Showing posts with label Kuechler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kuechler. Show all posts

Monday, April 12, 2021

May 4, 1942: Fletcher Attacks at Tulagi

Monday 4 May 1942

Battle of Tulagi 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
 Japanese Destroyer Kikzuki. Beached in Purvis Bay, Florida Island, Solomon Islands, in 1944. She had been sunk on 4 May 1942, when USS Yorktown (CV-5) planes raided the Tulagi area. Salvaged by the U.S. Navy in 1943 (Original color photograph, Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-K-6103).
Battle of the Pacific: US Vice Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher, in command of Task Force 17 (led by the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown) and Task Force 11 (USS Lexington), finally is ready to attack on 4 May 1942. Having moved the Yorktown to within about 86 nautical miles (160 km, 99 miles) of Tulagi, he launches his first strike of the campaign at 07:01. It consists of 12 TBD Devastator torpedo bombers and 28 SBD Dauntless dive bombers heading to Tulagi Island, which the Japanese captured on 3 May 1942. The objective is the large fleet of ships anchored near the island under the command of  Rear Admiral Kiyohide Shima. This is considered the beginning of the Battle of the Coral Sea.

The Japanese intended to have air cover over the invasion ships, but Admiral Takeo Takagi's aircraft carriers have been trying to ferry fighters to Rabaul but have been prevented from doing so by poor weather. It is unclear if Takagi ever actually completed that minor ferrying job, but he pointlessly has spent two days trying to do it and now his carriers are out of position exactly when they are needed most. Due to the delay, carriers Shokaku and Suikaku are 340 miles north of Tulagi, much too far away to intervene. Takagi has made a huge blunder, of course, but the real fault lies with the overly intricate Japanese operational plan that requires perfect timing of all of its parts without any allowances for outside interference by things that can disrupt that timetable - like the weather.

The US aircraft, facing no real air opposition, begin dropping their bombs on the ships at Tulagi at 08:50. They take the Japanese, who are still unloading troops and have most of their ships at anchor, completely by surprise. They hit two ships, Okinoshima (minor damage) and 1315-ton destroyer Kikuzuki (major damage, 12 deaths and 142 survivors). The Japanese manage to beach the latter ship on nearby Gavutu Island. The attackers also down a Mitsubishi F1M2 "Pete" floatplane that attempts to take off during the raid.

Fletcher is not done yet. After the planes return to Yorktown, he orders them to undertake a second strike. They arrive at 12:10 and sink two 215-ton minesweepers (Wa-1 and Wa-2) and damage another, Tama Maru (four dead, seven wounded). The US pilots also shoot down another seaplane. Four F4F-3/3A Wildcat fighters from Yorktown then arrive and shoot down two more "Pete" floatplanes over Florida island. The Wildcats then strafe destroyer Yūzuki, killing ten crewmen including the captain, and damage several other floatplanes near Gavutu. While attempting to return to Yorktown, two of the Wildcats run out of fuel and crashland on the southern coast of Guadalcanal (rescued by destroyer USS Hammann).
SBD Dauntless raiding Tulagi, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bombers returning to USS Yorktown after an attack on Tulagi, Solomon Islands, 4 May 1942 (US National Archives US Navy photo #80-G-20515)
Pleased with the results of the day's first two strikes and pleasantly surprised at the absence of Japanese fighter cover, Fletcher sends in a third strike. Many of the Japanese ships have departed the scene, but the planes damage transport Azumasan Maru and the minelayer/transport Okinoshima. One of the TBDs in this strike runs out of fuel, has to ditch in the ocean, and the crew is not found. After this, Fletcher retires to the south. Takagi attempts to find Fletcher's ships, but his planes search east of the Solomons and find nothing.

While Fletcher's planes have scattered the Japanese ships and scored numerous successes, they have not interfered with the Japanese construction of the seaplane base at Tulagi. The air attacks at Tulagi have been a brilliant demonstration of US naval air power, but they have no strategic effect. The Japanese seaplane base is operational on 6 May.

