Showing posts with label U-136. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U-136. Show all posts

Thursday, April 15, 2021

May 8, 1942: Lexington Sunk in the Coral Sea

Friday 8 May 1942

USS Lexington on fire and sinking, 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"A mushroom cloud rises after a heavy explosion on board the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Lexington (CV-2), 8 May 1942. This is probably the great explosion from the detonation of torpedo warheads stowed in the starboard side of the hangar, aft, that followed an explosion amidships at 1727 hrs. Note USS Yorktown (CV-5) on the horizon in the left center, and destroyer USS Hammann (DD-412) at the extreme left." Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-16651.
Battle of the Pacific: The Battle of the Coral Sea ends on 8 May 1942 with a classic tactical victory but strategic defeat for the Japanese. The Japanese Navy inflicts more damage on the Allies, but the Allies prevent it from accomplishing its main objectives and, by so doing, completely alter the course of the Battle of the Pacific.

Japanese Rear Admiral Chūichi Hara, on Zuikaku, is in tactical command of the carrier air forces aboard that ship and Shōkaku. He knows the US carrier force known to be nearby must be eliminated for the invasion of Port Moresby, which has been halted, to proceed. With his force about 100 nautical miles (120 miles, 190 km) east of Rossel Island, Hara sends out search planes at first light to locate the enemy force. About twenty minutes later, Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher does the same. A USS Lexington pilot is the first to spot the enemy's position, quickly followed by a Shōkaku search plane sighting US Task Force 17. After the violent maneuvers of 7 May, the two opposing carrier forces are about 210 nautical miles (240 miles, 390 km) apart - close enough to attack.

The Japanese get their planes aloft by 09:15, and the Americans by 09:25. The carrier groups both head for each other's position at flank speed. The stage is set for a decisive carrier battle.
US Navy fighters taking off worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The USS Yorktown's dive bombers (William O. Burch) reach their target first, at 10:32, but pause to await lagging formations to catch up before launching a coordinated attack. The Japanese have 16 Zero fighters patrolling over the two carriers, which are about 10,000 yards (9100 meters) apart. The weather is mixed, with low-hanging clouds and rain squalls. The attack begins at 10:57 and quickly scores two 1,000 lb (450 kg) hits on Shōkaku. Each side loses two planes.

Lexington's dive bombers attack next, at 11:30. They hit the Shōkaku with another 1000 lb bomb but miss the Zuikaku. The Japanese shoot down three Grumman F4F Wildcats without loss. Takatsugu Jōjima, the Shōkaku's captain, then withdraws his battered ship at 12:10 to the northeast.

While the attack on the Japanese carriers is in progress, Task Force 17 detects the incoming Japanese bombers on their CXAM-1 radar. A Close Air Patrol of six Wildcats is sent up, but it stations itself too low, completely missing the Japanese planes above. Some Yorktown SBDs, however, have better luck. The commander of the torpedo planes, Lieutenant Commander Shigekazu Shimazaki, directs 14 to attack Lexington and four to target Yorktown. The Japanese lose three planes to the SBDs and another to the Wildcats at a cost of four SBDs to the bombers' Zero escorts.
USS Lexington on fire and sinking, 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
" Japanese Type 97 Shipboard Attack Plane (Kate torpedo bomber) is hit by anti-aircraft fire during attacks on the U.S. aircraft carriers, late in the morning of 8 May 1942." Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-16638.
The Japanese torpedo attack begins at 11:13 against the two US carriers, which are stationed about 3000 yards (2700 meters) apart. While no hits are scored on Yorktown, it is a much different story regarding Lexington.  Coming in from both sides, the torpedo bombers get their first hit at 11:20, which punctures the port aviation gasoline stowage tanks and releases gasoline vapors. A second hit soon after destroys the port water main, forcing the three forward boilers to be shut down. The Japanese lose an additional four torpedo planes during this attack.

A few minutes after the torpedo planes attack, the Japanese dive bombers begin their attacks from 14,000 feet, with 19 aiming for Lexington and 14 diving on Yorktown. They score two hits on Lexington, starting numerous fires, and one on Yorktown. The hit on Yorktown is particularly damaging, causing 66 casualties and putting the superheater boilers out of action. A dozen near-misses also deform Yorktown's hull. The Japanese lose two dive bombers during this attack.

The Japanese dive bombers largely escaped the defending fighters during the attack, but once they are at sea level wild air battles ensue. The US loses three Wildcats and three SBDs, while the Japanese lose three torpedo bombers, a dive bomber, and a Zero. After this, the planes from both sides turn toward their own carriers at around 12:00.

Lexington and Yorktown, despite both receiving heavy damage, both remain operational. However, the plane recovery process goes poorly and they lose an additional five SBDs, two TBDs, and a Wildcat. The Japanese on Zuikaku suffer similar issues and lose five dive bombers, two Zeros, and a torpedo plane. Due to damage and lack of deck space due to the damage to the inability of Shōkaku to recover its planes, the Japanese push five recovered torpedo planes, four dive bombers, and three additional Zeros overboard.
USS Lexington on fire and sinking, 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"USS Lexington (CV-2) under Japanese dive bomber attack, shortly before Noon on 8 May 1942, during the Battle of the Coral Sea." Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-19100.
At 14:22, Fletcher decides that he has had enough and withdraws. Hara reports to Takagi that he has lost all but a dozen of his bombers, and Takagi, worried about his fuel situation, withdraws at 15:00.

Attention now shifts in both fleets from offensive operations to saving their own damaged ships. At first, it appears that Lexington can handle her multiple hits. The crew puts out the worst fires and she becomes operational again. However, at 12:47, sparks from electric motors ignite the gasoline vapors released from the first torpedo strike, causing a huge explosion that kills 25 men. There is another explosion at 14:42, and a third at 15:25. At 15:38, the fires are out of control and the crew realizes the situation is hopeless. Captain Frederick C. Sherman orders the crew to abandon the ship, and at 19:15 escorting destroyer Phelps pumps five torpedoes into the flaming hulk of "Lady Lex." It sinks at 19:52, with 216 deaths from the 2951-man crew. It also takes 36 aircraft with it.

