Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service March 1942.

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service March 1942.

Date                Time   Location         Damage

02/03/1942    Found  Childerditch 1 – Unexploded A.A. Shell found in a field 500

yards South of The Greyhound P.H.  No casualties or damage.  Time of occurrence not known.

04/03/1942    08.45  Great              A navy blue parachute 4 feet in circumference with

Wakering       12 white cords attached found by Wardens and claimed by the Director of Experiments, Shoeburyness Garrison.

17/03/1942    11.00  Wallasea        Found under the sea wall near the old Pool.  A

Island             deflated Barrage Balloon No. K.B/M.K. 6 & No A.499 with letters “R.N.” & “Evelyn” thereon.  Removed by Naval Authorities 18.3.42.

17/03/1942    Found  Childerditch 1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in a field 600 yards

South East of the Greyhound P.H. Childerditch Common.  No damage or casualties.   (Disposed of BDS 31.3.42).

21/03/1942    Found  Dunton         1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in the garden of

“Kimoiey” Lower Avenue.  No damage or casualties.  Date and time of falling not known.  (Disposed of BDS 3.4.42).

24/03/1942    Found  Rayleigh      1 – H.E unexploded in a meadow at junction of

Victoria and Alexander Avenues.  No damage or casualties.  Date and time of falling not known.

31/03/1942    21.29  Great              2 – Small Yellow U.X.Bs exploded in High Street

Wakering       and a of Small Yellow U.X.Bs fell in the area.  2 serious and one slight casualties.  Damage to roofs, tiles and windows of property.  Telephone wires down.

SECOND WORLD WAR (March 1942)

SECOND WORLD WAR  (March 1942)

Britain

The British government extended the conscription laws on the 5th March 1942. For the first time unmarried women between the ages of 20 to 30 years of age were included in the new laws.  Married women with children were excluded. Women were not used in combat but served in a range of non-combat activities. However, there are occasions were some women served as overseas spies or took an active role in the Special Operations Executive (SOE).  The upper age limit for men was extended to 45 years and the existing laws still remained in force.

When America entered the war in December 1941, a joint meeting between the U.S. and U.K. commanders agreed that defeating Germany was the first priority. Sir Arthur Harris had been appointed Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of RAF Bomber Command in February 1942. Later during the height of the Anglo-American bombing campaign he was given the name of Bomber Harris by the press. The Krupp factory in the industrial town of Essen was a prime target for Allied strategic bombings. The Krupp factory had a near monopoly in the production of steel, artillery, ammunition and other armaments. Beginning on the 8/9th March 1942 the RAF launched air raids with over 800 British bombers in total, attacking the town during the month of March 1942. Beginning on the 20th March 1942 the RAF carried out Operation Outward by attacking Germany with free-flying balloons. Nearly 100,000 surplus naval weather balloons were launched during the course of the war. In an effort to damage high voltage power lines, approximately half of them carried trailing steel wires. The intention was that the trailing wires would cause a short circuit in the power lines and subsequently causing electrical power to fail. The remaining balloons carried incendiary devices intended to start fires in fields, forests and heathland. Operation Outward was successful because of the harassment created on German air defences. German fighters were having to be deployed in an effort to shoot the balloons down thereby using additional fuel and wear and tear on their aircraft. On the night of the 28/29th March 1942 the RAF launched an attack on the medieval city of Lübeck on the Baltic coast. The city had a port and submarine yards nearby and the object was for the RAF to learn how effective an initial wave of aircraft could guide a second wave into a successful attack. The first wave dispatched 144 tons of incendiary bombs to set buildings alight and half an hour later a second wave dropped 160 tons of high explosives. At least half of the city was destroyed mainly by fire. However, the attack was costly for the RAF. Of the 234 bombers sent on the raid 13 aircraft were shot down along the route. Knowing that Adolf Hitler was outraged at the attack on Lübeck, Bomber Harris stated that the Nazis had “sowed the wind and now they are going to reap the whirlwind”. He was referring to the German bombing of British strategic targets during the period known as “The Blitz”. Like Lübeck, Coventry was a medieval town with an industrial centre, and Harris had no scruples about attacking a similar target in Germany. Althou gh outraged Hitler should not have been surprised that the Allies retaliated.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Operation Chariot or the Raid on St. Nazaire was a combined attack by the Royal Navy and British Commandos on the 28th March 1942. St. Nazaire is located in Loire estuary on the French coast and was chosen because of its dry dock facility and its loss meant large German warships in need of repair would have to return to home waters. This would require the Germans to either negotiate the English Channel or the North of Scotland. Either way they would have to run the gauntlet of the Home Fleet. The obsolete destroyer HMS Campbeltown was chosen to ram the dock gates at St. Nazaire. She was packed with well-hidden delayed-action explosives that detonated later in the day. Leaving Falmouth in Cornwall on 26th March 1940 Campbeltown crossed the English Channel escorted by 18 smaller craft then made their way along the Atlantic coast of France to St. Nazaire. They formed into a three-lane convoy with the destroyers operating in the middle lane. They received a signal from Plymouth that five German torpedo boats were in the area, and a further signal to say that two additional destroyers had been dispatched at full speed to join the convoy. Just before midnight on the 27th March 1942, two squadrons of RAF bombers began to attack St. Nazaire in order to divert the Germans attention away from the naval raid. In the meantime the convoy was spotted by a German submarine who sent a message to say that British warships were heading toward the docks. When the convoy reached St. Nazaire the destroyers headed for the dock entrance. Just prior to entering the dock Campbeltown raised the German naval ensign in an attempt to deceive the dock defenders she was one of their own destroyers. The port lane of the convoy headed for the Old Mole whilst the starboard lane headed for the old entrance in order to despatch their relevant contingents of Commandos. In the confusion of the air attack and the message about warships approaching, the Germans received orders for all guns to cease firing and searchlights to be extinguished. A German lookout had reported seeing some activity at sea and the searchlights were switched on illuminating the entire convoy. Immediately a German signal light demanded the identification and the convoy replied “Ship being fired on by friendly forces” following a few bursts being fired from the shore batteries. With the convoy about one mile from the dock gates the German flag was lowered on Campbeltown and the White Ensign raised. As Campbeltown increased her speed the dock searchlights were illuminated and they began to take heavy fire from the Germans. They cut through the anti-torpedo netting and rammed the dock gates with such a force that drove her thirty three feet into the gate. Two commando assault teams and five demolition teams disembarked from Campbeltown. The demolition team’s objectives were to destroy dock pumping machinery and associated dry dock installations. Campbeltown’s explosive charges detonated at noon on the 28th March 1942 which destroyed the dry docks. On board the Campbeltown at the time of the explosion were 40 senior German officers and civilians who were killed. The explosion killed approximately 360 men in total. The raid was successful but came at a high cost. Most of the motor launches were destroyed on the run in and were burning. Of the 622 men of the Royal Navy and Commandos who took part in the raid only 228 returned to England. They were on board the attacking fleet on the return journey. Five Commandos managed to escape through Spain and Gibraltar where they took a ship to England. A total of 169 men were killed (105 were RN and 64 were Commandos). The remaining 215 men were captured and became prisoners of war. The British raid on St. Nazaire infuriated Adolf Hitler who immediately sacked the chief-of-staff Generaloberst Carl Hilpert. However, the raid refocused the German’s attention on the prevention of any repeats on the various ports of the Atlantic Wall. 15,000 bunkers were ordered to be built to defend the Atlantic coast to extend from Norway to Spain. The German battleship Tirpitz never entered the Atlantic partly due to the raid on St. Nazaire. Out of five Victoria Crosses awarded during the St. Nazaire raid, one was slightly unusual. Thomas Frank Durrant was posthumously awarded the VC partly on the recommendation of an enemy officer, who singled him out for his bravery. Durrant was a sergeant serving in the Corps of Royal Engineers attached to No 1 Commando and was in charge of a Lewis gun on board H.M. Motor Launch 306. The launch engaged with a German destroyer, at about 50-60 yards range and searchlights illuminated the launch exposing Durrant.  He fired his gun into the bridge and although severely wounded he stayed at his post and when called upon to surrender he replied with a burst from his gun. The launch was boarded and those still alive were taken prisoner. Sgt Durrant died of his wounds the following day. Of the other four recipients of the VC, one was a Commando and the remaining three were naval. Lieutenant Colonel Augustus Newman was serving in the Essex Regiment attached to No 2 Commando. As overall commander of the assault force he need not have been involved in the attack but chose to lead his men from the front. He organised a defence against German reinforcements until all the demolition parties had completed their tasks. With evacuation by sea not possible they charged into the new town hoping to reach the surrounding countryside but were eventually surrounded. When their ammunition had been expended they surrendered and were taken into captivity. Newman survived the war. Lieutenant Commander Stephen Beattie was the commander of HMS Campbeltown who despite being blinded by searchlights and under heavy fire steamed his ship into the dockyard gates. Beattie survived the war and the VC was awarded not only for his bravery and his citation also mentioned the bravery of the ship’s company. Royal Naval Commander Robert Ryder was in command of the Naval Force aboard motor boat MGB314 who assisted in the evacuation of men from Campbeltown following the ramming of the dock gates. While exposed to heavy fire from the Germans he remained at station until he could no longer be of use and withdrew under heavy fire. Ryder survived the war Able Seaman William Savage served in the Royal Navy on board the Motor Gun Boat 314. He was totally exposed to enemy fire as the gun layer of the Lewis gun. He engaged with enemy positions on shore with accuracy and on the way out of the harbour he maintained the same accuracy against enemy ships until he was eventually killed at his post. Savage’s posthumous VC was awarded for his gallantry and his citation also mentioned the gallantry of his fellow comrades. The operation has been called “The Greatest Raid of all” within British circles as the dry dock facility at St. Nazaire was out of action until 1948.