Meanwhile, the Japanese put the main thrust of Operation Mo into motion today. The invasion force of five thousand troops of the South Seas Force and five hundred of the 3rd Kure Special Naval Landing Force bound for Port Moresby leaves Rabaul. Escorted by one light cruiser and six destroyers, they proceed southward toward Jomard Passage. The plan is to sail around the southern tip of Papua New Guinea around midnight on 6-7 May and then head west to Port Moresby.
Raid on Tulagi, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Japanese cargo ship Koei Maru is straddled by bombs dropped from aircraft the USS Yorktown (CV-5) in Tulagi harbor on 4 May 1942. The cargo ship escaped without serious damage (U.S. Navy photo 80-G-20532).
The Japanese continue pounding the isolated US island fortress of Corregidor in the Philippines. Today, a dive bomber sinks the 950-ton submarine rescue ship USS Pigeon and shore artillery sinks the 950-ton minesweeper Tanager (AM-5). Commanding officer General Wainwright sends a radio message to Douglas MacArthur in Melbourne, Australia warning that, "In my opinion, the enemy is capable of making an assault on Corregidor at any time. Wainwright knows he only has a four-day supply of potable water remaining.

Shortly thereafter, the first Japanese troops, 600 men, land on Corregidor. The 1300 men of the First Marine Battalion begin a defensive struggle that quickly moves to the entrance of Malinta Tunnel. President Roosevelt sends Wainwright a message, "You and your devoted followers have become the symbols of our war aims and the guarantee of our victory."

US Navy submarine USS Greenling (SS-213) torpedoes and sinks 3252-ton Japanese armed merchant cruiser Kinjosan Maru near Truk (Chuuk).

US Navy submarine USS Trout (SS-202) torpedoes and sinks 2119-ton Japanese auxiliary gunboat Kongosan Maru east of Honshū, Japan.
General Brereton on cover of Time, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Major General Lewis H. Brereton is on the cover of the 4 May 1942 Time magazine. He is the commander of the Tenth Air Force with its headquarters in New Delhi, India.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Having finally gotten across the Shweli River on the road from Lashio after several days of effort, Japanese troops drive into the regional center of Bhamo. Their next objective is Myitkyina. There is little to stand in their way on the road from Bhamo to Myitkyina except disorganized remnants of lost battles. Chinese troops also give ground on the Burma River.

The British evacuate the island of Akyab (Sittwe), which is prized due to its airfield and deepwater port. This is in part due to a surge in malaria cases that has affected morale. The Japanese advance is now getting uncomfortably close to India.

After dark, four B-17s of 10th Air Force raid Mingaladon Airfield, Rangoon. They damage a hangar and parked aircraft.

At Diego Suarez in Vichy Madagascar, a German crew partially scuttles 6181-ton freighter Wartenfels in its dry dock. The British and Australians will find the ship there when they invade later in 1942. They will repair it and return it to service as Empire Tugela.
Life, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The 4 May 1942 Life magazine features a Chinese air cadet on the cover.
Eastern Front: While Demyansk has been relieved, the nearby and much smaller garrison at Kholm remains surrounded. General Franz Halder notes in his war diary, "Attack to free Kholm has opened with good results." Halder notes that unlike the past week or two, the Soviets have launched some attacks that "were repelled; more attacks must be expected."

Halder also hints at growing tensions within the high command. He writes that at the daily Fuhrer Conference, there were "At times very lively exchange of views." This generally means that Hitler reacted to something with a screaming fit. Halder continues that "von Kuechler's suggestion to abandon the offensive in South in order to maintain the operation in North, is sharply disapproved." In other words, the Army Group North Commander, General Georg von Kuechler, asks to concentrate power at Leningrad and take it rather than dispersing inadequate effort all along the front. This is a roundabout way of saying that the Wehrmacht is overstretched in Russia, which it is, though nobody can say that to the Fuhrer. Hitler remains determined to make a decisive grab for the oil fields in the South and let the siege at Leningrad continue. Von Kuechler does not fall out of favor over this, as Hitler later promotes him to Field Marshal.
Cowes after the Luftwaffe raid of 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Damage on Arctic Road in West Cowes due to the 4 May 1942 Luftwaffe raid.
European Air Operations: The Luftwaffe continues its Baedeker Raids with an attack on Cowes and East Cowes, Isle of Wight. This has the large J. Samuel White Shipyard. Bombers drop 200 tons of bombs, beginning with incendiaries followed by high explosives. There are 70 deaths and many damaged buildings in a 100,000 square-foot  (10,000 square meters) area of destruction. Polish destroyer Blyskawica, being refitted at the shipyard, puts up a strong anti-aircraft defense (Blyskawica later is preserved and becomes the oldest preserved destroyer in the UK).

