Benham letter 20 August 1941

I carried out your instructions re your letter.

Larkhill

Friday 10.30 pm.

My dearest Maz,

I must apologise for using this thin paper but I am sitting up in bed, and this is the only paper I can muster in my room.

Many thank, Maz, for your letter which arrived this evening.  It was sweet and I was very touched by it.  I too have had the same involuntary feeling sometimes but it has always passed quickly when I think of the future which lies ahead of us all.  As I’ve said before the times which you and I have had in the past were times which I shall never forget, you were always so terribly sweet and kind to me and you and Par were for ever encouraging me in every way; and in the future we shall have some more marvellous times together.  I know that it will be some recompense to you to know that I am really happy and in the care of a girl who loves me as much as I love her.  I’ve never had the chance to talk to you as I should like to have done about Eileen, but she’s really wonderfully sweet, and, I know, looks upon you as her mother.  It’s a funny thing I suppose but I always rather liken my heart to a house, one part of which will always be occupied by you, it will never matter where I am or what I’m doing I shall always think of you and love you in the same way as I do now and that is with all the love a son has for his mother.

The words of yours in the latter part of your letter were very true and I shall never forget them and I hope that Eileen and I will be able to live up to the ideals for which we are all fighting.

When we get our house in running order absolutely nothing will please us more than to have you with us and I might say I’m already longing for the day when we shall be meeting you at Salisbury and bringing you to see our home, and hoping that everything will meet with your approval!!

Please open anything which looks as though it may contain a spot of cash.  Very many thanks for your very kind cheque but I really shall be most upset unless it’s a small one.  All that I want, Maz dear, is your love and your blessing and the promise from you that you will never think for one little minute that I shall ever be anything but your ever loving and ever affectionate

Peter

Letter addressed to Mrs. G.C. Benham, 5, Oxford Road, Colchester Essex.  Postmark mostly unreadable but date 20 Au 41.

SECOND WORLD WAR August 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR August 1941

(Britain)

By August 1941 the Government Code & Cypher School (GC & CS) was well established with both male and female British code-breakers. Bletchley Park was established as the principal centre for the code-breaking facilities in 1938. Before the beginning of the Second World War Polish code-breakers had cracked the Enigma Code which sent out military secret messages produced by the Germans. The original Enigma machine looked like a typewriter and when each letter was typed in, another letter came out so that messages would be received in code. The receiving party had an identical machine which changed the code back to the original message. The codes for the Enigma cyphers were frequently changed and the task was to find a way to access the more complicated code. As the Germans were changing their cyphers daily the Polish code-breakers were not able to proceed and handed the information over to the British to continue the task. The capture of German U-boat U-110 off the coast of Ireland on the 9th May 1941 proved beneficial to the Bletchley Park code-breakers. Before the U-boat could be scuttled the Enigma machine and code book was secured. U-110 was taken in tow back toward Britain but sank en-route to Scapa Flow. The British code-breakers eventually developed the “Colossus” computer in 1943.

The British special group nicknamed “The Shetland Bus” came into force on the 30th August 1941 and became a permanent link between Shetland in Scotland and German occupied Norway. The main purpose of the group of men and boats was to assist agents of the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) and the Special Operations Executive (SOE) in and out of Norway. A fleet of camouflaged working fishing boats were used, armed with light machine-guns concealed inside oil drums placed on deck, and the crew passing as fishermen. ”The Shetland Bus” was used to transfer agents to Norway and to provide them with the necessary weapons and supplies. The crossing were mostly carried at night during the winter months which entailed the crews and passengers enduring very heavy North Sea conditions. By sailing without navigation lights the boats were under constant risk of discovery by German aircraft or patrol boats. There was always the possibility of being captured whilst carrying out a mission to the Norwegian as the operations were under constant threat from German forces.

———–

(Germany)

In Nazi Germany in 1939 the T4 programme was set up to establish the euthanasia of mentally ill and handicapped citizens. The T4 programme was formed to create the Euthanasia Department, headed by Doctor Viktor Brack and targeted some children as being mentally defective. The children, including Jewish children, were transported from all over Germany to a Special Psychiatric Youth Department and systematically murdered. Either they were injected with lethal substances or led into shower rooms where they were gassed.  Eventually the programme was extended to include adults. German doctors and clergy protested that the programme was barbaric. On the 18th August 1941, Dictator Adolf Hitler ordered the programme to be suspended in Germany as he did not need such bad publicity. The programme would be revived in occupied Poland. This programme continued when the T4 personnel were transferred to concentration camps primarily for the extermination of the Jewish population.

German U-boat U-570 was on patrol in the North Atlantic south of Iceland on 27th August 1941. U-570 was on her first patrol although the commander Kapitäieutant Hans-Joachim Rahmlow and his second-in-command were experienced surface naval officers, but not in submarine warfare. The U-boat crew were inexperienced in any type of naval service. U-570 spent most of the morning submerged but surfaced approximately 10.50 am and was attacked by an American Lockheed Hudson light bomber. The Hudson was on loan to the British and was being flown by the Royal Air Force (RAF) on patrol. Rahmlow ordered a crash dive after hearing the approach of The Hudson which dropped four depth-charges. One of the depth-charges detonated approximately 10 yards from the boat and U-570 resurfaced. Some of the crew emerged and displayed a white sheet after the Hudson had subjected them to machine-gun fire. A Catalina flying boat was ordered to fly out and watch the U-boat until Allied ships arrived. She was towed away for repair and eventually entered service with the Royal Navy as HMS Graph in September 1941.

————

(Eastern Front)

Following Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Germany declared the District of Galicia in Poland as the fifth district of Generalgouvernement on the 1st August 1941. After occupying Galicia, Adolf Hitler formed a capital in the Galician province of Limburg. Prior to the German invasion of the Soviet Union the joint German/Soviet Union had invaded Poland in 1939 and the Soviet Union had temporarily occupied the District of Galicia.

In Stanislaw in Galicia on the 2nd August 1941 German S.S. Commander Hans Kruger ordered all Jewish and Polish intelligentsia be registered.  Subsequently the intelligentsia were tortured and murdered. This action became the first implementation of the “one bullet one Jew” system in the occupied territory of Galicia.

In Norway on the 2nd August 1941 the Nazi German occupation authorities implemented the confiscation of all Norwegian civil radios in order that the population did not have access to BBC broadcasts.

The German invasion of the Soviet Union, codenamed Operation Barbarossa, was initially a spectacular success and on 5th August 1941 the German army trapped the Soviet army at Smolensk on the drive toward Moscow. Smolensk fell to the Germans on the 6th August 1941 but overall the German advance had slowed down. Hitler took personal control of the campaign and on the 12th August 1941 he issued a directive that he believed would be a tactical move to take Leningrad in the north and the Crimean industrial basin in the south before winter. Against the advice of his military Generals, who wanted to continue the advance to Moscow, Hitler moved some of his troops advancing on Moscow to the Leningrad fronts. By the 22nd August 1941 the German forces were closing in on Leningrad and the first steps in the Siege of Leningrad began on the 31st August 1941.

Spain during the Second World War was officially a neutral country. However, on the 20th August 1941 a new German Infantry division was formed and had the assistance of 18,000 Spanish volunteers. The volunteers were officially designated as the Blue Division who were to serve in the German Army on the Eastern Front. Spanish leader General Francisco Franco sent an official offer of help to Berlin in June 1941 on the proviso that the volunteers would only fight against the Soviet Union on the Eastern Front. Adolf Hitler readily approved of the Spanish volunteers on the 26th June 1941 and Spanish volunteers flocked to recruiting offices in Spain to fight against the Soviet Army. The offer of help was to repay German support during the Spanish Civil War of 1936 and to maintain their neutrality they would not take up arms against the Allies on the Western Front.

The Soviet Union began the evacuation of Tallinn in Estonia on the 28th August 1941. Soviet forces had occupied Estonia since June 1940 and, following Operation Barbarossa, German forces advanced rapidly through the Soviet-occupied Baltic States. 190 ships in the Red Army Baltic Fleet were bottled up in the harbour of the Estonian capital Tallinn surrounded by German forces. In anticipation of a Soviet breakout the German navy began laying minefields and the Soviet minesweepers tried to clear a pathway through the minefields. The Soviet embarkation was protected by smokescreens, but previous minesweeping activities were largely ineffective. Bad weather and the shortage of Soviet aircraft was the main cause for the lack of protection for the fleet. Despite this the Soviet evacuation of Tallinn was successful in that 165 ships, 28,000 civilian passengers and 66,000 tons of equipment managed to escape. There are not any available records showing how many Soviet soldiers and airmen were evacuated, however, 12,400 people were thought to have drowned.

———–

(Other Theatres)

On the 1st August 1941 the United States of America announced a ban on oil exports to “aggressor countries” including Japan. There had been tensions between America and Japan following the 1931 Japanese invasion of Manchuria. Japan imposed an embargo of all oil imports and war supplies from America to China. The Japanese Imperial Navy estimated it had less than two years bunker oil remaining following the American ban of oil imports to Japan. This eventually would lead to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour in December 1941 bringing America into the war.

During 1941 the Japanese military planned to attack the British colonies of Malaya and Burma in a bid to conquer Southeast Asia. Germany encouraged Japan on the proposed invasion as it would divert British military forces away from the European theatre of war. In order to attack Malaya and Burma the Japanese sought free passage through Thailand. The British however, began to suspect that Japan was planning to set up bases in Thailand. On the 6th August 1941 the British and American Governments warned Japan not to invade Thailand and severe sanctions were placed on Japan. Despite the sanctions the Japanese invasion of Thailand occurred on the 8th December 1941.

The Atlantic Charter was a joint statement by the British and American governments and issued on the 9th August 1941. This statement outlined the British and American aims for the world at the end of the Second World War. The Charter proposed that there was not any territorial changes made against the wishes of the people, restoration of self-government and reduction of trade restrictions. There never was a signed version but when it was released to the public the Charter was titled “Joint Declarations by the President of the U, S. and the British Prime Minister”.

The Anglo-Soviet invasion of neutral Iran began on the 25th August 1941. The joint UK and Soviet troops invaded as they suspected the Iranian Leader Reza Shah was friendly to Germany. The invasion was to secure Iranian oil fields and Allied supply lines. Upon occupying Iran the Allies replaced Reza Shah with his son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the invasion ended on the 17th September 1941 as the occupation took over.     

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service July 1941.

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service July 1941.

Date                Time   Location         Damage

01/07/1941    Found   Paglesham 1 – Unexploded Para Mine complete with

parachute found in mud on North side of Paglesham Pool Creek 1/4 mile from junction with River Roach, Wallasea Island (exploded by Naval Authority 4th).  Also Tail Cap marked L.D. 682 in cap in red stencil and Parachute complete with shackle and Tail cap marked D.5718 in red over 63 in yellow found at Clements Farm.  All believed fell the 23.6.41.  No damage or casualties.

02/07/1941    01.10  Foulness       2 – Parachute mines exploded in the sea off

Island             Foulness Island, between Eastwick Farm and Fishermans Head.  No damage or casualties.

9 – H.Es exploded in fields 300 yards North of Scaldhurst Farm.  No damage or casualties.02/07/1941      01.40  Foulness       2 – Parachute mines exploded in the sea off Foulness Island, between Eastwick Farm and Fishermans Head.  No damage or casualties.

02/07/1941    Found  Thundersley            1 – Unexploded AA Shell found in a field

behind the Utility Poultry Farm, Rayleigh Road.  Time of occurrence not known.  No damage or casualties.

06/07/1941    02.45  Canvey          A Barrage Balloon grounded.  Deflated and

Island             removed to Canvey Island Fire Station.  RAF Hornchurch informed.

