Showing posts with label U-106. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U-106. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

June 1, 1942: Hitler at Poltava

Monday 1 June 1942

Hitler at Poltava 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Hitler at Poltava, 1 June 1942. From left to right: Lieutenant General Adolf Ernst Heusinger, General of the Infantry von Sodenstern, Colonel General Max Freiherr von Weichs, Adolf Hitler, General of the Panzer Force Friedrich Paulus, Colonel General Eberhard von Mackensen and Field Marshal Feodor von Bock. Federal Archive Image 183-B24543.

Battle of the Pacific: On 1 June 1942, a Japanese invasion force departs from Kashiwabara on Paramushiru Island in the Kurile Islands heading for Kiska Island in the Aleutians. Meanwhile, the US Navy sends Task Force 8.6 centered around the light cruiser USS Nashville (CL-43) to patrol 400 miles (741 km) south of Kodiak Island. The US 11th Air Force now has 12 P-40s, six B-26 bombers, and a B-17E at Otter Point on Umnak Island.

Pursuant to Admiral Nimitz's orders, aircraft carrier Saratoga sails from San Diego for Pearl Harbor following repair of torpedo damage suffered on 11 January 1942 and some modernization. It carries 14 Wildcats of VF-2 Detachment and 23 Dauntlesses of VS-3, along with four Wildcats, 43 Dauntlesses, and 14 Avengers as cargo. The cargo aircraft are carried as future replacements for aircraft expected to be lost at Midway Island by carriers Enterprise, Hornet, and Yorktown.

Five Japanese submarines (I-21, I-22, I-24, I-27, and I-29) lie off Port Hacking, Australia, waiting for the crewmen of the mini-submarines that attacks Sydney Harbour on 31 May to reach their rendezvous point. The men never arrive, having all been killed either during the attack or afterward.

The US Fifth Air Force sends B-17s to attack the Japanese base at Rabaul, while others raid Lae and Salamaua, New Guinea.
Hitler at Poltava 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Hitler driving from the airfield to his meeting with the leaders of Army Group South in Poltava, Ukraine, 1 June 1942.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: Following their successful mini-sub attack on the British fleet at Diego Suarez, Madagascar, two Japanese sailors (Lt Akieda Saburo and PO1C Takemoto Masami) have abandoned their mini-sub at Nosy Antalikely (Antali Keli) islet. Having gotten to the mainland on the boat of some friendly locals, they are proceeding on foot to the pickup point at Cape Amber. Hungry, they stop at a village, Anijabe village, to buy some food. They obtain the food from the friendly locals, but one of them contacts the British in hopes of getting a reward.

Japanese submarine I-10 launches its "Glen" seaplane for a reconnaissance mission over Diego Suarez, Madagascar. Even though this is the third straight day of such flights, the British do not notice it.

The US 10th Air Force raids the Rangoon dockyards with five bombers. The bomber crews claim to sink one tanker and damage another.  
Hitler at Poltava 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler, center, greets soldiers after getting off of his Focke Wulf Fw 200 Kondor at Poltava airfield, 1 June 1942.

Eastern Front: Adolf Hitler makes a rare visit to Army Group Center headquarters at Poltava in the Reichskommissariat Ukraine. He is there to discuss the upcoming Case Blue with Field Marshal Fedor von Bock. Hitler flies in at 9 a.m. and is gone by noon. Afterward, everyone is a little mystified why he visited, but Hitler shows a bit of wanderlust in early June 1942, flying to Poltava, then to Finnland to wish Marshal Mannerheim a happy 75th birthday, and then down to Berchtesgaden for a holiday. This is the first of Hitler's two visits to Poltava, the second being on 3 July.

These visits accomplish nothing that could not also be done via simple teletype messages and phone calls. However, they serve Hitler's purposes in terms of reminding the generals and soldiers at the front who is really in charge. They also serve as good propaganda tools to show the same thing to the German public. Hitler fully expects Case Blau to be a resounding victory and the final German triumph over the USSR, so he wants to be seen prominently at the point of its inception.

At Sevastopol, General von Manstein's 11th Army bombards the Soviet holdouts throughout the day. He is preparing to finally take the port. The Red Army troops know they have no hope of relief and Stalin has not authorized a withdrawal using ships.

The action is heating up in the air over Sevastopol, too. II./JG 77's Lt. Ludwig-Wilhelm Burckhardt is shot down near enemy lines while flying an escort mission for Generaloberst Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen's Fiesler Storch. He crash-lands near the Soviet lines, gets out of the plane, and runs for his life from advancing Soviet infantry. Burckhardt barely survives and makes it back to German lines but gets chewed out by his commander, Major Gordon Gollob, for not destroying his Bf 109 before leaving.

Back at Fuhrer Headquarters, General Franz Halder simply writes "Unchanged" in his war diary, adding "The mopping-up operation in the rear of Fourth Army [anti-partisan operation Hannover] is making good progress." Halder talks to General Hoth, the new commander of the 4th Panzer Army, about his role in Case Blue.
Hitler at Poltava 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler exits his Focke-Wulf 200 in Poltava, Ukraine, 1 June 1942.