During the day, RAF Bomber Command sends six Boston bombers to attack the Le Havre power station. No hits are made on the target and no bombers are lost.

After dark, the RAF's target is Stuttgart. It sends 121 aircraft (69 Wellingtons, 19 Hampdens, 14 Lancasters, 12 Stirlings, 7 Halifaxes) in the first major raid on Stuttgart. One Stirling fails to return. The night is very cloudy and bombing accuracy is poor. The Robert Bosch factory, which makes dynamos, injection pumps, and magnetos, is the primary target, but no hits are made on it. There are 13 deaths and 37 injured and only scattered damage to Stuttgart. A German decoy site at Lauffen 15 miles north of Stuttgart, though, receives a lot of damage. It is lit up by 35 searchlights and has 50 flak guns in action. The decoy site (Nachtscheinanlage) deceives the bomber crews on this and many other missions into thinking it is a major city when in fact it was empty countryside. The British also have used this tactic successfully ("Starfish sites," code-named "Q" sites).

There are minor operations of 9 bombers to Nantes, 6 Stirling bombers to Pilsen, 8 bombers on minelaying missions off Heligoland, and 6 bombers on leaflet flights. One bomber sent to Pilsen fails to return.
Cowes after the Luftwaffe raid of 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Houses at Sun Hill, Cowes, after the 4 May 1942 Luftwaffe raid (Friends of the O.R.P. Blyskawica Society).
May 4, 1942, is notable for the first combat mission of the North American Mustang Mk. 1, though only over England. These are Mustangs built to British requirements and are designated NA-73s, not P-51s as they will be in the US Army Air Force. The British Mustangs fly with RAF No. 26 Squadron on a patrol from Gatwick, Surrey. The RAF is unimpressed with the fighter's high-altitude performance - which is considered necessary for an air superiority fighter - and relegates the fighters to Army Co-operation Command rather than Fighter Command. It equips its Mustangs with cameras to fly low-level reconnaissance.
Newsweek, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The cover story of Newsweek magazine, 4 May 1942, is about "Battles in Burma: The Chinese Fight for Their Lifeline."
Battle of the Atlantic: After two days of losses by both sides in the Barents Sea, the weather takes a turn for the worse and decides matters. It degenerates from Arctic gales into a full-blown snowstorm and hostilities must cease. Both PQ 15 and QP 11 escape further damage, with the former having lost three freighters and a destroyer (the Punjabi, with HMS King George V damaged after colliding with it) and the latter one freighter, a submarine, and escorting cruiser HMS Edinburgh. PQ 15 arrives in Murmansk on 5 May and QP 11 arrives in Iceland on 7 May.

The Allies consider both convoys to have been a success despite the losses, particularly since PQ 15 is the largest Arctic Convoy (22 ships make port at Murmansk) so far. The Germans, too, are delighted, as they have created havoc on the Arctic convoy route at the expense of only three Heinkel torpedo bombers and one destroyer lost. The stage now is set for even larger convoy battles in the future.

U-162 (FrgKpt. Jürgen Wattenberg), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 3785-ton US freighter Eastern Sword 12 nautical miles (22 km) off the Georgetown Lighthouse, British Guiana (Guyana). There are 16 deaths and 13 survivors, who make landfall in their lifeboat aside from one man picked up by local fishing boat Ocean Star.

