Showing posts with label U-333. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U-333. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

May 26, 1942: Rommel Pounces in North Africa

Tuesday 26 May 1942

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Back at Fuhrer Headquarters, General Franz Halder writes:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

May 1942


2021

Monday, April 19, 2021

May 10, 1942: Spitfires Rule Over Malta

Sunday 10 May 1942

USS Long Island, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Curtiss SOC-3A of VGS-1 parked on the flight deck of escort carrier USS Long Island (AVG-1), 10 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-14521).
Battle of the Pacific: USAAF B-25 and B-26 bombers based in Port Moresby attack the new Japanese seaplane base at the Deboyne Islands on 10 May 1942 for the second day in a row, losing one of each type of bomber. The Japanese seaplane tender Kamikawa Maru is badly damaged and departs for repairs. Without the tender, the base is difficult to sustain. Thus, the Japanese begin evacuating the Deboyne base today due to its vulnerability and the failure of Operation Mo to invade Port Moresby. However, the seaplanes based there remain operational and spend the morning searching for Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher's Task Force 17 (USS Yorktown) without success. B-17 bombers also bomb the port of Kessa, Buka, in the Northern Solomon Islands.

Rear Admiral Fletcher already has departed the area, taking TF 17 south of New Caledonia. At 01:00, Australian Rear Admiral John Crace, commanding TF 44, also orders his cruisers back to Australia after losing communication with Fletcher. Unable to find the Allied carrier fleet, Vice Admiral Takeo Takagi takes most of his fleet back to Rabaul and sends his remaining aircraft carrier, Zuikaku, back to Japan to replenish its air units.

The Japanese, as a follow-up to their intricate Operation Mo, have planned to invade Nauru and Ocean Island. This is Operation Ry. The ships assigned to this operation are planning to set out, but the failure of Operation Mo makes this a much riskier proposition. Takagi is to command a critical component of this operation, too, though his 5th Cruiser Division will have no carrier support.
Kualoa Airfield, Hawaii, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Kualoa Airfield, Oahu, Hawaii, 10 May 1942.
Major General Jonathan Wainwright officially surrenders to Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma today. This is more symbolic and a formality, as Wainwright has been in captivity for several days and no longer has the authority to order surrenders. However, Major General William Sharp, in command of remaining Allied troops in the Philippines based primarily in Mindanao, decides to follow Wainwright's lead out of fears of a massacre of Wainwright's men if he does not. Right after Wainwright's radio speech, he orders the surrender of all remaining troops. Many of Sharp's Filipino troops decide to join the guerilla forces of Colonel Wendell Fertig instead rather than surrender. Like Wainwright, Sharp ultimately is sent to confinement in Mukden (Shenyang), Manchuria. This marks the end of the Philippine Campaign. The Allies have lost 140,000 lives and there are about 12,500 Allied prisoners of war. They are treated with great brutality.

US Navy submarine USS Silversides (SS-236) is operating 540 miles north of Marcus Island when it gets into a surface battle with Japanese guard boat No. 5 Ebisu Maru. The battle ends in a draw, with the heavily damaged Japanese boat making it back to port and the submarine losing one crewman when it is raked with machine gunfire.
President Roosevelt, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
President Franklin Roosevelt at an early-morning "birding party" near Pine Plains, New York. FDR is a big bird lover and Margaret "Daisy" Suckley, lower right, organized this one on 10 May 1942 (FDR Presidential Library 62-383).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: A new player enters the war in Burma when the Thai Phayap Army invades Shan State as a Japanese ally. There aren't many Allied troops left there, though, just scattered troops left behind during retreats who cause little trouble to the Axis troops. In western Burma, the British are retreating as fast as they can. Gurkha units are performing rearguard duties before they, too, retreat.

Japanese bombers attack Imphal, India. It is the first attack of the war on Imphal. The Japanese later claim that they were bombing an airfield, but the city has no airfield. At least 70 civilians are killed and another 80 wounded. The local population flees the city after the bombing and does not return for several days.

The Japanese attack the 17th Indian Division, about 10,000 men, at Shwegyin Chaung near the Chindwin River. This forces the 17th Division to withdraw up the Kabaw Valley to the border town of Tamu. The Japanese do not follow and instead fall back on their base.

To cover the retreating Allied forces, the 10th Air Force sends four B-17s to bomb Japanese planes parked at the Myitkyina Airfield. They destroy several planes and cause damage to the runway.

The Japanese have sent some ships in the "A Detachment" into the Indian Ocean for another raid on merchant ships from Penang. The A Detachment includes submarines I-10, I-30, I-16, I-18, and I-20, as well as tender Nisshin. Among the objectives is to reconnoiter the East African coast for potential invasion location. Some of the submarines carry reconnaissance planes, others Kai 1 (tiny) submarines. Today, the A Detachment refuels at sea from tankers Aikoku Maru and Hokoku Maru.