European Air Operations: German flak batteries at Ostend down an RAF Spitfire. The Belgian pilot survives two days and three nights in his dinghy before being picked up by the Germans and imprisoned.

RAF Bomber Command takes a rest after two major raids on consecutive nights, one against Cologne and the other over Essen. It considers the Cologne raid a success although the RAF lost 40 bombers. The Essen raid by 956 bombers, however, achieved little due to poor bombing accuracy.

Fires rage in Canterbury, England, after the latest "Baedeker Blitz" attack by the Luftwaffe.

 Lt. Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer of NJG 1 gets his first victory during the Essen raid. He will become known as "The Night Ghost of St. Trond."

Battle of the Baltic: German 981-ton freighter Malmö hits a mine in the Drogden area of the Skagerrak and sinks in Øresund southwest of Malmö, Sweden. On 8 August 1942, a Danish salvage company raises it, brings it to Copenhagen, repairs it, and returns it to service. It survives the war.

Hitler at Poltava 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Hitler arrives at the headquarters of Army Group South, 1 June 1942.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-156 torpedoes and sinks 5970-ton Brazilian freighter Alegrete between St. Lucia and St. Vincent. The attack is made after dark at 23:51, making the (neutral) Brazilian flag difficult to see. The crew quickly abandons ship and the U-boat uses its deck gun to send it under by 03:00 on the 2nd. All 64 on the freighter survive, with three lifeboats making landfall in Trinidad and Venezuela and the fourth being rescued by USS Tarbell (DD 142).

U-158 (Kptlt. Erwin Rostin), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5686-ton US freighter Knoxville City near the Isle of Pines and 50 miles southeast of Cape Corrientes, Cuba. This sinking is sometimes listed as having sunk early in the morning on 2 June. A torpedo strikes the engine room, killing two men instantly and stopping the ship. After an hour the ship is still afloat, so Rostin fires another torpedo that sinks it. Aside from the two men in the engine room, all 53 other crewmen survive. The crew's story is a little unusual because a Brazilian freighter, Jamaica, stops and asks the men in the boats if they want to be rescued, but they decline because they fear that this ship will be torpedoed, too. They ultimately make landfall in La Calina, Cuba, after 48 hours.

U-106 (Kptlt. Hermann Rasch), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, sinks 2689-ton US freighter Hampton Roads northwest of Cape San Antonio, Cuba. Rasch fires two warning shots with his deck gun, causing the freighter to stop. He waits for the crew to disembark, then fires one torpedo that sinks the ship. Five men remain on board and perish, but the other 23 men take to the boats and are picked up seven hours later by Alcoa Pathfinder.

U-404 (Kptlt. Otto von Bülow), on its third patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 5492-ton US freighter West Notus 320 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. The U-boat chases the ship for two hours and 45 minutes, using its deck gun and scoring about 20 hits in 55 shots. The crew is unable to send a distress call because one of the first shells destroys the radio. Finally, one of the shots disables the steering, causing the ship to sail in circles. The crew abandons ship after firing some rounds with a machine gun that causes minor damage to the U-boat. The U-boat then surfaces, questions the men, gives them some Perrier mineral water bottles, and directs them to Cape Hatteras. The burning freighter, meanwhile, takes a long time to sink, so in an unusual move, von Bülow sends a party on board to plant scuttling charges. There are four dead and 36 survivors, who are picked up after a couple of days by two separate freighters (Greek Constantinos H. and Swiss Saentis).

U-566 (Kptlt. Dietrich Borchert), on its fifth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and later uses gunfire to sink 9512-ton British freighter Westmoreland northeast of Bermuda 240 miles northeast of Bermuda. The ship takes a long time to sink, and remains afloat even after a coup de grâce torpedo is used, so Borchert surfaces and uses the deck gun to sink it after a five-hour ordeal. There are three dead and 65 survivors, who are picked up by two different freighters (Canadian Cathcart and U.S. Henry R. Mallory). This is U-566's only victory on this patrol.

Some sources place the sinking of 4536-ton Panamian freighter Bushranger today by U-107, but others do so on 31 May 1942, so I covered it there.

Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 87 Stuka bombers sink 6850-ton British freighter Empire Starlight in Murmansk Harbor. The Soviets refloat and repair it in 1945, renaming the freighter Murmansk. The planes also sink 235-ton Soviet freighter Subbotnik in the harbor, with eight dead.
USS Juneau, 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The U.S. Navy light cruiser USS Juneau (CL-52). "Photographed off New York City, 1 June 1942. She has a barge alongside her starboard quarter. Her superstructure retains its original camouflage scheme, but her hull has been repainted to a different pattern." Juneau will be sunk on 13 November 1942 at the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal with the loss of 687, including the five Sullivan brothers. Naval History & Heritage Command 19-N-31264.



