Showing posts with label U-108. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U-108. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

May 20, 1942: Churchill and Molotov Negotiate

Wednesday 20 May 1942

Churchill and Molotov, 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Prime Minister Winston Churchill greets Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov in the back garden of No. 10 Downing Street, 20 May 1942. Also seen in the photo are  Deputy Prime Minister Clement Attlee, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, and others (The Daily Telegraph).
Battle of the Pacific: Admiral Nimitz approves a secret operation on 20 May 1942 to ascertain Japanese plans. One of the codebreakers in the Honolulu station, Jasper Holmes, has come up with a way to ascertain the location of "AF," known from decrypts to be the target for an upcoming Japanese invasion. Using an undersea cable that is known to be secure, Nimitz today sends a message to the Midway Island base commander telling him to send out a radio message that there is a "water shortage" at the island. "At the present time, we have only enough water for two weeks. Please supply us immediately."

Just to make certain the intended Japanese recipients get the radio message, the island commander also is instructed to send the request for help both in a code the Japanese are known to have broken and "in the clear" (without coding). The US naval intelligence offices in three locations - Melbourne, Honolulu, and Washington - then sit back to see what develops.

The Japanese indeed are preparing an offensive operation against Midway. Today, Admiral Yamamoto sends out Operational Order 14. This details a complex plan to coordinate invasions of the Aleutian Islands and Midway with troops from Saipan.

A Yeoman in the US Navy Fleet Radio Unit in Melbourne, Australia (FRUMEL), Bill Tremblay, is working late. At 23:30, he identifies Yamamoto's message as important even though it is badly garbled. After Tremblay discusses it with his superiors, the message is put on a fast track for decryption. That, however, will take several days. The Honolulu station also intercepts a copy of the message which also is garbled, but largely in different places. Between the two interceptions, a large portion of the lengthy message can be decrypted.

B-17s based in Australia bomb the airfield at Koepang, Timor, continuing a series of missions against the base. These missions are effective at silencing antiaircraft guns at the airfield.
Baltimore News-Post 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Due to the meeting of Brigadier General Jimmy Doolittle and President Franklin Roosevelt in the White House on 19 May, the newspapers on 20 May are full of hints of new raids on Japan. Here, the Baltimore News-Post gives these rumors a banner headline. In fact, no such raids are planned.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Today is generally viewed as the completion of the Japanese conquest of Burma. The British formally dissolve Burma Corps, transferring all soldiers formerly under General William Slim to the British IV Corps. Slim is reassigned to Indian XV Corps.

Meanwhile, India is receiving a steady flow of reinforcements from the United States. Another unit of the 10th Air Force in the China-Burma-India Theater arrives at Karachi, India, from the US today. It is the 11th Bombardment Squadron, 7th Bomber Group (Heavy), and flies B-17s. The 11th will become active and fly its first mission on 3 June 1942
Marshal Timoshenko worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The troops of Soviet Marshal Timoshenko, shown, are in big trouble around Kharkov on 20 May 1942.
Eastern Front: The Wehrmacht commits more units to its attempt to encircle the Red Army troops wheeling about in confusion south of Kharkov. The Luftwaffe is particularly effective at sealing the pocket, sending Junkers Ju 87 Stukas from StG 77 to destroy five of the Soviet bridges across the Donets River and damage four others. Kampfgeschwader 3 (KG 3), meanwhile, focuses on the roads in the developing pocket that are crowded with Soviet columns that have belatedly been turned 180 degrees to face the growing threat to their communications. Such a maneuver is difficult even in normal times, as the roads east are crowded with service troops, equipment, and other obstacles. The going is slow, and the Soviets are running out of time.

Turning an army around is one of the most difficult maneuvers in warfare. The entire orientation is inverted, with the cutting edge of tanks, infantry, and artillery having to reverse course in a perfectly coordinated ballet that is difficult in peacetime, let alone under fire. The army's "tail," or supply establishment, likewise has to change position to be just the right distance from the front line - which is moving who knows where. Ammunition dumps wind up in the wrong places, headquarters have to move and are out of touch, unit commanders don't even know where their soldiers are. Add to that blocked roads through rough terrain caused by air and artillery attacks and it's easy for chaos to erupt. This is exactly what happens to the Red Army south of Kharkov in May 1942.

Fulfilling a direct order from Field Marshal Fedor von Bock, the 14th Panzer Division advances further north from Petrovskoye and takes Protopopovka. This eliminates another key Soviet Donets river crossing and narrows the mouth of the breakthrough from there to Balakleya down to a dozen miles.

The Germans, though, are running a big risk. They are drawing only a thin line between the huge Red Army forces to the east and west. It is eight miles long and, in most places, only two miles wide. This easily could be pierced by fierce Red Army attacks. The German III Panzer Corps heads west to try and expand the width of this cordon. However, the Germans have to rely on Romanian troops that are less than enthusiastic to stick their heads into this potential noose (at Fuhrer headquarters, General Franz Halder notes that "the Romanians have gained only a little ground").
Von Kleist worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Von Kleist.
Determined to seal his victory, General Ewald von Kleist risks it all and sends the 16th Panzer Division (General Hube), the 60th Motorized Division, and the 1st Mountain Division to support the exposed 14th Panzer Division. These are the best troops in the First Panzer Army, the cream of the Wehrmacht. It is a huge gamble because Soviet counterattacks from either or both sides easily could cut off all of these divisions in the exposed salient. This would turn German victory into defeat. Bock convinces Sixth Army commander Friedrich Paulus (direct orders don't always work in these situations even in the Wehrmacht), whose troops are north of the bulge, to support this ambitious move by releasing the 3rd and 23rd Panzer Divisions. They will advance south from Balakleya and meet Kleist's advancing panzers. Even if they meet, however, it is unclear if they can hold their positions against furious counterattacks. It is an audacious gambit.

