366 Days

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December

News Headlines

1

STALAG IX B OPENS, BECOMES INFAMOUS GERMAN POW CAMP

Near Bad Orb, Hessen • December 1, 1939 On this date in 1939, 4 months since the out­break of war in Europe, the German Wehr­macht (mili­tary) estab­lished a pri­soner of war camp, Mann­schafts-Stamm­lager IX B, out­side Bad Orb, roughly 30 miles/­48 km north­east of Frank­furt am Main. Over the course of the war Stalag IX B—Stalag being a […]

2

MUSTARD GAS TRAGEDY IN BARI HARBOR

Bari, Italy • December 2, 1943 World War I combatants had used a variety of poi­son gases on each other ranging from inca­pa­ci­tating and tem­po­rarily blinding the enemy to gases that burned the body, destroyed the lungs, and lique­fied tis­sues. Some­times their use had un­in­tended con­se­quences, as when the gases inflicted casu­al­ties on the users […]

3

THIRD B-29 RAID ON TOKYO

Tinian, Mariana Islands · December 3, 1944 On this date in 1944 eighty-six 4-engine B‑29 Super­for­tresses belonging to XXI Bomber Com­mand, a unit of the U.S. Twen­tieth Air Force, left the north­western Pacific Mari­ana Islands base on Tinian on their third Tokyo bombing mis­sion. Ten days earlier 111 of these heavy bombers had launched the first raid […]

4

ROOSEVELT’S “VICTORY PLAN” LEAKED

Chicago, Illinois · December 4, 1941 Early in July 1941, four months after the U.S. Congress had en­acted the Lend-Lease Pro­gram that began assisting Great Brit­ain and China in their defense against the aggressor states of Nazi Ger­many, Fas­cist Italy, and Im­perial Japan, Presi­dent Franklin D. Roose­velt asked his Sec­re­taries of War and the Navy […]

5

PRINCE ASAKA, HIROHITO’S UNCLE, TO COMMAND CHINA TROOPS

Tokyo, Japan · December 5, 1937 On this date in 1937 Prince Yasuhiko Asaka, a lieutenant gene­ral in the Imperial Japa­nese Army and uncle by mar­riage to Japa­nese Emperor Hiro­hito (post­humously referred to as Emperor Shōwa), flew from Tokyo to his new assign­ment—tem­po­rary com­mand of the Japa­nese Shang­hai Expe­di­tionary Force, a unit of Gen. Iwane […]

6

SOVIET INITIATIVE OUTSIDE MOSCOW SHOCKS GERMANS

Moscow, Soviet Union · December 6, 1941 Three weeks after launching Opera­tion Bar­ba­rossa on June 22, 1941, the Ger­mans and their Axis part­ners had reached close enough to Mos­cow to fly sorties and bomb the Soviet capital. Tactically, the Wehr­macht (German armed forces) won resounding vic­tories, taking over 3 mil­lion Soviet pri­soners in 1941 and seizing […]

7

JAPAN’S SNEAK ATTACK SAVAGES U.S. PACIFIC FLEET

Pearl Harbor, Hawaii · December 7, 1941 On this date in 1941, a quiet Sunday morning on the Hawaiian is­land of Oahu just before 8 o’clock, Japan staged a devious, vicious, un­pro­voked air and naval attack on America’s door­step, the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor and its defending Army Air Corps and Marine air­fields that […]

8

U.S. GOVERNMENT BEGINS ARRESTING ENEMY ALIENS

Washington, D.C. • December 8, 1941 Although the devastating Japanese surprise attack on U.S. mili­tary instal­la­tions at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Decem­ber 7, 1941, came as a shock to most Amer­i­cans, Presi­dent Franklin D. Roose­velt’s admin­is­tra­tion had already begun weighing pos­sible responses to an out­break of war with Japan, Germany, and Italy—countries treaty-bound in a mutual […]

9

JAPAN: NO U.S. AGGRESSION, NO WAR

Tokyo, Japan · December 9, 1940 On September 27, 1940, Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Imperial Japan signed the Tri­par­tite Pact, or Axis Pact as it was also known. The Pact was an out­growth of the “Rome-Berlin Axis” cele­brated by the Italo-Ger­man “Pact of Steel,” which Adolf Hitler’s foreign minis­ter Joachim von Rib­ben­trop and Benito […]

10

JAPANESE TROOPS LAND ON LUZON

Manila, Philippines · December 10, 1941 On this date in 1941, 3 days after the U.S. Pacific Fleet had been severely crippled at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Japa­nese troops landed on the U.S.-held island of Guam in the West­ern Paci­fic Ocean and occu­pied it with­in hours. On the same day ele­ments of the Japa­nese 14th Area […]

11

GERMANY, ITALY DECLARE WAR ON U.S.