07/07/1941    Found  South            1 – H.E unexploded in wood 800 yards North of

Weald           Colchester Road, Brook Street, East of Putwell Bridge, 500 yards from Brook, 150 yards into wood.  Time of falling not known.  No damage or casualties.  (disposed of BDS 27.7.41).

07/07/1941    Found  Hockley        A Meteorological balloon found by Leslie Ellis of

                                                            Nelson Road Hockley forwarded to HQ 17.7.41.

10/07/1941    16.55  Canewdon    Captain Dane, Resident Naval Officer of Burnham

on Crouch reported that at 16-55 hours the 10th, 1st, a mine exploded at the entrance to Lion Creek, Nr Lower Raypits Canewdon and blew up a motor boat, owned by P & N Petticrow Ltd of Eastern Boathouse, Burnham and contained two employees of that firm (names not known).  They had been to Bridge Marsh Island and when returning the boat struck a mine.  Search has been made of the foreshore of the River Crouch at Wallasea Island and Canewdon, but no trace of the two men or the boat has been found.

13/07/1941    02.45  Wickford        2 – H.Es exploded in a field East of Brock Hill Road

slight damage to a disused farm building.  No casualties.

14/07/1941    09.45  Rayleigh        Naval Barrage Balloon found in a field 100 yards

West of Doggetts Chase, deflated.  Marked in black KB/MK over 1043.  Also R.N. removed by RAF 16.7.41.

17/07/1941    Found  Great            Naval Barrage Balloon found in a ditch 100 yards

Burstead      North West of Sewer Works, Barleylands.  Seen to fall 21-00 hrs 12.7.41.  Marked R.N. Collected by RAF 18.7.41.

18/07/1941    15.45  Great              Naval Barrage Balloon found in a field at

Wakering       Alexander Road.  Deflated and torn from end to end.  Marked R.N. and K.B. Mark 6. 4804 on side and EVA on nose.  RAF Rochford informed.

19/07/1941    Found  Brentwood   2 – H.E unexploded in a field East of Weald Brook,

opposite 13th hole, Mayland Golf Course, Brook Street.  No damage or casualties.  Time of falling not known.

21/07/1941    Found  Canewdon   1 – H.E unexploded in a field 400 yards North of

Wick Farm.  No damage or casualties.  (disposed of BDS 26.7.41).

24/07/1941    13.00  Hockley          A Meteorological balloon with machine attached

found in a field removed to Police Station.  Inscribed No B.236 on machine.  Label “The Supt, Observatory, Richmond, Surrey.  (Forwarded to H.Q.).

25/07/1941    19.00  Haven Gore The body of a German Airman in an advanced

Island             state of decomposition found on the foreshore,  100 yards from sea wall at Haven Gore Point.  Body removed to Rochford Rural District Mortuary.  Name and identity undecipherable.  Removed and buried by RAF Southend.

28/07/1941    02.30  Ingrave           8 – H.Es unexploded in fields at rear of Whitby

                                                            Avenue.  No damage or casualties.

28/07/1941    03.15  Canewdon    9 – H.Es exploded in fields 300 yards North of

                                                            Scaldhurst Farm.  No damage or casualties.

SECOND WORLD WAR July 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR July 1941

 (Britain)

On the 12th June 1941 Britain and the Soviet Union signed the Anglo-Soviet Agreement pledging to assist each other and not make a separate peace with Germany. This military alliance was to be for the duration of the war and was the direct result of the German invasion of the Soviet Union on the 22nd June 1941 code named Operation Barbarossa.

Prime Minister Winston Churchill referred to the “V for Victory” campaign in a speech, on the 19th July 1941, from which point he began using the “V” hand sign. In January 1941 the “V” sign was introduced as part of a campaign by the Allies. The Belgian Minister of Justice, Victor de Lavelete suggested, on the Belgian-French language broadcasts on the BBC, that the “V for Victory” sign be used as a rallying emblem during the Second World War. The emblematic use of the letter “V” had spread through occupied Europe by July 1941. The BBC started the “V for Victory” campaign using the Morse code rhythm (three dots and a dash) as its call sign. The opening bars of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony has the same rhythm and the BBC used this call sign in its foreign language programmes to occupied Europe throughout the remainder of the war.

———-

(Germany)

German heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen whilst under repair in Brest Harbour, on the French coast, was attacked by British bombers on the 1st July 1941. An armour-piercing bomb dropped on and destroyed the control centre deep down under the bridge which also controlled all the guns. During the Battle of the Atlantic in May 1941 the German battleship Bismarck was joined by the Prinz Eugen and escorted by three destroyers in an attempt to break out into the Atlantic. They engaged with the Royal Navy and Bismarck was sunk on the 27th May 1941. Although damaged Prinz Eugen managed to escape to Brest, arriving on the 1st June 1941. German battle ships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau were also under repair in Brest Harbour at the time of the attack. The three ships were out of action and under repair until the end of 1941.

The Final Solution to the “Jewish question” began on the 31st July 1941. The Final Solution was a Nazi plan for the genocide of the Jews. It was designed as a deliberate and systematic genocide across German occupied Europe. Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler became the new architect of the plan proposed by Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler about the forcible removal of Jews from German controlled territories. Reichsmarshall Herman Göring wrote to Reinhardt Heydrich, Himmler’s deputy, authorising him to submit concrete proposals for the extermination of the Jews.    

———-

(Mediterranean Campaign and Desert War)

The Battle of Palmyra was part of the Allied invasion of Syria during the Syrian-Lebanon campaign. Vichy-France had substantial forces in the region and their ally Germany were allowed to use the air bases as staging posts for the Luftwaffe to take part in Anglo-Iraqi War. The Germans were also allowed to use the railway systems for send arms and ammunition to Iraq. In June 1941 the Allied forces had been launched from Palestine and Trans-Jordan into Syria and Lebanon. On the 1st July 1941 British mechanised cavalry and an Arab legion desert patrol advanced to defeat the Vichy-French 2nd Garrison at Palmyra to secure the oil pipeline from Iraq to Tripoli. The Allies entered Sukhna as it was not occupied by Vichy- French troops, but was attacked by the Vichy 2nd Light Desert Company. After a sharp battle the Vichy-French retreated into a box valley pursued by Arab Legion troops and surrendered. This caused the 3rd Light Desert Company, garrisoned at Palmyra, to lose heart and surrender. One minute past midnight of the 12th July 1941 the campaign ended and a ceasefire came into effect.

On Malta the new Air Commodore Hugh Lloyd made an inspection tour of the airfields and main workshops in early July 1941. The state of the island was worse than he expected but he realised the protection of air and naval assets would have to be his first priority. The Royal Air Force (RAF) had fewer than 60 serviceable aircraft of all types with very limited spares and what spares he did have was supplemented by sifting through the debris of wrecks or cannibalising of damaged aircraft. German air activity was slackened after the Luftwaffe departed for the Eastern Front following Operation Barbarossa after Germany had undertaken their attack on Russia. The Italian Regia Aeronautica was left to continue the effective air campaign against Malta By mid -July 1941 supplies were beginning to reach Malta and RAF British Hurricane fighter aircraft were arriving in readiness to defend the island.

———–

(Eastern Front)

In June 1941 the Russian nation was unprepared for war. The Germans advanced over a wide front and Joseph Stalin, the Soviet Union dictator, proposed “a scorched earth policy” during a radio broadcast on the 3rd July 1941. When the Soviet army was forced to retreat all materials, food and military equipment was to be destroyed in order that the advancing German army could not benefit from the evacuation. In the occupied territory the remaining citizens were required to form into partisan groups and sabotage the enemy progress at every possible opportunity.  Despite “the scorched earth” policy the invading forces, code named Operation Barbarossa, reached the Dnieper River near Kiev on the 5th July 1941. On a wide front stretching from the Baltic to the Black Sea on the 16th June 1941 the Battle of Smolensk began and by the 28th July 1941 German Panzers had reached Smolensk with the infantry following up.

The Baltic state of Latvia was occupied by the Germans on the 1st July 1941. The Soviet Union had annexed Latvia from Germany and Riga became the capital of Latvia under the Soviet regime prior to Operation Barbarossa. Following the German occupation, which began on the 10th July 1941, Riga became the German capital of Latvia. Once the Germans had established its authority the elimination of the Jewish and Roma population began. Anyone not racially acceptable or who opposed the German occupation were either killed or sent to concentration camps. Any Latvian citizen who cooperated with the Soviet Union suffered the same fate. The Jewish community were humiliated and deprived of their rights by being confined to their homes for most of the time. They were only able to shop in special stores and were allotted lower food rations. They were forced to wear the yellow Star of David on their clothes, restricted in their movements and had to surrender any securities they possessed. On the 27th July 1941 guidelines on the Jewish question was made public. They were herded into specific areas where ghettoes were arranged and they were forbidden to leave them. They were also used as cheap labour being paid minimum wages and provided with minimum food.

Operation Arctic Fox began on the 1st July 1941 when joint Finnish-German forces conducted a major offensive against the Soviet Union. This offensive followed the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. The principal goal was to capture the town of Salla, just inside the Finnish border with the Soviet Union, then advance toward Kandalaksha in the Soviet Union. This advance was an effort to block the railway route to Murmansk. The joint operation combined Finnish arctic troops with unsuitably equipped German troops who had been based in Norway. After fierce fighting Salla was captured by the Finnish-German troops and they advanced to within 19 miles (30 km) of the Murmansk railway. Further advance was prevented by the arrival of strong Soviet reinforcements. Owing to the offensive of Operation Barbarossa the Germans were unwilling to commit more units to this theatre and called an end to their attack. Operation Arctic Fox ended in November 1941 when both sides dug in after the Finns were reluctant to continue the attack on their own. 

During Operation Barbarossa, Hungary who was an ally of Nazi Germany, occupied the Polish city of Stanislawow on the 2nd July 1941. By orders of the Nazi Gestapo, on the 26th July 1941, a Jewish council was established to organise Jewish life and implement German orders. By the end of July 1941 the German occupiers took control of the city.

Italian dictator Benito Mussolini ordered a contingent of the Italian Royal Army to the Eastern Front on the 10th July 1941. In an effort to show solidarity to the Axis Powers Mussolini sent a corps size formation into the Soviet Union called the “Italian Expeditionary Force in Russia”. This force participated in the German advance through the Ukraine to the Volga along the southern part of the Eastern Front.         

A general uprising in Montenegro broke out on the 13th July 1941 against the Italian forces in occupied Yugoslavia. The uprising was instigated by the Yugoslav Communist Party who objected to the privileged position offered by the occupiers. In three weeks the insurgents forced the Italian troops to retreat to their stronghold position and captured almost all of the territory of Montenegro. The Italians conducted a counter-offensive and suppressed the uprising within six weeks.

In Poland between the 1st and 4th July 1941 in the city of Lwow (modern day Lviv in the Ukraine) the occupying Nazi German army murdered 25 Polish academics. The Massacre included professors, scientists and writers and their families in an effort to prevent anti-Nazi activity. By targeting prominent citizens and intellectuals they wished to weaken the resolve of the Polish resistance movement

————

(Other Theatres)

In America on the 1st July 1941, all men aged twenty-one and under the age of thirty-three years were required to register with their local draft officer under the Selective and Service Act of 1940. Draftees were then selected by national lottery to be included in the first military conscription in the U.S. history. If selected the draftee served on active duty for twelve months and then served in a reserve capacity for a further ten years.