Battle of the Mediterranean: Following heavy Stuka attacks on British defenders of the 150th Infantry Brigade at the Sidi Muftah box (Got el Ualeb, due west of Tobruk), German soldiers of the Afrika Korps resume their attack west against them that began on the 31st of May. The British Eighth Army attempts to relieve the embattled soldiers, without success. Fierce fighting continues throughout the day into the early afternoon, when the last British soldiers surrender. The Germans claim 3000 prisoners, the destruction of 101 tanks and armored cars, and the capture or destruction of 124 artillery pieces. 

This enables the Germans to make contact with the Italian X Corps, advancing through the minefield from the west. This Axis victory clears two desperately needed pathways through the British minefields to the west so that supplies can be trucked in by the Italian Ariete and Trieste divisions.

Spy Stuff: The Wehrmacht begins a secret disinformation campaign, Operation Kreml (Kremlin). Working on the assumption that the Red Army has sources within the German army, Operation Kreml involves a phony plan by Army Group Center to mount a large-scale offensive to capture Moscow. The plan is put in motion today with the Army Group's distribution down to the regimental level of sealed maps of Moscow with instructions not to open them until 10 June, when meetings to discuss the offensive will be held. In fact, the only Wehrmacht offensive planned for the summer is the one in the south, Case Blau. Kreml is a classic misdirection counterintelligence operation.
Hermann Goering as shown in Time Magazine, 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A photo of Hermann Goering in the 1 June 1942 issue of Time Magazine.

German Military: Generals Hermann Hoth of 17th Army and Richard Ruoff of 4th Panzer Army switch commands. Hoth is considered a top panzer general is tasked with preparing the 4th Panzer Army for its critical role in the upcoming Case Blue offensive into southern USSR toward Stalingrad.

Oblt. Heinrich Kraft of 8./JG 51 becomes Gruppenkommandeur of I./JG 51.

US Military: Headquarters, United States Army Northern Ireland Force and Headquarters, V Corps (both commanded by MG Hartle) transfer from Wilmont House to Lurgan. Meanwhile, the Headquarters of Northern Ireland Base Command (Provisional) is activated at Wilmont House under the command of BG Leroy P. Collins.

Brazilian Homefront: Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (CRVD) is founded in Itabira, Minas Gerais, Brazil. It is a metals and mining corporation that eventually evolves into Vale S.A., one of the most valuable companies in Latin America. It is also is controversial due to its impact on the environment and various accidents resulting in deaths and injuries.
Time magazine, with Chiang Kai-shek on the cover, 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek on the cover of Time magazine, 1 June 1942.

Holocaust: Carl Oberg officially takes up his post as Higher SS and Police Leader (Höherer SS-und Polizeiführer, HSSPF) "Frankreich" (France) with authority over German police and security forces in France, including the SD and the Gestapo. Oberg now is the ultimate authority in France for anti-partisan operations and Holocaust activities. He will earn the nickname "Butcher of Paris." 

Reinhard Heydrich accompanied Oberg to his new post in France in early May (before the Heydrich assassination attack on 27 May). Already, even before his official installation, Oberg has instituted the policy of requiring Jews in Paris to wear a yellow badge. One of Oberg's defining characteristics will be ordering mass executions of hostages as reprisals for Resistance activities.

American Homefront: The Grand Coulee Dam, which has been under construction since the ceremonial driving of the first stake on 16 July 1933, opens on the Columbia River. The reservoir fills completely and the first waters overtop the spillway. Over 21,000 acres (85 square km) of land have been flooded

The dam's first generator has been in operation since January 1941. Getting the dam into full operation is a very slow and gradual process, with the last of its 18 generators not being switched on until 1950. The total cost of the dam in 2020 dollars: $2 billion.

Future History: Thomas Frank Mankiewicz is born in Los Angeles, California. The son of Joseph Mankiewicz and nephew of Herman Mankiewicz, both power players in Hollywood, Tom Mankiewicz goes on to become an American screenwriter, director, and producer of motion pictures and television. His most famous credits include "Superman: The Movie" (1978) and some James Bond films, including "Live and Let Die" (1973). Tom Mankiewicz was famous within Hollywood insider circles as a "script doctor" brought in to "fix" shaky movie scripts. He passes away in Los Angeles on 31 July 2010 from pancreatic cancer.

Cecil Randolph Hundley Jr. is born in Martinsville, Virginia. He becomes a top catcher, particularly defensively, in Major League Baseball from 1964-1977. He is most famous for playing with the Chicago Cubs. His son, Todd, also becomes a Major Leaguer. Hundley originated the idea of baseball "fantasy camps," where fans get to play with former pros. He apparently still operates some as of this writing in 2021.

Fernando Atzori is born in Ales, Province of Oristano, Italy. He goes on to become a champion boxer before retiring in 1975. He passes away on 9 November 2020.
Life magazine with Hedy Lamarr on the cover, 1 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Life magazine, 1 June 1942, with actress Hedy Lamarr on the cover.

May 1942



2021

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

May 28, 1942: German Victory At Kharkov

Thursday 28 May 1942

Flying Tigers 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Kittyhawk fighters of the American Volunteer Group flying near the Salween River Gorge on the Chinese-Burmese border, 28 May 1942.