On the Japanese side, Takagi sends Zuikaku with her escorts to Rabaul, while the badly damaged Shōkaku heads for Japan. The Port Moresby invasion remains off, though Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto is still determined to continue when the time is right. The Japanese have sunk a US fleet carrier, a destroyer, and an oiler, along with the destruction of dozens of US planes, while the Americans have sunk only a Japanese light carrier. This is a close but clear Japanese tactical victory. But the Allies' ability to prevent the invasion of Port Moresby and blunt the Japanese military's heretofore unchecked advance south represents a much more important and lasting strategic victory. The Battle of the Coral Sea also is renowned as the first sea battle where no ship sights an enemy ship or fires at one.

US Navy submarine USS Skipjack torpedoes and sinks 4804-ton Japanese freighter Bujun Maru in the South China Sea.

USS Navy submarine USS Grenadier torpedoes and sinks 14503-ton Japanese naval transport Taiyo Maru 92 nautical miles (170 km) southwest of Me Shima, Nannyo Gunto, Kyushu, Japan. There are 816 deaths and 15 survivors, who are picked up by several nearby ships and a fishing vessel.
USS Lexington on fire and sinking, 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Battle of the Coral Sea, May 1942. Abandoning of USS Lexington (CV-2) following the Battle of the Coral Sea, 8 May 1942. Small explosions amid-ship is visible." Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-16637.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: An attempted mutiny in the Cocos (Keeling) Islands by Ceylonese (Sri Lankan) troops against the British fails. As illustrated by the final words of one of the mutineers - "Loyalty to a country under the heel of a white man is disloyalty" - there are elements of nationalism and racism to the uprising.

The mutineers, 30 men of the Ceylon Garrison Artillery on Horsburgh Island, attempt to arrest their commanding officers and turn the islands over to the Empire of Japan. The mutiny fails because the mutineers turn out to be completely incompetent soldiers who have difficulty firing their guns accurately, though they kill one loyal (Indian) British soldier and wound an officer. Once the mutiny is put down, three mutineers are executed and four others imprisoned for life. While completely unsuccessful, the Cocos Islands Mutiny provides fodder for anti-British agitation throughout the region, particularly in Sri Lanka.

Operation Ironclad, the British invasion of Madagascar, ended in a British victory on 7 May 1942, but the Vichy French retain some powerful but scattered assets. One of those assets, submarine Monge, launches an attack on Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable but misses. Two escorting destroyers, Active and Panther, leap into action and sink the French submarine (all 69 crew perish). All other undefeated Vichy French forces withdraw to the south, where they are annoying but pose no real threat to the British occupation. Italian freighters 2315-ton Duca Degli Abruzzi and 2669-ton Somalia are scuttled at Diego-Suarez.

Japanese troops driving north from Bhamo enter Myitkyina, Burma, which the British evacuated on 7 May. The Allied forces in northern Burma withdraw into China or India via the Hukawng Valley to the east and north of the city, depending on their preference. The retreating Allied forces do a good job of destroying the area's numerous bridges, which slows down any Japanese pursuit toward Sumprabum.

The 1st Burma Infantry Brigade leaves the 1st Burma Infantry Division and heads to India. It leaves Tigyaing on the Irrawaddy River today and heads west to the road junction at Indaw. The objective is to go to Pantha on the Chindwin River, cross it, and head west to India. This path involves difficult cross-country travel but it is the shortest route and free of enemy troops who are not far to the north on the Irrawaddy at Myitkyina.
USS Lexington survivors being rescued, 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Survivors of USS Lexington (CV-2) are pulled aboard a cruiser (probably USS Minneapolis) after the carrier was abandoned during the afternoon of 8 May 1942. Note man in the lower part of the photo who is using the cruiser's armor belt as a hand hold." Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-7392.
Eastern Front: General Franz Halder sums up the day with the brief entry, "Kerch offensive has opened with good initial successes. Rest of the front quiet."

At 04:15, General Erich von Manstein opens Operation Trappenjagd on the Crimean peninsula. The objective is to clear the eastern Kerch peninsula of Red Army troops so that the German 11th Army can concentrate all of its assets to subdue the Soviet pocket at the western port of Sevastopol.

Manstein has promised that the offensive will have "concentrated air support the like of which has never been seen." He describes his plan as a ground attack that will have its main strength in the air. The planes would "pull the infantry forward" because Luftwaffe General Wolfram von Richthofen has the strength of an entire air fleet - which usually accompanies an entire army group - to support the advance.

The attack opens with massive Luftwaffe VIII Air Corps raids on Soviet airfields and communications. Soviet 44th Army, holding the southern section of the Parpach Narrows front, loses touch with its headquarters, while the commander of 51st Army, holding the northern half of the front, is killed. The Germans mount 2100 sorties during the day, shooting down 57 of 401 Soviet aircraft and destroying their airfields.
Manstein at the front in Crimea ca. 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
General Manstein directs the attack on the Kerch peninsula from his command truck ca. 8 May 1942 (Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe 2-768).
When Manstein launches his ground attack after a quick 10-minute artillery barrage, the stunned Red Army defenders in the south quickly give way despite outnumbering the Axis units (19 Soviet divisions and four armored brigades to five German divisions, 2 1/2 Romanian divisions, and the 22nd Panzer Division). A German seaborne invasion by the 902nd Assault Boat Command of the 436th Regiment, 132nd German Infantry Division, lands behind the Soviets and helps to pierce the defensive line. The 28th Light Division and 132nd ID advance six miles by nightfall, a massive distance when previous gains have been measured in meters. General of Artillery Maximilian Fretter-Pico, commander of the 30th Corps, asks for and receives the 22nd Panzer Division to exploit the breakthrough. He also brings forward his only reserve, the Grodeck Brigade composed of a Romanian motorized regiment and two German truck-mounted infantry battalions.
Lord Gort inspects bomb damage in Malta on 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Lord Gort, the new Governor of Malta, and Vice Admiral Leatham inspect the dockyard area, 8 May 1942 © IWM A 8767.
European Air Operations: The Luftwaffe ends a four-day lull in operations with a Baedeker Blitz attack on Norwich. While 70 bombers participate, the raid causes little additional damage to the city, which the Germans previously attacked on the night of 27/28 April 1942.