Someone is going to have a massive victory that may decide the entire summer campaign. It's just not perfectly clear yet who that will be. How hard the Red Army on opposite sides of the German advance will resist this encircling move is the big imponderable.

Bock knows the decisive moment of the entire campaign, perhaps the entire war has arrived. He writes in his war diary, confidently but perhaps more hopefully:

[T]tonight I have given orders aimed at completely sealing off the Izyum bulge. Now everything will turn out well after all.

Only one thing stands in Bock's path to victory: the Red Army. However, something strange is going on. The Germans are astonished to see no signs of either a determined breakout or a relief attack from the East. The thin German lines are holding and consolidating even though they are outgunned and outmanned by enemy troops just out of sight. It's a mystery that only deepens.
Arizona Daily Star 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Arizona Daily Star of 20 May 1942 features news from the Eastern Front battle of Kharkov that suggests the Red Army is doing well there. "Russian Planes blast at German Tanks Along Highway."
General Manstein's 11th Army eliminates the final above-ground pocket of Soviet resistance south of Kerch today (there are still Red Army soldiers operating out of catacombs in the region). The German success in the Kerch peninsula means many Luftwaffe resources can be transferred to the Kharkov battle, but there is still unfinished business in Crimea to the west. Luftwaffe ace Gordon "Mac" Gollob completes one of the longest sustained victory streaks of the war by shooting down two enemy aircraft, a DB-3 and a LaGG-3. This gives him 101 victories, a major milestone, and 14 victories over the past five days since taking command of JG 77. Gollob is the tenth Luftwaffe pilot to reach the century mark. After these victories, JG 77 is transferred west to help with the conquest of Sevastopol.

The German victory in the Kerch peninsula now is complete. It was an overwhelming triumph. While Fliegerkorps VIII has lost 37 aircraft, the Soviets lose 417. While between 37,000 and 116,045 Red Army soldiers make it back to the mainland, an estimated 162,282 do not. The Germans take about 150,000 soldiers and others (many are civilians) prisoner. The 11th Army loses only 7588 men in total, about ten tanks, and a dozen artillery pieces. The Soviets effectively lose three armies and nine divisions, with nine other divisions requiring major rebuilding.

European Air Operations: There are no major raids by either side today, perhaps due to the weather. The RAF's 197-plane raid on Mannheim on the night of 19/20 May accomplishes very little and causes only two fatalities in the city.

During an intruder operation to Soesterberg Airfield, German Flak of the 2./leichte Flak-Abteilung 764 downs an RCAF Douglas DB-7B Boston Mk III. All three crewmen perish.
MV Norland sinking on 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
MV Norland on fire and sinking after being torpedoed by U-108 on 20 May 1942.
Battle of the Atlantic: German raider Michel shells and sinks 4245-ton Norwegian freighter Kattegat in the South Atlantic. Michel's crew takes the entire 32-man crew of Kattegat as prisoners.

U-108 (KrvKpt. Klaus Scholtz), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes, shells, and sinks 8134-ton Norwegian tanker Norland in the mid-Atlantic. Norland is part of Convoy ON 93. The entire 48-man crew survives and is rescued by Dutch freighter Polyphemus and USS PT-453.

U-753 (KrvKpt. Alfred Manhardt von Mannstein), on its fourth patrol out of La Pallice, gets its first victory of the wary. It torpedoes and sinks 7191-ton US Liberty ship George Calvert in the Caribbean near the Yucatan Channel. There are three deaths and 48 survivors.

U-155 (Kptlt. Adolf Cornelius Piening), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and badly damages 7797-ton Panamanian tanker Sylvan Arrow in the Caribbean southwest of Grenada. There are one death and 43 survivors, who are picked up by the destroyer USS Barney. Sylvan Arrow sinks while under tow on 28 May.
Wreck of SS Halo, sunk on 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Wreck of SS Halo, sunk on 20 May 1942 by U-506, lying on the seafloor.
U-506 (Kptlt. Erich Würdemann), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6986-ton US tanker Halo 50 miles south of Louisiana. There are 39 deaths and three survivors, who are rescued by Mexican freighter Oaxaca and British freighter Otina. This is the ninth victory of the patrol for U-506 and it isn't over yet. The wreck of the Halo, which was carrying 64,103 barrels of crude oil, is found during a pipeline survey in July 2000 lying in 470 feet (78 fathoms, 143 m) of water.

U-158 (Kptlt. Erwin Rostin), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 8,113-ton British tanker Darina 500 nautical miles (930 km) southeast of Bermuda. There are six deaths and 50 survivors, who are rescued by British freighter British Ardour, Norwegian freighter Dagrun, and US freighter Exanthia. This is the first victory of what will be an eventful patrol for U-158.

US Navy yard patrol craft USS YP-387 sinks after colliding with collier Jason off Delaware. There are six deaths and 15 survivors who are rescued by Jason.
Map of Doolittle raid, 20 May 1942 Chicago Daily Tribune worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The 20 May 1942 Chicago Daily Tribune contains a map and account of the 18 April Doolittle Raid on Japan.
Battle of the Mediterranean: U-431 (Kptlt. Wilhelm Dommes), on its sixth patrol out of La Spezia, torpedoes and sinks 4216-ton British tanker Eocene off Sollum, Egypt. The tanker is part of convoy AT-46. All 43 crewmen survive, rescued by Royal Navy HMT Cocker.

Due to a large number of RAF Supermarine Spitfires now on Malta, the Axis bombing raids now are usually composed of hit-and-run attacks by Luftwaffe fighter-bombers. The main objectives are still the airfields, and Luqa Airfield is attacked several times today after dark. Compared to the situation of a month ago, however, the attacks are minor and cause little damage.