Mediterranean

The island of Malta, a British colony, had been under siege by the Axis Powers since the summer of 1940. Failure of the February 1942 convoy from Alexandria to reach the island left Malta in a desperate position. Acute shortages of everything, food, ammunition, fuel, spare parts and aircraft were made worse by the constant Axis bombardment. Squadron Leader Stan Turner arrived in Malta in February 1942 after being appointed to take over 249 Squadron. He quickly realised that the existing Hurricane fighters faced unacceptable odds against German and Italian bombers and fighters. He urgently requested a squadron of Spitfire fighters be despatched and the request was approved. The Spitfires for the Malta squadron were the first to be deployed outside of Britain. The only option for the delivery of the Spitfires was that they would have to be transported from Britain by aircraft carriers. Upon reaching Algiers on the 6th March 1942 fifteen Spitfires were flown from HMS Eagle the 650 miles to Malta. All fifteen Spitfires, accompanied by seven Blenheim aircraft, reached Malta safely and by the 1Oth March 1942 they were ready for action. Aircraft carrier HMS Argus had originally been assigned, along with HMS Eagle, to deliver the Spitfires. Unfortunately the lift from the lower deck on Argus was too small to accommodate the fixed-wing aircraft which left Eagle as the only feasible option. By the 21st March 1942 HMS Eagle had returned to Algiers with an additional nine Spitfires and these were flown on to the island as before.

 On the 22nd March 1942 four cruisers and sixteen destroyers escorted three merchant ships plus a Navy oiler to Valletta harbour on the island. A cruiser and its covering destroyers sailed from Malta to meet them and successfully kept an Italian battleship, and its escorts away from the convoy. German bombers attacked the convoy and one merchantman and the oiler were sunk before reaching Malta. Arriving at the harbour to the cheers of the locals the remaining merchantmen were sunk in the harbour with only a fraction of their cargo unloaded.

Pacific

For the most part the Pacific War for the Japanese was highly successful. Their ambition to be masters of the Far East depended on their ability to obtain the raw materials Japan did not possess. They had been at war with China for years and were an experienced military force. The Allies did not appreciate Japan’s ability to invade so much territory so quickly and therefore were totally unprepared. This was a major reason for Japans success.

On the 4th March 1942 the Imperial Japanese Navy launched Operation “K” on a reconnaissance mission to Pearl Harbour. Two Kawanishi HK8 “Emily” flying boats flew from the Marshall Islands. Their mission was to assess the damage and the American repairs to the dock area. The flying boats had been loaded with four 500 lb (250 kg) bombs and landed at the French Frigate Shoals to refuel. In addition to their reconnaissance mission the Japanese pilots were to bomb the “Ten-Ten” dock to disrupt salvage and repair efforts. The dock was named for its 1,010 ft. (310 m) length. American radar stations picked up and tracked the two planes but thick cloud over Pearl Harbour prevented the defenders spotting the Japanese aircraft. American Curtiss P-40 fighters and Catalina flying boats were despatched to search for the assumed Japanese aircraft carriers. The same clouds confused the Japanese pilots who lost contact in the clouds and were separated. The Japanese leading pilot, Hisao Hashizume was only able to see small patches of the island. He dropped his bombs on the slopes of the extinct volcano on Tantulus Peak assuming it to be Pearl Harbour. The second Japanese aircraft was flown by Ensign Shosuke Sasao appears to have dropped his bombs into the ocean. Both Japanese aircraft returned on the long journey back to base. There were no American casualties but the raid raised the fears of a potential Japanese invasion of Hawaii. Operation “K” was only partially successful for the Japanese as they bombed Hawaii but they did not obtain the information regarding Pearl Harbour they were seeking.