After a daylight mission to Dieppe by 6 Boston bombers without loss, the night's mission is to Warnemünde, Germany. The 193 bombers make a "moderately successful" attack and lose 19 aircraft for a very poor 10% loss rate.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-564 (Kptlt. Reinhard Suhren), on its fifth patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 6078-ton US Design 1015 freighter Ohioan ten miles (19 km) off Boynton Beach, Florida. There are 15 deaths and 22 survivors, who are rescued by US Coast Coast Guard ships.

U-507 (KrvKpt. Harro Schacht), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 2424-ton Norwegian freighter Torny in the Gulf of Mexico west of Tampa, Florida. There are two deaths and 24 survivors, who are rescued by US Navy seaplanes.

U-136 (Kptlt. Heinrich Zimmermann), on its second patrol out of St. Nazaire, spots the 325-ton three-masted Canadian schooner Mildred Pauline off the coast of Nova Scotia. It surfaces and shells the ship, sinking it. All seven crewmen perish.
HMS Olympus, sunk on 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Olympus, sunk on 8 May 1942.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Royal Navy submarine HMS Olympus (LtCdr H.G. Dymott) hits a mine and sinks while leaving Grand Harbour, Malta. It is carrying survivors from submarine Pandora, P.36, and P.39. There are 89 deaths and only nine survivors - three from Olympus and six from P.39 - who manage to swim ashore.

German/Spanish Relations: The German military attache to Madrid, Colonel Krabbe, tells General Halder that "Spain is manifestly racked by economic and political strains. Likelihood of British invasion." Things actually are not quite that bad in Spain, and the British have no intention of invading. However, Spanish leader Francisco Franco does not mind the Germans thinking that Spain is in bad straits because he does not want to join the Axis.

American Homefront: Warner Bros. releases "In This Our Life," directed by John Huston/Raoul Walsh and starring Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, and George Brent. It is a classic "women's film" and involves issues of racial discrimination, personal responsibility, and marriage issues. It is based on a popular novel by Ellen Glasgow that dealt much more sharply with these issues and raised even more disturbing ones, such as incest. Huston is called away by the United States Department of War midway through production and the studio replaces him with Raoul Walsh, which causes problems with the cast, particularly Bette Davis. The film is notorious for its portrayal of African-Americans, though Davis personally finds Ernest Anderson, a waiter at the studio commissary, to play a key role for which he receives much critical praise and which kickstart his acting career. Due to its negative portrayal of African-Americans, the wartime Office of Censorship refuses to certify "In This Our Life" for foreign distribution. Despite all the issues, particularly some wildly diva-ish behavior by Davis, the film makes money.
USS Lexington torpedo damage, 8 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
View on the port side of USS Lexington (CV-2), looking aft and down through torn flight deck life nettings, showing damage from the aftermost of the two torpedo hits received during the Battle of the Coral Sea, 8 May 1942. This hit was centered at about Frame 85, and blew some of the ship's hull blister plating up and out, as seen at the waterline in this photo. Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-16804.

May 1942


2021

Saturday, April 3, 2021

April 28, 1942: Brewing Clash in the Arctic

Tuesday 28 April 1942

Rommel in North Africa 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
General Erwin Rommel, leader of the Afrika Korps, receives an Italian military decoration (Italian Colonial Order of the Star, Grand Officer's Cross) on 28 April 1942 (Federal Archive Image 101I-784-0212-34).
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese 22nd Infantry Division, Thirteenth Army, continues advancing in the Shanghai sector on 28 April 1942. Yesterday it captured Lungyu, today it takes Chinlan (Quinlan). while the island invasions across the Pacific Ocean are important to Imperial Japan, its top priority remains the eternal conflict in China.

Air battles continue over Port Moresby, New Guinea. The Japanese send eight bombers escorted by Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters over the port. During the fighting, death claims the commander of RAF No. 75 Squadron, John Francis Jackson, 34, when his P-40E is shot down and it crashes into a mountainside. The Australians also lose another P-40, while the Japanese lose a Zero piloted by Yoshimitsu Maeda, who is taken as a prisoner.

Jackson has been a stalwart in the aerial defense of the area. His body is identified only by his boots and his personal pistol. John Francis Jackson winds up with 8 aerial victories and he is interred at Moresby's Bomana War Cemetery. Moresby's airport is named Jacksons International Airport in his honor, and there is a monument honoring him and another RAAF pilot, Len Waters.

US Navy submarine USS Seal torpedoes and sinks Japanese freighter Tatsufuku Maru in the South China Sea.
British scout car in North Africa 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Daimler scout car of 5th Royal Tank Regiment, 4th Armoured Brigade in the Western Desert, 28 April 1942." © IWM E 11092.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Japanese troops, temporarily scared off by an unexpected encounter with the Chinese 28th Division, Sixty-Sixth Army, on the 27th, resume their drive north to the Chinese stronghold of Lashio. They run into Chinese defenders of the 28th Division and others. Fierce fighting breaks out. The Sixty-Sixth commander, General Chang, however, already is sending everything that can move back toward China through Kutkai and Wanting.

Eastern Front: Things are so quiet on the Eastern Front that General Franz Halder has given himself leave in Berlin to attend War Academy lectures and, among other things, visit the dentist. Among other things, he attends a lecture by General Walther Wenck and has lunch with the Commandant of the Hungarian War Academy, General Laszlo.
Auschwitz victim 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Polish naval officer Zenon Waczyński, executed at Auschwitz on 28 April 1942 after arriving on 5 April.
European Air Operations: After dark, the Luftwaffe switches targets again. After bombing Exeter, Bath, and Norwich, now it bombs York. While the attack causes limited damage, 79 people perish. There has been an unusually high death toll during these "Baedeker Raids" despite the relatively small number of planes involved, perhaps because residents of Great Britain have developed a false sense of complacency after many months without air attacks. They thus are not taking proper precautions such as sleeping in shelters. This is the last of these raids until the night of 3 May 1942.

RAF Bomber Command continues its heavy raids as well. During the day, six Boston bombers attack the St. Omer railway yards without loss. After dark, the main target is Kiel. The RAF sends 88 bombers (62 Wellingtons, 15 Stirlings, 10 Hampdens, and a Halifax), with five Wellingtons and a Hampden failing to return. The attack produces mediocre results, with damage to the city's shipyards and the Naval Academy hospital. There are 15 deaths and 74 injured.

