Showing posts with label USS Pompano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USS Pompano. Show all posts

Sunday, September 26, 2021

May 30, 1942: First RAF Thousand-Plane Raid

Saturday 30 May 1942

Operation Millenium 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Cologne Cathedral illuminated during Operation Millenium, 30-31 May 1942.

Battle of the Pacific: Having spent 72 hours in drydock, during which its flight deck was patched and whole sections of internal frame were replaced, USS Yorktown (Task Force 17) departs Pearl Harbor on 30 May 1942 to join Enterprise and Hornet near Midway Island. Repairmen from repair ship Vestal, damaged on 7 December 1941, remain on the ship and continue to work as it sails. Yorktown's depleted air group is replenished with units from aircraft carrier Saratoga, which is under repair in San Diego. The carriers plan to rendezvous northeast of Midway.

Admiral Nimitz, meanwhile, has not forgotten about Saratoga. Today, he orders Captain Ramsey to sail from San Diego as soon as possible even if not 100% ready for action. The 7th Air Force dispatches six B-17 bombers from Hawaii to Midway to reinforce the 15 already there.

The Japanese invasion fleet bound for Midway already is at sea. Today, a task force of two light aircraft carriers and two troop transport ships departs from northern Honshu for the Aleutian Islands part of the plan.

The US 11th Air Force based in Alaska brings a new airfield at Umnak, Aleutian Islands, into operation with B-26 bombers of the 77th Bombardment Squadron (Medium).

Japanese patrol planes approach the French Frigate Shoals, but they spot two US Navy ships anchored there and are forced to turn back. Their mission was to rendezvous with a submarine there, refuel, and fly reconnaissance over Pearl Harbor. This is now impossible and the Japanese do not find out with certainty that the US Navy carriers have left. The US ships are stationed at the shoals because they know the Japanese have used them in the past as transit points for bombing missions against Hawaii.

US Navy submarine Pompano  (SS-181) torpedoes and sinks Japanese troop transport Atsuta Maru in the East China Sea east of Okinawa. There are 39 crew and 37 passengers killed. Pompano escapes a depth charge attack by the transport's destroyer escort.

Pix magazine 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Pix magazine, 30 May 1942.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: Two Japanese submarines (I-16 and I-20) stationed about ten miles off Diego Suarez, Madagascar, launch mini-subs to penetrate the harbor. Both subs make it into the harbor, which the British have left unguarded despite having spotted a Japanese floatplane on the 29th. At 17:10, the I-20 mini-sub M-20b (Lt. Akieda Saburo) launches a torpedo that hits Royal Navy battleship HMS Ramillies. The torpedo blows a 30x30 foot hole in the port bulge forward of "A" turret. This cuts off the entire ship's electrical system and floods the forward magazines and shell rooms.

Saburo is not done yet. He and the other sub remain in the harbor and, at 21:20, Saburo fires his second and last torpedo, which sinks 6,993-ton tanker British Loyalty in 65 feet of water (later raised and used as a hulk at Addu Atoll, Maldives). The subs remain in the harbor until the 31st.

B-17 bombers of the 10th Air Force again bomb the airfield at Myitkyina, Burma. This is the last attack against this target for the time being. 

Eastern Front: The final, weak Soviet attempts to break out of the encirclement southeast of Kharkov end today. Less than 10% of the trapped men have managed to escape. The Germans march the roughly 250,000 (the exact number is a matter of scholarly debate) Red Army prisoners in long columns through Kharkov and then on to prison camps. At Fuhrer Headquarters in East Prussia, General Franz Halder notes in his war diary "All fronts equally quiet. On the Volkhov, the access to the bulge has been narrowed down."

The loss of the Kharkov battle irreparably destroys Marshal Semyon Timoshenko's military reputation. Stalin will replace him as commander of the Stalingrad Front on 22 July 1942 with Vasily Gordov. Thereafter, Timoshenko will be given only one more command before being basically cashiered.

Boeing B17F 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress makes its first flight at Boeing Field, Seattle, on 30 May 1942. This is a new series of B-17 bombers that incorporated 400 improvements learned from missions to date in the war. 

European Air Operations: After a lengthy period of preparation, RAF Bomber Command launches Operation Millenium at dusk. It sends over 1000 bombers to raid Cologne, the first 1000-plane raid of the war. The main targets are the city's chemical and machine-tool factories. The planes drop 1455 tons of bombs and incendiaries during a 90-minute attack. The firestorm kills 469 people and leaving 45,000 homeless.

Hermann Goering is having dinner at Veldenstein Castle when he gets a call from Josef Grohe, the Gauleiter of Cologne. During Grohe's explanation of the severity of the attack, Goering calls him a liar and hangs up. Soon after, another call comes in - this time from Adolf Hitler, who is in Berlin and has heard the same reports. Goering assures Hitler that at most 70 bombers attacked. When Goering learns later that air and flak defenses claim to have shot down 40 bombers, he claims it was a great defensive victory. Another 116 RAF bombers are damaged.