Battle of the Pacific: Two US Navy carriers, the USS Enterprise (CV-6) and Hornet (CV-8), leave Pearl Harbor on 28 May 1942 for the vicinity of Midway Island. A third carrier, Yorktown, continues to under frantic repairs in dry dock to damage caused at the Battle of the Coral Sea and is scheduled to follow them on within the next two days. Yorktown's air units, depleted by casualties, are replaced by fresh units (Bombing Three (VB-3), Torpedo Three (VT-3), and Fighting Three (VF-3)).

Naval Intelligence has determined from decoded Japanese transmissions that the Japanese intent to invade Midway on June 4th, and American Admiral Chester W. Nimitz is planning to give them a hot welcome by all of his carrier forces. Taskforce commander Vice Admiral William Halsey has been replaced by Rear Admiral Raymond A. Spruance due to illness. Unfortunately, carrier Saratoga remains on the West Coast for repairs and is unavailable for the battle, but some of its aircrews wind up on Yorktown. Admiral Nimitz has ordered 25 submarines to patrol around Midway.

The US 11th Air Force has secretly constructed an airfield on Unmak, Aleutian Islands, in preparation for the anticipated Japanese invasion in conjunction with the Midway operation. The field becomes operational today when a B-17 flies armed reconnaissance over the Aleutian chain. The Japanese are not there yet, so the bomber crew spots nothing amiss. 

USS Salmon (Lt.Cdr. E.B. McKinney) torpedoes and sinks 4382-ton Japanese freighter Ganges Maru 250 nautical miles southeast of Cam Ranh Bay, French Indochina. There are seven deaths.

B-26 bombers of the 5th Air Force attack the airfield at Lae, New Guinea.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: After a long journey across the Indian Ocean, a Japanese naval force composed of submarines designated "Divine Dragon Operations No. 2" nears Madagascar. Its mission is to launch midget submarines against the British Far Eastern Fleet in the vicinity of East Africa. Training for this mission has taken place throughout 1942 and has had the attention of top Japanese leadership, including Admiral Yamamoto. This is one of the few Japanese military activities designed specifically to aid their German allies, though how much aid attacks on the British Far Eastern Fleet would be to the Reich is an open question.
Illustration of German tanks in Russia from German magazine 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German tanks crossing a river on the Russian Front, World War II. Illustration from Illustrierte Zeitung (Leipzig, 28 May 1942).

Eastern Front: In a crushing defeat, the Soviet 6th and 57th Armies and 21st Tank Corps are annihilated southeast of Kharkov by defending German forces after being encircled. Red Army General Timoshenko still has not grasped the true state of play and only today orders a halt to Soviet offensive operations. Scattered and sporadic attempts by individual units continue, but very few succeed. Mass surrenders by an estimated 250,000 men begin today and continue for several days. The Germans, meanwhile, have lost perhaps 20,000 casualties all told. 

A Soviet salient to the southwest by Red Army forces attempting to reach Kharkov from the northeast is eliminated with help from the Luftwaffe first group of Schlachtgeschwader 1. It is flying the new Henschel HS-129 ground attack aircraft, which have proven quite durable and effective. During May, SchG 1 has flown 1467 sorties, with 1,028 Bf 109 missions, 259 by Hs 123s and 180 by the Hs 129s

At Fuhrer Headquarter in East Prussia, General Franz Halder writes in his war diary: 
The battle at Kharkov and on the Donets is brought to a close with a large take of prisoners and booty. Army Group South has issued the orders for the next phase of the offensive "Volchanak" and "Izyum."
The stage is now set for the opening stages of the grand German offensive that Hitler has decided will "sweep the deck" of the remaining Soviet forces and finally bring a successful conclusion to the campaign in the USSR. This, however, will take some time to prepare and is subject to the whims of the weather.

European Air Operations: Weather on the Channel Front remains unsettled, with winds from the southwest gusting to 40-45 mph and visibility poor, especially in the morning. This obviously is not good flying weather, so it is mainly an "off" day for the RAF. The men spend such days entertaining themselves during the day and then often attending Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) shows in the evening.

British MTB commissioned 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS MTB-77 - Vosper 72 feet-type Motor Torpedo Boat, British Navy. Commissioned 28 May 1942, Bombed by German aircraft off Vibo Valentia, Calabria, Italy on 8 September 1943.

Battle of the Atlantic: After losing half a dozen ships to Luftwaffe attacks south of Bear Island on the 27th, Convoy PQ 16 is joined by a Soviet escort composed of three destroyers and four minesweepers. These warships enable the convoy to proceed toward the Soviet Union without losing any more vessels.

U-502 (Kptlt. Jürgen von Rosenstiel), on its fourth war patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6759-ton US freighter Alcoa Pilgrim about 150 miles south of the Mona Passage (southwest of St. Thomas). The ship, carrying 9500 tons of bauxite ore, sinks within 90 seconds and the crew has no time to launch lifeboats. There are 31 dead and 9 survivors, who are picked up by US freighter Thomas Nelson.