Battle of the Baltic: Norwegian (Axis) freighter Vestra hits a mine and sinks in the Skagerrak near the Falsterbo Lighthouse, Sweden. The ship sinks in shallow water and is refloated, repaired, and returned to service.

Anglo/Soviet Relations: Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov arrives in London to hold talks on opening a second front. Churchill does not take to Molotov, later saying about him, "I have never seen a human being who more perfectly represented the modern conception of a robot." (WSC, WWII, Vol. I p. 288-9). Molotov, as usual, is all business, just as he was with Hitler in November 1940. He emphasizes Soviet claims on territory in Poland and the Baltic States, matters that Churchill views as premature. Despite their issues, the two men immediately begin work toward preparing a twenty-year treaty of friendship. The final agreement is signed on 26 May 1942.
WCCA headquarters in Woodland, California, 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Woodland, California, 20 May 1942. Entrance to American Legion Hall, being used by the Wartime Civil Control Administration (W.C.C.A.) to assist persons of Japanese ancestry in settling their affairs before they depart for internment camps (Dorothea Lange, National Archives at College Park NARA record 1372774).
US Military: The US Navy Department issues a press release on 20 May 1942, "Recruiting of [African Americans] to Begin June 1." It also releases a separate press release, "Marines Announce Plans for Recruiting [African Americans]."

The new Navy recruits are to receive the normal eight weeks of training at the established Great Lakes facilities. This will qualify them for a sixteen-week vocational school at the Hampton Institute in Virginia. They will be trained there as electricians, carpenters, ship fitters, machinists, metalsmiths, firemen, and cooks. Heretofore, African Americans in the Navy have been confined to the stewards' branch. Fearful of crew shortages in this area, the Navy refuses to allow transfers out of the stewards' branch to the general service until May 1945.

The black Marine Corps recruits have a somewhat different experience. The Marine Corps does not have a training center prepared, so the recruits must be placed on inactive duty status while one is set up. Eventually, a facility is constructed at Montford Point, near New River, North Carolina, and Camp Lejeune. Prospective Marine Corps recruits face often insurmountable obstacles such as tight quotas for black marines and other restrictions.

Admiral John S. McCain arrives at Noumea, New Caledonia, in seaplane tender USS Tangier. He assumes command as the new Commander Aircraft South Pacific Forces (COMAIRSOPAC). McCain now is responsible for tender and shore-based aviation in the South Pacific Area (SOPAC) under admiral Nimitz. This area is to the east of the Southwest Pacific Area and south of the Central Pacific Area. SOPAC encompasses the Ellice, Phoenix, Marquesas, Tuamotu, Samoa, Fiji, and New Hebrides island groups plus New Caledonia and New Zealand. However, it does not yet include Guadalcanal or Tulagi and thus does not include areas of likely conflict. It includes, though, the main route from the United States to Australia and is of immense strategic importance.

Submarine USS Kingfish (SS-234) is commissioned.
MLB schedule, 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Major League Baseball schedule for 20 May 1942, sponsored by Carstairs White Seal Blended Whiskey.
British Government: A two-day debate on the war situation concludes in Parliament. PM Leslie Hore-Belisha, the Secretary of State for War under former Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, is particularly critical of the Churchill government's handling of the war situation. He notes that there is not yet a "method of continuous cooperate" with the United States and that the different Allies are speaking with "disunited voices." Hore-Belisha proposes government reforms that will maintain "a clear-cut distinction" between "impartial, undiluted military opinion and what is a political decision." This is an obvious attack on Churchill, who is suspected by some of managing the war for his own personal political benefit.

American Homefront: Henry Ford begins the construction of a memorial to inventor George Washington Carver in Greenfield Village adjacent to the Logan County Courthouse. This project has been Ford's dream since meeting Carver, who is still alive to watch the building go up and be completed, in 1937.

Future History: Carlos Norman Hathcock is born in Little Rock, Arkansas. He joins the US military during the Vietnam War and becomes a Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant. He earns the nickname "White Feather Sniper" due to his habit of wearing a bush hat with a feather in it. Hathcock becomes a legendary sniper, and the Viet Cong place a $30,000 bounty on him. In his most famous encounter, he is sent specifically to eliminate an elite Viet Cong sniper known as "The Cobra." He accomplishes the task with a bullet that travels up Cobra's scope and into his eye. Carlos Norman Hathcock survives the war and passes away on 23 February 1999.
Internees leaving Woodland, California, 20 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
West Coast internees bound for a camp. (Dorothea Lange, Woodland, California, May 20, 1942. Courtesy National Archives and Records Administration).

May 1942


2021

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

May 6, 1942: Corregidor Falls to Japan

Wednesday 6 May 1942

Fall of Corregidor 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Japanese soldiers celebrate their final victory (for now) in the Philippines atop a US coastal defense gun on 6 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command NH 73222).
Battle of the Pacific: At 13:30 local time on 6 May 1942, US Lieutenant General Jonathan M. Wainwright surrenders the 10,000 Allied soldiers on Corregidor Island in Manila Bay to the Japanese forces of Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma. The surrender follows a vicious battle throughout the night and the landing of three Japanese tanks at 09:30.

While Wainwright knows that he could hold out longer militarily, his troops are almost out of potable water and he knows there is no hope of relief. It is a difficult decision, but holding out would only lead to more needless deaths and the end result would be the same.