Winston Churchill, meanwhile, knows exactly how many bombers were sent - 1046 planes - and announces to the press that it was over 1000. Hitler, speaking to an aide, comments to an aide:
It is out of the question that only seventy or eighty bombers attacked. I never capitulate to an unpleasant truth. I must see clearly if I am to draw the proper conclusions.
Aside from the devastation to the city, the raid begins a rift between Hitler and Goering that only grows with time.

During an RAF Coastal Command patrol off Terschelling, the planes bomb and sink 2956-ton Swedish ore carrier Värmdö in the North Sea off Den Helder, North Holland. The ship was carrying ore to Rotterdam. There are seven deaths.

A German flak ship shoots down an RAF Hudson III (AM842) out of North Coates during a convoy attack in the Waddenzee, South of Schiermonnikoog. All four crewmen perish.

German flak ship that shot down an RAF bomber on 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The crew of a German flak ship showing off the wheel of an RAF Hudson III they shot down on 30 May 1942.

Battle of the Baltic: German 1354-ton freighter Orkan hits a mine laid by Soviet submarine Lembit and sinks near Greifswalder Oie, Swinemunde. Casualties are unknown.

Battle of the Atlantic: Having lost seven ships to air raids, Convoy PQ 16 makes port in Murmansk (eight ships continue on to Archangelsk and reach that port safely). The Luftwaffe sends Junkers Ju 88 bombers of  II./KG 30 against the Murmansk-bound ships, and during these attacks Hero of the Soviet Union Leonid Ivanovich Rodionov is shot down and killed after claiming two planes himself.

German auxiliary cruiser Michel (HSK-9), operating in the South Atlantic, spots 6800-ton US Liberty ship George Clymer. The Liberty ship is stopped with engine trouble and makes an easy target. The raider hits the ship with two torpedoes (actually, it launches a motor torpedo boat that scores the hits), but is then chased off by nearby Royal Navy AMC Alcantara (which doesn't see Michel and assumes it was torpedoed by a U-boat). The George Clymer is so badly damaged that the crew has to abandon it, and Alcantara later scuttles it on 6 July 1942. Everybody survives.

U-404 (Kptlt. Otto von Bülow), on its third patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 5491-ton US freighter Alcoa Shipper 500 miles east of Cape Charles, Virginia. The lookouts on the freighter spot the U-boat well before the attack, but evasive maneuvers do not prevent a torpedo strike. The ship, carrying 8340 tons of bauxite ore, sinks within five minutes. The U-boat surfaces after the sinking, questions the men in their lifeboat, and leaves them bottles of rum, cigarettes, and a pair of dungarees for a sailor who was undressed. There are seven dead and 25 survivors, who are picked up just over two days later by Norwegian freighter Margrethe Bakke.

An unidentified submarine torpedoes and sinks the 2161-ton Norwegian freighter Baghdad east of Martinique. The ship sinks within minutes. There are nine deaths and 21 survivors. U-155 (KrvKpt. Adolf Cornelius Piening), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, is usually credited with this sinking, but some records indicate that it was still in port at Lorient on this date.

German 1592-ton minesweeper Sperrbrecher-166 Schirmeck sinks after a collision with training ship Obra. The ship apparently is refloated and returned to service.

French 288-ton trawler Edmond René is lost off Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, of unknown causes (perhaps a mine).

Sperrbrecher 166, sunk on 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Sperrbrecher 166, sunk on 30 May 1942 after a collision but refloated and repaired.

Battle of the Mediterranean: In Libya, the Axis offensive is struggling. German General Erwin Rommel, low on supplies and facing determined Free French resistance at the fortress of Bir Hakeim, pulls back the leading tanks of the Afrika Korps to the west. This forms a defensive perimeter, dubbed "The Cauldron," that is protected by British minefields on its western side.

Rommel sends some brave men through the minefield to make contact with Italian X Corps to the west and open a supply lane. These troops run into the British 150th Brigade at the "Sidi Muftah box" and destroy it early on the 31st to establish a connection with the Italian Corps. Meanwhile, fierce battles erupt near Bir Hakeim as the French attempt to close the supply lane there opened through the minefield on the 29th, while the Germans attempt to defend it.

The Germans previously captured 620 soldiers of the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade but, unable to watch over them, simply let them loose in the desert. These men make it to the Bir Hakeim fortress today. This only adds to the French supply issues, especially of water. 

British submarine HMS Proteus torpedoes and sinks 1571-ton Italian freighter Bravo in the Gulf of Sidra. Casualties are unknown.

British 72-ton utility tug HMS St. Angelo hits a mine off Grand Harbour, Malta, and blows up. There are at least four deaths.