The defence of Iceland was transferred to the United States of America from Britain on the 7th July 1941. At the beginning of the war neutral Iceland was a sovereign kingdom of Denmark. With the German invasion of Denmark, Britain imposed strict export controls on Icelandic goods as part of its naval blockade preventing profitable shipments to Germany. The British invaded Iceland during May 1940 and by June 1940, to protect the North Atlantic sea lanes, handed control over to the Canadians. The British was able to return back in the defence of Britain. Although still officially neutral the United States of America was handed the role of defence of Iceland by Britain on the 7th July 1941. Iceland remained neutral throughout the Second World War and cooperated with the British and the Americans whilst enjoying the benefits of being “protected” by them.

In America on the 26th July 1941 Japanese assets were frozen and relations suspended between the U.S and Japan. This was in response to the Japanese occupation of French Indochina. For the Japanese this meant a 77% loss of foreign trade and a 90% loss of oil supplies. American President Franklin D. Roosevelt had ordered these events following similar freezing of German and Italian assets and the withdrawal of their consular staff in June 1941. 

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service June 1941.

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service June 1941.

Date                Time   Location         Damage

04/06/1941    Found Little Warley  1 – H.E unexploded at Bluehouse Farm, East of

Horndon Railway Bridge.  No damage or casualties.  (disposed of BDS 4.6.41).

05/06/1941    00.03  Thundersley Damage to telephone kiosk in Hart Road by

                                                            shrapnel.  No casualties.

05/06/1941    01.10  Bowers           4 – H.Es exploded, 2 on Golf Course, 1 in ditch and

Gifford            1 in Farmyard at Great Mussels Farm.  Severe damage to farm buildings and a bungalow.  No casualties.

17/06/1941    19.00  Billericay        1 – H.E. unexploded found 300 yards North of Tye

Common Road and 150 yards South of Bluntswall Chase.  No damage or casualties.

18/06/1941    19.30  Great              Bernard Aubrey Wendon, 13 years, of 5 Wakering

Wakering       Wick Cottages, New Road with two other boys was returning home from Havengore Creek and was walking on an unmade road which leads from Oxenham Farm to Coastguard Station Cottages.  The road passes through a minefield fenced off either side of the road.  Wendon was killed by a mine exploding caused by the children throwing stones into the minefield.  Body conveyed to Mortuary at Billericay Hospital.  Other boys escaped injury.

21/06/1941    Found  Vange          1 – H.E unexploded on open ground about 70

yards South, South East of “Niacasa” Beech Road.  Believed to have fallen 13.9.40.

23/06/1941    01.30  Nevendon     2 – Parachute Flares, 1 aluminium container fell

through the roof of a bungalow in Burnt Mills Road causing slight damage to roof.  1 aluminium container found in a field at Nevendon.  No casualties.  (removed by B.D.S. 24.6.41).

23/06/1941    01.40  Foulness       2 – Parachute mines exploded between Lodge

Island             Farm and East Wick Farm.  Damage to Lodge Farm and houses at Church Road.  No casualties.

23/06/1941    01.45  Rayleigh        26 – H.Es 5 are unexploded, 7 exploded in vicinity

of Eastwood Road.  1 exploded in Leslie Road, 2 Warwick Road, 2 in The Chase.  2 Avondale Road, 5 in vicinity of Wellington, Napier and Victoria Roads, and 2 in an orchard in Bull Lane.  The unexploded 1 between Trinity Road and The Chase (BDS 26.6.41), 1 in garden of “Terra Murra” Princes Road (BDS 1.7.41).  1 in orchard 200 yards South of Bull Lane (BDS 8.7.41).  1 Warwick Road.

23/06/1941    Found    Shenfield   1 – A.A. unexploded Shell near L.N.E. Railway,

rear of engine turntable.  No damage or casualties.  (BDS 26.6.41).

26/06/1941    05.00  Foulness       1 – Naval Barrage Balloon torn from end to end

Island             and deflated grounded 100 yards West of Landwick Police Lodge, New Ranges.  R.N. marked on side & XB/NK 6/1127 on nose.  RAF informed.

27/06/1941    01.40  Foulness       1 – H.E. exploded in a field 300 yards North East of

                                    Island             Wardens Post “P” 18.  No damage or casualties.

30/06/1941    Found  Paglesham  The tail cap and parachute of para mine at

Clements Farm.  Tail Cap marked D.5718 in red stencil over 63 in yellow.  Search being made for para mine.   No damage or casualties.

 30/06/1941   Found  Canvey         1 – Unexploded Cannon Shell at rear of “Selsey

                                      Island           Bay” Mornington Road.  No damage or casualties.

SECOND WORLD WAR June 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR June 1941

(Britain)

In an effort to reduce the production and consumption of civilian clothes, the Board of Trade’s President Oliver Lyttleton announced on the 1st June 1941 that rationing was to be introduced. This rationing safeguarded the raw materials and released workers and factory space for war production. Around a quarter of the British population was entitled to wear some sort of uniform as part of the armed forces, therefore raw materials and labour was mostly directed to military uses for the fabrics involved. The “Make Do and Mend” campaign was encouraged to make existing supplies of civilian clothes last longer.

Prime Minister Winston Churchill and the vice chairman of the Council of People’s Commissioner for the Soviet Union Vyacheslav Molotov gave radio speeches to their respective countries announcing the German invasion of the Soviet Union on the 22nd June 1941. Both leaders agreed they would venture into a joint effort to fight Nazism. (See Germany-Operation Barbarossa)         

During the Battle of the Atlantic the British cargo ship Brockley Hill was torpedoed and sank off Greenland by German U-boat U-651 on the 24th June 1941. U-651 was on her first patrol and commanded by Kapitänleuntant Peter Lohmeyer, when she attacked Convoy HX133. Brockley Hill’s master James Howard and the remaining 41 members of the crew were picked up by merchant ship Sauger. U-651 went on to sink SS Grayburn on the 29th June 1941 but was sunk on the same day by the convoy escort. U-651‘s career was a short one as she was on her one and only patrol. Her crew were rescued by the Royal Navy and then interrogated by the Admiralty.      

——

(Germany)

Aged 82 years Kaiser Wilhelm II died of pulmonary embolism at Doorn in the Netherlands on the 4th June 1941. Wilhelm was the last German Emperor and King of Prussia who abdicated on the 9th November 1918 just prior to Germany’s defeat in the Great War. Following the abdication he and his family fled into exile in the Netherlands. He was buried in a mausoleum in the grounds of Huis Doorn. A few hundred people attended his funeral.        

German and Italian assets were frozen in the United States of America in response to the worsening events in Europe.  American President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the freezing of the assets of the Axis powers on the 14th June 1941. With relations deteriorating further between the Axis powers and America, on the 16th June 1941 Roosevelt ordered the withdrawal of German and Italian consular staffs from the USA by the 10th July 1941.

Operation Barbarossa was the code name for the German invasion of the Soviet Union which was launched on the 22nd June 1941. German dictator Adolf Hitler had diverted his armed forces away from Britain in an effort to wipe out the communist regime of the Soviet Union. Although not having achieved air supremacy over Britain and having abandoned a subsequent invasion, Hitler thought Britain was unlikely to recover from the military set-backs she had suffered. He also thought Britain would seek an armistice and then enter into an alliance with Germany against the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was totally unprepared for the furious attack launched over a 2,900 km (1,800 miles) front, despite having been warned by Churchill six weeks previously. Churchill had received intelligence reports from the Balkans regarding the German invasion but the Kremlin responded by stating that Britain was spreading ugly rumours against the Germans. Germany entered a Non-aggression Pact with the Soviet Union in August 1939 which for Hitler, was a devise to buy time to defeat the Western democracies before turning east. Hitler was at the pinnacle of his power and was ready to take on the Soviet Union. He did so in the knowledge that with exception of Britain, most of continental Europe was under German occupation or neutral. With a rapid advance of the German troops they had captured Baltic cities of Kaunas and Vilnius on the 24th June 1941. German forces occupied Dubno and Lutsk in the south and Baranovichi in the north of the Eastern Front on the 25th June 1941. By the 28th June 1941 the Germans had massively encircled Soviet Red Army near Minsk and Bialystok. 0peration Silver Fox was launched on the 29th June 1941 by Finnish and German forces combined against the Soviet Union. The attack was designed to cut off and capture the key Port of Murmansk and the attack was launched from Finnish and Norwegian territory. Operation Silver Fox ended in November 1941. (See the Eastern Front)

On the 23rd June 1941 Hitler arrived for the first time at the Wolf’s Lair which was his Eastern Front military headquarters. The top secret high security site was located in the Masaurian woods east of the Prussian town of Rustenburg.

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(Mediterranean Campaign and the Desert War)

During the Siege of Malta on the 1st June 1941 Air Vice Marshall Forster Maynard was replaced by Air Commodore Hugh Lloyd as Malta’s Air Officer Commanding. After an inspection tour of the island Lloyd realised he had fewer than sixty aircraft in which to defend the island. However, it was his intention to take on the German Luftwaffe. By cannibalising slightly damaged aircraft and sifting through wrecks he was able to obtain spares to keep the remaining aircraft serviceable. When the Luftwaffe departed for the Eastern Front after Germany had undertaken Operation Barbarossa the Italian Regia Aeronautica was left to continue the air campaign against Malta. By mid-June 1941 supplies were beginning to reach Malta and Royal Air Force (RAF) British Hurricane fighter aircraft were arriving in readiness to defend the island.

Vichy France controlled Syria and Lebanon was invaded by the Allies on the 8th June 1941. The invasion was aimed at preventing Nazi Germany from using the Vichy French controlled Syria and Lebanon for attacks on Egypt. Included in the Allied attack was an Israeli soldier Moshe Dayan who was attached to the Australian-led reconnaissance task force. On the 7th June 1941, the night before the invasion, Dayan’s unit crossed the border and secured two bridges over the Litani River. As they had not been relieved, as expected on the 8th June 1941, they assaulted a Vichy police station and captured it. Whilst defending his position a sniper’s bullet struck the binoculars he was using and metal/glass fragments were forced into his left eye. Dayan lost the eye and so badly damaged was the eye socket area that it was not possible for a glass eye to be fitted. He was compelled to wear a black eye patch permanently.  Australian troops advancing from British held Palestine entered the Lebanese town of Merdjayoun on the 11th June 1941. The Australians opposed by badly equipped defenders were soon in control of the town. The majority of the Australians on the 13th June 1941were diverted north to attack Jezzine in Lebanon in order to advance to Beirut. A small garrison of Australians were left to hold Merdjayoun. Following a strong Vichy French counter-attack the garrison was forced to withdraw on the 15th June 1941. With the aid of re-enforcements sent as a relief column Allied troops successfully defended the pass back to Palestine and recaptured Merdjayoun on the 24th June 1941.        

During the North African Campaign the British Army launched Operation Battle-Axe on the 15th June 1941 in an effort to relieve the Siege of Tobruk. The intention was to clear the eastern Cyrenaica of German and Italian troops who were fighting a defensive campaign for the first time in the war. On the first day, the 15th June 1941 the British lost over half their tanks.  The only success was achieved on the second day when they repulsed a big German counter-attack. On the third day the British were forced to withdraw to prevent being encircled by the German. Winston Churchill had expected a complete success and was displeased that Operation Battle-Axe had failed with the loss of most of the tanks sent to support it. On the 22nd June 1941 Churchill replaced General Sir Archibald Wavell, Commander-in-Chief, Middle East with General Claude Auchinleck, Commander-in-Chief, India. Wavell and Auchinleck were ordered to exchange duties.     