Before he surrenders, Wainwright sends one last radio message to General Franklin Roosevelt. It says, "There is a limit of human endurance, and that point has long been passed." He then orders that remaining gunboats Luzon (later raised and repaired by the Japanese), Oahu, and Quail be scuttled to prevent their falling into enemy hands.  Colonel Samuel L. Howard, commander of the 4th Marine Regiment that conducted the defense, burns the regimental flag as well as the national colors. At about 11:00, Wainwright sends two officers carrying a large white flag out of the entrance to Malinta Tunnel, watched by grinning Japanese soldiers posing for the camera.
Fall of Corregidor 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Surrender of Corregidor, the Philippines, 6 May 1942 (National Archives at College Park 535553).
That afternoon, Wainwright and three aides drive to the Japanese line in a battered Chevrolet staff car. After taking a boat to the mainland, they then are made to wait in a small frame house in the stifling heat for hours until Homma sees them. He and his aides note that Japanese shore artillery is still firing at Corregidor.

General Homma presses Wainwright to order all Allied forces in the Philippines to surrender (the Visayan-Mindanao Force has not surrendered), but Wainwright responds that he only controls troops on Corregidor. After that, Homma gets up to leave and refuses to talk further. The approximately 11,000 Allied troops are sent to various locations after the surrender. The US Army and Navy nurses remain on Corregidor for a few weeks to care for sick patients before being sent to the Santo Tomas prison camp. About 4,000 of the other troops are marched through the streets of Manila to the Fort Santiago and Bilibid Prison camps, with the vast majority of the remainder being sent to other Japanese camps. Wainwright is sent to confinement in Manchuria.

A very few Allied troops become guerilla fighters. In the most unique reaction to the Japanese success, 18 men from gunboat Quail (AM-15) led by their commander, Lt. Cmdr. John H. Morrill, sail a 36-foot motor launch from their ship away from the island (without orders or Wainwright's knowledge). The outcome of that voyage is described below.
General Homma worldwartwo.filminspector.com
General Homma speaks fluent English and is broadly sympathetic to the plight of the captured soldiers. However, he does nothing effective to stop atrocities by his own soldiers beyond issuing vague orders (which are ignored) that they should be treated properly. While the victor, Homma has fallen out of favor with his superiors due to the length of time the victory took and his lack of aggressiveness and harshness. Homma soon loses his command and, in 1943, retires (likely involuntarily) from the military entirely.
Fall of Corregidor 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Victorious Japanese soldiers lower the US flag flying over Corregidor, 6 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command NH 73223).
Far to the south of Guadalcanal, Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher combines his Task Force 17 (USS Yorktown) with TF 11 (Lexington) and TF 44. The Japanese carrier force commanded by Vice Admiral Takeo Takagi is slowly steaming south while refueling toward him, but Fletcher is unaware of this and also spends time refueling. At 10:50, Takagi receives a report from a Kawanishi reconnaissance flying boat that the US fleet is 300 nautical miles (350 miles, 560 km) to the south. He detaches his two fleet carriers, Shōkaku and Zuikaku, to head toward the US fleet in order to attack at first light on the 7th.

Meanwhile, USAAF B-17 bombers based in Australia attack the Japanese Port Moresby invasion convoy throughout the day. However, they have no success, illustrating the difficulties level bombers have in hitting moving warships. Late in the day, the Japanese seaplane tender Kamikawa Maru sets up a seaplane base in the Deboyne Islands to provide air support for the invasion.

At 18:00, informed of the location of the Japanese invasion forces (but not the carriers) by General MacArthur, Fletcher completes his refueling and heads northwest. This closes the gap between the two carrier forces to 70 nautical miles (130 km) as darkness falls. The stage is set for a major battle on 7 May if the two sides discover each other's position.
Fall of Corregidor 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
General Homma, right, dictates terms to General Wainwright, left.
At Tulagi, the new Japanese occupants put into operation their seaplane base. Nearby in the Florida Islands, 264-ton minesweeper Tama Maru, damaged during the 4 May US Navy air attacks, finally sinks. There are four dead and seven wounded.

RAAF PBY Catalina A24-20 is shot down while on a daylight reconnaissance mission east of its Port Moresby Seaplane Base over the Coral Sea. The crew had just reported spotting two Japanese destroyers (likely of the Operation Mo invasion force) when contact was lost. The crew later is declared dead, but pilot Geoff E. Hemsworth is known to have been taken as a prisoner. However, nothing more is known about his fate and likely the Japanese execute Hemsworth on some unknown date. The crew is memorialized at the Port Moresby Memorial.

In the East China Sea northeast of Keelung, Formosa (Taiwan), US Navy submarine USS Triton torpedoes and sinks 5664-ton Japanese freighter Taigen Maru (alternately Taiei Maru). There are 31 dead.

US Navy submarine Skipjack (SS-184) torpedoes and sinks 2567-ton Japanese freighter Kanan Maru 26 miles northeast of Cam Ranh Bay, French Indochina (Vietnam).

Japanese forces sink 58-ton US freighter Laida 30 nautical miles (56 km, 35 miles) northeast of Port Moller, Alaska, in the Aleutian Islands. The Japanese have designs on the Aleutians and are scouting it for their upcoming invasion.
Portsmouth Times, Fall of Corregidor 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The fall of Corregidor is worldwide headline news, as in the 6 May 1942 Portsmouth, Ohio, Times.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British invasion of Madagascar (Operation Ironclad) continues on 6 May 1942 against erratic Vichy French resistance. While the initial lodgement phase and capture of the port of Diego-Suarez happened quickly on 5 May, the next British objective, the French naval base at Antisarane, proves much more troublesome. The port is defended by trenches, two redoubts, pillboxes, and flanked on both sides by impenetrable swamps. The British also have had to march 21 miles to reach it and are far from their supplies.

The British, though, have several advantages. These include air and sea superiority and a dozen tanks. French 1969-ton aviso (sloop) D'Entrecasteaux temporarily escapes to open water because its draft is so shallow that torpedoes pass under it, but the ship is tracked down and heavily damaged by British naval and air power. The ship is beached with the loss of 16 crewmen.