Colonial League Day in Munich on 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Colonial Union day in Munich, at which Governor of Bavaria Franz Ritter von Epp gives a speech (Denzel, Federal Archive Image 146-2008-0172).

Partisans: Félix Otto Cadras, a leading French partisan and communist (participating in organizing the National Front partisan organization), is executed by a German firing squad at Fort Mont-Valérien, Paris, along with Arthur Dallidet, Louis Salomon, and Jacques Decour. These executions are in reprisal for an attempted assassination at Le Havre on 23 May 1942. Cadras will be made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor by a decree of 17 January 1961, and a school and a street are named after him.

Allied Relations: RAF Air Chief Marshall Sir Charles F Portal and Lieutenant General Henry H "Hap" Arnold, Commanding General USAAF, meet to discuss the basing of US planes in Great Britain. Arnold's plan calls for 66 combat groups and additional observation squadrons by March 1943.

American Homefront: It is Memorial Day in the United States.

Attempting to evade being sent to an intern camp, Fred Korematsu has had plastic surgery on his eyelids. However, today he is arrested on a street corner in San Leandro, California. He will begin a court case, Korematsu vs. United States, 323 U.S. 214 (1944), that reaches the US Supreme Court. It upholds the exclusion of those of Japanese ancestry from the US West Coast. The conviction is overturned in a case filed in 1983 and disavowed by the Supreme Court in Trump vs. Hawaii (2018), though this latter opinion is not binding, being merely dictum.

USS Runner is launched, 30 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Launching of submarine Runner, Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine, United States, 30 May 1942 (US Navy).

May 1942


2021

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

May 25, 1942: Soviet Breakout at Kharkov Fails

Monday 25 May 1942

Panamanian tanker Persephone sinking, 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Panamanian tanker Persephone, torpedoed by U-593 off New Jersey on 25 May 1942, splits in half and sinks while watched by a US Navy blimp. Notice the large oil slick.

Battle of the Pacific: Aboard the Japanese flagship Yamato in the Hashirajima Anchoring Area located 30-40 km (16-22 nautical miles, 19-25 miles) south of the Kure Naval Base, Admiral Yamamoto's staff conducts wargames aboard a tabletop on 25 May 1942. Both the Aleutians and Midway campaigns are checked and rechecked for flaws, but none are found. Submarine I-9 launches its "Glen" reconnaissance seaplane to fly over Kiska and Amchitka Islands in the Aleutian Islands without incident.

On the Allied side, there also is growing confidence. Commander Joseph Rochefort, head of the US Navy intelligence branch Hypo in Hawaii, has a staff meeting with Admiral Chester Nimitz to discuss the latest decoding of Japanese radio transmissions. While the Japanese changed their codebook on the 24th and the US has not yet cracked the new code, Rochefort's team has been decoding hundreds of messages a day from a pile that has stacked up.

Rochefort informs Nimitz that the attack on Midway Island is scheduled for 4 June 1942. Furthermore, he reveals the date and actual launch time of the attack and the Japanese aircraft carriers that will be used. This data comes directly from the lengthy Operational Order 14 sent to his commanders by Admiral Yamamoto on 20 May and just decoded by Rochefort's codebreakers.

Largely due to this intelligence information, Nimitz orders US submarines from Hawaii to patrol the seas around Midway Island. Light cruiser USS St. Louis arrives at Midway and disembarks Companies C and D of the Second Marine Raider Battalion along with a 37mm gun battery of the Third Defense Battalion. The 11th Air Force transfers its P-40s of the 11th Fighter Squadron, 28th Composite Group, from Elmendorf Field, Anchorage, Alaska, to Cold Bay. 

This Yamamoto intercept is controversial because somehow it never makes it into the National Archives. However, several of the people involved later remember it vividly, such as Rochefort and one of his subordinates, Jasper Holmes, who writes about it in his memoir "Double-Edged Secrets." This may be the best military intelligence coup of the entire war, for it enables Nimitz to plan out his entire battle strategy with certainty for what will turn out to be the decisive battle of the war in the Pacific.
USS Salmon worldwartwo.filminspector.com
USS Salmon at sea.

US Navy submarine USS Salmon (SS-182), on its third war patrol out of Fremantle, torpedoes and sinks Japanese 11,441-ton submarine tender Asahi in the South China Sea. Some sources date this sinking as 3 May 1942. I place it here out of an abundance of caution and because this seems like the more likely attack date. There are 16 dead and 583 survivors.

US Navy submarine USS Drum (SS-228) torpedoes and sinks 2379-ton Japanese freighter Kitakata Marueast of Nojimazaki, Honshu, Japan.