By mid-March 1942 the Japanese had attacked and occupied Singapore, the Dutch East Indies, Java and Malaya. American-British-Dutch-Australian Command (ABDA) or ABDACOM was formed by the four nations involved in late December 1941. This decision was agreed at the Arcadia Conference in Washington in early December 1941. The command was led by General Sir Archibald Wavell, and was devised to maintain control of the Malaya Peninsular from Singapore to the Dutch East Indies which included the Philippine Islands. Wavell’s command was thinly spread over such a large area and Japanese supremacy soon overwhelmed the region. Although part of ABDACOM the Philippines were in reality commanded by American General Douglas MacArthur. He in turn was commander of the U.S. Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE). With the Japanese over-whelming the whole of the region and following the fall of Singapore ABDACOM was dissolved in February 1942. The Philippine Islands were being overwhelmed by the Japanese and MacArthur attempted to slow the Japanese advance. Fearing the Philippines would also be over-run American President Franklin D. Roosevelt did not want his commander of USAFFE captured and he ordered MacArthur and family to evacuate to Australia. On the 17th March 1942 MacArthur had landed in Australia and arrived in Melbourne on the 21st March 1942. From Melbourne he made his famous speech, “I came through this and I shall return”. He refused Washington’s request to amend his speech to “We shall return”.

The French New Caledonia lay east of Australia. The island was also a stop-over for the supply route from America. The Japanese had possible intentions to occupy the island because it had a harbour and an airfield, easy access to Australia and also the French and Australian defences were minimal. On the 12th March 1942 the American Task Force 6814 arrived at the harbour of Noumea. As the harbour did not have deep water facilities the Task Force was transferred to the island on a flotilla of small vessels. The Task Force dispersed inland with the 132nd Infantry Regiment assigned to defend the northern portion of the island. The 182nd Infantry Regiment was assigned to defend the southern section including Noumea.

Following the closing down of ABDACOM in February 1942, Wavell returned to India. He was Commander-in-Chief India and had been C-in-C ABDACOM as well. Field Marshal William (Bill) Slim was promoted to command the Fourteenth Army the 1st Burma Corps in March 1942. He inherited a disastrous situation. Morale was low within the British conscripts, the Burmese auxiliaries and the Indian troops. Slim turned the morale round by visiting each of his units and re-assuring them he valued them. His speeches created a pride in the units and he managed to rebuild the fighting spirit which he brought about by his military skill and his own personal charisma. Heavily outnumbered he was forced to withdraw to India. By leading a controlled military withdrawal he made sure the 900 mile (1,400 km) retreat did not turn into a rout. The Japanese rapid advance overstretched their ability to supply their army giving Slim the opportunity to organise his forces. Burma’s unforgiving terrain forced Slim into changing his transportation methods where he used mules instead of vehicles and his army was supplied by air transport. The Japanese began to pay a heavy price for their advance as the encounters were better organised by the Allies.

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Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service February 1942.

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service February 1942.

Date                Time   Location         Damage

15/02/1942    Found   Rayleigh      A piece of balloon fabric with cords attached

believed to be part of an experimental balloon found in the garden of 6 Station Crescent.  Removed to Rayleigh Police Station.

16/02/1942    08.40  Foulness       A British Hurricane ‘plane crashed 300 yards East

of Haven Gore Bridge.  Plane completely wrecked.  Pilot from RAF Harwich sustained slight injuries to head and chest.  (Removed to Shoeburyness Hospital, Number unobtainable due to damage)  RAF informed.  Military guard mounted.

SECOND WORLD WAR January 1942

SECOND WORLD WAR January 1942

Desert War and Mediterranean

Malta was beginning to experience more severe problems on top of being besieged since June 1940. When a number of ships of the British Mediterranean “Force K” Fleet was sunk in December 1941 the navy withdrew the remaining ships from central Mediterranean on the 7th December 1941. With the loss of the British warships, together with around 20 RAF bombers and reconnaissance aircraft having been shot down the success against the Axis convoys soon died up. German convoys were beginning to get through to Tripoli in Libya. The withdrawal of “Force K” coincided with the Italian bombing campaign which was proving to be successful. German Messerschmitt 110 and JU88 night fighters were flown into Sicily to assist in the bombing campaign. The RAF defensive arm was under pressure when Germany attacked airfields and civilian areas on the 1st January 1942. Eight Hurricane fighters were shot down during the battle and a further fifty destroyed on the ground. British naval and air commanders argued for more aircraft especially Spitfires to be sent to Malta. It was pointed out that the inferiority of the Hurricane against the Messerschmitt was affecting morale and Spitfires began arriving in March 1942.

Following the Allied capture of Benghazi in Libya (See Desert War Dec 1941) the Allies advanced and reached El Aghelia on the 6th January 1942.  When Generalleutnant Erwin Rommel, commander of the Afrika Korps, retreated from El Aghelia on the 15th December 1941 he moved closer to his supply line in Tripoli, Libya. He had also received reinforcements which had started to arrive at Tripoli on the 5th January 1942. Rommel’s 120 mile counter-offensive began on the 21st January 1942 and the Afrika Korp captured Agedabia and began the push to Beda Fomm. On the 29th January 1942 Rommel’s Afrika Korp had recaptured Benghazi. He established his new front line east of Benghazi from Tmimi to Mechili. The two sides were able to rest and rearm until Rommel was finally ready to attack the Gazala Line in the spring of 1942.                       

Eastern Front

The Soviet Dictator Joseph Stalin transferred General Georgi Zhukov from Leningrad to Moscow in October 1941. Zhukov was a master tactician and a respected leader of men, and recognised the German Operation Barbarossa had failed. By the 7th January 1941 the German Army was suffering from the lack of proper winter clothing and equipment owing to the onslaught of the Soviet winter. Combined with the lack of proper winter shelter the morale of the German Wehrmacht was badly affected. The Germans, at what was their worst hour, began to suffer an appalling loss of experienced commanders. This was mainly because of the commander’s inability to agree with Adolf Hitler who then assumed the role of Commander-in-Chief of the Army thus relieving many of the generals of their command. By the 31st January 1942 the German Army was in retreat following the Soviet offensive. The effect Zhukov had on the defender offensives of Moscow was boosted. The Soviet Army had regrouped with artillery, armour and reserve manpower and the Soviet offensive began on the 5th January 1942. The Russian Bear had awakened.

Stalin had ordered a thousand mile offensive against the Germans of which Medya was the furthest city east of Moscow. Following the German retreat from Moscow and the beginning of Zhukov’s Offensive the Soviet Army took the cities of Kirov and Medya on the13th January 1942. From intelligence received, Hitler believed the Soviet Army was ready to collapse. He ordered the remainder of the German Army in the Soviet Union to the Eastern Front. The exception being the troops at the Siege of Leningrad. His ultimate aim was the capture of the mineral resources of southern Soviet Union.