U-106 (Kptlt. Hermann Rasch), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 7383-ton British freighter Mentor north of Cabo Catoche, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Rasch surfaces and questions the crew, who misinform him that the ship was the Bengloe. There are four dead and 82 survivors, who are rescued after three days by British freighter Antilochus.

U-103 (Kptlt. Werner Winter), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6414-ton US tanker New Jersey 90 miles southwest of Grand Cayman Island. The crew is able to launch two lifeboats before Winter fires a coup de grace torpedo and then surfaces and uses his deck gun to finish off the tanker. All 42 crewmen survive, picked up by USS Tattnall (DD 125) and Biddle (DD 151) within a few days.

U-155 (Kptlt. Adolf Cornelius Piening), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 1928-ton Dutch freighter Poseidon east of Barbados. Piening engages in a somewhat unusual night surface attack. After firing four torpedoes, one finally hits and sinks the ship quickly. All 32 men on board perish.

Panamian 7797-ton tanker Sylvan Arrow, torpedoed on 20 May by U-155, finally sinks. There are 43 survivors and one dead.

British freighter Yorkmoor, sunk on 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
British freighter Yorkmoor, sunk by U-506 on 28 May 1942.

U-506 (Kptlt. Erich Würdemann), on its second war patrol out of Lorient, uses its deck gun to sink 4457-ton British freighter Yorkmoor northeast of the Bahamas. Würdemann uses his gun because he is out of torpedoes, having used them all in a successful patrol in the Gulf of Mexico. Yorkmoor has a 4-inch gun and eight machine guns, so an unusual gun battle emergest between the freighter and the U-boat. However, it is a night attack and the Yorkmoor's gunners have difficulty aiming at the submarine so they score no hits. The attack takes just over half an hour, during which the U-boat gunners fire 55 shells and score several hits at extreme range. The ship's crew abandons ship in four lifeboats after the radio operator has sent distress calls. All 45 crewmen survive, picked up within about a week by British freighter Laguna and a US Coast Guard cutter. U-506, although out of torpedoes and having used up a lot of shells, still has one more victory in store for it on the way back to base during an extremely successful patrol.

Italian submarine Barbarigo torpedoes, shells, and sinks 4836-ton British freighter Charlbury off the east coast of Brazil. There are two deaths.

German 1337-ton minesweeper Sperrbrecher-174 (Tindefjell) hits a mine and sinks west of Buoy 11W, west of Dunkirk. There is one dead.

Canadian 70-ton sailing vessel Carmen Nina runs aground and is wrecked off Sheet Harbor, Nova Scotia. Casualties are unknown.

USS Nicholas on 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The U.S. Navy destroyer USS Nicholas (DD-449) flying Bath Iron Works' house flag on acceptance trials off Rockland, Maine (USA), 28 May 1942, a week before she was commissioned (Naval History and Heritage Command 19-N-36881).

Battle of the Mediterranean: Fierce tank battles continue in Libya as German General Erwin Rommel continues his offensive into the British Gazala Line. The British 4th Armoured Brigade arrives at El Adem and stops the German 90th Light Division, pushing it back to the southwest.

While his forces have made impressive advances, Rommel's main headache is at the fortress of Bir Hakeim. There, the Italian IX Tank Battalion of the 132nd Tank Infantry Regiment, Ariet Division, has failed to dent strong Free French fortifications and lost heavily in the attempt. 

Supplies are critical in the desert, as the panzers eat up fuel during Rommel's sweeping maneuvers and the men need water and rations. Italian supply vehicles operated by the Trieste and Ariete divisions are slowed by minefields near Bir Hakeim but continue to make progress toward the advancing panzers. 

While the Afrika Korps retains the initiative, quick British responses have blunted the attacks and ended chances of a quick German victory. The Desert Air Force (DAF) bombs the French at Bir Hakeim by mistake. The French under General Kœnig are surrounded at Bir Hakeim, so Kœnig attempts to break the encirclement by sending a column north toward the 150th Infantry Brigade. A fierce battle ensues during which the French destroy seven Italian half-tracks, but Italian artillery prevails and the breakout attempt fails.

NY Times of 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The New York Times of 28 May 1942 notes that "Heydrich of Gestapo Hurt: Big Reward Up for Assailant."

Special Operations: German leader Reinhard Heydrich remains alive at a Czech hospital, kept alive by quick surgical intervention following the assassination attempt on 27 May 1942. The medical prognosis remains grim, but Heydrich's condition has stabilized. His two assassins, Jozef Gabčík and Jan Kubiš, remain at large in a local safe house. SS-Reichsfuhrer Heinrich Himmler has dispatched his personal SS physician, Karl Gebhardt, by plane to the hospital to supervise Heydrich's care.

Auschwitz victim 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Wojciech Biernat, was born in Jodłówka. A Catholic priest who perished at Auschwitz on 28 May 1942 (Auschwitz Memorial).