US Navy submarine USS Tautog (SS-199) torpedoes and sinks 4467-ton Japanese freighter Shokwa (sometimes spelled Shoka) Maru 385 miles southwest of Ulithi Atoll (190 miles south of Woleai), Carolines. There are two dead and 63 survivors (though only 62 survive until landfall as they sail to Faraulep Island).

US Navy submarine USS Pompano (SS-181) torpedoes and sinks 902-ton Japanese tanker Tokyo Maru 70 miles west of Naha (East China Sea), Okinawa.

US Navy submarine USS Permit (SS-178) torpedoes and damages Japanese freighter Senko Maru in the Makassar Strait east of Bontang.

B-17 Bombers of the 5th Air Force bomb Vunakanau Airfield, while B-25 bombers of the 3rd Bomber Group return to Lae. Four B-25s are lost in action and one is forced to crash-land near Port Moresby. The sole remaining A-24 at Aiyary Airfield, meanwhile, is lost when it crashes on takeoff.
Panamanian tanker Persephone sinking off the coast of New Jersey, 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Panamanian tanker Persephone, sunk off the coast of New Jersey on 25 May 1942.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: Blocked from returning to China by Japanese control of the Burma Road, the Chinese 38th Infantry Division begins to cross the border from Burma into India. Four B-17 bombers based in India bomb Rangoon, Burma, in the early morning hours.

Eastern Front: Soviet forces within the pocket south of Kharkov make their first and most ferocious attempt to break through the thin German line (roughly ten miles deep) on the Donets River. The attack is a classic attack à la russe, a frontal assault made by waves of Soviet soldiers charging across fields directly at Wehrmacht machine guns. According to German sources, the Soviets have their arms linked (similar to Sassanid Empire soldiers of the 7th Century who chained themselves together as a sign of determination) and shout "Urray" as they run and fall. The desperate Red Army soldiers, facing elite panzer units, almost make it to the key road junction of Petrovskoye before being turned back with massive losses. 

The Luftwaffe uses its complete air superiority to drop SD2 anti-personnel cluster bombs among the masses of Soviet men advancing in the open, dissipating the attacks. Ultimately, the breakout attempt achieves nothing beyond decimating the Soviet attackers. It leaves the Red Army pocket even more confined than ever. However, the trapped Soviet soldiers have not given up yet.

At Fuhrer Headquarters in East Prussia, everything appears to be going perfectly. General Franz Halder cannot contain his delight with the situation south of Kharkov as he writes in his understated way:
The battle around the pocked west of Izyum continues to evolve satisfactorily. The enemy's desperate and resolutely directed attempts to break out eastward were repelled, as were the feeble attacks with tanks from the east through Savintai.
Halder also is sanguine about the attacks from the failed northern Soviet pincer, noting that the Soviets there have made only "some negligible local gains." German operations further north in the Moscow sector (apparently Halder is referring to Operation Hannover, see below) are making "only slow progress" due to "bad weather," but that is a minor point beside the unbelievable success at Kharkov.
Soviet troops at Kharkov 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Soviet troops attempting to break out from the Kharkov pocket ca. 25 May 1942. Western news agencies are full of positive reports about Red Army successes in this area even as its position disintegrates.

However, there is bad news in Halder's daily summary that he does not comment on, perhaps because it conflicts with his jubilant mood over the brewing victory at Kharkov. A casualty summary from the beginning of Operation Barbarossa through 20 May 1942 shows 1,214,827 total army losses, 37.96% of the average army strength. Of these, 9610 officers and 247,410 others of all ranks are killed and 879 officers and 56,687 others are missing and can be presumed dead or captured. These are staggering losses, particularly in light of the relatively light losses suffered in previous campaigns. The German army is being bled white and replacements are not coming anywhere near to making up all the casualties. Interestingly, Halder does not report on the total army manpower strength, which is steadily declining.

There is also another disquieting note in Halder's diary entry. He summarizes a meeting with a Colonel Abberger who has visited the Headquarters of the Second Army. Abberger reports that the command there "has not yet grasped the importance of making preparations for speedy construction of fortifications on the northern wing of "Blau."" Since Operation Blau is the make-or-break summer offensive as repeatedly stated by Adolf Hitler, the failure of some commands to adequately prepare is ominous, and Halder seems genuinely concerned. Perhaps it is an indication that the troops are tired after a long, hard winter of constant fighting and cannot be pushed harder.

Oblt. Anton "Toni" Hackl of 5./JG 77 is awarded the Ritterkreuz for his 51 victories, while Lt. Gerhard Krems of 2./KG 27 receives the same award, making him the first KG 27 pilot so honored. Hackl winds up with 192 official victories, but this is a very shaky number with many different estimates of his actual victory total. He passes away in 1984.