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(The Eastern Front)        

In Finland on the 9th June 1941 negotiations brought Germany and Finland together in readiness for possible attack on Soviet Union. Following Operation Barbarossa Finland declared war, on the b 25th June 1941, against the Soviet Union. On the 29th June 1941 German and Finnish troops launched an attack against the Soviet Union across the barren northern terrain known as Operation Silver Fox. (See Germany)                                                     

In the Baltic the Soviet Union began the first mass deportation of the Lithuanian people which was conducted on the 13th June 1941. The NKVD and NKGB Russian troops based in Lithuania escorted approximately 20,000 deportees on trains to Siberia. These deportees were Lithuanian families who were selected as being Anti-Soviet families. On the 14th June 1941 similar deportations began with Estonian and Latvian being transferred to Siberia. During Operation Barbarossa, German officially occupied Lithuania from the Soviet Union on the 27th June 1941 after the Soviet forces had retreated. During the retreat the Soviets massacred between 1,000 and 1,500 mostly ethnic Lithuanian Jews on the 25th June 1941.       

In Hungary on the 26th June 1941 the city of Kassa was bombed by an unidentified aircraft. The true identity of the attacking aircraft has never been established but there are two possible explanations. The first was that the Soviet aircraft attacked the city by mistake when they were targeting a German radio station in the Slovakian city of Preslov, thirty kilometres north of Kassa. The second was that Germany feigned the bombing to provoke Hungary into attacking the Soviet Union. This attack on Kassa was the pretext for Hungary and Czechoslovakia to declare war on the Soviet Union on the 27th June 1941.       

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(Other Theatres and Areas)

In America, the Tuskegee Airmen were a group of African-American military pilots who were formed on the 2nd June 1941 into the 99th Fighter Squadron. This unit consisted of four hundred and twenty nine enlisted men and forty seven officers. Their programme involved primary training at Morton Field then conversion training at Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama. The War Department had set up a system to accept those African-American applicants with flight experience or higher education. This ruling ensured the most intelligent applicants were eligible to join.

The United States Army Air Force (USAAF) was the aerial warfare service component of the United States Army during the Second World War. The USAAF was created on the 20th June 1941 under the command of General Henry H. Arnold, to amalgamate both the Air Corps and GHQ Air Force. The Air Corps had been the statutory military branch since 1926. GHQ Air Force had developed into an independent force similar to Britain’s Royal Air Force in 1935. However, while Britain and Germany had separate air forces independent of their army or navy, during the Second World War the American Air Force remained a part of the army.

American President Franklin D. Roosevelt became very wary of the increasing aggression of Germany toward the Soviet Union. He made some diplomatic moves to improve U.S./Soviet Union relationships. These relations were soured between the two countries over the Soviet Unions’ aggressive annexing of nearby countries and the changing borders. On the 24th June 1941, in a press conference speech, Roosevelt opposed Congress regarding the Lend-Lease bill which would give aid to the Allies but would exclude the Soviet Union.       

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In Ethiopia the British had forced an Italian surrender in May 1941. The Duke of Aosta who was the Italian Viceroy of Ethiopia continued the fight at Assab, the last Italian harbour on the Red Sea. On the 10th/11th June 1941 a surprise landing at Assab by the 3/15th Punjab Regiment secured the pier unopposed. Two Italian Generals were taken prisoner after the Punjabis had landed. The Civil Governor was taken to HMS Dido where he surrendered Assab to the Rear Admiral R.H.C. Halifax who was the Senior Officer Red Sea Force. The Punjabis took five hundred and forty seven prisoners along with the two Generals and thirty five Germans.       

Spain under Fransisco Franco during the Second World War was officially a neutral country. In recognition of the assistance of Germany and Italy during the Spanish Civil War Franco wrote to Hitler on the 19th June 1941 offering to join the war on the Axis side. Franco’s offer was for volunteers to fight on the Eastern Front but not on the Western Front, thereby maintaining neutral status with the Allies. On the 26th June 1941 Hitler approved of Spanish volunteers and the Blue Division was quickly raised, then sent to Germany for training before serving at the Siege of Leningrad which began in September1941.

The SS Mareeba was an Australian freighter sailing in the Bay of Bombay carrying 5,000 tons of sugar from Batavia to Colombia on the 26th June 1941. Mareeba was attacked by the German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran and received nine shots to her hull. Several shots hit her engine-room and Mareeba slowly began to sink. A team of German boarding party placed demolition charges to sink her quickly. Mareeba’s forty eight man crew were taken prisoner and taken on board Kormoran who sped away to avoid retaliation for the sinking.

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SECOND WORLD WAR May 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR May 1941

(The Blitz)                                               

 Liverpool was subjected to seven nights of bombing that devastated the city. The peak of the bombing was from the 1st to 7th May 1941 involving six hundred and eighty one Luftwaffe bombers who dropped 2,135 high explosive bombs and 119 other explosive devices such as incendiary bombs. Of the one hundred and forty four cargo berths in the docks, sixty nine were put out of action inflicting 2,895 casualties. Liverpool Cathedral was damaged and over 6,500 homes completely demolished and a further 190,000 damaged leaving many thousands of people homeless. After the 7th May 1941 the Luftwaffe air assault diminished as Germany turned their attention toward attacking the Soviet Union. Liverpool was the most heavily area of the country with the exception of London and the final raid was conducted on the 10th January 1942.            

Belfast was attacked by the Luftwaffe on four separate evenings April and May 1941. The third raid during the Belfast Blitz in Northern Ireland took place overnight of the 4th/5th May 1941 where incendiary bombs predominated. The total casualty raid was 150 people killed with many more injured. The 4th and last raid on Belfast took place overnight of the 5th/6th May 1941. Over the four separate raids 1,300 homes were demolished, 5,000 badly damaged and 50,000 slightly damaged or required “first aid repairs”.

Nottingham was attacked on the 7th/8th May 1941 by Luftwaffe bombers. The Germans had developed a radio navigation system designed for night bombing pf Britain known as the “X-Gerät Beams”, but the British had found a counter-measure to divert the attack away from the main target. The beam had been set to cover the Rolls-Royce Plant at Derby but the Luftwaffe followed the beam to Nottingham. Over one hundred bombers took part in the raid and many bombs fell on open farmland. Two churches and one hotel were destroyed and a further five buildings were damaged. 253 people were killed and 294 injured during the raid. The period when the X-Gerät radio beams aimed at Britain endedwhen the Germans moved their forces to the east in preparation for the invasion of theSoviet Union.     

On the 10th/11th May 1941 the House of Commons was damaged on the last large raid on London. Other targets were Hull, Liverpool, and Belfast and shipbuilding area of the River Clyde. Germany shifted its focus toward the Soviet Union and the East bringing to an end “The Blitz” on Britain.   

Across Britain, by the end of the Blitz, over 40,000 civilians had been killed, 46,000 seriously injured and over one million homes had been damaged or damaged. The Luftwaffe had lost 2,400 aircraft without achieving any of its objective during the Battle of Britain and the Blitz combined,

Finally at the end of the Blitz British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, after visiting Liverpool and the surrounding areas in May 1941 said, “I see the damage done by the enemy attacks, but I also see the spirit of an unconquered people”. To sum it all up we can use the words of Mrs. Dorothy Laycock, a child of the Liverpool Blitz, “They tried to wipe us off the face of the earth. They nearly did but they didn’t quite, did they?”

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(The Mediterranean Campaign and the Desert War)

The Anglo- Iraqi War began on the 2nd May 1941. The pro-Nazi and nationalist party, who were seeking independence from Britain, had overthrown the pro-British regime in April 1941. This change of government led to a British invasion of Iraq. Substantial Iraqi ground forces were deployed to the plateau overlooking RAF Habbaniya where airstrikes were launched at the RAF station. On the 6th May 1941 Iraqi troops withdrew from RAF Habbaniya after taking heavy casualties and were overwhelmed by British air supremacy. The five day siege had been lifted by the Royal Air Force’s own resources. Berlin instructed the Luftwaffe to send a small force of aircraft to Iraq on the 6th May 1941 and the bulk of the aircraft arrived in Mosul, north of Baghdad on the 13th May 1941 in order to support the Iraqi government. On the 17th May 1941 the British Royal Air Force attacked the Iraqis in Fallujah which was secured on the 21st May 1941. The Iraqi counter-attack was defeated on the 23rd May 1941. British forces began to advance toward Baghdad on the 27th May 1941. With no serviceable aircraft available as the British advanced on Baghdad the German military mission fled Iraq on the 29th May 1941. On the 30th May 1941, with the British on the outskirts of Baghdad, the Iraqi government fled from Iraq. On 31st May 1941 the Mayor of Baghdad surrendered and an armistice signed ending the Anglo-Iraqi War.

The Battle of Crete began on the 20th May 1941 when German paratroopers staged an airborne invasion on the island. This was the first occasion when paratroopers were used en masse as an invasion force. Alongside Cretian civilians were Greek and British defenders who inflicted heavy casualties on the German paratroopers. On the 21st May 1941, through a combination of communication failures, Allied tactical hesitation and German offensive, Maleme Airfield sited in Western Crete fell. This enabled the Germans to land reinforcements and the Allies withdrew to the southern coast of the island. The British destroyer HMS Juno was bombed and sunk by Italian aircraft southeast of Crete on the 21st May 1941. Two British cruisers HMS Fiji, HMS Gloucester and destroyer HMS Greyhound was bombed and sunk by the Luftwaffe around Crete on the 22nd May 1941. The Luftwaffe had further success with bombing and sinking of British destroyers HMS Kashmir and HMS Kelly off Crete on the 23rd May 1941. The German advance on the island was temporarily halted when the Australian and New Zealand defenders carried out a bayonet charge causing heavy German casualties which forced the Germans briefly to withdraw on the 27th May 1941. On the same day Archibald Wavell, Commander-in-Chief Middle East, sent a message to Winston Churchill explaining Crete could no longer be defended and troops must be withdrawn. The Chiefs of Staff agreed and ordered the evacuation. From the 28th May 1941 to the 1st June 1941 over 18,000 British troops were evacuated to Egypt leaving 12,000 British and Dominion troops and thousands of Greeks on the island when the Germans controlled Crete from the 1st June 1941.

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(Britain)                                               

During the Battle of the Atlantic a total of sixty three ships were sunk (351,294 tons) with a further three ships damaged (23,992 tons). These ships were lost to German U-boats during the course of May 1941. German submarine U-110 was a member of the Atlantic wolf pack attacking Allied shipping. On the 8th May 1941 U-110 had successfully sunk two Allied ships but the convey escort destroyer HMS Broadway proceeded to drop depth charges. U-110 was forced to surface and abandon ship. Before the German crew could scuttle U-110 a boarding party from HMS Bulldog entered the ship and discovered her code books and “Enigma” machine. U-110 was taken in tow back to Britain but sank en route to Scapa Flow. The documents captured from U-110 helped Bletchley Park code breakers solve a German cypher code which turned out to be one of the biggest secrets of the war. HMS Hood was patrolling the Bay of Biscay to stop German ships attempting a breakout from Brest when she was ordered to the Norwegian Sea. The Admiralty had received a false report that the German battleship Bismarck had sailed from Germany and Hood was dispatched to Scapa Flow on the 6th May 1941. When Bismarck sailed for the Atlantic on the 19th May 1941 she was joined by the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen and escorted by three destroyers. The Admiralty ordered Hood and battleship HMS Prince of Wales to pursue the German ships before they could break out into the Atlantic and attack Allied shipping. In the early hours of the 24th May 1941 Hood engaged Prinz Eugen. Bismarck and Prinz Eugen opened fire on Hood which was struck by several German shells which exploded internally causing her to sink within three minutes. Of the 1,418 members of the Hood’s crew only three survived. Prince of Wales received damage from German hits and coupled with mechanical problems she was forced to disengage. However, she managed to hit Bismarck three times who had to head for safety in occupied France where she could be repaired. Bismarck was spotted by the Royal Navy and sunk on the 27th May 1941. Prinz Eugen had sustained damage but managed to reach occupied France and receive repairs.