U-162 also surfaces and shells 119-ton British three-masted schooner Florence M. Douglas off the coast of Guyana. Everyone survives.
Detroit during a blackout, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Detroit, Michigan, conducts a blackout drill on 4 May 1942. Detroit is the location of critical industries necessary for the war effort.
U-564 (Kptlt. Reinhard Suhren), on its fifth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 9767-ton British tanker Eclipse, a member of Convoy ON-87, near Fort Lauderdale, Florida. There are two deaths and 45 survivors. The ship sinks in very shallow water and is later salvaged, repaired, and returned to service in December 1942.

U-507 (KrvKpt. Harro Schacht), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 2686-ton US Design 1074 tanker Norlindo 80 nautical miles (150 km) northwest of Dry Tortugas Island. There are five deaths and 28 survivors, rescued by Panamanian freighter San Blas.

U-507 later torpedoes and then surfaces to shell and sink 5104-ton tanker Munger T. Ball. The ship erupts in flames due to the 65,000 barrels of gasoline on board. There are 30 deaths and only four survivors, rescued by Norwegian freighter Katy. This sinking is sometimes listed as occurring on 5 May.

U-507 finds a third US tanker, 6950-ton Joseph M. Cudahy, and torpedoes and sinks it about 74 miles northwest of the Dry Tortugas. There are 27 deaths and 10 survivors. This sinking is sometimes listed as occurring on 5 May.
HMS Rodney, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Rodney at Liverpool, 4 May 1942 (© IWM A 9608).
U-125 (Kptlt. Ulrich Folkers), on its fourth mission out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5687-ton US freighter Tuscaloosa City 200 miles west of Negrit, Jamaica. All 34 men on board survive, picked up by US freighter Falcon. The U-boat captain surfaces after the attack, questions the crew, gives them directions to shore and wishes them well.

British 7037-ton freighter Empire Story runs aground in foul weather at Briar Island, Nova Scotia. The crew abandons the ship, but it later works itself off the island itself and is found and taken in tow by Canadian tug Foundation Franklin. On the way to Digby, Empire Story capsizes and sinks.

RAF bombers of Coastal Command sink 2936-ton German freighter Klaus Fritzen at Måløy, near Bergen, Norway.

RAF bombers of Coastal Command also sink 4647-ton German freighter Sizilien off Borkum, Germany. During these Coastal Command raids, a flak ship 20 km southwest of Egmond aan Zee shoots down an RAF Hudson V AM530. All five crewmen perish.

German 773-ton freighter Herrenwyk (formerly Finnish Martti-Ragnar, captured at Bergen) hits a mine and sinks in the Bay of Kiel, Germany.

A 9-ton British fishing boat, FV Little Express, hits a mine in the Thames Estuary and is destroyed. All three men aboard perish.
Planes lined up on USS Enterprise, 4 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
An SBD Dauntless scout-bomber and five TBD-1 Devastator torpedo planes prepare to take off from the USS Enterprise during operations in the south Pacific area, 4 May 1942 (US Navy).
Battle of the Mediterranean: At Malta, a Luftwaffe fighter downs the Spitfire of Flight Lieutenant Norman MacQueen. MacQueen had just been announced as a winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross in the London Gazette on 1 May 1942. Malta Command also activates a new Infantry Brigade today, the Western Infantry Brigade, bringing the total to four. Luftwaffe raids begin at 10:25 and continue throughout the day.

Battle of the Black Sea: Luftwaffe aircraft sink 836-ton Russian transport Potemkin en route from Kamysh, Crimea - Burun, Turkey. There are 30 deaths and 25 wounded. This sinking is sometimes listed as occurring on 5 May.

Special Operations: The British Special Operations Executive (SOE) team Norwegian Independent Company 1 performs a successful sabotage operation against the electric railway Thamshavn Line in Orkdal, Norway. The objective is to prevent the Third Reich from transporting the pyrites that are being extracted at the mine at Løkken Verk. This is the first in a series of raids to accomplish this objective which, due to concerns of local residents, is done by targeted sabotage rather than RAF bombing.