European Air Operations: During a morning RAF fighter patrol off Dunkirk (Operation Ramrod 51) by No. 222 (Natal) Squadron, an RAF Supermarine Spitfire Mk Vb is shot down near Gravelines by Focke Wulf Fw 190As of JG 26. The pilot, Squadron Leader Jerzy Jankiewicz, is killed.
Panamanian tanker Persephone sinking, 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Panamanian tanker Persephone sinking off the coast of New Jersey, 25 May 1942.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-593 (Kptlt. Gerd Kelbling), on its second patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks 8426-ton Panamanian tanker Persephone off Barnegat Light, New Jersey. Because the tanker splits in half and sinks in very shallow water, the bow half is refloated and towed to New York. Unusually, 21,000 of the 80,000 barrels of oil it is carrying are saved via this maneuver. The US Coast Guard later blows up the stern half of the ship due to it being a hazard to navigation. There are nine dead and 28 survivors.

U-558 (Kptlt. Günther Krech), on its seventh patrol out of Brest, sinks 3451-ton US sugar freighter Beatrice at 01:34 southeast of Kingston, Jamaica. The sinking is unusual because a torpedo hits the freighter but fails to explode. The U-boat then must surface and sink the freighter with gunfire. Krech barely escapes when a PBY Catalina appears at 03:05 and drops depth charges. 21 of the survivors sail their lifeboat to Pigeon Island, Jamaica, while others are picked up by British patrol boat HMS Hauken. There are one dead and 30 survivors.

U-156 (Kptlt. Werner Hartenstein), on its third patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and damages the 1190-ton US destroyer USS Blakeley (DD 150) off Martinique, West Indies. The destroyer loses 60 feet of its bow but makes it to Port de France, Martinique. Later repaired with a bow taken from sister ship USS Taylor (DD 94), Blakeley returns to service in the Caribbean in September 1942. There are six dead and 116 survivors, including 21 wounded.

U-103 (Kptlt. Werner Winter), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5588-ton US freighter Alcoa Carrier about 125 miles northwest of Montego Bay, Jamaica. Winter surfaces and shells the ship when it takes its time sinking, fires another torpedo into it, and then gives the survivors in two lifeboats some cigarettes. The ship doesn't actually sink until the 26th - there are conflicting dates about when the attack actually takes place, the 25th or 26th. All 35 crewmen survive after being picked up by a Cuban gunboat (33 men) and a US Navy seaplane (2 men).

Greek 3895-ton freighter Emmy runs aground at Morien Bay, Cape Breton Island, and is wrecked. Salvage companies eventually cut up the wreck for scrap. Pieces of the wreck can still be seen when diving. There are no casualties.

Mexican freighter Oaxaca rescues three survivors of US tanker Halo, sunk by U-506 on 20 May. Two of the men later perish from exposure and their wounds.

Luftwaffe planes attack Convoy PQ 16 as it sails from Reykjavik, Iceland, toward Murmansk, USSR. They damage US freighter Carlton, which is towed back to Reykjavik by British trawler HMS Northern Spray. Carlton is attacked again on the 26th.
German General Erwin Rommel 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Colonel-General Erwin Rommel, leader of the Afrika Korps, photographed with the 15th Panzer Division near Bir Hakeim, 25 May 1942 (Zwilling, Ernst A., Federal Archive Image 101I-443-1551-10A).

Battle of the Mediterranean: The Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica resume their attacks on Malta airfields with a vengeance today. The planes bomb all three military airfields at dusk. The attack appears to target RAF bombers that have been attacking Axis convoys to reinforce Colonel-General Erwin Rommel's forces in North Africa and Sicilian airfields.

Things finally are heating up in North Africa after a long winter break. Rommel spends the day with the 15th Panzer Division, which today makes a wide arc to the southeast of Bir Hakeim to position itself for an attack on the 26th. Rommel has roughly 90,000 German and Italian troops and 560 tanks facing 110,000 British imperial and allied troops with 840 tanks along the Gazala Line in Libya south and west of Tobruk. Free French General Koenig, under the overall command of British General Neil Ritchie, commands 40,000 men of the 1st Free French Brigade at the southern end of the line at the old fort of Bir Hakeim. 

Rommel is planning to attack Koenig's force after a feint further north. It is a common tactic of both sides to attack allied forces and avoid frontal confrontations with the opposing major power forces (German or British). While the French force sounds imposing due to its numbers, it is in fact a mixture of French Marines, Legionnaires, and soldiers of French African colonies including Senegal, Madagascar, and central Africa. This brave force lacks cohesion and modern weapons.

Italian torpedo boat Groppo is lost in the Strait of Messina due to unknown causes. No casualties are known.
British LRDG trucks, 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminpsector.com
Chevrolet 30-cwt trucks of the British Long Range Desert Group (LRDG) in the western desert, 25 May 1942. Lt. Graham, © IWM E 12385.

Partisans: A major German anti-partisan operation comes to an abrupt halt in the Bryansk sector due to heavy rain. The Ugra River is so full that it spawns a second channel twenty meters wide, preventing panzers from advancing to close a projected encirclement. This situation continues for two days.