Several German cities were attacked on the 12th May 1941 by the Royal Air Force (RAF) to counter some of the German Luftwaffe raids on Britain. These raids happened despite the radio speech made by Hermann Göring in 1940, “If as much as a single enemy aircraft flies over German soil my name is Meier”. Göring was the Reich Marshall of the Greater German Reich, Germany’s highest rank, and was referring to the Jewish problem. This speech would come back to haunt him when Bomber Command began large scale operations against German targets in 1942.

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(Germany)

On the 10th May 1941 Deputy Führer Rudolf Hess flew a Messerschmitt Bf 110 to Scotland on a solo peace mission, parachuting into Eaglesham near his objective of Dungavel House after running out of fuel. His self-styled mission was an attempt to negotiate a peace between Britain and Germany. His proposals were for Germany to have a free hand in Europe and Germany respecting the integrity of the British Empire. The British government rejected his proposals and treated him as a prisoner of war for the remainder on the Second World War. Hess had a reputation of total loyalty to future dictator Adolf Hitler who made him deputy party leader in 1933. He was declared second to Hermann Göring in line of succession in 1939. As Hitler became preoccupied by military and foreign policy Hess’s power waned and was further undermined by Martin Bormann and other top Nazi leaders. In an effort to restore his influence Hess flew to Scotland. After the war Hess was tried as a war criminal at the Nuremburg Trials. He was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment at Spandau Prison in Berlin. From 1966 he remained the only inmate until his death in 1987.

On the16th May 1941, in the Western Desert Campaign, German Commander Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps troops successfully defeated British troops at Halfaya Pass which is located on the Egyptian/Libyan border. The British had previously attacked through Halfaya Pass and pushed eastwards towards Libya when a German counter/attack forced the British back to Halfaya Pass. The British Scots and Coldstream Guards garrisoned and secured their positions and took control of the Halfaya Pass allowing the remaining British Army to retire back to Egypt. After a period of stalemate the German determined attack on the 26TH/ 27TH May 1941 forced the British to abandon the pass.

SS Robin Moor an American merchantman was sunk by German submarine U-69 off Sierra Leone on the 21st May 1941. She sailed from New York to Mozambique via South Africa carrying a commercial cargo without convoy protection, because at the time America was a neutral country. She sailed under the American flag in an area considered to be relatively safe from U-boats. Robin Moor was stopped by U-69 whose captain had decided to sink her and the nine officers, twenty nine crewmen and eight passengers were allowed to board her four lifeboats. U-69 torpedoed Robin Moor which then sank. The captain of U-69 radioed the lifeboats position and on the 8th June 1941 one lifeboat containing Robin Moor’s captain and ten others were rescued.  The other three lifeboats were presumed lost as they were never found. The sinking of a neutral nation’s ship caused a political incident in the United States and U-69’s captain justified his actions by saying the ship has been sunk as she was carrying supplies to German’s enemy.

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(Other Theatres)

In Ethiopia Emperor Haile Selassie entered Addis Ababa, his capital in triumph on the 5th May 1941. In 1936 Italy had invaded Ethiopia and the Emperor fled the country and lived in exile in the British city of Bath. Italy conquered Ethiopia in 1937. She declared war against the United Kingdom and France in June 1940. From Ethiopia, Italy invaded British Somaliland in August 1940 but the British launched a counter-invasion and the Italians were to go on the defensive in January 1941. The Italian North African War was effectively over by the 6th April 1941 when the Italian flag was replaced by the Union flag over the Viceroy’s residence. A break-away Italian army led by the Duke of Aosta, Viceroy of Ethiopia continued the fight. He was also the Commander-in-Chief of the Italian army and fierce fighting by the Italians slowed the British counter-invasion. The Italians were besieged by the British and Commonwealth troops and despite fierce Italian resistance, with the lack of water and supplies running low they were forced to surrender at Amba Alagi on the 15th May 1941. After the proclamation of surrender had been read the Italian army marched away, a British General took the salute and the Allied troops presented arms as accorded by the honours of war. The officers were allowed to keep their firearms whilst being transferred for internment as prisoners-of-war.           

At the instigation of the Japanese, a peace agreement was signed between Thailand and France in Tokyo on the 9th May 1941 officially ending the Franco-Thai War. Some areas of French Indochina had been fought over between Thailand and Vichy France during the Franco-Thai War of 1940 to 1941. Following the Japanese invasion of French Indochina in September 1940 the French were forced to allow Japan to set up military bases enabling Japanese access to Allied Burma. The peace agreement stated that France would relinquish their hold on the disputed border territories with Thailand.

The “Strike of the 100,000” began on 10th May 1941 in German-occupied Belgium and was led by Julien Lahaut, head of the Belgian Communist Party. The demand of a wage increase was the object of the strike and also a means of passive resistance to the German occupation. Originating in the Cockeril steel works in Eastern Belgium, the news soon spread through the Province of Liége, the industrial Province of Hainaut in the west and the neighbouring areas of Flanders. The national press of the Belgian Resistance gave widespread coverage and the Germans agreed to an 8% increase in wages in order to end the disruption. The strike lasted eight days and ended on the 18th May 1941.

In America, on the15th May 1941 the first Civilian Public Service (C.P.S.) camp opened for conscientious objectors. The C.P.S. provided conscientious objectors an alternative to military service and the camps encouraged them to perform work of national importance. Nearly 12,000 draftees unwilling to do any form of military service, were sent to 152 C.P.S. camps from 1941 to the disbanding of the C.P.S. in 1947. However, one conscientious objector who did serve his country, wore the uniform and saluted the flag was Desmond T. Doss who enlisted to become a combat medic. As a conscientious objector he refused to bear arms in combat but instead became a medic with the 77th Infantry Brigade. For his exceptional valour in rescuing and treating his fellow troops in the Pacific Campaign he was awarded two Bronze Star Medals and the Medal of Honour.          

Dublin, the capital of neutral Southern Ireland was attacked by the Luftwaffe on the 31st May 1941. The attack occurred in the early morning when four bombs fell in the North Strand area of the city. A total of twenty-eight people were killed, ninety civilians were injured and approximately three hundred houses were damaged or destroyed leaving four hundred people homeless. The renamed Connolly Station located in the North Strand Road was the most likely target as streams of refugees were arriving from Belfast following the Luftwaffe raids on that city. It has been suggested the raid by the Luftwaffe was a warning to Southern Ireland to keep out of the war but the suggestion appears never to have been proven.           

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SECOND WORLD WAR April 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR April 1941

(The Desert War)

When Italy entered the war in June 1940 they already had an army of 236,000 men, equipment and supplies in Libya. Their attempt to captured Egypt had been halted by the British and they were driven back into Libya. Germany intervened by sending re-enforcements under Lieutenant-General Erwin Rommel and his Afrika Korps. By the end of March 1941 Rommel had reached and captured El Agheila. The British were in retreat and Rommel, known as the “Desert Fox”, was set to continue the desert war.

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By the 6th April 1941 Rommel’s Afrika Korps had advanced 400 miles, forcing the British to retreat to Egypt, when he assigned some of his force to begin the siege of Tobruk. The German siege of Tobruk began on the 10th April 1941, where a garrison of British troops, mostly Australian remained, to deny the German/Italian axis powers access to the town’s port. The Siege of Tobruk was to last for two hundred and forty one days. The reason the British and the Axis Powers wanted control of Tobruk was that it had a deep protected harbour, for the British so they could defend Egypt and the Suez Canal. For the Axis Powers, to bring in supplies rather than having to transport them from the distant port of Tripoli in Libya. On the 13th/14th April 1941 German tanks attacked the Australian defences but they were held off by artillery fire and the German infantry was forced back by the Australian infantry. In the meantime, Rommel had advanced eastward toward Egypt and was at the frontier by the 24th April 1941. With the failure to capture Tobruk during the march eastward, Rommel believed the only way to take Tobruk was by a deliberate attack. This attack was not possible until sufficient support units had arrived in the area. On the 27th April 1941 Major-General Friedrich Paulus a Deputy Chief of the General Staff, arrives from Berlin to enquire about Rommel’s intentions. Also to let him know there was little chance of more help being available and to concentrate on holding defensive position on the Egyptian frontier.

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 (The Battle for Greece)       

When Italy failed to win the Greco-Italian War which had begun on the 28th October 1940, Hitler decided to intervene on the 4th November 1940. The Greek Army had forced the Italians to retreat into Albanian territory and by the 24th March 1941 the Italian offensive was cancelled as it had ended in complete failure. British troops were transferred from North Africa to Greece beginning on the 4th March 1941. They were required to assist the Greeks in their battle against the advancing German troops.

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The German invasion of Greece, known as Operation Marita began on the 6th April 1941 with the Greek Army occupying the Greek border with Albania. British and Commonwealth reinforcements had arrived in anticipation of a German attack. However, the Germans invaded from Bulgaria, thereby creating a second front. By the 8th April 1941 Salonika in Greece was captured. On the 11th/12th April 1941 the Battle of Vevi was fought between Commonwealth troops and forces from Nazi Germany. The battle took place near the town of Amyntaion close to the Greek North West border. The Allies withdrew owing to adverse weather conditions in the mountains passes. Kleisoura Pass in the Greek mountains and was strategically important as it stood on the main Allied defensive line from Albania. Between the 13th and 14th April 1941 organised resistance by some elements of the Greek 20th Infantry Division were in position to halt the rapid German advance through Yugoslavia. With intense effort and artillery support the attacking Germans managed to split the line and drive some Greek forces into the higher ground, and the remainder surrendered to the Germans. The retreating element of the Greek armed forces was forced to surrender around mid-day on the 14th April 1941 as there was not sufficient transport to bring reinforcements from the Albanian border. German Blitzkrieg tactics overwhelmed the British troops who had been sent to assist Greeks. Outnumbered on the ground and in the air the Greek and Allied forces were unable to deploy sufficient troops to stop the German advance at any one position. With the Germans approaching Athens the city was placed under martial law and the Greek Prime Minister Alexandros Koryzis committed suicide by shooting himself on the 18th April 1941. The same day the British began to plan for the evacuation of Greece as it was clear the Allied forces could not halt the German advance. The Greek government agreed that the armed forces should be evacuated. On the 23rd April 1941 the Greek Army surrendered to the Germans and the Greek government including King George II of Greece escaped to Crete. Beginning on the 24th April 1941 British and Allied forces began their evacuation from Greece. Despite an acute shortage of Allied shipping more than 50,000 Allied troops were evacuated, mostly to Crete but others went to Egypt. Tanks, heavy equipment and trucks had to be abandoned. On the 27th April 1941 German troops occupied the Greek capital Athens. Jointly Germany and Italy occupied the capital while the country was divided into three separate zones occupied by the Germans, Italians and the Bulgarians.

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(Britain)

April 1941 was the month for the Blitz of British Cities. Luftwaffe raids targeted major city centres including industrial and dock areas.

Bristol and Avonmouth suffered heavy air attacks on the 3rd, 4th, 7th, and 11th April 1941. However, the attack on Bristol on the 7th April 1941 was acting as a diversionary raid as the Luftwaffe were making Liverpool their main target for the night. Although not realised at the time the Blitz on Bristol had ended on the 11th April 1941 as the Luftwaffe switched their attention to Belfast, London, Plymouth, Coventry and Birmingham.

Coventry suffered two heavy night raids by the Luftwaffe on the 8th/9th and the 10th/11th April 1941. The damage caused by the two raids included some factories, the central police station, the Coventry & Warwickshire Hospital, King Henry VIII School and St. Mary’s Hall. Christ Church was the main architectural casualty of the raids when most of the building was destroyed leaving only the spire standing. The two raids resulted in the death of 451 people and over 700 seriously injured.         