Lt. Colonel Michael West, commander of the South Lancashires' 2nd Battalion, sets out at 02:00 to flank the French defenses at Antisarane. However, the swamps prove impenetrable. They have some successes but are eventually forced to withdraw after losing communication with the other units. At 05:00 the RAF bombs the French defenses, and the frontal assault begins at 05:30. It fails due to accurate French 75mm artillery and machinegun fire, leaving the British force scattered and demoralized. 
Admiral Syfret on Madagascar, 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Rear Admiral (later Admiral/Sir) Edward Neville Syfret, commander of Royal Navy forces (Force H, Eastern Fleet) at Madagascar, in recently captured Diego-Suarez, ca. 6 May 1942.
The British make a second frontal assault at 20:30, after darkness has fallen. This attack has more success. By 23:00 the British capture the forward line of French trenches that front the "Joffre Line." In conjunction with this attack, the destroyer HMS Anthony makes a daring dash to the Antisarane docks and lands 50 Marines before quickly scampering to safety. The Marines, under Captain Martin Price, enter the town and cause chaos, firing their guns and throwing grenades. Price frees some British prisoners and then withdraws to the docks to form a defensive perimeter for the night. Around midnight, the troops from the frontal assault break into Antirasane as well and capture the French headquarters.

In Burma, Japanese forces based in the recently captured Bhamo regional center, approach the British base at Myitkyina in northern Burma. The British have no intention of holding there and prepare to evacuate to the west.

US Lieutenant General Joseph Stilwell, known as "Vinegar Joe," begins his "walkout" from Burma to Assam, India. Accompanying him are the 117 men and women of his staff. The Assam route is used by many other retreating Allied and Chinese troops. Stilwell's case is different than most because he is a senior Allied commander and technically is second-in-command of all Chinese forces under Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, though in reality the Chinese generals ignore Stilwell and do what they want.
General Stilwell begins his walkout, 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
General Stilwell, right, during his "walkout" from Burma, ca. 6 May 1942 (Ibiblio).
Eastern Front: For months, Joseph Stalin has clung to his belief that his forces on the Kerch peninsula can break through to relieve the Red Army garrison bottled up in Sevastopol to the west. However, today he changes his mind and issues Order No. 170357, which orders all forces to turn to the defensive. Typically for Stalin, he blames the troops in the field for their failure to defeat the enemy and refuses to send reinforcements or allow a withdrawal. However, while the overall gist of the order is to adopt a defensive posture, it also stipulates that the troops first launch local operations to improve their positions. This keeps the Red Army troops from digging in just as General Erich von Manstein, commander of the German 11th Army, is preparing a major assault to breach the Soviet lines.

At Kholm, General Franz Halder notes briefly that the breakthrough to the Kholm pocket is "further improved" and that wounded who have been trapped in the pocket now can be evacuated. Otherwise, he notes, "Remainder of the front very quiet due to the weather and road conditions." Curiously, he makes no mention of Crimea, where Manstein is preparing a major offensive. Manstein, known to be one of Hitler's favorites, has few other fans at Fuhrer headquarters.
Luftwaffe BV 141 reconnaissance plane, 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Blohm and Voss BV 141 reconnaissance aircraft. Photographed on 6 May 1942 (Federal Archive Image 183-B21073).
European Air Operations: A Luftwaffe intruder bombs and sinks the Fairmile B motor launch HMS ML 160 at Brixton in Greater London.

During the day, the RAF sends 18 Boston bombers to Boulogne (docks), Calais (parachute factory), and Caen (power station). After dark, the target for the third night in a row is Stuttgart. It is another moderately sized attack of 97 bombers (55 Wellingtons, 15 Stirlings, 10 Hampdens, 10 Lancasters, and 7 Halifaxes) with the primary target once again the Robert Bosch factory, which so far has not been touched. This mission also is a failure, and the people of Stuttgart don't see any bombs fall at all. Instead, the Lauffen decoy site once again draws off many bombers, which mistakenly bomb the city of Heilbronn only five miles from the decoy site. Seven people die in Heilbronn and over 150 buildings are destroyed, but Stuttgart suffers no damage.

In subsidiary operations, 19 bombers attack Nantes, there are four Blenheim bombers on Intruder missions (one lost), and 9 bombers drop leaflets.
Empire Buffalo, sunk on 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
British freighter Empire Buffalo, sunk by U-125 on 6 May 1942.
Battle of the Atlantic: U-125 (Kptlt. Ulrich Folkers), on its fourth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6404-ton British freighter Empire Buffalo west of the Cayman Islands. The freighter was en route from Kingston, Jamaica, to New Orleans, USA. There are 13 deaths and 29 survivors, who are rescued by the US ship Caique. Empire Buffalo escaped the same fate on 18 September 1939 when, as US freighter Eglantine, a U-boat stopped it but then allowed it to proceed.

U-125 also torpedoes and sinks 1946-ton US freighter Green Island about 80 nautical miles (150 km) south of Grand Cayman Island. All 22 crewmen are picked up by British ship Fort Qu'Appelle.

U-507 (KrvKpt. Harro Schacht), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks US freighter Alcoa Puritan in the Gulf of Mexico 15 miles (28 km) off the mouth of the Mississippi River. All 54 people on board are rescued by Coast Guard cutter USCGC Boutwell.

U-108 (KrvKpt. Klaus Scholtz), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 4422-ton Latvian freighter Abgara southeast of Great Inagua Island, the Bahamas. All 34 crewmen reach land in their lifeboats.
Dutch freighter Amazone, sunk on 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Dutch freighter Amazone, sunk by U-333 on 6 May 1942.
U-333 (Kptlt. Peter-Erich Cremer), on its second patrol out of La Pallice, torpedoes and sinks 1294-ton Dutch freighter Amazone near Fort Pierce, Florida. There are 14 deaths, while 11 survivors are picked up by US Navy submarine chaser USS PC-484.