The RAF also sends yet another raid to Trondheim, Norway, in an attempt to sink the Tirpitz. This ties in with mounting Allied fears, discussed below, of danger on the Arctic Convoy route. The attack by 23 Halifax and 11 Lancaster bombers fails to hit the battleship, though the pilots claim some successes.

There also are subsidiary operations by six Blenheim bombers to the Langenbrugge, Germany (northeast of Hanover), power station, four Blenheim Intruders, and six minelayers off the north German coast. The only aircraft lost is one Blenheim from the Langenbrugge raid.

The Germans are furious about the recent raids on Rostock. They admit that the raids caused great damage but deny that the Baltic port was a legitimate military target. The Börsen Zeitung newspaper states:

Probably British agitators will again assert that the airmen attacked only military targets; but that the real purpose is to terrify the German population is too clear to be denied.

Of course, terror raids are have been common in World War II since 1939. They can have quite unintended effects on enemy morale.
HMS Columbine 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Corvette HMS Columbine in port at Tilbury on 28 April 1942. © IWM A 8422.
Battle of the Atlantic: A potential major naval conflict is brewing in the Arctic off the Norwegian coast. If all the units from both sides are brought to bear, it could be a cataclysm of destruction. However, in the Arctic, the weather usually has the last word on such matters, especially during this time of year.

Adolf Hitler has ordered a huge buildup in air and naval units in the north of Norway. This includes a large force of Heinkel torpedo bombers and large surface ships. Battleship Tirpitz also is available for duty at Trondhem. Hitler's goal is to interrupt the Arctic convoys that have been passing mostly unmolested near North Cape, Norway, on their way to and from Murmansk. In addition to planes and surface ships, the Germans have seven U-boats (U-88, U-251, U-405, U-456, U-589, and U-703) in a patrol line waiting for the next convoy.

With these forces now in position, an opportunity to use them arises when German aircraft spot Allied Convoy PQ-15 about 250 nautical miles (463 km) southwest of Bear Island. The German forces prepare to attack in the coming days.

Hitler is not the only one with his thoughts on the Arctic Lend-Lease route, however. A joint Royal Navy-United States Navy task force, code name "Force Distaff," sails today from Scapa Flow in the Orkneys. Force Distaff will provide escort protection to PQ-15 northeast of Iceland. This force includes battleships HMS King George V and USS Washington, aircraft carrier Victorious, and heavy cruisers Wichita and Tuscaloosa. U.S. Rear Admiral Robert C. Giffen is in overall command.

In addition to Force Distaff, British submarines Truant, Unison, Free French submarine Minerve, Norwegian submarine Uredd, and Polish submarine Jastrzab are patrolling off the Norwegian coast. Both sides are prepped and ready to rock and roll at any time.
HMS Lance 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Lance, hit by Luftwaffe Ju 87 Stuka bombers on 5 and 9 April, shown at the Malta jetty where she was sunk. Attempts were made to salvage Lance but they failed and she was written off. 28 April 1942. © IWM A 9516.
The Russian North Fleet understands the potential for a disaster in the Arctic and makes a diversionary attack in Titovka Bay. The Soviets want to convince the Germans that the threat is not out at sea, but an invasion. Soviet destroyers Remyashchi, Gromki, and Sokrushitelny lead a force of nineteen TSCH auxiliary minesweepers, 32 SKA boats, and two patrol boats (Rubin and Smerch) in the deception.

Unknown yet to the Germans, Convoy QP-11 departs from the Kola Inlet today. Its thirteen ships are escorted by two Soviet destroyers (Sokrushitelny and Kuibyshev) and four minesweepers, with additional escorts waiting to join en route. Thus, the sea north of North Cape could get very crowded very soon with all these ships and naval units in play.

U-136 (Kptlt. Heinrich Zimmermann), on its second patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 5163-ton Dutch tanker Arundo about 15 nautical miles south of the Ambrose Lightship at the entrance to New York Harbor. The ship, traveling independently perhaps due to speed issues, is loaded with war supplies including 5000 crates of Canadian beer and sinks within five minutes. There are six deaths and 37 survivors, who are rescued by the destroyer USS Lea (DD-118). 

Yard patrol craft USS YP-77 (private yacht "Edmar" requisitioned for war duty) sinks in the Atlantic after a collision. The US Navy is still learning how to organize convoys and there are a number of mishaps (such as the sinking of USS Sturtevant on 26 April) as the navy officers sort things out.
British Stuart tank in North Africa 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
British tank on display in North Africa. "An official photographer takes shots of a Stuart tank of 5th Royal Tank Regiment, 4th Armoured Brigade, 28 April 1942." © IWM E 11074.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Heavy Axis air attacks continue at Malta. They sink 161-ton Royal Navy tugboat HMS West Dean. People on the island lately have claimed that the Axis forces have been focusing on unexpected targets such as hospitals. Today, the area around St. Publius Parish Church in Floriana is devastated. Thirteen people taking shelter in the church's crypt are killed and another five seriously injured. This is known as the "blackest day for Floriana."

Axis Politics: The Axis leaders have been cultivating the support of Arab nations and ethnic groups. While that hasn't always worked out well, as in the abortive pro-Axis coup in Iraq, the Axis leaders still hope for a general uprising against the British. Also, there are hopes for large numbers of Arab troops within the Wehrmacht. Today, Italian Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano extends another inducement by promising that Italy will give formal recognition to the independence of Arab States. Since Britain and France exert political control throughout the region, this is a subtle way of encouraging uprisings that would aid the Axis powers. 
Brooklyn Eagle 28 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The 28 April 1942 Brooklyn Eagle is full of news about President Roosevelt's fireside chat.
American Homefront: James M. Landis, national director of the U.S. Office of Civilian Defense, institutes nightly blackouts of the Atlantic coast in the New York City area. These cover a fifteen-mile strip of the coast. These are to counter U-boat activities in the area, as city lights make it easier for submarines to spot ships silhouetted against background lights.