Two separate raids by the Nazi Luftwaffe against the City of Birmingham took place on the 9th & 10th April 1941. The first raid was made up of 235 bombers who dropped 280 tons of explosives and 40,000 incendiary bombs on the city centre. The Bull Ring suffered heavy damage and the Prince of Wales Theatre together with the Midland Arcade were destroyed. Outlying areas including Small Heath, Aston and Nechels also suffered heavy damage. The second raid had 245 bombers dropping 254 tons of explosive and 43,000 incendiary bombs causing major damage to Solihull, Hall Green and Erdington and the combined two raids caused 1,121 casualties.       (Continue from here again)

The Belfast Blitz comprised four separate German air raids during April/May 1941. The first raid was probably only to test the Northern Ireland City of Belfast’s defences on the 7th/8th April 1941. Two hundred Luftwaffe bombers attacked military and manufacturing targets in the city on the 16th April 1941. Aircraft carrier HMS Furious was berthed in the dockyard having a refit when she was hit by a single small bomb but only sustained light damage. The raid consisted mainly of high explosive bombs causing the death of approximately 900 people and 1,500 injured, which was the greatest loss of life in any night raid during the Blitz. Only London had a higher casualty rate on any one night. The 3rd and 4th raids were carried out during early May 1941.

The Luftwaffe returned to London in waves lasting all night on the 19th April 1941 and dropped hundreds of tons of bombs for which they lost only two aircraft. Many important landmarks and public buildings were hit. St Paul’s Cathedral had the north transept slightly damaged and the remaining stained glass windows were shattered. The Speakers House at Westminster, the Law Courts, Selfridges and Christie’s Auction House were also damaged. The total casualties were roughly 2,300 killed and another 3,000 seriously wounded. With many homes hit the raid proved to be one of heaviest of the war.

The Royal Dockyards at HMNB Devonport was the main target carried out by the Luftwaffe on the city of Plymouth. On the evening of the 24th April 1941, during a heavy bombing raid, the communal air-raid shelter at Portland Square took a direct hit. Seventy-six people who had taken refuge in the shelter were killed and just three people survived. The square was away from the dock area but in the central area of the city.

During April 1941, the Battle of the Atlantic saw the loss of forty-four ships sunk (247,758 tons) and a further four damaged (28,793 tons) giving a total loss of 276,550 tons. Convoy SC-26 was an east-bound convoy of twenty-three ships which sailed from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Liverpool. The convoy was intercepted by eight U-boats in the Atlantic on the 2nd /3rd April 1941. Thirteen ships were either sunk or damaged that night (56%) with the loss of 72,631 tons. The only escort was Armed Merchant Cruiser (AMC) Worcestershire who managed to destroy one U-boat, U-76.

German battleships Gneisenau and Scharnhorst were anchored at Brest in France on the 22nd March 1941. After a successful raid on British convoy shipping in the Atlantic the two ships made for safe anchorage at Brest. One of the surviving British convoy ships radioed their position to British battleships HMS Rodney and HMS King George V but the German ships escaped to safety. The two ships entered dry-dock for routine maintenance but were subjected to repeated British air raids. Gneisenau was moved from the dry-dock to the harbour and on the  6th April 1941 she was struck by a torpedo from a  British Bristol Beaufort torpedo bomber inflicting heavy damage. The attack killed 72 servicemen initially and wounded a further 90, of whom 16 later died of their wounds. Scharnhorst also suffered numerous attacks and although damaged she had not been struck by any torpedo.

Malta, a strategically important island in the Mediterranean and pitted the air forces and navies of Italy and Germany against the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the Royal Navy. The Siege of Malta had begun in June 1940 and the Axis Powers resolved to bomb or starve Malta into submission. Malta, a British colony ideally positioned to defend North Africa and to attack Axis ships transporting supplies and reinforcements from Europe. Consequently it was one of the most intensely bombed island during the war. German General Erwin Rommel stated that the Axis Powers would end up losing control of North Africa unless Malta was defeated. The Axis Powers air superiority was taking its toll on the island with their bombing raids but the Allies had some success during April 1941. The Royal Navy had intercepted the Axis 14th Destroyer Fleet on 15th/16th April 1941, carrying German Afrika Korps supplies, when they sank eight German and Italian ships for the loss of destroyer HMS Mohawk. Further success was had when the Malta convoys began to get through bringing with them much needed Hurricane fighter planes as reinforcements for the obsolete Gloster Sea Gladiators and Hurricanes already on the island.

In the Kingdom of Iraq, British forces begin to land in Basrah on the 18th April 1941. The Kingdom was an independent state which had been governed by the United Kingdom until 1932. Under the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1930 the U.K. had obtained permission to build two military bases to ensure control of Iraqi petroleum. The Iraqi government was responsible for internal security, but the U.K. had been allowed to retain the bases, RAF Shaibah near Basra and RAF Habbaniya between Ramadi and Fallujah. As well as protecting British petroleum interests they were an air link between Egypt and India. Nationalist and anti-British Rashid Ali became Prime Minister of Iraq in March 1940. In January 1941 Rashid Ali resigned as P.M. but on the 1st April 1941 he seized power in a coup d’état. British relations with Rashid Ali had become unsatisfactory which resulted in Britain sending troops to assist the Iraqi Army. (See Other Theatres – 1st April 1941)          

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(Germany)                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded by German troops advancing through Romania and Hungary on the 6th April 1941. Hitler had ordered the invasion of Yugoslavia at the end of March 1941 after Yugoslavia had rejected entry into the Tripartite Pact. The Luftwaffe had been ordered to attack Yugoslavia’s capital Belgrade and the two day assault began on the 7th April 1941. Germany ordered the Kingdom of Yugoslavia to be split into two separate territories which would be annexed to German and Italy on the 10th April 1941. The city of Belgrade surrendered on the 12th April 1941 and the German Army continuing the invasion of Yugoslavia on the 16th April 1941 until Yugoslavia finally surrendered on the 17th April 1941. Yugoslavia became a Fascist State by conquest.          

—————————–

(Italy)

Italy’s North African War effectively ended on the 6th April 1941 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (Previously Abyssinia), when the Italian flag was hauled down and the Union flag was hoisted over the Italian Viceroy’s official residence. The residency had previously been the palace of Emperor Haile Selassie. The British, under the command of General Archibald Wavell, had planned and executed a three-pronged attack. Although outnumbered by the Italians Wavell had RAF air support. In January 1941 Lieutenant-General William Platt led his forces from Sudan into Eritrea and the Italians soon retreated. Lieutenant-General Alan Cunningham advanced north from Kenya into Italian Somaliland while a third force crossed from Aden and took Somaliland by amphibious assault. These three forces linked up to push deep into Ethiopia. The great majority of Italy’s forces had already abandoned the city leaving it in charge of armed police who surrendered to British divisional commander Cunningham. Remnants of the Italian army in Eritrea were retreating toward the Eritrean town of Dessie in March 1941. Several thousand Italian troops continued a guerrilla war until September 1943 when Italy surrendered to the Allies. Hitler’s invasion of Poland and declaration of war with Britain and France had brought Italy into the war which then exposed their weaknesses in its military. Greece and North Africa soon fell. And only German military intervention in early 1941 saved Mussolini, who went by the nickname “Il Duce” (“the Leader”), from a military coup.

——————————-

(Other Theatres)

In Iraq Rashid Ali staged a military coup d’ état on the 1st April 1941. He was nationalistic and anti-British who resented the British having air force bases at RAF Shaibah near Basra and RAF Habbaniya between Ramada and Fallujah. The government had broken off diplomatic relations with Nazi Germany but in March 1939 Rashid Ali was the new Prime Minister of Iraq. Although not a pro-Axis supporter he made some initial contacts with German representatives in Ankara and Berlin. He resigned as P.M. in January 1941 and seized power in a coup d’ état on the 1st April 1941. A Pro-Axis government was installed in Iraq on the 3rd April 1941 with Nazi support and funding. The British response was to air lift re-enforcements to Iraq on the13th April 1941 and arriving at RAF Shaibah on the 18th April 1941. The new Iraqi government moved ground forces to occupy the plateau south of RAF Habbaniya on the 30th April 1941. This was the opening moves of the Anglo-Iraqi War during May 1941. (See Britain – 18th April 1941)                  

The United States of America occupied Greenland on the 10th April 1941 to act as a protectorate for Greenland’s neutrality. Following the fall of Denmark in April 1940 Greenland was left an unoccupied territory of an occupied Denmark. American President Franklin D. Roosevelt authorised Secretary of State Cordell Hull to sign an agreement with the Danish envoy to the USA Henrik Kauffman. This agreement allowed the presence of American troops to guarantee Greenland’s neutrality. This action was independent to the occupied Danish Government’s wishes declaring the agreement void and Kauffman a traitor to the state. Greenland automatically entered the war in December 1941 after the Japanese invaded Pearl Harbour, allowing Greenland to provide “stepping stones” for America’s aircraft delivery to Europe.   

American destroyer USS Niblack patrolling off Iceland on the 10th April 1941 escorted a task force which landed American troops in Iceland. Before the landings Niblack was making a preliminary patrol and picked up three boatloads of survivors from a torpedoed merchantman vessel. A German U-boat was detected and driven off after Niblack’s commander ordered the dropping of depth charges in the area. This action was believed to be the first act of war between Germany and the USA even though America was still neutral at the time.  However, on the 11th April 1941 the United States began sea patrols in the North Atlantic in order to safeguard the American servicemen based on occupied Greenland.

On the 10th April 1941 Roosevelt declared the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden should no longer be combat areas but should be open to United States shipping owing to their neutrality.        

The Independent State of Croatia was established on the 10th April 1941. It became a puppet state of Germany and Italy and was founded by utilising occupied Yugoslavia. Adolf Hitler had issued a directive for the Axis Powers to invade Yugoslavia on the 27th March 1941. Croatia was created utilising territories of Slovenia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Independent State of Croatia was governed by a one-party state run by the fascist Ustasa organisation. The regime targeted Serbs, Jews and Roma as part of a large-scale campaign of genocide, as were the anti-fascist or dissident Croats and Muslims.          

The Soviet Union/Japanese Neutrality Pact was signed in Moscow on the 13th April 1941. Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka and Ambassador Yoshitsugu Tatekawa signed on behalf of Japan and Foreign Minister Vyacheslau Molotiv for the Soviet Union. The pact was signed to ensure the neutrality between the two countries allowing the Soviet Union to safeguard its eastern border and concentrate on the European theatre of war. It also allowed Japan to continue its war with China. Japan was aware that the diplomatic relationship with the United States of America was rapidly deteriorating.         

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–                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service March 1941.

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service March 1941.

Date                Time   Location         Damage

01/03/1941    13.00  Langdon        Joseph William O’Neil 17 years, a member of the

Hills                A.F.S. attached to East Ham Fire Station of “Landour” Park Avenue was tampering with a Cannon Shell at home when it exploded.  Parts of both hands were blown away.  O’Neil and his mother Emily were seriously injured and his sisters Theresa 3 years and Peggy 13 years slightly injured.  O’Neil died in Billericay Hospital 3.3.41.

08/03/1941    04.00  Hadleigh        Damage to glass at “Joyclin” by A.A. Shrapnel.  No

                                                            casualties.

08/03/1941    23.05  Ashingdon    1 – H.E exploded on Bentalls Farm, 130 yards

North East of Ulverstone Road.  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    07.09  Rochford       11 – H.Es exploded and a number of I.Bs burnt out

in fields at the corner of Rectory and Ashingdon Road.  Damage to telephone wires and property.  1 slight casualty.