U-333 also torpedoes and sinks 7088-ton US tanker Halsey off St. Lucie Inlet, Florida. The 33-man crew takes to the boats and is almost rescued by submarine chaser USS PC-451, but it spots U-333 and embarks on a pursuit. Shortly after they leave, the tanker explodes and breaks in two. The men in the boats ultimately are rescued by local fishing boats.

U-333 also torpedoes and damages 8327-ton US tanker Java Arrow about eight miles off Vero Beach, Florida. The crew abandons ships, but the tanker does not sink. A US Coast Guard officer boards the tanker and determines it can be towed to show, so the master, Sigvard J. Hennichen, and four crewmen board the tanker, which ultimately is towed to Port Everglades and repaired. There are two dead and 45 survivors.

Royal Navy 913-ton armed trawler HMT Senateur Duhamel sinks after colliding near Cape Lookout, North Carolina with auxiliary ship USS Semmes (AG-24). 
DuUSS Quail, sunk on 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The USS Quail, scuttled at Corregidor on 6 May 1942. Several members of her crew refused to surrender to the Japanese and instead rode a motorboat out into the Pacific.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Residents of Malta expect an Axis invasion, and those fears are exacerbated on 6 May 1942 when a naval battle erupts within sight of shore off Grand Harbour. The twenty-minute battle is between a Royal Navy motor launch, ML-130, on its normal patrol, and German E-boats laying mines. The British vessel is blown up, with four deaths and nine men taken prisoner. Otherwise, it is a normal day on Malta during the recent Blitz, with attacks beginning a little before 10:00 and lasting throughout the day. There is some good news at 19:20 when five Hurricanes Mk 2C arrive from Egypt to bolster the defense.

Battle of the Black Sea: Soviet 2782-ton transport Vostok hits a mine and sinks at the entrance to the Kerch Strait. There are ten dead and 47 survivors, who are picked up by an escort.

US Military: The US Army Air Force requisitions all but 200 civilian Douglas DC-3s passenger planes into military service. These will become C-47 Skytrain (or Dakota) military cargo planes, many used to carry supplies to China over "The Hump" by the 10th Air Force.

The US Navy opens a Naval Auxiliary Air Facility, Nawiliwili, Kauai, Hawaii.

The 4th Marine Regiment is captured on Corregidor on 6 May 1942 and is deactivated on 18 June 1942. It is reactivated on 1 February 1944 on Guadalcanal.

The First Battalion of the Fourth Marine Regiment is captured on Corregidor and temporarily ceases to exist. It will be reactivated on 1 February 1944 on Guadalcanal by redesignation of the 1st Raider Battalion, 1st Raider Regiment.
Douglas C-47 Skytrain, sunk on 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Douglas C-47 Skytrain in flight (USAF).
British Homefront: The first American Red Cross Service Club in the UK opens at Northern Counties Hotel in Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

American Homefront: A student at Washington State, Carl Ronning, writes an "open letter" to Governor of Idaho Chase A. Clark. After noting that Clark recently forbade out-of-state Japanese-Americans from enrolling in any state college, Ronning writes:

I am certain, Mr. Governor, that the majority of the people of Moscow [Idaho, location of the state university] and the students of the University do not approve of your actions. I myself am soon slated for the army, but if I thought that I was going to fight to defend any of the actions such as you have committed, I would hang my head in shame.

Of course, it would be difficult for many such students to attend college while they are in internment camps as ordered by President Roosevelt.

Future History: General Wainwright survives the war in Japanese captivity. After being released, he plays a prominent role in the official Japanese surrender ceremony held on the USS Missouri on 2 September 1942. President Harry Truman awards Wainwright the Medal of Honor upon his return to the United States.

General Homma also survives the war. He is tried as a war criminal for the Bataan Death March and other atrocities, found guilty, and is executed by firing squad on 3 April 1946.

Lt. Cmdr. John H. Morrill of USS Quail and his 17 men set out from Corregidor in their motor launch at 10:15 on 6 May, shortly before the surrender. Morrill has prepared adequate supplies for the trip (after all, his scuttled ship no longer needs them), but the outboard engine is old and cranky. They experience engine troubles on their ride out of Manila Bay but make it past the Japanese patrol vessels nearby. The men land in the small village of Digas, where they are welcomed by the local inhabitants and are given the opportunity to fix the engine. Then, after numerous other stops, they finally reach Darwin, Australia (a distance of 3200 km) on 6 June 1942. Without any ceremony, the US Navy then sends the men on new assignments.
The Road to Mandalay Bar in San Francisco on 6 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Road to Mandalay Bar in West Portal, San Francisco, 6 May 1942.

May 1942


2021

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

May 5, 1942: British Invade Madagascar

Tuesday 5 May 1942

War at sea 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
This photo dated 5 May 1942 shows an unidentified ship being bombed or torpedoed. Perhaps taken by photographer and documentarian Nigel Henderson (Tate Gallery TGA 9211/9/6/3).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British 29th Infantry Brigade and No. 5 Commando land on Vichy Madagascar on 5 May 1942. This is Operation Ironclad and is conducted by Force 121. The troops land at Courrier Bay and Ambararata Bay, just west of Diego-Suarez, while a decoy attack is executed to the east.

The landing is covered by aircraft from Royal Navy aircraft carriers HMS Illustrious and Indomitable, with battleship Ramillies providing shore bombardment. Swordfish torpedo bombers quickly sink the French submarine Bévéziers at Diego-Suarez with depth charges (two killed, one wounded). They also sink 4504-ton Vichy armed merchant cruiser Bougainville and scout ship D'Entrecastreax (later raised, repaired, and used by the Free French). The British suffer a loss, too, when corvette Auricula (LtCdr S.L.B. Maybury) strikes a mine in Courrier Bay and eventually sinks (all crewmen survive but with some wounded).