Meanwhile, in Poland, German authorities began to deport Jews from the Lodz Ghetto on the 15th January 1942.This Ghetto was established by the Germans for the internment of Polish and Roma (gypsies) following the invasion of Poland. The gates of the ghetto, which housed nearly 164,000 residents, were closed in April 1940. Lodz was the second largest ghetto in all German occupied Europe with Warsaw being the largest. The ghetto was designed to starve the people and over 20% of the population died from hard work, overcrowding and starvation. The deportation of the inmates to the Chelmno extermination camp from Lodz began with a special S.S. detachment carrying out the operation. During the course of January 1942 approximately 10,000 Jews and Roma were deported to Chelmno.

The Vilna Ghetto in Lithuania was established by the Nazis in August 1941. Abba Kovner, an inmate of the ghetto was a Jewish poet and writer who raised a Jewish resistance fighting force, in order that an organisation for a revolt needed to be assembled. On the 21st January 1942 Kovner released a manifesto titled “Let us not go like lambs to the slaughter” and was the first to target the German plan to murder all Jews. Kovner had heard rumours of the killings and mass graves in nearby Ponary and his manifesto pleaded with all Jews of Vilna to join an uprising saying it “Was better to fall as free fighters” rather than be slaughtered by the Nazis.

The Pacific War

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour in December 1941 the invasion of the islands of the Far East was the next on their agenda. These invasions would ensure the continuation of much needed supplies of raw materials. America and the Allies were unaware that the Japanese were in a position to mount a simultaneous invasion of Southeast Asia.

Occupation of the Philippines was planned by the Japanese as of their plan for a “Greater East Asia War”. The main aim was to seize the sources of raw materials of Malaya and the Dutch East Indies while the navy neutralised the United States Pacific Fleet. On the 2nd January 1942 Japanese troops captured the city of Manila, capital of the Philippine Islands. On the same day the Japanese occupied the Naval Station Sangley Point which was a U.S. communications and hospital facility and the Cavite Naval Yard.  The facility was the headquarters of the U.S. Navy Asiatic Fleet. America had officially occupied Sangley as a coaling station when they defeated the Spanish at the Battle of Manila Bay in 1898. Approximately eight miles southwest of Manila the Cavite City peninsula is surrounded by the Manila Bay. Cavite Naval Yard was used by the Japanese for the same purpose after the occupation.

On the 2nd January 1942 the Japanese controlled nearly all of Southeast Asia. Opposing the invasion was American General Douglas MacArthur, Commander-Chief of all U.S. and Filipino troops. MacArthur had consolidated all his forces into the units based at Luzon in the Bataan Peninsula. As they were the only remaining Allied stronghold in the region of the Bataan Peninsula and the island of Corregidor the American and Filipino troops were besieged on the 7th December 1942. Despite the lack of supplies the defenders managed to fight the Japanese for three months before their surrender at Bataan.

Japan gradually occupied Malaya from the 8th December 1941 until the Allied surrender at Singapore on the 16th February 1942. By the 8th January 1942 the Japanese had defeated the British 11th Indian Infantry Division at the Battle of Slim River thus penetrating the defences and affording easy access to Kuala Lumpur, the capital of Malaya.  Lieutenant-General Arthur Percival, General Officer Commanding Malaya, decided to withdraw all British and Commonwealth troops from Malaya and the Japanese captured Kuala Lumpur on the 11th January 1942. Fighting continued until the 18th January 1942, by which time the Japanese had taken many prisoners, when the remaining Allied troops had to retreat to the Johor Causeway as the defensive line had collapsed. By the 31st January 1942 the last organised Allied forces left Malaya, heading for Singapore, thus ending the 54 day battle. The whole of Malaya had fallen into Japanese hands.  

With the occupation of Malaya, the island of Singapore was next on the Japanese invasion agenda. Singapore was part of the British Empire and was considered to be the “Gibraltar” of the Far East, which was and remains, the gateway to the rest of Asia. By controlling Singapore a huge portion of the gateway to the Far East was controlled. Singapore was considered to be impregnable as its fortress was designed to be formidable. When the Japanese invaded Pearl Harbour on the 8th December 1941 they simultaneously bombed the Royal Air Force (RAF) bases to the north of Singapore. With the air base destroyed the RAF were unable to protect the British army and the civilian population on the island or to retaliate against an invasion. The Japanese sinking of the British battleship HMS Prince of Wales and the battle cruiser HMS Repulse on the10th December 1941 together with the air cover destroyed, Singapore was defenceless to an assault from the air and the sea. The British Army and Commonwealth troops stationed at Singapore were their only hope of defence. The expected invasion against the island was considered to be a naval attack in which the island defences would result in a victory for the British defenders. However, Singapore’s naval guns were positioned to aim out to sea and could not be turned inland. Complacency and an underestimation of the enemy by the British High Command was their downfall. With the loss of Malaya, on the 18th December 1941, Percival’s army retreated to Singapore on the 31st January 1942. By blowing bridges across the Johor Causeway the British High Command assumed the Japanese would not easily be able to negotiate a jungle attack. Adequate preparations for the defence of an assault through the jungle was thought not to be necessary, as the jungle was considered to be sufficient.

The Netherlands, together with America, Britain and New Zealand declared war on Japan on the 8th December 1941. The Netherland government in the Dutch East Indies began immediately to prepare for war against Japan. Upon receipt of the declaration the Japanese government decided to halt any hostilities in the Dutch East Indies in the hope that the Dutch would not destroy their oil installation before Japan was ready to invade. By the 11th January 1942 Japan was ready and declared war on the Netherland. The Dutch East Indies amalgamated all the American-British-Dutch East Indies troops in the region under the command of British Field Marshall Archibald Wavell. The Japanese when they did attack on the 17th January 1942 adopted the strategy whereby they always had air cover. Their aim was conquer and control of the Dutch East Indies. The advance was designed so that the Allied forces could not consolidate into a defensive position before having to retreat. Owing to the greater number of Japanese troops the combined Allied defenders were unable to halt the Japanese advance and on the 9th March 1942 the Dutch East Indies surrendered.

The Japanese invasion of Borneo was planned on the 16th December 1941. By the 23rd December 1941 the Sarawak region of the island was occupied by the Japanese whose aim was to gain access to the oilfields. The government and oil officials destroyed the oilfields and refineries before evacuating the island on the 17th December 1941. In order to attack the Sandakan seat of British North Borneo, the Japanese landed in small fishing boats on the 18th January 1942. The 650 men of the North Borneo Army Constabulary were not able to provide sufficient resistance to halt the Japanese advance. Governor Charles Robert Smith surrendered British North Borneo on the 23rd January 1942 and he and rest of the staff were interned until the end of the war. The remaining British and Dutch troops retreated into the jungle from where they finally surrendered on the 1st April 1942. In the meantime the Japanese forces had fully occupied Borneo on the 29th January 1942.