President Roosevelt gives another of his famous "fireside chats." The title is "On Our National Economic Policy and Sacrifice," and it lasts for just under 33 minutes. He attacks the issue of rationing head-on:

As I told the Congress yesterday, ‘sacrifice’ is not exactly the proper word with which to describe this program of self-denial. When at the end of this great struggle we shall have saved our free way of life, we shall have made no ‘sacrifice.’…

The Office of Price Administration "freezes prices."
Motion Picture Magazine April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Paulette Goddard and John Wayne promoting "Reap the Wild Wind" on the cover of Motion Picture magazine, April 1942.
The FBI under special agent N.L.J. Pieper raids homes and businesses in the San Francisco Bay area and apprehends 24 enemy aliens. Among other contraband, short wave radios are discovered during the sweep. Meanwhile, "several hundred" internees depart from San Francisco today for processing at the Tanforan race Track assembly center. The San Francisco News reports that "It appeared more to be the start of an outing than on "ousting."" Area Commander Lieutenant General DeWitt orders the evacuation of Japanese-Americans from Portland and surrounding areas by May 5.

Some sources claim that the Gallup polling organization releases the results of a poll about the proper name of the current war on 28 April 1942. The preferred name, these sources claim, is "World War II." However, Gallup does not list such a poll anywhere, though it may exist anyway. In any event, what to call the current war varies from nation to nation. Americans have taken to calling it "World War II," but Russians call it "The Great Patriotic War," people in the UK prefer "The Second World War," and so on. 

Just to be clear, the United States does not formally adopt "World War II" as the proper name until after the war's conclusion. This is done at the recommendation in a 10 September 1945 letter from Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson and Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal to the President. This name, after approval by then-President Harry S. Truman, enters the Federal Register on 11 September 1945 (not 28 April 1942) as the official U.S. name of the conflict. This name has been used in many subsequent United States laws.

April 1942

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

2021

Friday, March 26, 2021

April 24, 1942: When Will Help Arrive?

Friday 24 April 192

Manila being bombed, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Axis bombs fall on Malta, 24 April 1942.
Battle of the Pacific: Japanese planes raid Port Moresby, New Guinea, on 24 April 1942. They destroy two B-26 bombers at 7-Mile Drome, some PBY Catalinas moored in the harbor, and three P-40E Kittyhawk fighters of RAF No. 75 Squadron.

The Japanese are bombing and shelling the sole remaining US Army outpost in the Philippines located in the caves on Corregidor Island without respite. Much of the world has forgotten about this lone holdout against the Japanese, mentally writing it off when General Douglas MacArthur escaped in mid-March. The troops there no longer seem to be at the top of his priority list, either. However, the troops and service personnel on Corregidor, some of whom are women, are suffering daily. A few trapped soldiers maintain diaries. One of them is Denny Williams.
US Army Nurse Denny Williams.
US Army Nurse Denny Williams, from Culpepper, Virginia, makes dispassionate but telling entries in her diary throughout the Corregidor ordeal. Williams watches some fortunate friends get flown out on seaplanes, but there is no happy ending for her and many others. She writes that "The large blowers in the ventilators have to be shut off when we get direct hits because the blowers circulate the dust caused from the bombs." The stress is inescapable, and to leave the tunnels just to hang some laundry is to risk your life. She records that everyone is making wisecracks to relieve the tension, but "My hands tremble when I’m giving anesthetics; evidently I’m more frightened than I realize." This is not unusual, as "I am not alone in this for even the hands of the calmest doctors tremble." Denny Williams concludes the day's entry with, "When will help arrive?"

US Navy submarine USS Trout (SS-202) torpedoes and sinks Japanese transport Tachibana Maru just south of Susami Kii, Japan (south of Osaka).
Manila Tribune, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Manila, Philippines, Tribune, 24 April 1942.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The Battle of Hopong-Taunggyi in Burma ends after a fierce offensive by the motorized 200th Infantry Division of the Chinese National Revolutionary Army that captures Taunggyi. The Japanese, however, shrug off the loss and continue advancing toward Lashio.

Eastern Front: With the spring thaw ("Rasputitsa") in full swing on 24 April 1942, operations remain in a lull. General Franz Halder seems bored as he writes the day's diary entry:

Situation: Unchanged. Enemy continues relieving and regrouping movements opposite the southern part of the front. All quiet in Army Group North. 

The Germans remain worried about the possible Soviet use of poison gas, and Halder discusses preparedness for this and also "Rocket Projector troops" (Nebeltruppen, who man Nebelwerfer mortars and rockets) with General Wilhelm-Francis Ochsner.

The Nebelwerfer have been in use throughout the war and their use is being expanded by both sides on the Eastern Front. The Red Army has its own version, Katyusha rocket launchers. The advantage of these types of weapons is that they are light and inexpensive. These types of weapons also have the benefit of producing characteristic scary noises that cause G.I.s to nickname them "Screaming Mimis."
Bomb damage in Exeter, England, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Luftwaffe bomb damage in the historic cathedral at Exeter, April 1942.
European Air Operations: The Luftwaffe conducts the first two so-called "Baedeker Raids" against Exeter on the nights of 23/24 and 24/25 April 1942. The first raid is a dud, causing little damage, but the second kills over 80 people. Luftflotte 3 conducts the raids using KG2 and KG106, led by pathfinders of I/KG100. The raids are moderate in size, comprised of 30-40 bombers, but the bombers fly two sorties each night. This leads to a terrifying, sleepless night. These raids cause more casualties than usual because the standard two sorties are separated by several hours that lull the residents into a false sense of security until the pattern becomes known.

During the day, the RAF sends a dozen Boston bombers to attack Flushing docks and half a dozen to attack the Abbeville airfields (these latter bombers are recalled). No planes are lost.

After dark, the RAF raids Rostock, Germany, for the second night in a row. It sends 125 bombers, with 91 targeting the town and 34 the Heinkel aircraft factory on its outskirts. Once again, the Heinkel factory emerges unscathed, but the town center sustains heavy damage. In subsidiary operations, 39 bombers attack Dunkirk, four Blenheim bombers independently raid the Low Countries (one is lost), and there are three leaflet flights.