German Army Group Center commander Field Marshal Kluge asks Fourth Army commander General Heinrici to head further west than originally intended on the assumption that the partisans under Soviet General Belov would be able to cross the river anyway to evade capture. However, the German troops are not going anywhere at this time and plans have to be constantly revised. Operation Hannover now is in disarray not because of enemy action, but solely due to the weather and partisan demolitions of vital bridges. This is a massive operation, though, involving multiple Wehrmacht divisions to eliminate a lingering threat and the Germans refuse to abandon it.

American Homefront: The Warner Bros./Michael Curtiz film "Casablanca," starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, begins filming in Hollywood. Producer Hal Wallis is so enthusiastic about the project, based on an unproduced play by Murray Burnett and Joan Alison, that he has spent the most ever paid in Hollywood for those kinds of rights, $20,000. The entire picture is shot in the studio aside from brief stock footage of Paris and of a plane landing. Many of the minor roles and extras are played by European refugees, lending poignancy to the main plot about people exiled due to German conquests. The city of Casablanca, of course, is currently governed by the Vichy French who are grudgingly collaborating with the Reich. It will be liberated by the Allies shortly before the film's release on 26 November 1942. One of the film's more subtle achievements is its understated but consistent delivery of anti-Axis propaganda. "Casablanca" goes on to win numerous awards, turns a healthy profit, and is often acclaimed as one of the best films ever made.
Life magazine 25 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Life magazine features "Spring Planting" on the cover of its 25 May 1942 issue. The lad driving the tractor suggests a growing manpower crisis on farms as older men enlist or are drafted.

May 1942



2021

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

May 24, 1942: German Anti-Partisan Operations in Full Swing

Sunday 24 May 1942

Lieutenant Commander Lance E. Massey 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Lt Cdr Lance E. Massey commander of VT-3 in the cockpit of his TBD-1 Devastator, at Naval Air Station Ford Island, Pearl Habor, 24 May 1942. Note that the plane has the marking for sinking one Japanese ship on it. Massey will lead his squadron of obsolete torpedo bombers into battle from the USS Enterprise at Midway and perish on 4 June 1942. He receives the Navy Cross posthumously and the Navy names destroyer DD-778 after him in 1944 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-66074).

Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese introduce a new codebook on 24 May 1942. This new code takes several days for US Naval Intelligence to crack. However, the new Japanese codebook comes a few days too late, as the Americans within the past few days have decoded several important Japanese messages that detail Japanese plans to invade Midway Island in early June.

Due to this codebreaking, the US Navy, led operationally by Admiral Chester Nimitz, already knows that the Japanese are going to divide their forces between Midway and the Aleutian Islands. The US also knows how many aircraft carriers the Japanese will deploy. Nimitz and his strategists decide to concentrate their only three aircraft carriers (once USS Enterprise and Hornet arrive from the southwest Pacific) at Midway and essentially abandon the Aleutians. At Midway, Nimitz figures, the three available carriers plus aircraft stationed on Midway itself should enable the US Navy to fight the battle on equal terms numerically.

Despite only having rough numerical parity, though, the advantage of knowing Japanese plans in advance gives the Allies an incalculable advantage. Enterprise and Hornet are expected back at Pearl within the next few days and will barely have time to turn around to get to Midway in time.

US Navy submarine USS Pompano (Lt Cdr L.S. Parks) spots Japanese fishing boat Kotoku Maru northeast of Taiwan and sinks it with gunfire.

The US Fifth Air Force sends B-25 and B-26 bombers of the 3rd Bomber Group to attack the airfield at Lae, New Guinea. The Japanese respond promptly with 15 Zero fighters and accurate anti-aircraft fire and down at least two B-25s while successfully disrupting the attack.

Japanese submarine I-21 sends a "Glen" reconnaissance plane over Auckland, New Zealand, without incident.
US Marines at Parris Island, May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
US Marines complete their training at Parris Island, South Carolina, May 1942 (colorized, Alfred T. Palmer/The Library of Congress).

Battle of the Indian Ocean: General Joseph Warren "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell arrives in Assam, India, after a 140-mile walk through jungles. Stilwell leads his 117-member staff of men and women using the "Stilwell stride," which is a consistent 105 paces per minute. He holds a press conference where he states:
I claim we got a hell of a beating. We got run out of Burma and it is as humiliating as hell. I think we ought to find out what caused it, go back and re-take it.
Stilwell aide Frank Dorn and war correspondent Jack Belden later write books about the grueling but successful retreat, one of the few where a general leads his troops on foot.
New Knights Cross bearers 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
New Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross bearers Obstlt. Horst Griese, Goedicke, Sturmführer Hermann Fegelein, Major Rudolf Pannier in Berlin, 24 May 1942. Fegelein, who we will meet again in 1945, is currently Inspector of Cavalry and Transportation (Inspekteur des Reit- und Fahrwesens) in the SS-Führungshauptamt (SS Headquarters). His previous command, the SS Cavalry Brigade, was decimated during desperate defensive actions in the Moscow sector and disbanded in March 1942 (Federal Archive Picture 121-1397).  