The Battle of Rabaul was fought in the Australian Territory of New Guinea on the island of New Britain. Rabaul was significant to the Japanese owing to its proximity to the Caroline Islands, the site of the Imperial Japanese Naval base at Truk. Following the capture of Guam on the 10th December 1941, Japanese Major-General Tomitaru Horii was given the task of capturing Rabaul. Japanese carrier-based aircraft began attacking Rabaul on the 4th January 1942.The Australians had despatched a small garrison to Rabaul, as tensions had increased with the Japanese, in March 1941. This garrison was formed into the Lark Force with a total maximum number of 1,400 men and commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel John Scanlon. The force included personnel from a local militia group, a coastal defence battery, an anti-tank battery and a detachment of the Field Ambulance Service. The garrison’s main task was the protection of the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) airbase near Rabaul. Nearby Simpson Harbour was the RAAF anchorage for Catalina flying boats which acted as an important part of the surveillance observing Japanese movements in the region. The RAAF air defence consisted of ten lightly armed CAC Wirraway training aircraft and four Lockheed Hudson light bombers plus the flying boats. Wing Commander John Lerew had very little offensive capability. When the Japanese first attacked on the 4th January 1942 he realised the odds were stacked against him.  He sent a signal to RAAF HQ in Melbourne with the phrase used by gladiators in ancient Rome quoting the Latin motto “Nos Morituri Te Salutamus” (“we who are about to die salute you”). Part of the Japanese naval task force embarked from Truk on the 14th January 1942 heading toward Rabaul. Over one hundred Japanese aircraft attacked Rabaul on the 20th January 1942 and eight Wirraway planes engaged the oncoming Japanese assault. During the course of the battle one Japanese bomber was shot down by artillery fire, but three RAAF aircraft were shot down, two crash-landed and one was damaged. As a result six Australian airmen were killed in action with a further five wounded. The air attack destroyed the Australian coastal artillery and the Australian infantry withdrew from Rabaul. The following day the Japanese invasion fleet, commanded by Vice-Admiral Shigeyushi Inoue, was located off Kavieng on the island of New Ireland by a Catalina flying boat. Before being shot down the crew of the Catalina managed to send off a signal informing RAAF HQ of the approaching invasion fleet. The Australian troops took up positions where they prepared to confront the expected landings. The remaining two Wirraway and one Hudson aircraft were withdrawn from the area taking some of the wounded with them. Rabaul airfield was destroyed by the Australians once the RAAF had departed. Rabaul was still being bombed on the 22nd January 1942 and early morning of the same day the Japanese landed on New Ireland and took Kavieng without too much opposition. The same night the invasion fleet approached Rabaul and entered Simpson Harbour in the early hours of the 23rd January 1942. Approximately 5,000 Japanese troops began to land and the Australians attempted to halt the attack. Sensing the situation was hopeless Scanlon ordered his soldiers and civilians to retreat through the jungle. The cost to the Australians on the 23rd January 1942 was the loss of two officers and twenty six other ranks killed in action. Early on the morning of the 24th January 1942 Japanese troops began a mopping up operation in the jungle area where the Australian troops remained at large for many weeks. With the Australian soldier’s line of retreat severed, lacking guerrilla warfare tactics, over 1,000 Australian troops were captured or surrendered on the 9th February 1942.

The Japanese launched a five hour attack on Thailand in mid-December 1941. This led to an armistice and a military alliance treaty between Thailand and the Japanese Empire. In order to allow the Japanese troops to invade British-held Malaya and Burma, the Japanese Empire put pressure on the Thai government into agreeing to the engagement. Thailand, now allied to Japan, declared war on the United Kingdom and the United States of America on the 25th January 1942.

Other Theatres

From December 1941 to January 1942 the Arcadia Conference was held in America’s capital city of Washington. The top British and American military leaders were brought together for the conference. As leaders of their respective countries Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt endorsed a series of major decisions that shaped the war effort.  On New Year’s Day, the 1st January 1942 the “Allied Big Four” (America, Britain, the Soviet Union and China) signed a short document and it was called the “Declaration by United Nations”. On the following day, the 2nd January 1942, representatives of 22 other countries added their signature to the document which eventually became the United Nations.

The final Luftwaffe raid on Liverpool was on the 10th January 1942. A lone German bomber pilot was being harassed by British fighter aircraft. In order to escape he dropped his bomb load on Liverpool’s Stanhope Street and Upper Stanhope Street which received a direct hit. The street had an undamaged air raid shelter but the 13 people who died were sheltering in the houses. The bombing campaign on Liverpool ended, life was still hard, but at least the threat from the skies was over. After visiting Liverpool and its surrounding area in May 1942 British Prime Minister Winston Churchill stated, “I see the damage done by the enemy attacks but I also see the spirit of an unconquered people”. The fate of the German bomber is not known.

Along the Eastern Seaboard of America, a German U-boat offensive officially began against merchant ships on 13th January 1942. Operation Drumbeat (Paukensclag) was the code name given for the attacks.  The German High Command had received a message that Japan had invaded Pearl Harbour and on the 11th December 1941 Nazi Germany declared war on the United States. Five U-boats capable of attacking America 3,000 nautical miles away were already in the vicinity. The U-boats dominated the waters of the Eastern Coast of America and were within sight of the shoreline. This enabled them to sink fuel tankers and cargo ships with impunity. British Intelligence had warned the U.S. Navy that a group of U-boats were heading for America. The U.S. Navy’s attention was searching for enemy aircraft attacks. As a consequence very few New Englanders were aware of the carnage being carried out in home waters as the details of the U-boat attacks were being withheld from the public. The navy did not wish to admit to the military incompetence by not heeding the British Intelligence and hid this information from the public.

The Wannsee Conference was held in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee in Germany on the 20th January 1942. Director Reinhardt Heydrich of the S.S. Reich Main Security office called for the conference which was for the implementation of the “Final Solution to the Jewish question”. The conference was to ensure the cooperation of administration leaders of all government departments for European Jews to be rounded up and sent to extermination camps in Poland. Heydrich emphasised the S.S. would ensure the fate of the Jews would be an internal affair once the process was completed. A secondary aim of the conference was to arrive at the definition of what makes a Jew. One copy of the conference minutes survived the war and it was found and seized among files at the German Foreign Office. During the subsequent Nuremburg Trials of November 1945 to October 1946, the conference minutes were used as evidence against the perpetrators. A memorial now stands on the conference site in Wannsee.

American troops began arriving in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on the 26th January 1942 as the first contingent to fight in the European theatre of war. During the Arcadia Conference in Washington, American and British heads of state agreed that Europe should be the priority despite the gravity of the situation in the Pacific. When they started to arrive in large numbers the Americas were stationed from Scotland to Cornwall. Sent in advance of the planned invasion of Europe the American troops were anxious to join the fight against Hitler. The British on the most part were glad to see the American servicemen but resentment soon began to spoil the relationship. When the Americans arrived they had full stomachs and full pockets of money, whereas the British had been at war for two years and were used to fighting alone and going without. In order to defeat Hitler the U.S. War Department sent all service a pamphlet called “Instruction for American Servicemen in Britain”. As most American servicemen had not been abroad the pamphlet was designed to familiarise then with British history, culture and the local slang of the various regions. Eventually the British civilians began to portray the American servicemen as being “Over paid, Over sexed, Over here”.