Three men from Company Linge, having sailed from the UK via fishing boat, alight at Bjørnør on Fosen and travel overland to Namdalseid. A German lorry helpfully gives them a lift for part of the way. At Orkdal, they target the transformer station for the railway at Bårdshaug. The explosion at 05:00 wrecks the station and brings all traffic on the electric railway to a standstill. The three saboteurs escape to Sweden via Trondheim.
German internees at Camp Kenedy, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German internees at Camp Kenedy, Texas, 1942 (German American Internee Coalition).
Hungarian/Uruguayan Relations: Hungary severs relations with Uruguay. This apparently is retaliation for Uruguay breaking diplomatic relations with Germany, Italy, and Japan on 25 January 1942. Uruguay is not at war with any of the Axis powers, however (not until 21 February 1945, when it declares war on Germany and Japan). Uruguay has a large ethnic German population and is important for the Battle of the Atlantic because of the port of Montevideo, the last stop for Kriegsmarine heavy cruiser Admiral Graf Spee. Latin America is under heavy diplomatic pressure from Washington to favor the Allies, of course.

US Military: The Commander in Chief U.S. Fleet, Admiral Ernest J. King, directs the Coast Guard Auxiliary to organize civilian small craft as coastal picket ships.

Danish Homefront: Vilhelm Buhl becomes the 11th Prime Minister of Denmark, replacing the recently deceased Thorvald Stauning. He leads the unity government created by Stauning. The Third Reich at this time is allowing Denmark a very small degree of political independence, though that is entirely subject to Adolf Hitler's whims and is more of an illusion than a reality.

American Homefront: Albert Greutert, Acting Swiss Consul and representing Italian and German interests, and F. van den Arend, Special Division, Department of State, submit separate reports on conditions at detention camps Camp Kenedy and the Doud Field Alien Internment Camp at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas. Greutert's report notes that Camp Kenedy, "made up of pre-fabricated barracks," is "not fully organized yet" and "was hardly prepared for the influx of about 500 German internees." There also are about 160 Japanese internees there. The report continues, "I found the conditions [at Fort Sam Houston] in every regard so much better than those prevailing at the Kenedy camp, with everything nice and running smoothly." Greutert notes that the Camp Kenedy inmates have broken up into "several very different groups, especially with regard to their former countries of residence."

The US Office of Price Administration issues Ration Book Number One to every American to use when purchasing rationed items, including sugar, coffee, and meat.
German internees at Camp Kenedy, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Camp Kenedy Internment Camp, 1942, a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp near the town of Kenedy, Texas (German American Internee Coalition).

May 1942


2021

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

April 29, 1942: Japanese Preparing Operation Mo

Wednesday 29 April 1942

Hitler and Mussolini in Salzburg 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Hitler and Mussolini at Schloss Klessheim, 29 April 1942 (National Digital Archives, Poland).
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese are preparing Operation Mo, an invasion of Port Moresby, New Guinea, on 29 April 1942. With a large invasion force at their forward base at Truk, they also intend to occupy and install a seaplane base at Tulagi in the Solomons north of Guadalcanal (the Australians currently operate a seaplane base at nearby Gavutu-Tanambogo). Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto places Vice Admiral Shigeyoshi Inoue, a strong proponent of these aggressive moves, in charge of the naval portion of Operation Mo. General Douglas MacArthur, Allied area commander, is kept abreast of all these developments as the intelligence flows into his headquarters in Melbourne, Australia.

Japanese forces occupy Parang and Cotabato, Mindanao.
RAF Short Stirling bomber, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Groundcrew refuelling a Short Stirling Mk I of No. 1651 Heavy Conversion Unit at Waterbeach in Cambridgeshire, 29 April 1942." the truck is an AEC 6x6 petrol tanker known as a "Matador." © IWM COL 201.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: After fierce fighting by Chinese rearguard units, the Japanese 22nd Infantry Division, Thirteenth Army, takes the key position of Lashio. The Chinese commander there, General Chang, orders all stores blown up before ordering a retreat to Hsenwi. There are quite a lot of them, as Lashio is a key stop on the Allied supply route to China.