The Vichy commander, Governor General Armand Léon Annet, has about 8,000 troops, about 6,000 of whom are local Malagasy tirailleurs and most of the rest Senegalese. Annet has 1500-3000 of his troops in the vicinity of Diego-Suarez, but they are poorly equipped with eight inadequate coastal batteries and 17 Morane-Saulnier 406 fighters.
HMS Hero, 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
It is payday aboard destroyer HMS Hero during its passage from Alexandria, Egypt, to Haifa, Palestine to refit. The men filing past the table receive their pay on the crown of their cap. 5 May 1942 (© IWM A 9123).
The 17th Infantry Brigade quickly seize the coastal batteries and barracks, then turn and take the port of Diego-Suarez. Other troops from the 29th Independent Brigade march 21 miles against light resistance to the naval base at Antisarane. There, they destroy Arrachart airfield and destroy five Morane fighters. They also damage two more Moranes, while also damaging two Potez-63 twin-engine fighters. By the end of the day, the invading British force have taken Diego-Suarez and are in place to attack heavily defended Antisarane.

In Burma, Japanese troops set out from the newly occupied Bhamo and drive toward the British base at Myitkyina. They encounter no organized resistance, though the roads are clogged with civilian refugees and fleeing Allied troops. To the east, some Japanese troops cross the border into China, but they have no intention of invading China from that direction across the Himalayas.
Japanese invasion of Corregidor, 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Japanese troops landing on Corregidor on the evening of 5 May 1942. By this point, the defending Allied troops are already confined to Malinta Tunnel.
Battle of the Pacific: As 5 May dawns, the Japanese troops of the 61st Infantry Regiment, 14th Army, that late on 4 May invaded the last Allied bastion in the Philippines, Corregidor Island, have pinned the island's defenders from the 1st Battalion, Fourth Marine Unit, into Malinta Tunnel. Casualties on both sides are heavy, with the Allies losing about 800 US and Filipino troops and the Japanese about three times as many. The Japanese are having great difficulty crossing the channel and are low on landing craft, so the possibility of a stalemate exists.

However, Allied commander General Jonathan M. Wainwright recognizes the hopelessness of the situation. Among other problems, he only has a few days of potable water left. He orders to be scuttled his remaining vessels: US Navy patrol yacht Fisheries II, yacht Maryann, auxiliary patrol boat Perry, motor torpedo boat Q-111 Luzon (raised and repaired by the Japanese), 529-ton tug USS Vaga, and 688-ton tug USS Genesee scuttled (later salvaged, repaired, and used by the Japanese). Just before noon, Wainwright orders white flags of surrender to be flown and gives the order, "Execute Pontiac," which means surrender. Talks soon begin with victorious Japanese General Masaharu Homma, but General Wainwright does not officially surrender yet. 

On Tulagi, the Japanese garrison continues working on their new seaplane base amidst the devastation caused by Vice Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher's three air raids on the 4th. Destroyer Kikuzuki, beached by its crew, is pulled off the Gavutu beach by the tide and sinks in Tulagi Harbor. A total fo 87 Japanese naval personnel perished in the 4 May attacks and 36 landing troops were seriously injured.

Fletcher's tasks Force 17 (USS Yorktown) rendezvouses with TF 11 (Lexington) and TF 44 at 08:16 320 nautical miles (370 miles, 590 km) south of Guadalcanal. As they assemble, four Grumman F4F Wildcat fighters from Yorktown intercept and shoot down a Kawanishi H6K reconnaissance flying boat from the Yokohama Air Group of the 25th Air Flotilla based at the Shortland Islands. The loss of this aircraft alerts the Japanese admirals to the presence of US Naval carriers in the general vicinity.

Admiral Chester Nimitz now informs Fletcher by radio from Hawaii of reliable information obtained from naval intelligence that the Japanese intend to invade Port Moresby on 10 May. Under Operation Mo, Nimitz says, the Japanese intend to join their Carrier Force (Zuikaku and Shōkaku) with the Tulagi Invasion Force at 14:00 on 6 May and then head for Port Moresby. It is very precise information, and Fletcher immediately decides to spend the rest of the day refueling and head for a certain confrontation with the Japanese fleet.

Admiral Takeo Takagi, meanwhile, spends most of 5 May sailing his carrier force south along the east side of the Solomon Islands. He then enters the Coral Sea between Guadalcanal and Rennell Island. He is, of course, sailing in the general direction of the US fleet, though they remain separated by hundreds of miles. A US B-25 sights a Japanese carrier off Bougainville as Takagi is sailing south but the report never makes it to the US Navy.

Japanese submarine I-21 torpedoes and sinks 7176-ton US Liberty ship John Adams off New Caledonia. There are five deaths and 45 survivors.
The Kholm pocket, 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
View of the entrance to the Kholm (Cholm) pocket across the Bailey Bridge with a wrecked vehicle in the foreground, ca. 5 May 1942 (Muck, Richard, Federal Archive Image 101I-004-3636-08A).
Eastern Front: Wehrmacht troops reach Kholm at 06:20, relieving the small garrison after a brutal siege lasting months. This caps off a brilliant recovery by the Germans in which they saved the troops at both Demyansk and Kholm by narrow margins. The Army orders special medals to be struck for the two garrisons.

At Fuhrer headquarters in East Prussia, General Franz Halder passes off the relief of the Kholm garrison in one terse sentence, followed by "All quiet on the rest of the front." However, this follows a summary of German casualties from the beginning of Operation Barbarossa through 30 April 1942 that is quite revealing of the true situation on the Eastern Front. The Heer (army) has incurred casualties of 36.49% of the troops, with 9,152 officers and 235,908 others killed and 875 officers and 54,218 others missing. These are unprecedented numbers and unsustainable if the summer offensive fails.