Illustrating the global nature of the conflict, aircraft carrier USS Ranger launches 60 P-40 Warhawk fighters off the African Gold Coast. The planes fly to Accra and then on to Karachi, India, where they are to join the 10th Air Force for operations out of India.
Soviet prisoners of war stacking bales of hay, May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Soviet POWs stacking bales of hay for the Germans, May 1942 (Schürer, Federal Archive Image 183-B19683).
Eastern Front: General Franz Halder, who generally takes a cautious or even pessimistic view of developments of the front, writes in his war diary: "The Kerch offensive, which was going on so well, has been slowed down by adverse weather. Other fronts quiet." The Kerch Offensive he's referring to is Operation Trappenjagd.

The truth isn't quite so miserable for the German cause as Halder implies. Luftwaffe Fliegerkorps VIII greets the morning, during which light rain continues drizzling down until noontime, by attacking Soviet tanks desperately trying to stop the German breakthrough. This includes 11 KV-1 tanks, which are heavily armored but slow and ponderous. Another part of Fliegerkorps VIII, KG 55, sends its Heinkel He 111 bombers to attack the infantry. While 8 of the slow bombers are shot down, they drop enough anti-personnel bombs (SD-2) to decapitate the forward Soviet units. Luftwaffe General Wolfram von Richthtofen sends other bombers to attack the Soviet supply lines from Kerch to the mainland. During these attacks, they sink three transport ships carrying 900 wounded, a gunboat, six patrol boats, and assorted other vessels.

The 22nd Panzer Division is held up by the rain and mud and only begins moving during the afternoon. However, after that it makes good time on its drive to the northern coast to trap Soviet 51st Army and almost completes the encirclement by nightfall. General Fretter-Pico's scratch Grodeck Brigade, meanwhile, continues driving east toward Kerch without much opposition and even gets through the second main Soviet line (the Sultanovka, or Turkish Wall, Line). The Soviets had hoped to make a stand at this line by pulling troops back from the front, but the Red Army generals can only engage in recriminations on why this doesn't happen. Fretter-Pico decides late in the day to send the 132nd Infantry Division toward Kerch along the same road the Grodeck Brigade took in the morning even though there are signs the Soviets are attempting to seal that hole in the front.
Luftwaffe helper in France, May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A Luftwaffe helper (Luftwaffenhelfer) at a flight control center in France, May 1942 (Lysiak, Bruno, Federal Archive Image 101I-616-2527-23A).
While the Crimea battle is going badly for it, the Red Army is preparing a major offensive by the Southwestern Front and Southern Front. It is to be aimed at Kharkiv. There are six armies in the two fronts, with hundreds of tanks and masses of artillery. In overall command is Marshal Semyon Timoshenko. His Military Commissar, who technically has equal input into tactical and strategic decisions, is Nikita Khrushchev. The attack, which has been delayed by the spring thaw ("rasputitsa"),  is scheduled to begin on 12 May.

The Wehrmacht also is planning an operation centered on Kharkiv. This is Operation Fredericus, which is to be completed by the Sixth Army under the command of General der Panzertruppe Friedrich Paulus. The goal of Operation Fridericus is to blow a hole in the Soviet line south of Kharkiv around the "Izyum Bulge," a projection of the Red Army line formed during the Soviet winter counteroffensive. This, it is hoped, will be the opening stages of "Case Blue," the decisive summer offensive spelled out in Fuhrer Directive No. 41 that is to capture the Caucasus oil fields and finish the Soviet Union as a major power. It is vital to German plans that Operation Fridericus be executed quickly and completely.

The choice of Paulus as commander of both Sixth Army and this critical operation is curious. He is well known to be primarily a staff officer with little battle experience. However, he also is known to be bright and hard-working, and that counts for a lot in the Third Reich. Paulus advanced to this position in January 1942 because he has been a protege of Field Marshal Walther von Reichenau - but Reichenau passed away the same month, leaving little reason for Paulus to fill this key position over other, battle-hardened commanders.

The Army Group South rear areas near Kharkiv are filling up with troops penciled in to serve in Case Blue. In effect, the other army groups are being deprived of troops at the expense of Army Group South. However, Hitler is adamant that these new troops are to be kept in reserve and are not to be used for any purposes other than Case Blue. So, Paulus must complete Operation Fridericus using only Sixth Army. That operation is projected to begin on 18 May. Today, Paulus submits his final draft of Operation Fridericus but warns his superiors that the Soviets may be planning a spoiling attack.

So, both sides are preparing large offensives at the same spot in the southern front, with the Soviets planning to attack first. The Germans have about 300,000 men at the front in this general area, supported by 1000 tanks and 1500 aircraft. However, a great deal of Luftwaffe strength remains fully committed in Crimea for some time.
Q-Ship Evelyn, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Q-ship Evelyn, 10 May 1942 (US Coast Guard).
European Air Operations: There are no operations by either side, most likely due to inclement weather.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-333 (Kptlt. Peter-Erich Cremer), on its second patrol out of La Pallice, torpedoes and sinks 5214-ton British freighter Clan Skene 300 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras. This is an opportunistic sinking by U-333 because it was damaged by depth charges a few days ago and was limping back to France when it spotted the unescorted freighter. There are nine deaths and 73 survivors, who are picked up by USS McKean (APD 5).