Chang also blocks the road to Kutkai, though the Japanese seem more interested in heading west toward India than northeast to invade China. The Chinese 200th Division, which has had some success to the south at Loilem, loses its escape route by the Japanese occupation of Lashio and is forced to turn southwest before taking a roundabout route around Lashio to reach China. The entire Chinese position in Burma, which recently looked quite promising, is now completely adrift.

This Japanese success cuts communications between China and Mandalay, virtually ensuring its loss to the Allies. The British already assume that Mandalay will fall and have pulled their units north of the city. General Chang has little hope of holding out for long and is preparing to withdraw his entire force into China through Kutkai and Wanting. All Allied supplies to China, particularly US lend-lease shipments, now must be made by air. These flights must be made over the "Hump," or Himalayas, by the USAAF 10th Air Force.

The 10th Air Force also has some offensive capability. Today, it sends its B-17s to bomb Rangoon. The planes cause major damage to the dock area.
Portland, Oregon, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Portland, Oregon, officials posting evacuation orders from the United States War Relocation Authority. Printed in The Oregonian of 29 April 1942.
Eastern Front: The Germans have solidified their contact with the isolated Demyansk garrison sufficiently for engineers to string a telephone line across the Lovat River. The two overall commanders, Generals Georg von Kuechler, Oberbefehlshaber der Heeresgruppe Nord ("commander-in-chief of Army Group North"), and Walter von Brockdorff, commander of II. Armeekorps (2 Corps) in the former pocket, finally can discuss the situation without fear of being overheard. The pocket at Kholm remains in peril, but a relief force under Generalmajor Werner Huehner is approaching. Hitler is following events there closely and is prepared to send more forces to help relieve the pocket if necessary.

The Soviets are preparing an attack to sever this tenuous German connection through Ramushevo to Demyansk. However, in part due to the spring thaw ("Rasputitsa"), they are having difficulty getting troops in place to mount this operation and it will not be ready until May.
York after a Luftwaffe attack, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Damage in York after a Luftwaffe attack, 29 April 1942. Shown is a steam locomotive in the York North locomotive depot (National Railway Museum).
European Air Operations: On 29 April 1942, York recovers from an overnight Baedeker Blitz raid by the Luftwaffe. As with many other such raids, it causes only moderate damage but an inordinate number of casualties. Buildings destroyed or damaged include the Guildhall and minster. There are 79 deaths and many injured.

Tonight, 29/30 April, the  Luftwaffe attacks Norwich again. This raid destroys many buildings in the center of the city. The planes drop more than 110 high-explosive bombs despite encountering heavier anti-aircraft fire than previously. The attack is 45 minutes shorter than the previous attack on the night of 27 April but still claims an additional 69 lives.

During the day, a Luftwaffe Bf-109F-3 of 3(F)/123 succeeds in getting aerial reconnaissance of Bath, Avonmouth, and the Nailsea munitions dump. 

RAF Bomber Command, however, is not taking a break. The RAF sends half a dozen Bostons against the Dunkirk docks during the day without loss.

The RAF hits Paris/Ennevilliers in the evening, sending 88 aircraft (73 Wellington bombers, 6 Stirlings, and 9 Hampdens) against the city in bright moonlight. They run into heavy flak and fighter defenses, however. The bombing results are mediocre, with no hits made on the main target, the Gnome & Rhone aero-engine factory. There are 15 deaths and 74 injured. The RAF loses three Wellingtons.

Subsidiary raids are made to Ostend (20 bombers), minelaying (5 Manchesters off the Danish coast), and six independent intruder missions. The raid on Ostend is the first of the war, and two bombers are lost there and one on the minelaying mission.