Berlin, Germany • December 11, 1941 On this date in 1941 in Berlin, Adolf Hitler, Chancellor and Fuehrer of Nazi Germany, addressed a tooth­less Reichs­tag (German parlia­ment), its members eager to hear him declare war on America. Hitler did this four days after air and naval units of the Imperial Japa­nese Navy had ambushed the […]

12

DEADLY JAPANESE ATTACK ON USS PANAY

Shanghai, China • December 12, 1937 In 1937 the Chinese city of Shanghai, a city of 3 million people, domi­nated the coun­try eco­nom­i­cally. Located on one of the many trib­u­taries of the Yangtze River, Shang­hai was a “treaty port” (i.e., open to foreign traders) on the East China Sea. Then as now the Yangtze River […]

13

BRITISH NAVY TRAPS GERMAN FLAGSHIP ADMIRAL GRAF SPEE

River Plate Estuary, Uruguay • December 13, 1939 In the first months of World War II only Great Britain’s Royal Navy, under the leader­ship of 65‑year-old First Lord of the Ad­mi­ralty (in May 1940, Prime Minis­ter) Winston Chur­chill, pro­se­cuted the war against Nazi Germany with energy. After U‑boats had sunk the air­craft carrier HMS Cou­ra­geous […]

14

NORWAY’S QUISLING MEETS HITLER

Berlin, Germany · December 14, 1939 On this date in 1939 Adolf Hitler and high-ranking members of the Ger­man Navy and Army met with Norway’s Vidkun Quis­ling, whose pri­vate visit to Berlin had been spon­sored by Alfred Rosen­berg, the Nazi Party’s chief racial theorist. From 1931 to 1933 Quis­ling had served as Norway’s minis­ter of […]

15

MINDORO’S CAPTURE IS STEPPING STONE TO MANILA

Mindoro Island, Philippines • December 15, 1944 On October 17, 1944, the naval, air, and land forces of Gen. Douglas Mac­Arthur, Supreme Com­mander, South­west Pacific Area, began their assault on the Japa­nese-held Philip­pine island of Leyte. Three days later Mac­Arthur and his staff, accom­panied by Philip­pine presi­dent Sergio Osmeña, waded onto Palo Beach (Red Beach), […]

16

NAZIS FORCE BULGE IN ALLIED LINES

Adlerhorst Forward HQ, Central Hessen, Germany • December 16, 1944 “It is essential to deprive the enemy of his belief that victory is certain,” Adolf Hitler told his gene­rals on Decem­ber 12, 1944, at his rural Adler­horst (Eagle’s Nest) head­quarters near Bad Nau­heim, Germany, the camou­flaged western com­mand out­post Archi­tect of the Reich Albert Speer (pronounced “spare”) […]

17

ALLIES DENOUNCE NAZI KILLING OF JEWS

Washington, D.C. and London, England • December 17, 1942 In remarks he made to 14 senior Nazis at a top-secret con­fer­ence in the fashion­able Berlin suburb of Wann­see on Janu­ary 22, 1942, 38‑year-old SS-Ober­gruppen­fuehrer Rein­hard Hey­drich, chief of the Reich Security Head [or Main] Office as also head of the German secret police apparatus, spoke of […]

18

HITLER PLOTS SOVIETS’ RUIN WITH OPERATION BARBAROSSA

Berlin, Germany • December 18, 1940 On this date in 1940 in Berlin, one day before receiving the credentials of the new Soviet am­bas­sador to Germany, Adolf Hitler signed Fuehrer Direc­tive 21, Opera­tion Barba­rossa (Unter­neh­men Barba­rossa), thereby ini­ti­ating the secret pre­pa­ra­tions and mili­tary opera­tions that led to the Axis inva­sion of the Soviet Union on June 22, […]

19

FINNISH AID TO DISRUPT NAZI ORE IMPORTS

London, England · December 19, 1939 In the afternoon of August 23, 1939, Adolf Hitler’s foreign secretary Joachim von Ribben­trop appeared in Moscow’s Krem­lin fortress to sign off on the Nazi-Soviet Non­ag­gres­sion Pact. The 10‑year pact, also known by the twin sur­names of the Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov and the German foreign minister Ribben­trop, was […]

20

ROOSEVELT: U.S. MUST PLAN FOR ITS DEFENSE

Washington, D.C. · December 20, 1940 On this date in 1940 President Franklin D. Roose­velt appointed William Knud­sen to head a 4‑member board (Office of Pro­duc­tion Manage­ment, or OPM) to plan for national defense and coor­di­nate aid to Great Britain following Ger­many’s total block­ade of that island nation in mid-August (Battle of the Atlantic). A Danish […]

21

ROMANIA’S CENTER GOVERNMENT FALLS, FASCISTS IN?