Brazil agreed the U.S.A. could set up air bases in the northeast of her territory on the 28th January 1942. They also agreed to break off relations with the Axis powers. For this privilege the Americans agreed for the investment in Brazil’s iron industry. When Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939 Brazil declared herself neutral in the event of war. That neutrality was broken when German submarines torpedoed Brazilian vessels off Brazil’s shores. Brazil was to finally declare war on the Axis Powers of Germany and Italy in August 1942.

In Germany on the 30th December 1941, Dictator Adolf Hitler made a speech at the Berlin Sportpalast and threatened all Jews of the world with total annihilation. The Berlin Sportpalast was a multi-purpose indoor arena on the outskirts of the city. It was well known for the speeches and rallies the Third Reich took advantage of. On the same day Hitler, as Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the German Army, blamed the failure of Operation Barbarossa on the weather. The Axis powers had failed to prepare for a longer campaign. This inevitably should have included winter clothing and winter lubrication for their mechanical equipment. During Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union had ground to a halt with both cities of Leningrad in the north and Sevastopol in the north ending up by being besieged. By which time Hitler’s attention was them directed at Moscow but dogged Soviet defences and heavy rain halted the German advance on the city. Hitler’s original belief that the Germans only had to “kick open the door” to defeat the Soviet Union proved to be totally wrong

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

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

Date                Time   Location         Damage

02/12/1941    08.10  Canewdon    2 – Landmines exploded in minefield bordering

Creaksea Road (near entrance to Lion Wharf).  No casualties.  Overhead telephone wires damaged.  (Thought to have been due to a fox running across the field).

13/12/1941    Found  Ingrave         1 – H.E. unexploded in a wood 600 yards to rear of

Hatch Farm, Thorndon Park.  No damage or casualties.  (date and time of falling not known).  (Discredited by BDS 6.1.42).

15/12/1941    15.00  North              A linen target kite about 100 yards of cord

Benfleet         attached found at Bonville Farm, Arterial Road.  RAF informed.

20/12/1941    17.50  Great              1 – Para mine exploded on War Department land

Wakering       near Cupid’s Corner.  No casualties.  Slight damage to 12 houses.

20/12/1941    17.55  Foulness       1 – H.E exploded 450 yards West of Hyde Corner. 

                                                            No damage or casualties.

SECOND WORLD WAR December 1941

SECOND WORLD WAR December 1941

 (Britain)

On the 1st December 1941 Malta sustained its 1000th raid by Fascist German and Italian air forces. The Axis powers recognised the importance of Malta in the Mediterranean and the island was besieged from June 1940 to November 1942. British air and sea forces were able to attack Axis shipping which was sending vital supplies and reinforcements from Europe. The Afrika Korp commander General Irwin Rommel knew that without acquiring Malta the Axis would not be able to control North Africa because they would not be able to get supplies through. The solution for the Axis powers was to bomb or starve and besiege the island into submission. Malta was one of the most intensely bombed areas during the war but valiant efforts by Allied shipping supplied the island.

With the possibility of war against Nazi Germany, a plan for limited conscription for single men aged between 20 and 22 years, was considered in the spring of 1939. This form of conscription would be for the men to undertake 6 months military training.  0n the 3rd September 1939 the day Britain declared war on Germany the National Service (Armed Forces) Act imposed conscription to all men aged between 18 and 41 years to register for service. On the 3rd December 1941 the U.K. Parliament passed a second National Service Act. This act extended compulsory conscription for men to be liable for some form of National Service up to the age of 60 years.  Only men up to the age of 51 years would be considered eligible for military service. The act also widened the scope of conscription to include all unmarried women and childless widows between the ages of 20 and 30 years. Exemption rules remained in place which included the medically unfit, reserved occupations and conscientious objectors.

On the 6th December 1941 Britain declared war on Finland, Hungary and Romania in support of its ally, the Soviet Union. Finland entered military co-operation with Nazi Germany in late 1940 following  Soviet aggression during the Winter War of 1940. For Finland the German’s Operation Barbarossa began the Continuation War which lasted until June 1944. Finland signed the Anti-Comintern Pact and Germany suggested Finland sign the Tripartite Pact. The Finnish government declined the offer as they wished to maintain diplomatic relations with the United States of America. The Tripartite Pact was an agreement entered into by Germany, Italy and Japan in September 1940.   

In the South China Seas off the coast of Malaya on the 10th December 1941 the Royal Naval battleship HMS Prince of Wales and battlecruiser HMS Repulse were sunk. These warships formed part of “Force Z” whose objective was to intercept the Imperial Japanese Navy and convoys following Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbour on the 7th December 1941. “Force Z” had a close encounter with the Japanese heavy surface vessels but failed to locate and destroy the main convoy. On the return to Singapore, without the assistance of air support they were attacked in open waters and Repulse and Prince of Wales were sunk by Japanese long-range torpedo bombers. The lack of air cover illustrated the effectiveness of aerial attack against the heaviest of naval warships. The sinking of these two warships seriously weakened the British Eastern Fleet in Singapore.

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(Eastern Front)

In Nazi-occupied Lithuania on the 1st December 1941 S.S. Officer Karl Jäger wrote a report that “Lithuania was clear of Jews”.  Lithuania was overrun by Nazi-Germany at the beginning of the war and by December 1941 95% of the Jewish population had been massacred, most of them between June and December 1941. There have been unconfirmed reports that the genocide was with the collaboration of the Non-Jewish local militia groups. Jäger was a mid-ranking S.S. officer (Standentendenfuher) and was commander of Einstazkommando 3 zone in Lithuania. His responsibility was for the systematic killing of Jews during the aftermath of Operation Barbarossa.

By early December 1941 the German army had stalled outside Moscow. Germany had underestimated the Soviet resistance which was particularly active on the northern and southern side of Moscow. On the 1st December 1941 the Germans attempted a direct offensive from the west but the offensive stalled and was driven back.On the 2nd December 1941 a reconnaissance patrol reached the town of Khimki 30 km (19 miles) from central Moscow. The temperature in Europe was the coldest it had been for over 40 years and by the 4th December 1941  the temperature in Moscow was recorded as minus 37o C (minus 31o F) and the German army was still without winter clothing and equipment. Despite all the temperature problems German General Heinz Guderian, who commanded the 2nd Panzer Army, had succeeded in getting close to Moscow on the western flank. However, over 130,000 cases of frostbite were reported among German soldiers and on the 5th December 1941 Guderian disobeyed his orders to continue the offensive and called off the attack to avoid total catastrophe. On the 8h December 1941 German Dictator Adolf Hitler had signed his directive No 39 ordering the German army to assume a defensive line on all fronts and the army was forced to pull back to consolidate their lines. On the 16th December 1941 permission was given by the Generals, without Hitler’s approval, for a limited withdrawal to the west of the Alka River as the front line could not be held. Hitler declared himself Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the German Army on the 19th December 1941 (See Other Theatres). On the 20th December 1941 the order to withdraw was cancelled by Hitler and he ordered his troops to remain where they were and defend every inch of ground. As the Eastern Front was now in Hitler’s personal control Guderian along with commanders of the 4th Panzer and 9th Army were dismissed on the 25th December 1941.  