Hauptman Joachim Muncheberg, Stab II./JG 26, shoots down a Spitfire near Le Tourquet. It is his 74th victory. The victim is likely Polish ace Major Marian Pisarek, commander of I Polish Fighter Wing.
Michigan state troopers in action, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Michigan State Troopers guarding the Sojourner Truth housing project as African-Americans move into them, 29 April 1942. Many local residents objected to the location of the projects and violent clashes led to arrests (The Faces of Detroit).
Battle of the Atlantic: Both sides have sent heavy forces to the Arctic as the Allies struggle to keep the Soviet Union supplied via the Arctic convoy route around northern Norway. The Allies have two convoys converging in the area, PQ-15 from Iceland heading east and QP-11 from Murmansk heading west. Today, a German Ju 88 reconnaissance bomber and U-boats spot QP-11 a day after it left port. The U-boats prepare to attack on the 30th. The British, meanwhile, dispatch light cruiser HMS Edinburgh (CS 18) from Murmansk to beef up QP-11's escort force.

The Soviets, however, get in the first blow. Submarine M-171 (Lt. Cdr Stanikov) torpedoes and sinks 4969-ton German freighter Curityba off Vardø, Varangerfjord, Norway. The Curityba is carrying a Norwegian fishing trawler, F-14-V, and two auxiliary minesweepers, M-5403 and M-5407 (it is unclear if the trawler is one of these), which go down with the ship. There are 34 survivors and 22 deaths.

U-66 (KrvKpt. Richard Zapp), on its fifth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 10,354-ton Panamanian tanker Harry G. Seidel west of Trinidad. There are 48 survivors and two deaths.

U-108 (KrvKpt. Klaus Scholtz), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 9925-ton US tanker Mobiloil about 350 miles northeast of Turks Island in the Caribbean. This happens after an excruciating 13-hour chase which includes one torpedo miss. The U-boat finally gets into position and hits the tanker at 08:57, then surfaces and begins shelling the ship. The tanker crew, meanwhile, returns fire with their own 4-inch stern gun. A long battle ensues into the late afternoon. Finally, Scholtz fires more torpedoes (for a total of six, a large number for a commercial shipping target) that break the tanker in half. All 52 men on board survive, picked up by USS PC-490 on 2 May 1942. The tanker's master, Ernest V. Farrow, is later convicted for failing to follow orders to wait for a convoy off Norfolk.

The US is finally organizing coastal convoys on the East Coast. Today, the first coastal convoy departs from New York to the Delaware River, and other convoys also begin.

The surviving 27-man crew of US freighter Steel Maker, sunk by U-136 on 19 April, is rescued today by British freighter Pacific Exporter near Frying Pan Shoals.
Construction of Allis Chalmers plant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Construction of the Allis Chalmers Supercharger Plant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 29 April 1942 (Milwaukee Public Library).
Battle of the Mediterranean: Royal Navy submarine HMS Urge sinks on 29 April 1942 while en route from Malta to Alexandria after hitting a mine while sailing on the surface. The incident happens not long after Urge leaves Grand Harbour, Malta. The submarine is torn in two by the violent explosion and sinks rapidly with no survivors There are 39 deaths, including war correspondent Bernard Gray. The wreck is discovered in October 2019 lying in 130 meters (430 feet) of water two miles (3.2 km) off the Malta coast.

Royal Navy 81-ton tug Alliance hits a mine and sinks off Famagusta, Cyprus. There are three deaths and seven survivors. British 157-ton schooner Terpsithea also hits a mine and sinks at the same location. Everyone on the schooner survives.

Malta's military governor, Lt. General Sir W. Dobbie, reports that 333 people have been killed there over the previous month. This includes 139 men, 117 women, and 77 children). Property damage "has been exceedingly heavy." He concludes, though, that "the bearing and morale of the public has remained admirable."  

Battle of the Black Sea: German 155-ton naval ferry barge (Marinefährprahm) F 130 hits a mine and is beached. Later, it is refloated, repaired, and put back in service.