Holocaust: The first convoy of Nacht und Nebel (Night and Fog) detainees, composed of 43 men and 9 women, leave Paris from the Gare de l’Est. The male detainees are taken to a camp at Hinzert and the females to Aachen. While technically they are supposed to be taken before a German court and tried, this does not always happen. The Nacht und Nebel arrests stem from a 7 December 1941 directive issued by Adolf Hitler to arrest political activists secretly ("in the night and fog"), leaving their families and friends uncertain about their fates. Invariably aside from rare situations, those arrested were to be executed.

American Homefront: US Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson issues a warning to the citizens of the West Coast to prepare for a Japanese bombing attack in retaliation for the Doolittle Raid.

Italian opera singer is released from FBI custody after three months of custody for being a suspected enemy alien. The FBI alleged that Pinza supported the Axis and have held him at Ellis Island since March 1942. A fellow opera singer, Norman Cordon, claimed to have told the FBI that Pinza was a fascist sympathizer, though there never was any proof of that. Why Cordon did that is unproven, though perhaps out of professional jealousy. Pinza quickly goes from captivity to singing onstage at the Metropolitan Opera.

Future History: Tien Chun is born in Guangdong, China. As James Tien, he becomes a prominent actor in 70 Hong Kong martial arts films such as "Hands of Death" (1976) until retiring in 1996. 

Stanley Benjamin Prusiner is born in Des Moines, Iowa. He goes on to win numerous awards and accolades in the fields of neurology and biochemistry, including the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physiology for prion research. As of this writing in 2021, Prusiner is director of the Institute for Neurodegenerative Diseases research laboratory at the University of California, San Francisco.
Vought test pilot team 28 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Vought Test Pilot team, 28 May 1942 -Lt-Rt Boone Guyton, Charlie Sharpe, Dick Burroughs, Bill Boothby & Lyman Bullard with SB2U.

May 1942


2021

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

May 26, 1942: Rommel Pounces in North Africa

Tuesday 26 May 1942

USS Hornet 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
USS Hornet at Pearl Harbor, 26 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-66129).

Battle of the Pacific: After a hard sail from the Southwest Pacific, USS Enterprise arrives at Pearl Harbor on 26 May 1942. USS Yorktown, damaged at the Battle of the Coral Sea, is roughly 24 hours behind. Vice Admiral William Halsey has been in command of the task force (TF 16), but he has suffered a case of dermatitis and now it is under the command of Rear Admiral Raymond A. Spruance. Repair crews are standing by to undertake repairs to Yorktown once it arrives, with the plan being for Enterprise, Yorktown, and USS Hornet to quickly depart for Midway Island.

US Navy aircraft ferry USS Kitty Hawk (AKV-1) arrives at Midway with reinforcements. These include 3-inch (76.2 mm) antiaircraft guns of the 3rd Defense Battalion, a light tank platoon, and reinforcements for Marine Air Group Twenty Two (MAG-22). None of these men, of course, realize how close the battle is.

Meanwhile, the Japanese are finally ready to begin their operation to take Midway and islands in the Aleutians. The Japanese Northern Force (two light carriers) departs from Japan toward the Aleutians. The main force (Kido Butai) allocated to Midway remains in the Inland Sea for another day. The Japanese have no idea that the US Navy has broken their codes and knows with precision the date and places of their planned invasions. A Japanese "Glen" seaplane reconnoiters Kiska Island in the Aleutians and has no issues.

The US Navy has no intention of interfering with the Aleutians Island invasion and instead will concentrate all of its forces at Midway. However, the 11th Air Force based at Elmendorf Field near Anchorage has been sending some air reinforcements to the Aleutian Islands. Today, it sends the P-40s of the 11th Fighter Squadron, 28th Composite Group to Umnak, Aleutians.

USS Salmon torpedoes and sinks Japanese 11,441-ton repair ship Asahi 100 miles southwest of Cape Paderas (south of Phan Thiet, Vietnam). There are sixteen deaths, but 582 crewmen and Captain Tamura survive.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: Today, 26 May 1942, is considered the end of the Burma campaign as the last of the Allied forces slip out of Burma. General "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell has gotten out with his command by walking through jungles with 114 people, including nurses, a Chinese general with his personal bodyguards, mechanics, some civilians, a news reporter, and British commandos. The Japanese have complete control of Burma, part of which is now garrisoned by Thai troops. While the Chinese fear an invasion across the Himalayas, the Japanese are not looking in that direction but instead have their eyes set on eventually invading India.

NY Daily Mirror 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The 26 May 1942 New York Daily Mirror is full of stirring news about the successful Soviet offensive south of Kharkov - where the Red Army actually is staring a massive defeat in the face.

Eastern Front: After the failure of one breakout attempt from their pocket southeast of Kharkov, Red Army soldiers try again this morning a little to the north. This attack is not quite as forceful as the one on the 25th toward Petrovskoye and only comes within four miles of succeeding. German Army Group South commander Field Marshal Fedor von Bock watches the proceedings from a hill south of Lozovenka. He sees the Luftwaffe's best ground-attack aircraft (Ju 87 Stukas, Ju 88 medium bombers, and He 111 medium bombers) pound the masses of Soviet troops clogging the roads. He remarks that it is "an overpowering picture."

