Operations: During the day, the RAF sends four Boston bombers on a sweep off the Dutch coast. After dark, RAF Bomber Command mounts a major raid on Hamburg. It sends 272 bombers - 177 Wellingtons, 41 Hampdens, 22 Stirlings, 13 Manchesters, 12 Halifaxes, and 7 Lancasters - but the weather is poor, with icing and electrical storms. Only a small fraction of aircraft actually bomb Hamburg, causing 8 fires and killing 17 people and injuring 119. One of the bombers bombs Bremen by mistake and causes more militarily significant damage to the Vulkan shipyard there than by the main force over Hamburg. There also are minor raids by 13 Wellingtons to Le Havre, 3 Blenheims over Holland (Eindhoven, Haamstede, Leeuwarden and Schipol Airfields), 24 minelayers off Heligoland, and 16 leaflet-droppers over Belgium and France. The RAF loses four Wellingtons and a Manchester on the Hamburg raid and one of the leaflet planes for a 1.8% loss rate.
US floating dry dock Dewey, scuttled on 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
US floating dock "Dewey," scuttled on 8 April 1942 in Bataan, the Philipines to avoid capture by the Japanese.
Battle of the Atlantic: U-123 (Kptlt. Karl-Heinz Moehle), on its eighth patrol out of Lorient, continues a very successful patrol off the east coast of the United States. It sinks two US tankers, 9264-ton Oklahoma (19 dead and 8 survivors) and 7989-ton Esso Baton Rouge (3 dead and 65 survivors), about ten miles off St. Simon's Island, Georgia. Both ships sink in shallow water and later are refloated and returned to service in late 1942.

U-84 (Oblt. Horst Uphoff), on its fourth patrol out of Brest, gets its first victory of the war about 180 miles southeast of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia. It is 5226-ton Yugoslavian freighter Nemanja (13 dead and 34 survivors). This sinking occurs after a nine-hour chase during which U-84 missed with two torpedoes.

Italian submarine Pietro Calvi torpedoes and sinks US freighter Eugene V.R. Thayer off the coast of Brazil.

German 734-ton freighter Kurzesee hits a mine laid by Soviet submarine K-1(Captain 3rd class Avgustinovich) earlier in the day. It sinks off Kvaenangenfjord (Skjervøy), Norway. Swedish 2374-ton freighter Ara hits a mine and sinks off Terschelling, Friesland, the Netherlands.

Soviet submarine ShCh-421 hits a mine in the Barents Sea and is irreparably damaged. Everybody survives the sinking, which actually concludes on 9 April 1942.

The British Admiralty scuttles 3645-ton freighter Carolina Thornden as a blockship in Water sound, Scapa flow.

HMS Penelope, showing battle damage of 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Penelope, showing battle damage sustained at Malta.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Luftwaffe Field Marshal Albert Kesselring's air offensive against Malta reaches its climax. Royal Navy cruiser HMS Penelope (three dead), under heavy attack, heads out of Grand Harbor at 20:00 to avoid destruction and fights off repeated air attacks on its way to Gibraltar. Mooring vessel Moor (767 tons) hits a contact mine dropped by the Luftwaffe and sinks (28 deaths, one survivor). Today's attacks become the worst one-day attack on Malta of World War II.

The Italian Regia Aeronautica also attacks shipping at Alexandria. The planes sink Royal Navy whalers HMT Thorgrim (307 tons, refloated in 1950) and Svana (268 tons).

Anglo/US Relations: Harry L. Hopkins, a close crony of President Roosevelt, and Army Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall arrive in London, England. They are there to discuss the arrival of US troops, naval units, and air formations.

US Military: The US Army Air Force activates the 9th Air Force with its headquarters at New Orleans. This formerly was the V Air Support Command.
Nurse Betty Evans at her station in Iceland, 8 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Army Nurse Betty Evans checks thermometers by the medication cabinet, 8 April 1942, Iceland. Female nurses are not allowed in active combat zones at this time. Notice that the cabinet is locked, and nurses were among the few allowed access (US Army Medical Department, Office of Medical History).
Canadian Government: The Canadian government creates the Park Steamship Company to build freighters specifically designed for wartime service. These become known as Park ships and sail alongside Liberty ships built in American shipyards and Fort ships built in Great Britain.

American Homefront: The War Production Board expands on earlier orders that have terminated the production of civilian automobiles and some other consumer goods. It orders a halt to all production deemed unnecessary to the war effort as of 31 May 1942. As workers shift to the military and war work, the unemployment rate begins edging down from a 14% rate in 1940.

Future History: Roger Maxwell Chapman is born in Leicester, England. He becomes the vocalist for the Farinas, who release their first single, "You'd Better Stop," in August 1964. He later fronts a succession of acts, most notably Family, as a distinctive singer and showman. Much of his career is in Germany, where he is awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2004. After giving a "farewell performance" in 2010, Chapman appears to be retired as of 2020.

Leon A. Huff is born in Camden, New Jersey. He becomes a top songwriter, helping to develop the Philadelphia soul music genre along with partner Kenneth Gamble. As Gamble and Huff, they are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the non-performer category in March 2008.
Thrilling Wonder Stories, April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Thrilling Wonder Stories," April 1942 (cover art by Earle K. Bergey).

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