Luftwaffe aircraft sink 950-ton Soviet auxiliary minesweeper T-494. There are nineteen survivors and twenty dead.
Hitler and Mussolini in Salzburg 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Hermann Goering, Karl Doenitz, Kurt Zeitzler, and other officials at the map table in Schloss Klessheim, 29 April 1942 (ONB).
Axis Relations: Following his successful (final) speech to the Reichstag on the 26th, Adolf Hitler takes his personal train down to Salzburg, near his home at Berchtesgaden, to meet Mussolini. The two dictators meet at Schloss Klessheim for a two-day meeting to review the war situation in front of Hitler's customary 1:1000 maps. Hermann Goering, Foreign Minister Ribbentrop, Field Marshal Keitel, General Jodl, and other top Axis officials are there as well, signifying the importance of the meeting.

As usual, Hitler does most of the talking. These sessions invariably default to Hitler engaging in extended monologues as Mussolini listens in silence. Hitler tells Mussolini that his sole foreign policy dream was "annulling Bolshevism as a military power." The summer's offensive in the USSR would accomplish this. After that, Hitler says he would be able to shift his main forces west for a showdown with the western Allies. He hints that Stalin might be ready to negotiate terms due to supposed frustration with the failure of the British and Americans to open up a second front in France. 

The two men agree that, now that the Wehrmacht had survived the winter intact, nothing could save the Red Army. Privately, however, Mussolini is not so sure. To his son-in-law and Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo Ciano, he reveals resentment over his utter reliance on Hitler and the Wehrmacht. Mussolini, now privy to Hitler's plans for another grand offensive in the East ("Case Blue"), notes that the war's outcome would be decided by the end of the summer in the steppes of Russia.

Nothing is really decided today. The dictators will meet again on the morning of the 30th to discuss military plans.
The crater at Tessenderlo, Belgium, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The massive crater at Tessenderlo, Belgium, resulting from the explosion of 29 April 1942 (Tessenderlo Group).
US Military: General Harold Huston George, 49, is mortally wounded in a ground accident at Batchelor Field near Darwin, Australia. A Curtiss P-40 loses control while taking off and slams into George's Lockheed C-40. Victorville Air Force Base in California is renamed George Air Force Base in his honor in June 1950.

Holocaust: A date is set for all Dutch Jews to wear a Yellow Star of David badge: 3 May 1942.

Belgian Homefront: An explosion caused by ammonium nitrate rocks a chemical factory (Produits Chimiques de Tessenderloo (PCT)) in Tessenderlo, Belgium. Ammonium nitrate is often used as fertilizer but also as an ingredient in explosives. The shockwaves are felt in Antwerp and Brussels and the explosion creates a crate 70 meters wide and 23 meters deep. Accidental explosions during its manufacture and transport cause many tragedies over the years, such are in Beirut in 2020, so the incident is not necessarily military sabotage. There are 189 deaths.
Tanforan Assembly Center, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Internees on the mess line at the Tanforan Assembly Center in California, 29 April 1942 (Dorothy Lange, National Archives 537677).
American Homefront: Top Hollywood entertainers visit the White House to kick off a 30-city tour promoting the sale of war bonds. Among the celebrities in attendance are Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Cary Grant, Desi Arnaz, Groucho Marx, Laurel and Hardy, Charles Boyer, Charlotte Greenwood, Claudette Colbert, Olivia de Havilland, Spencer Tracy. and Betty Grable. Actress Carole Lombard, of course, perished during a tour selling war bonds on 16 January 1942.

In a sign of the times, just as the top Hollywood stars are in Washington dining with the President, civil defense authorities order all theater marquees in Times Square to be blacked out.

The San Francisco News reports that the local FBI office has made searches and raids in 24 cities and towns of Northern California for aliens and contraband articles. The Wartime Civil Control Administration, meanwhile, reports that it is having difficulty finding farmers to work all the fields being abandoned (unwillingly, of course) by the evacuating Japanese-Americans. A columnist in the same newspaper, Arthur Caylor, meanwhile, reports that many of the areas in San Francisco being vacated by the Japanese-American residents are being condemned. There is a "sub-surface meeting-of-minds," he says, that "the Japanese shall never come back."

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