Due to battle losses that cannot be replenished with Czechs, the Czechoslovak No. 311 Squadron is withdrawn from RAF Bomber Command and reassigned to Coastal Command. The Czech squadron finishes with over 1000 bombing sorties between 10 September 1940 and 24 April 1942.
Soviet submarine Shch-401 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A pre-war photo of Soviet submarine Shch-401, sunk by Friendly Fire on or about 24 April 1942.
Battle of the Atlantic: U-136 (Kptlt. Heinrich Zimmermann), on its second patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 7244-ton British freighter Empire Drum just before midnight on the 24th about 280 nautical miles (520 km) southeast of New York City. The ship is carrying 1270 tons of explosives and sinks just after midnight on the 25th after Zimmermann pumps a coup de grâce into the ship. He then surfaces and questions the survivors, examines the wreckage, and departs. All 41 crewmen survive, picked up by USS Roper and Swedish freighter Venezia.

Soviet submarine Shch-401 (Capt 3rd Class Moiseev) is sunk in a case of "Friendly Fire" by torpedo-cutters "TKA N13" and "TKA N14." The cutters of the Northern Fleet use depth charges and torpedoes to sink the sub near Komagneset, Vardø, Finnmark Fylke, Norway. Different sources list this action as occurring on either 23 or 25 April 1942. This sinking occurs the day after Shch-401 attacked a German convoy and was damaged by German submarine chasers.

Danish 1359-ton ferry Kalundborg hits a mine and is badly damaged in Kalundborg Fjord. There are no deaths and some passengers are lightly injured. Tugs attempt to tow the ferry port but it sinks.
McComb Journal, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The 24 April 1942 McComb, Mississippi, Journal headlines "Reds Hold Landed U.S. Bomber, Allies Keep Up Raids on Rabaul."
Battle of the Mediterranean: Axis air raids on Malta continue, focusing mainly on the RAF's airfields and the Grand Harbour area. There are many civilian and military casualties in Valletta and Floriana. The first raids are at 05:30 and they continue throughout the day and night. The RAF is down to four Spitfire fighters and about six Hurricane fighters, with some of these planes grounded at various times with damage. The RAF claims three enemy planes destroyed and loses two Wellington bombers, with others damaged, in retaliatory raids on Comiso Airfield in Sicily.

British Military: April 24, 1942, is the first flight of the Miles Master M.25 Martinet (LR 241), performed at Woodley Aerodrome by test pilot Flight Lieutenant Thomas Rose. This is a target tug aircraft used by the RAF and affiliated air forces throughout the remainder of World War II. The Martinet is necessary because front-line aircraft are being shot up too fast for enough to become "obsolete" and only suitable for target-towing duties. Some eventually are developed as radio-controlled target drones pursuant to secret Specification Q.10.43, something the United States also is working on. There are 1,724 Martinets produced in total and some remain in the RAF into the early 1950s.
US Naval base at Argentia, Newfoundland, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U.S. Naval Air Station and Naval Operating Base, Argentia, Newfoundland, April 24, 1942 (U.S. Navy photo NH 113541).
US Military: New color specifications for naval aircraft go into effect. Service aircraft now are non-specular light gray except for non-specular blue-gray on surfaces visible from above. Advanced trainers are to be glossy aircraft gray with glossy orange-yellow on the wing and aileron surfaces, with primary trainers only having gray on their landing gear.

General George C. Marshall sends a thank-you note to General George Patton in appreciation for the gift of a goblet fashioned from a copper oil can. "Dear Patton," the letter begins, "Mrs. Marshall and I were much intrigued with the oil cup." General Patton at this time is commander of the Desert Training Center in the Mojave Desert to prepare for desert warfare. He also commands elements of the First Armored Corps and the Second and Third Armies.

The U.S. Navy announces that it will take over the Sanford (Florida) Municipal Airport (later known as the Orlando (Florida) Sanford International Airport). This is big news for the sleepy town and gets a banner headline in the 24 April 1942 "The Sanford Herald." This decision has a huge impact on the area, as the Navy is ready to spend millions of dollars upgrading the facilities.

The US Army issues Technical Manual "The Army Cook, April 24, 1942."
Finnish Army soldier, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Finnish Army Company commander Cpt. Hakala is taking a morning wash. April 24, 1942, Voitatunturi (Voittotunturi). Colorized. [SA-Kuva].
Finnish Military: Kenraalimajuri (Major General) K. I. Viljanen, the commander of the 4th Infantry Division, and those accompanying him are killed when they get lost and wander into a Finnish minefield near Seesjürvi. Only one man from the group survives.

Holocaust: Continuing the gradual degradation of rights for Jewish citizens in the Reich, the government bans all Jews from using public transport. This is a great handicap, as private vehicles are increasingly rare due to production and fuel shortages.

German Homefront:  Plenipotentiary-General for Employment Gauleiter Fritz Sauckel issues a decree requiring women to work in manufacturing. This reflects a growing manpower shortage as casualties on the Eastern Front mount and production of munitions lags.

Canadian Homefront: Lucy Maud Montgomery, O.B.E, author of novels including "Anne of Green Gables," passes away at the age of 67.
Lieutenant Ramlo, 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Official Portrait of US Marine Corps (USMC) Second Lieutenant (2LT) Orvin H. Ramlo, taken at San Diego, California (CA), April 24, 1942. 2LT Ramlo is an ace pilot and is credited with 5 kills." (National Archives 6608411). Ramlo wound up with seven kills and won the US Navy Cross on 10 November 1942. His son, Orvin Jr., became a Colonel and passed away in 2017.
American Homefront: Japanese residents of San Francisco, Alameda, and Contra Costa Counties are ordered to report for registration over the weekend prior to their evacuation. Authorities will take them to the new Tanforan assembly center. The plan is to resettle them in the Gila River Valley, 50 miles southeast of Phoenix, Arizona. Locals in that area see positives from the relocation, with a front-page article in the 24 April 1942 Casa Grande (Arizona) Dispatch titled, "Construction on Japanese Relocation Quarters Will Stimulate Local Business."

The San Francisco supervisor's committee on city planning requests a prohibition on liquor licenses in the areas being evacuated by Japanese residents (bounded by Ellis, Gough, California, and Fillmore Streets). It also proposes to ask Congress to impose a moratorium on all mortgages held by evacuating Japanese citizens.

A "Behind the News" commentary by Arthur Caylor in the San Francisco News warns "Uncle Heiny or Cousin Guiseppe" to discard "certain cameras, short-wave radios and other contraband" or face raids by "G-men."