09/03/1941    20.35  Rochford       I.Bs (a number) in the vicinity of Ashingdon Park

Estate and Rectory Farm.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

09/03/1941    21.40  Doddinghurst            2 – H.Es exploded in fields at Pear Tree

                                                            Green.  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    21.45  Mountnessing          4 – H.Es exploded in fields near May’s Café,

Church Road.  Damage to property and overhead electric and telephone cables.  No casualties.

09/03/1941    21.55  Billericay        3 – H.Es and a number of I.Bs in line from

Littlebrook Farm Outwood Common Road to 200 yards South of Outwood Common Railway Bridge.  Slight damage to property.  1 slight casualty.

09/03/1941    21.55  Wickford        2 – H.Es exploded in fields near L.N.E.R. Goods

                                                            Yard.  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    21.55  Runwell         1 – H.E. exploded in a field 150 yards North East of

“Ingraf”.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

09/03/1941    21.55  Laindon         1 – H.E. exploded in a field North of A.127 near

East end Waverley Avenue.  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    22.05  New                4 – H.Es exploded on New England Island.  No

                                    England         damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    22.05  Haven Gore   3 – H.Es exploded 2 on Havengore Island and 1

500 yards West of Havengore Farm.  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    22.15  South Weald 4 – H.Es exploded 3 in the stackyard of Rochetts

Farm and 1 in a ditch at side of Weald Road.  Damage to property and water main.  Weald Road blocked.

09/03/1941    22.15  Bentley          I.Bs (about 30) burnt out in fields surrounding

Hillfields House, slight damage to property.  No casualties.

09/03/1941    23.15  Raweth          1 – H.E. unexploded in a field 200 yards North of

Wardens Post M.12 Raweth Lane.  No damage or casualties (removed by B.D.S. 15.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Laindon         1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. 200 yards North of

Ghyillgrove Farmhouse, Honeypot Lane, in a field.  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    Night  South Weald 1 – Small U.X.B. and wire at Prieze Hall.  No

damage or casualties (dealt with by B.D.S. 30.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Fobbing         1 – Small U.X.B. and wire (dealt with by B.D.S.

                                                            28.3.41)  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    Night Laindon           1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in garden of “North Crisp”. 

No damage or casualties (dealt with by B.D.S. 19.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Laindon         1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in field 1/2 mile East of

Hotwater and Lee Wootons Lane.  No damage or casualties (dealt with by B.D.S. 11.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Langdon        1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in garden of “Myosotes”

Hills                Lee Chapel Lane.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S 19.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Pitsea             1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. 8 yards North East of

Mess room of Sewerage Works.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 11.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Wickford        1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in a field at rear of

“Janroe” Waterworks Road.  No damage or casualties dealt with by B.D.S. 28.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Langdon        1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. and Parachute in field 40

Hills                yards North of Dry Street.  No damage or casualties.  (dealt with by B.D.S. 28.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Langdon        1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. and Parachute in field 1/2

Hills                mile West of Dunton Wayletts Signal Box 20 yards North of Railway. No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 14.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Little Warley  1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in Brickfields Yard.  No

damage or casualties (dealt with by B.D.S. 10.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Vange            1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in roof of shed at “Glen

Lowge” Glen Road.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 28.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Hutton            1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in field at Tally-Ho! Drive

Hunters Chase.  No damage or casualties (dealt with by B.D.S. 10.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Laindon         1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. near allotments 60 yards

West of “White House” in a tree at Albemarle Crescent.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 28.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Brentwood     1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in a swamp in Harts Wood

Hartswood Road.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 10.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Langdon        1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. in a field Nr Lee Chapel

Hills                and High Road.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 19.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Thundersley 1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. wire and parachute,

balloon and board in field 600 yards South of Great Burches Farm.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 10.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Downham     1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. found near “Frenwill”.  No

                                                            damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 12.3.41).

09/03/1941    Night  Raweth          1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. wire parachute and board

opposite Good Companion Garage, Chelmsford Road (dealt with B.D.S. 10.3.41).  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    Night  Rayleigh        2 – Parachutes and wire found at Hylands Farm

                                                            (taken by B.D.S. 10th).

09/03/1941    Night  Raweth          1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. wire parachute balloon

and board at Dallymans Farm, London Road.  No damage or casualties (dealt with B.D.S. 28.3.41).     

09/03/1941    Night  Billericay        1 – Small Yellow U.X.B. wire parachute and board

at Buckwyns Farm, Buckwyns Estate (dealt with B.D.S. 28.3.41).  No damage or casualties.

09/03/1941    Night  Laindon         10 – H.Es unexploded in fields East of Noak Hill

Road.  No damage or casualties. (all dealt with B.D.S. 28.3.41).

11/03/1941    06.55  Foulness       2 – H.Es exploded on Ridge Marsh Farm.  No

                                    Island             damage or casualties.

11/03/1941    22.55  Childerditch  1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in a field at Nuttys Farm,

60 yards West of farm buildings.  No damage or casualties.

12/03/1941    20.30  Brentwood     1 – A.A. Shell exploded on tennis courts at

“Merrymead” Sawyers Hall Lane.  No damage or casualties.

12/03/1941    23.15  South             Parts of Barrage Balloon in a field near Clifford

                                    Benfleet         Road (removed by RAF).   

13/03/1941    20.30  Hockley          1 – H.E exploded in field at Brammerton Road.  1

                                                            slight casualty.  Slight damage to property.

13/03/1941    20.45  Hockley          1 – H.E exploded 50 yards West of Southlands

Railway Crossing of L.N.E.R.  Damage to track, telephone wires and signals.  Train service suspended.  No casualties.

13/03/1941    20.55  Thundersley 1 – H.E. unexploded in a field near St Michaels

                                                            Avenue Daws Heath.  No damage or casualties.

13/03/1941    21.00  Canvey          1 – H.E exploded in a field between Coastal Wharf

Island             and Catholic Church. 1 50 yards from Tank of Oil.  No damage or casualties.

13/03/1941    21.30  Raweth          1 – H.E. exploded near “Downwood” Hooley Drive,

Trende Hayes.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

13/03/1941    21.30  Raweth          1 – H.E. exploded at Maple Drive, Trende Hayes. 

                                                            No damage or casualties.

13/03/1941    21.45  Rochford       2 – H.Es exploded, 1 near stackyard at Doggetts

Chase and 1 150 yards North of Russell Terrace, Stambridge Road.  Slight damage to property. 1 slight casualty.

13/03/1941    Found   Downham   1 – H.E. exploded in a field at Grange Road.  No

damage or casualties.  Time of occurrence not known.

14/03/1941    00.45  Foulness       2 – H.Es exploded in fields North East of Church. 

                                    Island             Damage to telephone wires.  No casualties.

14/03/1941    03.00  Doddinghurst            1 – A.A. unexploded Shell at Cows Farm. 

                                                            No damage or casualties.

14/03/1941    20.55  Thundersley 1 – H.E exploded in field 250 yards South of

Southend Arterial Road and 200 yards East of St Michaels Avenue Daws Heath.  No damage or casualties.

15/03/1941    00.30 Raweth           1 – H.E exploded and 1 I.B. burnt out at Beeches

                                                            Farm.  No damage or casualties.

15/03/1941    00.40  Foulness       1 – H.E exploded on main Military concrete road

Island             opposite New Wick Farm.  Damage to road which is blocked, telephone and electric cables.  No casualties.

15/03/1941    01.00  Thundersley 1 – A.A. unexploded Shell fell in field 1/4 mile North

East of “Ivedene”  Daws Heath Road.  No damage or casualties. (dealt with B.D.S. 22.3.41)

15/03/1941   03.35   Creeksea       1 – H.E. exploded on disused timber shed at

Creeksea Ferry.  Timber shed demolished.  Telephone and electric cables down. No casualties.

15/03/1941    10.00  Childerditch  1 – A.A. exploded Shell crater found in gateway of

Childerditch Farm Cottages, 150 yards from Brickfields Road.  No damage or casualties.

15/03/1941    20.45  Hullbridge     I.Bs (about 50) at Coventry Corner.  1 serious

casualty, the occupant of a bus which was set on fire (property of Westcliff Motor Services Limited.  Also garden shed fired.

15/03/1941    21.00  Hullbridge     I.Bs (about 16) at Abbleside Gardens.  No damage

                                                            or casualties.

15/03/1941    22.00  Doddinghurst            1 – H.E. exploded in a field at Pettettes

Farm Mountnessing Road.  No damage or casualties.

17/03/1941    10.00  Wallasea        1 exploded Sweep Cutter of German origin found

Island             on the sea wall near Grass Farm.  (Navy Depot informed.)

19/03/1941    00.50  Laindon         3 – H.Es exploded, one in garden of “Woodlands”

Norfolk Road, 1 at Alexander Road and 1 at Rosebury Avenue.  Damage to property, gas main fractured.  No casualties.

19/03/1941    00.50  Little                I.Bs (about 50) burnt out in fields at Rectory Road

                                    Burstead        and near the Church.  No damage or casualties.

19/03/1941    01.15  Basildon        10 – H.Es exploded in fields 500 yards North of

                                                            Bethwick Lane.  No damage or casualties.

19/03/1941    01.15  Laindon         1 – H.E. unexploded  in a field 300 yards North of

Bencons Farm, Wash Road.  No damage or casualties B.D.S. 10.5.41.

19/03/1941    03.05  Great Warley I.Bs (about 100) burnt out at Codham Hall.  No

                                                            damage or casualties.        

19/03/1941    03.05  Shenfield &   I.Bs (a number) at Highlands and Priests Lane. 

                                    Hutton            Damage to property.  No casualties.

19/03/1941    03.30  Great Warley 2 – H.Es exploded in field at Codham Hall Farm. 

                                                            No damage or casualties.

19/03/1941    13.30  Ramsden       1 – A.A. unexploded Shell found in garden of

Bellhouse      Malveas Cycle Shop premises, 50 yards East of Fox & Hounds P.H.  No damage or casualties.  (removed by B.D.S. 29.3.41).

19/03/1941                Billericay        1 – A.A. Shell exploded in a field 50 yards North of

Thrift Wood Lane Tye Common.  No damage or casualties.

19/03/1941    21.10  Paglesham    4 – H.Es exploded and a number of I.Bs burnt out

at East Hall.  Slight damage to property.  Overhead electric cables down.  18 pigs killed.

20/03/1941    00.60  Hutton            1 – H.E. exploded on North side of River Wid, 400

yards from Wash Road.  Electric cables down.  No casualties.

20/03/1941    01.15  Mountnessing          Damage to property in Brentwood Division

at Burnt House Lane and main road, Padham Green, due to mine exploding in Chelmsford Division.  No casualties.

21/03/1941    13.50  Runwell         1 – H.E. unexploded found in bed of River Crouch,

100 yards East of “Ilgars”.  No damage or casualties.

21/03/1941    21.00  Bowers           4 – H.Es exploded craters found on Marshes, 500

Gifford            yards South of Great Russels Farm.  No damage or casualties.

22/03/1941                Great              1 – H.E. unexploded found 1/4 mile West of

Wakering       Croftman’s House Paynters Lane Road.  No damage or casualties.  Road closed.  Dealt with B.D.S. 27.3.41

23/03/1941    13.00  Rochford       A pear shaped object (metal) of German origin, 3

feet long having the appearance of a Buoy which appeared to have contained a canister which had exploded, was found in the River Crouch.  (Removed by Admiralty.)

24/03/1941    11.00  Great              A fatal accident occurred at the New Ranges when

Wakering       Sapper William Frederick Walden, 20 years.  No. 2118986 of the 200th Field Co. R.Es stationed at Battlesbridge was killed while working in a mine field as the result of a land mine exploding.