Bucharest, Romania · December 21, 1937 On this date in 1937 Romania’s last free elections (until 1990) ended in the ouster of the middle-of-the road Na­tion­al Libe­ral govern­ment. The Libe­rals, who remained the largest party in parlia­ment, were unable to form a coali­tion govern­ment with the next 2 runner-up par­ties. A week later King Carol II named the […]

22

U.S., BRITISH LEADERS FORMULATE WAR PLANS FOR 1942

Washington, D.C • December 22, 1941 On this date in 1941 the Japanese public glimpsed their first photos in the news­paper Asahi Shimbun of their country’s devas­tating attack on the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the worst mili­tary catas­trophe in Amer­i­can history. On the same date, Presi­dent Frank­lin D. Roose­velt, British Prime Minis­ter […]

23

FAILED OPERATION WINTER STORM DOOMS GERMANS IN STALINGRAD

Southwest of Stalingrad, Soviet Union • December 23, 1941 On this date in 1942 the German Wehrmacht (armed forces) ended Oper­a­tion Winter Storm (German, Unter­nehmen Winter­gewitter), the 11‑day attempt by German Army Group Don, a new forma­tion commanded by Field Marshal Erich von Man­stein, to break the Soviet envelop­ment of Gen. Friedrich Paulus’ German Sixth […]

24

DE GAULLE LOYALISTS SEIZE VICHY FRENCH ISLANDS OFF CANADA

Washington, D.C. • December 24, 1941 On this grim date, Christmas Eve 1941, a tiny piece of Vichy France—the Atlan­tic islets of Saint Pierre and Miquelon, whose gra­nite out­crop­pings lay just 12 miles/­19 km off the New­found­land coast adja­cent to Canada—fell to the forces of Free France. It was the first French terri­tory to be lib­er­ated in […]

25

GLUM DAMPENS GERMAN CHRISTMAS SPIRITS

Berlin, Germany • December 25, 1941 On this date in 1941 Japanese citizens celebrated the 15th anni­ver­sary of the suc­ces­sion to the Impe­rial Throne of Emperor Hiro­hito (post­humously referred to as Emperor Shōwa), according to tradi­tion the 124th direct des­cen­dant of Jimmu, the legen­dary first ruler of the Empire of the Rising Sun. Fes­tive toasts […]

26

BRITISH TRAP ENDS SCHARNHORST’S CAREER

North Cape, Norway • December 26, 1943 On this date, the day after Christmas 1943, the German battle­ship (aka battle­cruiser) Scharn­horst and her crew of 1,968 met their fate in the Battle of the North Cape off the northern tip of Norway. At 32,100 long tons, the sleek, 771‑foot/­235‑meter state-of-the-art war­ship fitted out with 9 11‑inch/­28‑centi­meter […]

27

CIVILIAN PROGRAM TO BOOST PILOT NUMBERS

Washington, D.C. • December 27, 1938 In 1938 America’s armed forces had less than 3,000 pro­fes­sional pilots. To speed the pro­duc­tion of pilots out­side the U.S. armed ser­vices, Pre­si­dent Franklin D. Roose­velt unveiled the Civil­ian Pilot Training Pro­gram (CPTP) on this date in 1938. The pro­gram was intended, the presi­dent said, to pro­vide a boost to […]

28

NAVY SET TO RECRUIT CIVILIANS INTO SEABEE UNITS

Washington, D.C. · December 28, 1941 The Seabees were in effect combat engineers of the U.S. Navy, working and, when neces­sary, fighting on land. On this date in 1941 Rear Admiral Ben Moreell requested autho­rity to orga­nize a mili­ta­rized Naval Con­struc­tion Force, and a week later he gained per­mis­sion from the Bureau of Navi­ga­tion (later […]

29

LONDON SURVIVES END-OF-YEAR BLITZ

London, England • December 29, 1940 On this date in 1940, when President Franklin D. Roose­velt appealed to the nation in a radio “fire­side chat” to support his pro­posal to strengthen the U.S. mili­tary in light of devel­op­ments in Europe, the German Luft­waffe delivered a mas­sive attack on London. Almost 3,000 civil­ians were killed in the […]

30

CHURCHILL ADDRESSES CANADIAN LAWMAKERS

Ottawa, Canada • December 30, 1941 On December 28, 1941, British Prime Minister Winston Chur­chill left Wash­ing­ton’s Union Station, the capital’s major train station, for Canada. Six days ear­lier Chur­chill and his mili­tary and civil­ian advisers had arrived in the United States aboard the Royal Navy’s newly com­mis­sioned battle­ship, the HMS Duke of York, to […]

31

RECORD YEAR-END DELIVERY OF B-29s

Washington, D.C. · December 31, 1943 By this date in 1943 Boeing delivered its 92nd B‑29 Super­for­tress to the U.S. govern­ment after the giant bomber began rolling off the assem­bly line the pre­vious Septem­ber. Even before the coun­try was at war and govern­ment funds had been allo­cated, Boeing had produced a proto­type of the long-range […]

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