Eastern Front: Southeast of Kharkov, the two sides spend the day concentrating their forces. In his war diary, General Franz Halder notes that the pocket "at last is solidly sealed." The large Soviet forces (9th and 57th Armies) trapped in a pocket prepare to launch a major breakout attempt on the 25th, while the Germans flood fresh new divisions into the thin corridor on the Donets River separating the Soviet forces to the east and west.

The German generals remain astounded that the Red Army to the east is mounting no major attacks to pierce the corridor and reconnect with their fellow soldiers trapped to the west. Halder mentions simply that "[a]ttempts from the east, through Izyum and Savintsi, to crack the ring from without were repelled." This suggests the attacks are not in any way massive or threatening. The decision to let the trapped armies battle their way out themselves seems to rest with Stalin, who is loathe to retreat. He also has a macabre tendency to want his generals to suffer the consequences of their poor previous decisions, perhaps to solidify his own moral ascendancy.

The moribund pincer to the northeast of Kharkov mounts a renewed attack toward the city. Halder speculates that this is "apparently to keep us from withdrawing forces from this sector" and sent them south to reinforce the corridor at Izyum. The Red Army attacks are unsuccessful.

Halder also notes Soviet radio silence in the area along the boundary line between Army Groups Center and South. These boundary lines are always prime areas of attack, and radio silence usually means the Soviets are planning something in this area.

Gustav 31.5 inch gun worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler observes the Gustav gun (Schwerer Gustav). This very real weapon has become a favorite of video game makers.

Looking ahead, Halder has a staff meeting about transferring artillery from the Sevastopol front to the Leningrad sector once Sevastopol is taken. The Wehrmacht has its largest guns at Sevastopol, including the massive Gustav (31.5 inch) railway gun. While they pose tempting targets and take far more resources to position and use than they are worth, these large guns are having an effect at Sevastopol by destroying some Soviet forts along the perimeter. As an indication of just how much logistics this gun requires, however, it is not even in a position to fire any shells yet at Sevastopol even as Halder is talking about transferring it north. It arrived there in early May and will not be ready until 5 June 1942.

In a sign of looming German manpower shortages, Halder also has a conference with Lt. Colonel Gehlen about a "Russian Replacement Army." Using captured Soviet troops on the Eastern Front is still in the early formative stages. The idea is to form units using volunteers from the POW camps who are anti-Communist for one reason or another (for example, Ukrainians who resent Soviet domination of their country). This is an idea that will gradually pick up steam over the next couple of years.

As part of a continuing Luftwaffe air offensive against Leningrad, planes sink Soviet Leninets-class submarine L-21. The Soviet Navy later raises the submarine and returns it to service.
NY Times 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The NY Times, 24 May 1942. The headline is about the Soviet loss of the Kerch Peninsula, which happened several days ago - news travels slowly from the Eastern Front.

European Air Operations: German Messerschmitt Bf 109 E-7 6413 has engine trouble and is forced to ditch 2 km north of Wijk aan Zee, Netherlands. The pilot survives.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-103 (Kptlt. Werner Winter), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 1828-ton Dutch freighter Hector about 50 miles northwest of Grand Cayman Island. Winter has to spend four hours positioning the U-boat for the attack because Hector's master, Johannes Lodewijk, has received a radio message of U-boats in the vicinity and is proceeding at top speed. One torpedo hits at 16:40 and sends Hector to the bottom in less than four minutes. Due to the quick sinking, only one lifeboat and a raft are launched. The radio operator remains at his post sending a distress call until the end and is lost with the ship, along with the cook. Despite the radio operator failing to send the ship's name or position, a passing ship, US tanker F.Q. Barstow, happens to be nearby and rescues the ship's crew within hours. There are 29 survivors.

U-502 (Kptlt. Jürgen von Rosenstiel), on its fourth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 4996-ton Brazilian freighter Gonçalves Dias about 100 miles south of Ciudad Trujillo (Santo Domingo), Dominican Republic. Rosenstiel attacks this neutral ship because he sees a 120mm gun onboard and only learns that the ship is Brazilian after surfacing and questioning survivors. There are six deaths and 39 survivors.

Norwegian (under German control) 927-ton freighter Bør hits a mine and sinks off the coast of Holland. There are 17 survivors, picked up by Norwegian freighter Kong Sigurd.

Greek 5411-ton freighter Anna Mazaraki runs aground and is wrecked at East Bar, Sable Island, while en route to Sydney, Nova Scotia. Everybody aboard survives (some sources place this as occurring on 25 May).