25/03/1941    11.45  Dunton          1 – H.E unexploded was found 50 yards South of

railway and 50 yards East of Berry Lane.  No damage or casualties.  (Dealt with by B.D.S. 10.5.41).

26/03/1941                Shenfield       2 – A.A. unexploded Shells found on a spare plot of

                                                            land in Middleton Road.  No damage or casualties.

27/03/1941                Mountnessing          1 – A.A. unexploded Shell found in Turnip

field at Arnolds Farm, 40 yards East of Lower Road.  No damage or casualties.  (disposed of B.D.S. 8.4.41).

29/03/1941    10.00  Rayleigh        1 – A.A. exploded Shell found1/2 mile North West

                                                            of gas holder.  No damage or casualties.

29/03/1941    East Horndon           1 – A.A. Shell exploded in Jackson’s Wood

Meadow, at rear of Mount Thrift Farm.  No damage or casualties.

SECOND WORLD WAR March 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR March 1941

(Britain)

British commandos conducted a raid on the Nazi- occupied Lofoten Islands off Narvik in Norway, known as Operation Claymore on the 4th March 1941. They achieved their objective of destroying fish oil factories and over 3,600 tons of oil and glycerine. As well as capturing German code information they took over 200 German prisoners, destroyed eleven ships and one German armed trawler surrendered to destroyer HMS Somali. The commandos suffered only one casualty in the whole operation which was an accidental self-inflicted wound by an officer who managed to shoot himself in the leg with his own pistol.

Operation Lustre began on the 4th March 1941 during the Middle East Campaign when British troops were transferred by a series of naval convoys from Alexandria in Egypt to Greece. The first British troops landed in Greece on the 7th March 1941. British troops were required to assist the Greeks in their battle against advancing German troops. The Greek army were opposing the Italian forces who had been virtually defeated. Germany sent troops to re-enforce the Italians and Britain reciprocated by re-enforcing the Greeks. It did however, leave the Allied forces weakened in North Africa leading to Rommel’s successful counter-attack in April 1941. (See Germany – 24th March 1941)

During the Blitz on Britain’s cities, a Luftwaffe bomber flew over Buckingham Palace in London on the 8th March 1941 and dropped a single high explosive bomb. The North Lodge was hit and demolished but one policeman was killed. Later the same day another wave of German aircraft dropped high explosive bombs over the Palace forecourt. No casualties were reported among the Palace staff and the Palace itself did not sustain any major damage. On the 19th March 1941 London was subjected to the worst bombing raid of the year when it was one of twelve cities having been hit by numerous Luftwaffe raids during March 1941.  On the night of the 10th March 1941 Portsmouth was raided by the Luftwaffe who dropped thousands of incendiary and hundreds of high explosive bombs. Although serious damage was caused the city coped remarkably well in extinguishing the fires and securing the damaged buildings. 93 people were killed, over 200 were injured and over 1,000 were made homeless. On the nights of the 13th-14th and the 14th-15th March 1941 Luftwaffe bombers raided the Clydebank district of Glasgow. The main targets were the armaments factory at the Singer Sewing Machine works, John Brown & Co shipyard and Beardmore’s engine works. Over the two nights 528 people were killed and 617 seriously injured. 11,350 homeless people were given temporary accommodation. Plymouth Docks and neighbouring Devonport was subjected to a series of devastating raids from the 19th March 1941. The city lost its historic Guildhall and the main shopping streets were badly damaged and more than 900 people were killed and over 40,000 were made homeless.                           

The Battle of Keren in Eritrea was a conflict during The East Africa Campaign and was fought between a mixed Italian Army of regular and colonial troops and the British/Free French forces. The British army consisted mainly of Sudanese and Indian troops under the British flag. Keren is surrounded on most sides by a jumble of steep granite mountains and sharp ridges with road and rail access along a valley. The natural fortification was ideal for the Italians to defend against an attack along the valley road to Keren, as they occupied the high ground. The British attacked on the 27th March 1941 and forced the Italian army off the high ground. The Italian defence positions at Keren were untenable and the defenders withdrew along the road from Keren to Aasmara with the British in pursuit.  

On the Mediterranean island of Crete British heavy cruiser HMS York was disabled in Souda Bay by two explosive motorboats of the Italian Regina Marina on the 25th March 1941. Six motorboats packed with explosives attacked three targets in pairs. Of the six motorboats only three were successful, two struck York which was run aground to prevent her sinking. The third damaged Norwegian tanker Pericies. Submarine HMS Rover supplied electrical power to enable York’s guns to operate as anti-aircraft defence. After Rover was damaged by German aircraft she was towed away for repair. York was further damaged beyond repair and was abandoned after having her main guns wrecked by demolition charges on the 21st May 1941.                    

At Cape Matapan, off southern Greece, a naval engagement took place between the 27th -29th March 1941. The Battle of Cape Matapan was fought between the British Royal Navy and the Royal Australian Navy against the Italian Regia Marina. Italian messages had been intercepted and decoded by “enigma” at Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park in England. The messages informed the British that an Italian battleship, six heavy and light cruisers were about to attack merchant convoys supplying British forces in the Mediterranean. This enabled ships of the Royal Navy and the Royal Australian Navy to intercept and sink or severely damage several ships of the Italian navy. In order not to disclose “enigma” a Sunderland flying boat was dispatched and the Italian ships located. Two separate British patrols converged on the Italian fleet. The first was commanded by Vice-Admiral Pridham-Wippel with cruisers HMS Ajax, HMS Gloucester, HMS Orion and HMS Perth and a number of destroyers sailed from Greek waters. Admiral Cunningham with HMS Formidable, HMS Warspite, HMS Barham and HMS Valiant left Alexandria the same day to join up with the cruisers. On the morning of the 28th March 1941 a number of Italian ships engaged with Pridham–Wippel’s group but the Italians experienced range finding problems with their guns and they changed course to join up with the remainder of the Italian ships. The British had inflicted considerable damage to the Italian Regia Marina. They had one battleship damaged, three heavy cruisers and two destroyers sunk and one destroyer badly damaged. In the battle over 2,300 Italian sailors were killed and 1,015 were taken prisoner. The British suffered four light cruisers slightly damaged, one torpedo bomber shot down and three killed. On the early morning of the 29th March 1941 Admiral Cunningham ordered a signal to be sent to the Italians that they were unable to rescue any more of the 1,015 survivors due to the risk of air attacks. He gave the location of the remaining survivors for the Italian hospital ship Gradisca to recover.    

In the Battle of the Atlantic the Allies suffered huge convoy losses during March 1941. A total of forty ships were sunk (234,847 tons) and a further ten ships were damaged (98,329 tons) mainly from German U-boat attacks.                

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(Germany)

German dictator Adolf Hitler instructed Chief of German Police of the dreaded SS Heinrich Himmler to order the expansion of Auschwitz concentration camp on the 1st March 1941. The new camp was to house 100,000 prisoners of war and be located outside the village of Birkenau in Poland.                

In North Africa German Panzers began to arrive in greater numbers on the 12th March 1941 following Lt-General Erwin Rommel’s appointment as head of the Afrika Korps in February1941. Rommel’s attack on El Agheila on the 24th March 1941 began a new stage in the war. It was the beginning of the German involvement in one of the war’s major fronts. Fighting against the Italians the British had extended their front from Egypt to Tobruk in Libya and the Italians were defeated and surrendered. The British were substantially weakened when some of the forces were sent to assist in the Greco-Italian War. Rommel sensed the British weakness and ordered an attack on El Agheila Fort. The British realised they could resist against a concerted German attack and retreated. There was little action apart from the British setting delaying tactics and the Germans reoccupied El Agheila. For Rommel the campaign to take El Agheila was a success and the North African Campaign had begun.  Mersa Brega in Libya is the most southerly part of the Mediterranean Sea and was the opening phase of Rommel’s first offensive on the 31st March 1941. The Afrika Korps took Mersa Brega by pinning down the British with his infantry whilst despatching his Panzers across the open desert flanks. This tactic was the first example of moves that were to become his signature.

 On the 27th March 1941 Hitler issued a directive to his military leaders to plan for an invasion of Yugoslavia. The new government of Yugoslavia had rejected the Tripartite Pact with Nazi Germany negotiated by Prince Regent Paul earlier in the month. When the pact was rejected Hitler was enraged which led him to order the invasion. (See Other Theatres – 4th March 1941)

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(Italy)

The Italian Spring Offensive began on the 9th March 1941 during the Greco-Italian War. The Greek Army had advanced deep into Albanian territory and Italian dictator Benito Mussolini supervised the last Italian attempt of the war to defeat the Greeks. The Greek artillery had not been neutralised and the exploitation of advantageous terrain allowed the Greeks to maintain an active defence. The Italians began the attack with heavy artillery and air bombardment followed by numerous infantry assaults. On the 14th March 1941 Italian General Ugo Cavallero advised Mussolini to halt the offensive as the attacks were futile. On the 24th March 1941 the offensive was cancelled as the offensive had ended in complete failure. Italian casualties amounted to over 18,000 dead and wounded while the Greeks suffered 5,300 dead, wounded and missing.                 

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(Other Theatres)

Bulgaria officially signed the Tripartite Pact on the 1st March 1941 in Vienna. The Tripartite Pact was a defensive military alliance between Germany, Italy and Japan and the agreement was signed in Berlin during September 1940. The Kingdom if Bulgaria had been an ally of Germany during the Great War but hesitated to sign the new pact due to internal differences of opinion. However, Bulgaria was finally forced to agree Germany’s wishes when Germany needed to move their troops through Bulgaria to assist in the Italo-Greek War. By signing the Tripartite Pact there was not any possibility of Bulgaria militarily resisting German access through the country side.              

Following months of negotiations between Germany and Yugoslavia, Prince Regent Paul of Yugoslavia met with Adolf Hitler on the 4th March 1941 at his country retreat of Berghoff where Paul agreed to join Axis Pact. He set his conditions for Yugoslavia to join the Axis Powers and Hitler agreed providing all the terms were published.  Following discussion with the Yugoslav government some members of the cabinet resigned on the 21st March 1941 in protest at Prince Paul’s Pact with the Nazis. On the 25th March 1941 Paul’s commitment to the Tripartite Pact was signed in Vienna. However, the regime was overthrown and a new government was proclaimed when the seventeen year old Crown Prince Peter was declared King on the 27th March 1941. The government refused to ratify the Yugoslav signing of the Tripartite Pact which enraged Hitler who issued a directive to invade Yugoslavia. (See Germany – 27th March 1941)                    

In America the Lease-Lend programme had been approved by Congress and President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the act on the 11th March 1941. The Lease-Lend programme was devised as a means of aiding Great Britain in its war against Germany. America’s reasoning for granting the aid was that if your neighbour was successful in defending his home, the security of your home was enhanced. British morale was bolstered in the knowledge they were not alone in their struggle against Germany.                 

The Western Defence Command (WDC) of America was established on the 17th March 1941. The command formation of the U.S. Army was responsible for the training of soldiers prior to their deployment overseas. The coordination for the defence of the Pacific Coast region of the United States was little more than a planning agency until the 11th December 1941 following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour.                

Japanese Takeo Yoshikawa arrived in Hawaii on the 27th March 1941 under the cover of being a vice-consul named Tadashi Morimura. Yoshikawa had been discharged from the Imperial Japanese Navy after having suffered a severe stomach ailment in 1936. He began a career in Naval intelligence at the Navy Headquarters in Tokyo after studying every source he could access to become an expert on the United States Navy. In 1940 he passed Foreign Ministry English examinations to qualify as a junior diplomat. Upon arriving in Hawaii he began his spying career by observing the U.S. Fleet movements and security arrangements at Pearl Harbour. His observations were transmitted to the Foreign Ministry in Tokyo.                    

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