U-506 (Kptlt. Erich Würdemann), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 7050-ton US tanker Aurora about 40 nautical miles from Southwest Pass, Louisiana. There are one death and 38 survivors, who are rescued by USS Onyx and YP-157. Two tugs take the burning tanker in tow to Algiers, Louisiana, and it is eventually repaired and returned to service under the new name Jamestown.  

U-588 (Kptlt. Victor Vogel), on its third patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 4031-ton UK freighter Kitty's Brook about 35 nautical miles (65 km) east of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia. There are 25 survivors and nine deaths.

German replenishment oiler Warmia hits a mine in the Bay of Biscay and is severely damaged.
Romanian pioneers celebrate King's Day, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Romanian pioneers celebrate the Day of the King, 10 May 1942. They are carrying Pignone model 1937 flame-throwers.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Axis spies have told the Germans and Italians in Sicily about the recent arrival of over 60 Spitfire fighters, so they try to eliminate this new force as quickly as possible. The Luftwaffe sends 20 Ju 87 Stukas and 10 Junkers Ju 88s with a heavy escort, followed by another raid by 10 Ju 88s escorted by over 30 Bf 109s. A third raid then comes in by Italian Cant Z1007 bombers escorted by 10 MC 202 and 10 Re 2001 fighters. Finally, a fourth raid by 20 Stukas with Bf 109 escorts takes place. The raids come in quick succession, but they meet heavy fighter opposition. The Spitfire fighters disperse the attacks, shoot down many bombers, and convince the Axis headquarters that daylight raids on Malta are now a very bad idea. 
Spitfires May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Spitfires of RAF No. 91 Squadron lined up at RAF Hawkinge, May 1942.
German 79-ton Schnellboot (E-boat) S-31 hits a mine and sinks in while laying mines off Sliema Point near Grand Harbour, Malta. The mines are intended to sink freighter HMS Welshman, which is carrying ammunition for the island's anti-aircraft guns, ground personnel for the recently arrived Spitfire fighters, and spare aircraft engines, among other things. Welshman gets in and out of the harbor by nightfall without damage. It is likely that S-31 hits one of the mines it had just laid that accidentally got cut from its moorings. There are 13 deaths and 13 survivors, including skipper Lt. Heinrich Haag.
HMS Welshman unloading at Malta, 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Welshman at the dock in Malta, 10 May 1942. © IWM A 9507.
Battle of the Black Sea: The Luftwaffe bombs and sinks 1048-ton Soviet transport Chernomorets during a voyage from Kerch to Novorossiysk. There over 500 deaths, many of them wounded men being repatriated.

War Crimes: The Luftwaffe raids Alexandria, bombing and sinking British hospital ship Ramb IV (formerly an Italian ship but captured at the port of Massawa on 10 April 1941). There are 165 deaths, 155 of them wounded soldiers. There are always excuses for bombing hospital ships in the fog of war, but they are clearly marked. Doing so is a recognized war crime.

US Military: The US Navy holds a demonstration of towing fighter planes behind a larger aircraft in order to increase their range at the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A twin-engined Douglas BD A-20 successfully tows two Grumman F4F Wildcat fighters for an hour at 180 knots at 7000 feet. Despite the success of the demonstration, the idea does not catch on.

President Roosevelt authorizes the Air Medal to recognize meritorious achievements while flying.
Exclusion Order No. 61, issued 10 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Civilian Exclusion Order No. 61, issued 10 May 1942.
British Homefront: Winston Churchill gives a radio address on the second anniversary of his having replaced Neville Chamberlain as Prime Minister. He specifically warns Hitler about using poison gas, saying:

we shall treat the unprovoked use of poison gas against our Russian ally exactly as if it were used against ourselves and if we are satisfied that this new outrage has been committed by Hitler we will use our great and growing air superiority in the West to carry gas warfare on the largest possible scale far and wide against military objectives in Germany.

Churchill does not mention that both sides are developing poison gas and have been for some time. Hitler has shown no indication that he intends to use it against England, though there is evidence Germany is using it in certain instances on the Eastern Front (and in concentration camps, of course). Canada established the Suffield Field Experimental Station in Alberta in 1941 to develop and test poison gas. Beginning around this time, the Canadian government gasses about 2000 people, including many without full protective gear. Many sustain injuries, especially around the eyes.

American Homefront:  The Western Defense Command issues Civilian Exclusion Orders No. 60 and No. 61. They require every individual or family with full or partial Japanese ancestry to register at a Civil Control Station within 24 to 48 hours.

It is Mother's Day. Knott's Berry Farm sells a record 6,390 1/2 chicken dinners during the day. The demand for chicken dinners is so strong that the restaurant runs out of chickens by 17:00, with some guests waiting as long as four hours for their chicken.

President Roosevelt spends a quiet day at Hyde Park, New York, without any appointments.

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


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