After spending over ten days on a raft in the Caribbean, two survivors of US freighter Norlantic (sunk on 13 May) are rescued by passing freighter Marpesia. There are still three survivors on another raft from this ship who won't be rescued until 19 June.
Norwegian/German freighter Bør, sunk by mine on 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Norwegian/German freighter Bør, sunk by a mine on 24 May 1942.

Battle of the Mediterranean: It is a quiet day on Malta, with no bombing raids. Patroling RAF Spitfire fighters down a Junkers Ju 88 reconnaissance aircraft and two Italian Macchi fighters.

Battle of the Black Sea: Turkish 330-ton coaster Chefak is torpedoed and sunk off Cape Vassilicos, Bulgaria. This may be the same vessel as Safak sunk on 23 May by ShCh 205 off Burgas, Bulgaria.

Partisans: Three panzer divisions, three infantry divisions, and one security division began Operation Hannover. This is one in a series of anti-partisan operations in the central section of the Eastern Front. Partisans, forewarned of the attack, destroy bridges which are essential as streams and rivers in the vicinity remain swollen from the spring thaw (Rasputitsa). The reason so many German forces are involved is that many regular Red Army units have been trapped there since the winter Moscow counteroffensive in a failed attempt to take Bryansk. These roughly 17,000 soldiers are led by Major General P.A. Belov and are a formidable force. The German plan is to encircle Belov's men, but he has partisan spies everywhere and to a large extent is able to evade the German trap. When the Germans do capture "partisans," they tend to look just like every other local inhabitant, and thus whether they are actually partisans or not is difficult to tell.

Hannover has been delayed for several days by persistent thunderstorms in the area. They clear slightly now, enabling General Heinrici, commander of the 4th Army, to begin the operation. The 19th Panzer division advances from the south and makes almost ten miles before noon. However, the panzers are stopped there by the Ugra River, which is swollen from the thaw and recent rains. The partisans, watching the German tanks closely, know exactly which bridges to blow up as they retreat.

The Germans also have a trick up their sleeve. They are using several hundred specially trained Soviet POWs as spies. These POWs have volunteered for the mission and were trained at the Experimental Organization at Ostintorf near Orsha. Their mission is to advance across the lines, reconnoiter, and then return with information about the partisan whereabouts. The Germans do not expect much from this group, but any information collected from them would be a bonus. Overall, the first day of Operation Hannover is a success, though the rains continue, making progress difficult and sloppy.  

US Military: Major General John C.H. Lee forms the Headquarters, Services of Supply, US Army Forces in the British Isles (SOSO, USAFBI) at 28 Grosvenor Square, London.
Request concert in Berlin, 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Request concert in the Berliner Rundfunkhaus on Whit Monday 1942 with the new knight's cross bearers Lieutenant Colonel Giese [Griese, standing with his back to the camera], Major Pannier and Standartenführer Fegelein." Berlin, 24 May 1942 (Federal Archive Picture 121-1404).

British Homefront: Perhaps incited by recent nebulous comments by the socialist politician Sir Stafford Cripps, separate London gatherings organized by the Daily Express and the UK Communist Party adopt resolutions calling for a second front in Europe. This, of course, is a constant demand by Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin throughout 1942. However, the western Allies have no plans for a second front at this time.

Canadian Homefront: Canada orders rationing of tea and coffee.
Dutch freighter Hector, sunk by U-103 on 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Dutch freighter Hector, sunk by U-103 on 24 May 1942.

American Homefront: The Office of Civilian Defense conducts the first large-scale test blackout in the Midwestern United States. It begins at 22:00 centered around Detroit, Michigan, and lasts for fifteen minutes. Nearby communities including Pontiac and Windsor, Ontario join in. This is a major industrial region that is vital to the Allies' war effort, producing planes and tanks, among many other things. While this area is not in any imminent danger, it is a region that the Luftwaffe would love to attack once feasible. There are legends, likely false, that the Luftwaffe actually does plan to overfly this region later in the war. In any event, no enemy planes ever come anywhere remotely close to the Midwest.

Future History: Ichirō Ozawa is born in Tokyo, Japan. The son of a businessman and politician, Ozawa gravitates into politics as well. He is elected to the Japanese House of Representatives as a member of the CDP in 1969, representing the Iwate district, and, as of 2021, continues to serve there. Ozawa becomes Leader of the Opposition from 1995-1997 and again from 2006-2009 and is famous within Japanese political circles for his back-room influence, for which he acquires the nickname "Shadow Shōgun."
WAC leader Oveta Culp Hobby, NY Times, 24 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
NY Times Magazine, 24 May 1942. The cover features the Director of the Women's Army Corps (WAC) Oveta Culp Hobby. 

May 1942



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