Warner Bros. releases the comedy "Larceny, Inc." directed by Lloyd Bacon and starring Edward G. Robinson, Jane Wyman, Broderick Crawford, Jack Carson, and Anthony Quinn. Jackie Gleason makes an early appearance as a soda jerk. Robinson, who plays a gangster trying to go straight, takes the film to "soften his image" after a long run of tough gangster and policeman roles. Some reviewers have seen parallels between "Larceny, Inc." and Woody Allen's 2000 film "Small Time Crooks."

C.H. Laessig, who opened the very first gas station in the United States at 418 South Teresa in St. Louis, Missouri, passes away. He and his partner, Harry Grenner, later opened a chain of 40 gas stations across the city.
People displaced by the TVA 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
One of a series of photos taken on 24 April 1942 of families displaced by the Tennessee Valley Authority's Fort Loudoun Dam (located 602 miles, or 969 km, upstream from the mouth of the Tennessee River). The dam opened on 2 August 1943. Some people view the displacement of these families as a sign of the indifference of government agencies to the needs of the common people (National Archives at Atlanta).
Future History: Barbara Joan "Barbra" Streisand is born in Brooklyn, New York. She takes after her mother, who occasionally sings professionally, and quickly gains a reputation in her neighborhood for singing in front of her apartment building. She makes her first demo tape at age 13, but her real passion becomes acting. A job as an usher at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater on Broadway in 1960 leads her to audition for the play ("The Sound of Music"), though she isn't hired. A talent show appearance at a Greenwich Village (gay) nightclub turns into a continuing gig, which leads to other gigs, and then some stage roles. Around this time she changes her stage name from "Barbara" to "Barbra." Further roles come along, then television appearances including "The Tonight Show" and "The Ed Sullivan Show." Her first album in 1963, "The Barbara Streisand Album," hits the top 10 on the Billboard charts and wins three Grammys. After that, her career is assured, and ultimately Barbra Streisand becomes a legendary singer and actress who is still active as of this writing in 2021.

Nurse Denny Williams survives the war after spending time in the Santo Tomas POW camp. She passes away in 1997 at the age of 89.
Evacuation orders for Japanese 24 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Posting of Japanese Exclusion Order (No. 17, dated April 24, 1942) in Seattle, Washington, 1942 Social Trends in Seattle Vol 14 (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1944).

April 1942

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

2021

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape

Sunday 19 April 1942

USS Nevada leaving Pearl Harbor April 19, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
USS Nevada leaves Pearl Harbor for a trial run on April 19, 1942, after hurried repairs from the 7 December 1941 air raid (U.S. Navy).

Battle of the Pacific: The Doolittle raiders end their mission in the early morning hours of 19 April 1942 by crashing in China or ditching their B-25 bombers in the sea. Ultimately, 15 of the 16 planes are destroyed in crashes. One crew lands near Vladivostok, Russia, where the crew is interned because the USSR is not at war with Japan (they escape in 1943). The Japanese capture eight crewmen, of whom three are executed as "war criminals." One crewman dies of disease in prison. Most of the remaining crewmen are helped by Chinese civilians and manage to return home via Burma and India. Colonel Doolittle, who lands in a rice paddy near Chun Chow and is helped by local civilians, is promoted (in absentia) to Brigadier General.

The Japanese search hard for the Doolittle crews and while doing so execute an estimated 250,000 Chinese civilians in reprisal. In Tokyo, the raid takes the military command by surprise and alarms it even though the attack actually caused little damage. The danger is that it has exposed shortcomings in the sea "outfield" defensive perimeter. It recalls some units to the home islands for defense and beefs up sea patrols. Admiral Yamamoto speeds up spans for the invasion of Midway in order to provide better security on the sea approaches to Japan. Because the life of the Emperor was placed in jeopardy by the raid, the official position is that it is unpatriotic to argue against the adoption of a more defensive strategy.
Bataan April 19, 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Sunday Tribune of 19 April 1942 has many pictures of the recent surrender of Bataan.
In Washington, D.C., there are wild rumors of a raid (due to Japanese radio reports that "Enemy bombers appeared over Tokyo for the first time in the current war"), but the White House and War Department issue no statements. President Roosevelt is in Hyde Park, New York, and finally is informed about the raid. Advisor Samuel Rosenman suggests that if any reporters ask where the raid originated, he could tell them it came from "Shangri-La," a fantasy Himalayan city in James Hilton's novel "Lost Horizon."

In the Philippines, the Japanese complete the capture of Cebu Island. A Japanese submarine shells and sinks 1406-ton Philippine freighter El Cano off Corregidor. The Japanese lose guard boat No. 21 Nanshin Maru (scuttled) and No. 1 Iwate Maru (sinks) as a result of the air attacks from the USS Enterprise in preparation for the Doolittle raid.
San Francisco Chronicle 19 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The press is full of reports of a daring air raid on Japan, but there is no official word yet and the details are only provided by Japanese radio broadcasts. San Francisco Chronicle, 19 April 1942.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British 1st Burma Division, about 7000 men, crosses the Pin Chaung River in Burma on 19 April 1942, meeting up with an advancing Chinese relief column. The Chinese attack at 08:00 and make little progress, but attack again in the afternoon and make contact with the British around 16:00 after the Japanese pull back to the south and east. The British under the command of Captain J.A. Clifford thereby avoid being trapped and save the troops. Clifford stays in the vicinity to collect stragglers, some of whom have escaped after being captured.

The Chinese leader, General Lo Cho-Ying, had refused to rescue the British, but subordinate commander General Sun Li-Jen responded favorably to a telephone appeal from British commander Major General James Bruce Scott and led 1121 men to help the British. The 1st Burma Division is in poor condition, having lost its heavy equipment and with many Burmese troops having deserted. King George VI will award General Sun with the Commander of the Order of the British Empire medal and also some of his subordinate commanders with other awards. The Chinese remain in the area to attack south toward the Yenangyaung oil fields but face heavy Japanese opposition. All told, the Japanese have lost 700 killed in the battle around the Yenangyoung oil fields while the Allies have lost roughly 550 men - and control of the installation.
Finnish 2nd Lieutenant 19 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Finnish Second Lieutenant takes a break, April 1942 (SA-Kuva).
Eastern Front: Lieutenant General Mikhail Grigoryevich Yefremov, commander of the Soviet 33rd Army, commits suicide to avoid being taken prisoner by the Germans near Vyazma. He does so while personally leading a failed breakout attempt across a highway out of a pocket south and east of Smolensk that had formed during a Soviet attempt to take Vyazma in February 1942. The Germans had found a copy of orders for the breakout in the uniform of a dead Soviet soldier and were ready and waiting at the crossing point. They form three lines of defense at the road and destroy the remnants of the 33rd Army with withering machine-gun and artillery fire.