Back at Fuhrer Headquarters, General Franz Halder writes:

In the Izyum pocket, desperate break-out attempts to the east continue. Our attack has divided the pocket into two smaller pocket. More feeble attempts from the outside.

Halder further notes that the other prong of the Soviet pincer movement also is ending: ""On the front east of Kharkov, the attacks are dying down. The enemy concentrations are thinning."

Three Soviet generals, including Major General I.V. Bobkin, die in the fighting. By the afternoon, hordes of Red Army soldiers are trapped in a 10x2 mile pocket in the Bereka Valley. The 23rd Panzer Division and the 1st Mountain Division drive in past streams of surrendering Soviet soldiers. Red Army General Timoshenko continues trying to direct offensive operations within the pocket, but it would take a miracle for a breakout to succeed now. The Germans still remain astonished that the Red Army hasn't tried a major relief operation from the east.

Soviet 12-ton river minesweeping launch No. 916 is sunk today, perhaps by scuttling.

European Air Operations: Poor weather continues to hamper operations on the Channel Front. The Royal Canadian Air Force reports "Weather, unsettled with occasional showers."

A Bristol Beaufighter Mk 11F of RAF No. 125 (Newfoundland) Squadron crashes ear Eastern Breakwater, Swansea Harbour, Swansea, Glamorgan. The crew survives.

U-333 arrives in port on 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U-333 (Kptlt Peter-Erich Cremer) arrives back at its base at Saint-Nazaire on 26 May 1942. Note damage to the conning tower. Böttger, Gerd, Federal Archive Fig. 101II MW-4457-08.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-103 (Kptlt. Werner Winter), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5588-ton US freighter 125 miles (232 km) northwest of Montego Bay, Jamaica. All 35 men take to the lifeboats, where Winter questions them and gives them some cigarettes. A Cuban gunboat rescues 33 of the men, while two are picked up by a US Navy seaplane.

U-106 (Kptlt. Hermann Rasch), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, stops 5030-ton US freighter Carrabulle in the Gulf of Mexico with a siren and a shot across the bow. The Carrabulle's radio operator sends a distress call, then the entire crew of eight officers and 32 men take to two lifeboats. Rasch waits until the instant the second lifeboat hits the water before torpedoing the freighter, which sinks the ship and also destroys that lifeboat. The entire incident is unusual, with a report that Rasch asks the first lifeboat if everyone is clear, is told no, and then laughs and fires anyway. There are 22 dead, all from the second lifeboat, and 18 survivors who are picked up by US freighter Thompson Lykes.

U-703 (Kptlt. Heinz Bielfeld), on its second patrol out of Skjomenfjord, torpedoes and sinks 6191-ton US freighter Syros 200 miles southwest of Bear Island. Syros is traveling as part of Convoy PQ-16 toward Murmansk. The attack is made at 02:59, which is daylight at this latitude at this time. The crew is unable to use the lifeboats and use three rafts. Fortunately, help is nearby, but still a dozen men die and there are 28 survivors. The survivors have an eventful ride back to Iceland on US freighter Hybert when it blunders into a British minefield northwest of Iceland and sinks, but they all survive that sinking, too.

Luftwaffe planes based in Norway find US freighter Carlton, which was part of PQ-16 but had engine trouble and now is under tow by British trawler HMS Northern Spray. The planes somewhat surprisingly make no hits on this easy target. 

German artillery near Murmansk makes a rare hit on a ship when it sinks 860-ton Norwegian tanker Vardø near Murmansk. The tanker, loaded with oil and gasoline, sinks quickly. Casualties are unknown.

French 4578-ton freighter Enseigne Maurice Préchac springs a leak and sinks east of the Azores.

Map of Battle of Gazala 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A general overview map of the Battle of Gazala that began on 26 May 1942. Indicated in red are the Italian feints and then General Rommel's cartwheel to the southeast.

Battle of the Mediterranean: German General Erwin Rommel breaks a long stalemate in the Western Desert. At 14:00, the Italian X and XXI Corps attack the center of the British Gazala line.  This is Operation Venice (Unternehmen Venezia). Only a few German units are involved in this attack, while other units drive north to support the attack. Rommel's ground forces are aided significantly by the Luftwaffe's JG 27 and III./JG 53 fighter forces.

However, the Italian assault is only a feint. It is designed to draw Allied attention and reserves north and away from Rommel's main target. After dark, Rommel with the 15th Panzer Division personally leads Panzerarmee Afrika, the Deutsches Afrikakorps (DAK), Italian XX Motorised Corps, and the German 90th Light Afrika Division in a sweeping arc through the desert to the southeast. His intention is to launch a powerful thrust into what Rommel considers to be the most vulnerable sector of the British Gazala defensive line, a fort at Bir Hacheim largely occupied by Free French forces. If everything works perfectly, Rommel may be able to make a thrust to the coast and cut off large Allied formations and maybe even capture the port of Tobruk.

Royal Navy 195-ton minesweeper HMS Eddy hits a mine and sinks near Grand Harbour, Malta.