In the Western Ukraine, the town of Stanislawow was incorporated, from the Polish Republic, into the district of Galicia following the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. There were more than 50,000 Jews living in and around Stanislawow when the German SS Hans Krueger took control of the town. During the Bloody Sunday of October 1941 thousands of Jews were ordered to the market for separation selection. Approximately 30,00O Jews were escorted to a nearby cemetery and murdered. The remainder were ordered on the 1st December 1941 to the prepared ghetto area. By the 24th December 1941 Stanislawow Ghetto was set up officially and closed from the outside. Approximately 20,000 Jews were crammed into a limited space, and rationing was enforced with very little food. Workshops were set up to support the German war effort and the Jews were forced to work them.

The Vilna Ghetto in Lithuania was established on the 31st August 1941. Lithuania was a German occupied state who wished for all Jews to be confined to a ghetto area. A two-ghetto system was organised which enabled the Nazis to control the Jewish inmates who were aware of their fate. Subjected to uninhabitable and insanitary conditions, disease and daily death, the intentions were to dehumanise the inmates and to exploit them as slave labour. On the 3rd December 1941 the first Criminal Aktion began when 157 Jews were killed at Ponary. The town of Ponary was selected as the area for the massacre of the Jews transported from Vilna. An Aktion provided Jews with a work permit (schiens). German and Lithuanian forces entered the ghetto on the 3rd/4th December 1941 and rounded up about 150 Jews with a criminal past and transported them to Ponary where they would be executed. On the 15th December 1941 the “Gestapo block” Aktion arranged for 300 Jews to be shot at Ponary. The 20th December 1941 the Lithuanian militia killed 400 Jews.

The Ukrainian village of Bogdanovka had a concentration camp as part of the German inspired Holocaust. In December 1941 a few cases of typhus broke out in the camp. Typhus is a disease spread by squalid conditions, lice and fleas. The camp was run by a Romanian administration. On the 21st December 1941 a German adviser to the Romanian administration authorities suggested the only way to quell the Typhus outbreak would be to murder all the inmates. Thousands of ill and disabled were forced into two stables by Romanian soldiers and gendarmes. The stables were locked and dowsed in kerosene then set alight burning alive all those inside. Of the remaining inmates some were led off in batches to a nearby wood and shot.  Freezing to death the rest of the inmates were forced to dig pits with their bare hands and pack them with frozen corpses. The killing stopped for a Christmas break but resumed again on the 28th December 1941. Over 40,000 Jews were massacred and by the 31st December 1941 the Typhus outbreak had been eliminated.                                                 

As an architect of the Holocaust, Reichsfuhrer of the SS Heinrich Himmler, on the 24th December 1941, ordered that all Jewish fur coats, furs and hides of any description would be confiscated. The Holocaust was the German version of total destruction of the Jewish race. The order was to be carried out immediately in all Jewish quarters particularly in the ghetto areas throughout Nazi occupied Europe. The various Jewish Councils and councillors were warned that they along with any Jews found still to have furs of any description would be shot.

Sevastopol is a port in the Crimea on the Black Sea and during the summer of 1941 the Soviet Red Air Force had been using the Crimea as a base to attack targets in Romania. The Axis Powers of Germany, Italy and Romania had invaded the Soviet Union on the 22nd June 1941 during Operation Barbarossa. Their forces reached the Crimea in the summer of 1941. However, the only objective not in the Axis hands was Sevastopol and despite several attempts to secure the city Sevastopol was still in Soviet hands. A major attack was planned for late November 1941 but heavy rains delayed it until the 17th December 1941. The attack was unsuccessful as the Axis Powers failed to capture Sevastopol and siege warfare was conducted which lasted until the middle of June 1942. On the 25th December 1941 Soviet forces launched an amphibious landing on the Crimean peninsular at Kerch to relieve the siege and force the Axis Powers to defend their gains. The operation was only able to save Sevastopol for the short term as the Axis Powers captured the port after the remaining Soviets were encircled and they surrendered on the 4th July 1942.              

The 872 day Siege of Leningrad began on the 8th September 1941 and lasted until the 27th June 1944 and was the longest and most destructive siege in history. The city of Leningrad was completely devastated. On Christmas Day the 25th December 1941, 5,000 civilian deaths were recorded but many more deaths went unregistered and their bodies left unburied under the snow until it melted in 1942. The daily death toll was 5,000-7,000 civilians with the total deaths in the first year of the siege as being 780,000 civilians.

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(Desert War and the Mediterrainian)

Generalleutnant Erwin Rommel was commander of the Axis forces in North Africa (German and Italian). He ordered a complete withdrawal of his forces to El Aghelia on the 15th December 1941. Following a surprise attack, known as Operation Crusader, by the Commonwealth troops on the 18th November 1941 advantage was obtained by both sides as the battle brought individual successes and failures. The New Zealand element of the 8th Army reached the garrison at Tobruk and relieved the siege on the 27th November 1941. By the 7th December 1941 Rommel was forced to narrow his front and shorten his lines of communication when he experienced supply shortages. By the 25th December 1941 Allied forces had reached and captured Benghazi in Libya.

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HMS Galatea was a Royal Navy Arethusia-class light cruiser and joined the Mediterranean Fleet on commissioning and based at Malta. At the outbreak of war she was ordered home to patrol home waters and returned to the Mediterranean in July 1941 and was again based at Malta. Her task, with Force “K”, was to operate against the Axis supply convoys who were shipping supplies to North Africa.  On the 15th December 1941 Galatea was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-557 off Alexandria Egypt. Captain E.W.B. Sim, 22 officers and 447 ratings were killed with approximately 100 survivors being picked up by destroyers HMS Griffin and HMS Hotspur. U-557 was rammed by mistake by an Italian torpedo boat and sank with all hands less than 24 hours later.            

Using “human torpedoes” Italian Navy divers attacked and disabled two Royal Naval battleships in the harbour of Alexandria, Egypt on the 19th December 1941. A submarine of the Italian Royal Navy (Regia Marina) left La Spezia, their base in northern Italy, on the 3rd December 1941 carrying 3 manned torpedoes. They picked up the torpedo divers in the Greek island of Leros. When on the 19th December 1941 the torpedoes were released from the submarine they entered Alexandria harbour when the British defence gates were opened to allow three destroyers to pass. With the British fleet in harbour the Italian targets were the battleships HMS Valiant and HMS Queen Elizabeth plus an aircraft carrier that was expected to be there. Instead they attacked a Norwegian tanker Sagona. When the limpet mines were attacked and exploded severe damage was afforded to both Valiant and Queen Elizabeth Who also lost eight members of her crew. Although not sunk both battleships were out of action for a long time. Sagona lost her stern section and the explosion badly damaged the destroyer HMS Jervis who was alongside for refuelling. For the next six months the Royal Navy lost naval supremacy in the eastern Mediterranean to the Italian fleet. All six of the Italian divers were captured but they had succeeded in their mission to disrupt the harbour.