A separate breakout attempt by General Pavel Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps from the Smolensk/Vyazma pocket is undetected by the Germans and succeeds in crossing the road to reach the Soviet 10th Army. A monument to Yefremov is later placed in Vyazma and he posthumously is awarded the Order of the Red Banner. Belov, on the other hand, gains greatly in prestige and soon will be awarded command of the 61st Army.

In Crimea, the battles along the Parpach Narrows have died down, but the Luftwaffe is making its enhanced presence known. Today, German bombers damage tanker I. Stalin along with three other transport ships. General Manstein has managed to keep his casualties relatively low during the battles while General Kozlov's Crimean Front has lost 40% of its manpower, 52% of its tanks, and 25% of its artillery during its failed offensives. Manstein now begins planning a final offensive (Unternehmen Trappenjagd or "Bustard Hunt") to clear the Soviets out of the Kerch Peninsula once the spring thaw arrives in early May. The Soviet Stavka asks Stalin to consider withdrawing from the exposed position but the commander in chief is undecided.

Near Demyansk, General Seydlitz's relief force continues slowly grinding toward the pocket where almost 100,000 German troops are trapped. The Soviets are resisting bitterly but have nowhere to retreat between the relief column and the Lovat River. General Halder notes casually in his war diary, "Still all quiet on the front."
Hitler Youth induction ceremony 19 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Hitler Youth induction ceremony for ten-year-olds in Berlin, 19 April 1942 (Federal Archive Image 183-J01181).
European Air Operations: It is a quiet day on the Channel Front. The only activity is minelaying overnight in the Frisian Islands, during which the RAF loses one Hampden and one Wellington bomber.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-130 (KrvKpt. Ernst Kals) shells the Royal Dutch Shell refineries at Ballen Bay on Curacao in the Netherlands West Indies. A total of twelve shells cause minimal damage.

U-136 (Kptlt. Heinrich Zimmermann) torpedoes and sinks armed US freighter Steel Maker west of Bermuda. The submarine stops to question the survivors in their life boats, and Captain politely says, "I am sorry to have to sink you and do this to you, but this is war." He promises to inform the Allies of their position. Although only one crewman perishes and 36 men survive, the survivors drift in the current and the last man is not rescued until 18 May 1942. (Sources conflict on U-136's activities today but this is according to the US Navy Chronology).

U-136 also torpedoes and damages freighter Axtell J. Byles (named for a football player) off Wimble Shoals, North Carolina. The tanker makes it to Hampton Roads under its own power with no injuries to the crew.

German auxiliary cruiser Michel (formerly Polish freighter Bielsko and then hospital ship Bonn), under the command of FK (later KzS) Helmuth von Ruckteschell, shells and sinks 7468-ton British tanker Patella in the South Atlantic. There are five dead. The Germans take 60 crewmen as prisoners. This is Michel's first victory after breaking out through the English Channel and sailing on 20 March 1942.

US 7500-ton freighter Exminster collides with freighter Algic at the entrance to Cape Cod Canal, Cape Cod Bay, Massachusetts, and sinks. Algic suffers minimal damage. Exminster later is raised and towed to New York but ultimately scrapped in 1946.

US Navy destroyer Broome (DD-210) rescues 27 survivors from freighter Alcoa Guide, sunk by U-123 on 16 April 1942.

Convoy PQ-14 arrives at Murmansk, USSR.
Lima news 19 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Lima, Ohio, News headlines the Doolittle Raid on 19 April 1942.
Battle of the Mediterranean: U-81 (Kptlt. Friedrich Guggenberger), on its fifth patrol out of La Spezia, rams and sinks 90-ton Egyptian sailing vessel Hefz el Rahman off the coast of Palestine. Royal Navy destroyer HMS Umbra torpedoes and sinks 4219-ton Italian freighter Assunta de Grigori off Sfax, Tunisia.

There are heavy air raids on Malta, as there have been since mid-March. The RAF has no planes in service on the island, so the Luftwaffe has complete control of the skies aside from anti-aircraft fire. The bombers drop 436 tons of bombs (442,376 kg) and single out anti-aircraft batteries for special attention, hitting 15 of them and killing 13 gunners. Also suffering damage are all major airfields and Grand Harbour. In Hamrun, 34 civilians perish when a bomb strikes St. Paul's Home for the Elderly, run by the Little Sisters of the Poor.

German Military: At his hunting lodge at the Rominten Heath in East Prussia, Hermann Goering gives a speech to his top Luftflotte commanders about the war in the East. "The Russian is an enemy of barbarous methods. They ought not to be initiated by us, but we've got to show a sterner face." While Goering is reticent about saying exactly what this "sterner face" means, his meaning is clear.

US Military: Battleship USS Nevada leaves Pearl Harbor for a trial run after extensive repairs from torpedo and bomb damage suffered during the 7 December 1941 Japanese air raid. She will proceed to Puget Sound Navy Yard for major repairs and modernization.

American Homefront: Bernard Joseph Smith wins the Boston Marathon with a new record time of 2:26:51.

Warren Spahn makes his major league debut for the Boston Braves, retiring the two batters he faces.

Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau encourages Americans to spend 10 percent of their income on war savings bonds.

Reserve Cavalry officer Lt. Ronald Reagan (he enlisted in 1937) is called to active duty. His first assignment is with the San Francisco Port of Embarkation at Fort Mason, California, as a liaison officer of the Port and Transportation Office. He is unable to serve overseas because the army has classified him as fit only for limited service due to his poor eyesight.
Ronald Reagan and Jane Wyman 19 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Ronald Reagan bids farewell to wife Jane Wyman in Los Angeles on April 19, 1942. He is off to report for duty as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army (AP Photo).

April 1942

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

2021