Partisans: The German anti-partisan attack near Bryansk, Operation Hannover, remains stalled by heavy rains. General Halder notes in his war diary, "the attack against Cav. Corps Belov is still hampered by adverse weather, and is making only slow progress."

Signing of Anglo-Soviet Agreement of 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"A general scene showing delegates enjoying a walk in the gardens of 10 Downing Street, following the signing of the Anglo-Soviet Alliance. Left to right, they are Mr. Sabolev, Mr. Papov, Ivan Maisky (Soviet Ambassador to London), Anthony Eden (British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs), Molotov (Soviet Foreign Secretary), Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and an unidentified naval officer." © IWM CH 5701.

Spy Stuff: Four German saboteurs depart from Lorient, France, on board a submarine. This is part of Operation Pastorius. They are bound for a landing at Amagansett, Long Island, New York, which they will reach early on 13 June 1942. This group is led by George John Dash, a former private in the US Army Air Corps stationed in Honolulu before being honorably discharged, then re-enlisting and serving at Fort Ontario in Oswego, New York. Another group led by Edward Kerling and bound for Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, also departs by U-boat around this time (one group departs on 26 May, the other on 28 May, the sources conflict on which left first and the U-boats are not identified in the sources).

The other saboteurs in Dasch's group are Ernest Peter Burger, Heinrich Harm Heink, and Richard Quirin. They have been trained at the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, the German High Command, on an estate at Quenz Lake, near Brandenburg and Berlin. Their mission is to find stuff and blow it up. Dasch ultimately betrays the entire operation and alerts the FBI..

Allied Relations: Lieutenant General Henry H "Hap" Arnold, Commanding General USAAF; Rear Admiral John H Towers, USN, Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics; and RAF Air Chief Marshall Sir Charles F Portal have a meeting in London. Prime Minister Winston Churchill opens the meeting at 10 Downing Street. The main topic of these discussions is the basing of US bombers and fighters in the United Kingdom for offensive operations against the Reich.

Reinhard Heydrich in Prague on 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Reinhard Heydrich attends 'Prague Music Week" with his wife, Lina Heydrich, at the Waldstein Palace, Prague, Czechoslovakia, on 26 May 1942. Federal Archives Image 146-1972-039-24.

Anglo/Soviet Relations: In London, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden n and Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov sign the Twenty-Year Mutual Assistance Agreement Between the United Kingdom and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, better known as the Anglo-Soviet Treaty of 1942. The agreement codifies a de facto wartime alliance between the two powers, with a political part of the agreement to continue for twenty years regardless of the duration of hostilities.

The treaty is bilateral, which is somewhat unusual given the cozy relationship between Great Britain and the United States and the other Allies. However, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill at this stage of the war is in constant communication with US President Franklin Roosevelt and would not do anything to threaten that relationship. The core of the agreement is that neither party will seek a separate peace, which all of the Allies agree with but hitherto have had difficulty securing Stalin's formal commitment. In this way, the Anglo-Soviet Treaty of 1942 is a key step in building a united front among all of the Allies. Otherwise, the agreement basically just recognizes the current state of affairs between the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union.

P-61 Black Widow first flight is on 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Northrop Corporation XP-61 "Black Widow" prototype 41-19509 at Northrop Field, 1942. (U.S. Air Force).

US Military: Test pilot Vance Breese makes the first flight of the Northrop XP-61 Black Widow night fighter. The flight takes place at Northrop Field in Hawthorne, California. The Army Air Force places great hopes in this plane because it is the first purpose-designed night fighter, and the US is desperately short of such planes. However, the Black Widow gets bogged down in development issues and is largely superseded by the time it can become operational.

Jet-assisted takeoff (JATO) is demonstrated with a Brewster F2A-3 Buffalo at NAS Anacostia, D.C. The plane uses five British antiaircraft solid propellant rocket motors and its takeoff distance is reduced by 49%.

Japanese Homefront: Radio Tokyo reports that "America and Britain... have now been exterminated.. the British and American fleets cannot appear on the oceans." This apparently is based on supposed naval losses in the Battle of the Coral Sea. However, US losses there were much smaller than the Japanese think.

American Homefront: First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt visits Muhlenberg College to celebrate Women's Day.

Congress passes the National Housing Act Amendments of 1942 (May 26, 1942, ch. 319, § 15, 56 Stat. 305). These deal with providing rental housing for war workers in areas determined critical for defense work by the War Production Board, which estimates that housing will be needed for 1.3 million workers, including 100,000 in dormitories and 285,000 family dwelling units. The plan is for many low-income workers to be able to buy their dwellings, though many will rent. A lot of these homes will be mobile homes, a new concept at this time, because defense production needs may change and the homes may need to be moved. You ever wonder where mobile homes originated? Look no further.

Eleanor Roosevelt 26 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Eleanor Roosevelt arrives at Muhlenberg College; photographer unknown, “Women's Day: Tuesday, May 26, 1942.,” Muhlenberg College Historical Photograph Collections, accessed September 15, 2021.

May 1942


2021

Friday, May 28, 2021

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

Thursday 21 May 1942

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

May 1942


2021