In Crimea, General Erich von Manstein and his 11th Army are preparing his long-planned assault on the Red Army line along the Parpach Narrows to clear the Kerch peninsula (Unternehmen Trappenjagd, or "Bustard Hunt"). The Luftwaffe's IV Fliegerkorps supporting Manstein receives new reinforcements today, including Gruppen of SchG 1 at  Itshki-Grammatikovo. These air units have been replenished back in the Reich over the winter and are in top condition. The intention is to establish such absolute dominance in the air that the Soviet troops will be paralyzed and unable to defend their very strong positions.

Major Siegfried Freytag of Stab II./JG 77 scores his 40th victory, which always is a cause for celebration within the Luftwaffe.
The Kholm pocket, 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German soldier eating amidst the ruins in the Kholm pocket (Muck, Richard, Federal Archives Image 101I-004-3637-35A).
European Air Operations: The Luftwaffe does not make any major raids today. However, the town of Exeter is still struggling with the aftereffects of the raid conducted on the night of 3/4 May. New fire outbreaks continue throughout the day, including at St. Stephens Church on Gandry Street and St. Mary Arches Church. Reinforcements from surrounding areas help to fight the fires.

Following a mission by a dozen Boston bombers of RAF No. 226 Squadron to Zeebrugge coke ovens and an aborted mission to a Lille power station, tonight's mission for RAF Bomber Command again is Stuttgart. This time, 77 bombers (49 Wellingtons, 13 Stirlings, 11 Halifaxes, and 4 Lancasters) attempt to bomb the Robert Bosch factory. This mission goes even worse than yesterday's attack. The RAF loses three Wellingtons and a Stirling while none of the bombs fall in Stuttgart. Many of the bombers are attracted to the Lauffen decoy site and most of the bombs fall harmlessly in the woods. In subsidiary operations, the RAF sends 19 bombers to Nantes, four Blenheims make Intruder missions to Schiphol Airport outside Amsterdam, and ten bombers drop leaflets, all without loss.

RAF Coastal Command planes sink 5843-ton German freighter Konsul Carl Visser at Ålesund, Norway.
US freighter Afoundria, sunk on 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
US freighter Afoundria, sunk by U-108 off Haiti on 5 May 1942.
Battle of the Atlantic: U-106 (Kptlt. Hermann Rasch), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 7985-ton Canadian passenger ship Lady Drake 90 nautical miles (170 km) north of Bermuda. There are 12 deaths and 256 survivors, who are rescued by the minesweeper USS Owl. 

U-103 (Kptlt. Werner Winter), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5966-ton British freighter Stanbank in the general vicinity of Bermuda. There are nine deaths and 39 survivors, who are rescued by British freighter Rhexenor.

U-564 (Kptlt. Reinhard Suhren), on its fifth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and damages 3478-ton US freighter Delisle 15 nautical miles (28 km) from Jupiter Inlet, Florida. There are two deaths and 36 survivors. The crew abandons the ship but reboards her on the 6th. A US Navy tug later tows Delisle to Miami, where the tanker is repaired and returned to service.

U-108 (KrvKpt. Klaus Scholtz), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5010-ton US freighter Afoundria (Master William Arthur Sillars)  about eight miles north of Le Male, Haiti. All 46 people on board survive and are rescued by USS Mulberry (AN 27) and taken to Guantanamo.

In poor weather, 1383-ton Norwegian freighter Magnhild runs aground on Virgin Rocks, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland. The ship eventually is written off. All 20 crewmen are rescued by the minesweeper USS Brant.

German 3288-ton minesweeper Sperrbrecher 36 Eider hits a mine and is badly damaged off Heligoland. She makes it back to port but this ends her service.

German 6233-ton tanker Zabern hits a mine and sinks in the Bay of Kiel.
Look magazine of 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Look magazine of 5 May 1942 is full of helpful suggestions on "What We Must Do Now - to Win the War."
Battle of the Mediterranean: At Malta, the government announces a cut in the bread ration to 10 1/2 ounces per person per day. This follows previous cuts in other daily food item rations. The daily air raids begin shortly after noontime and continue into the night.

POWs: At Stanley Internment Camp in Hong Kong, there has been an outbreak of beriberi. Dr. Percy Selwyn-Clarke adds a weekly dose of thiamin to the internees' soup. This later is changed to a daily dose of 3 milligrams. This prescription ends the epidemic by August 1942.

Holocaust: The German government will no longer report concentration camp deaths to next of kin.

American Homefront: The Los Angeles Times wins a Pulitzer Prize for 1941 due to five editorials it ran supporting the right of publications such as the Times to comment on notable court cases. Also on 5 May, the court case brought against it to squelch these editorials that went to the United States Supreme Court also ends in its favor.

Future History: Virginia Wynette Pugh is born in Tremont, Mississippi. From a poor background, she sings on the Country Boy Eddie show on a local Birmingham, Alabama, television station in 1965 and gets some attention. After moving to Nashville, she wins a recording contract from producer Billy Sherrill of Epic Records, who induces her to adopt the stage name Tammy Wynette (her legal name only changes with her marriages). Her first single makes the Country charts at No. 44 and her second rises to number three, leading to a string of successes. Her biggest hit is "Stand By Your Man" in 1968, a somewhat ironic tune considering that she had left her husband to pursue her recording career. After that, Tammy Wynette's singing career is assured. She goes on to become recognized as the "First Lady of Country Music." Tammy Wynette passes away on 6 April 1998 in Nashville.
WACs in a Jeep, 5 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
This original photo was taken on 5 May 1942 in Florida. It shows eleven WACs in a US Army Willys Jeep. This photo was later used in a well-known ad campaign and may have influenced the creation of the Twentieth Century Fox film "Four Jills in a  Jeep" (1944) (US Army).

May 1942


2021