During 1941 HMS Neptune led “Force K” which was a raiding squadron of cruisers in the Mediterranean. The cruisers involved were HMS Neptune, HMS Aurora and HMS Penelope steaming in line ahead. In support was HMS Kandahar, HMS Lance, HMS Lively and HMS Havlok. The squadron were based in Malta. The task of “Force K” was to intercept and destroy German and Italian convoys supplying troops and equipment to Rommel’s Afrika Korp in Libya. On 19th December 1941 with Neptune leading the line they ran into an uncharted minefield. Neptune struck a mine just after 1.00 a.m. Aurora, second in line, took avoiding action and struck another mine. Minutes later Penelope was buffeted by an explosion on her port side. Neptune was immobilized and severely damaged and the crew made arrangements to be taken in tow. As the wind freshened Neptune drifted helplessly into a second mine then struck another mine, bringing her to a complete stop. Aurora and Penelope withdrew from the minefield although Aurora was reduced to 10 knots maximum, owing to the damage inflicted by the explosion. Although the two ships were correct in leaving the area the need to save lives was imperative. Penelope stood by as Aurora departed for Malta with Lance and Havlok as escorts. Kandahar and Lively entered the minefield in an attempt to tow Neptune out. When Kandahar struck a mine, Neptune’s Captain Roy O’Connor flashed a warning to “Keep Away”. Just after 4.00 a.m. Neptune struck a forth mine and slowly turned over and sank. 764 officers and men were lost and only one man was rescued by an Italian torpedo boat after he had been 5 days in the water. At dawn Kandahar was still afloat but partially submerged and the tide took her clear of the minefield. HMS Jaguar appeared at 4.00 a.m. after being sent out on a Kandahar rescue mission from Malta. Kandahar’s officers and men jumped overboard and 8 officers and 170 men were rescued although 73 men had perished. With dawn approaching Jaguar fired a torpedo into Kandahar which sank her and headed back to Malta.

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(Japan)

The basic concept for the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour was to destroy the American fleet while at anchor. The idea was adapted from the British all aircraft attack on the Italian naval base at Taranto during November 1940. Japanese Emperor Hirohito had approved the attack on America’s Pearl Harbour on the 5th November 1941.  America’s proposed Peace Agreement between the USA and Japan had been presented to the Japanese government on the 26th November 1941. This was perceived by Japan to be an ultimatum to withdraw from the Second Sino-Japanese War. Japanese Prime Minister Tojo rejected the “peace feelers” from USA on the 2nd December 1941. In the meantime the Japanese fleet had set sail for the attack on Pearl Harbour on the 26th November 1941. The attack could have been recalled but no further diplomatic progress was made and by the 4th December 1941 the Japanese Naval attack force was heading steadily towards Pearl Harbour.  At 7.48 a.m., local time, on the 7th December 1941 the Imperial Japanese Navy’s carrier air force launched an attack on Pearl Harbour. Located in the Pacific Ocean the dock at Pearl Harbour served as an American port and base facility on the Hawaiian island of Honolulu. The Japanese battle fleet, under the command by Admiral Isokoru Yamamoto, consisted of 6 aircraft carriers, 2 battleships, 2 heavy cruisers, 1 light cruiser, 9 destroyers, 8 tankers, 23 submarines, 5 midget submarines and 414 aircraft.  The base was attacked in two waves by 353 Japanese fighters which included level, dive and torpedo bombers. In these two waves the Japanese damaged all eight of the battleships moored, of which four sank in the harbour. Three destroyers, one anti-aircraft training ship and one mine-layer were also sunk or destroyed. 188 U.S. aircraft were destroyed on the ground. Fuel dumps and torpedo storage facilities together with dry-dock, shipyard and manufacturing workshops were also attacked. During the course of the attack the Americans suffered 2,403 military and civilians killed and a further 1178 wounded. By comparison the Japanese losses were fairly light. Of the 353 Japanese aircraft which took part in the raid 29 were lost with a further 74 damaged by anti-aircraft fire from the ground. Japanese personnel losses were recorded as being 55 airmen and 9 submariners killed and one airman captured. The Japanese achieved their aim of crippling the American pacific fleet. However, the prime target were the 3 American aircraft carriers assigned to the U.S. Pacific Fleet based at Pearl Harbour. It was pure luck that the carriers were out at sea and whose location was unknown. Ninety minutes after the attack began the aircraft returned to their individual carriers. On the day of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour Japan announced a declaration of war on the U.S.A. Yamamoto’s intention had been to commence the attack 30 minutes after the formal declaration of war. Notice of the declaration was delayed and the Japanese Ambassador to Washington only received the message an hour after the attack had begun. Upon being presented with declaration of war notice the U.S. Congress declared war on Japan on the 8th December 1941. Because the attack on Pearl Harbour was carried out whilst peace negotiations were being discussed, President Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed that the 7th December 1941 was “a date which will live in infamy”. The attack would eventually be judged as a war crime.

The Americans believed the Japanese were not capable of mounting more than one major naval operation at a time. Japan’s planned military action began when they launched their invasion of Southeast Asia on the 7th December 1941. The attack on Pearl Harbour had been planned as a preventative action to keep the US Pacific Fleet from interfering in Southeast Asia. The simultaneous attack by Japan was launched against The Philippine Islands, Thailand, Malaysia, Guam, the Chinese city of Shanghai, Singapore and Wake Island.

The Japanese also launched an attack on the Philippine Islands on the 7th December 1941 as part of the operation to occupy Southeast Asia. Capture of the Philippines was essential to protect shipping routes between Japan and their eastern suppliers of raw material. The bombing offensive began when the Japanese attacked the American Clark Field on the 8th December 1941. Thirty-five Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers were assigned to Clark Field and at the time of the attack seventeen B-17’s were on the ground. Twelve were totally destroyed, four were damaged and one did not receive any damage at all. Thirty-four P-40 fighters were also based at Clark Field, and were either destroyed by aerial combat or whilst still on the ground. Questions were asked as to why Clark Field was caught by surprise nine hours after receiving news of the Pearl Harbour attack. There was not a satisfactory answer. On the 12th December 1941 Japanese troops had landed in the Philippines and by the 13th December 1941 they were firmly established. On the 22nd December 1941 the Japanese army had landed at Lingayan Gulf. On the 23rd December 1941 the United States commander of the Philippines General Douglas MacArthur declared Manilla to be an “Open City”.  In wartime an open city is a settlement which announces it has abandoned its defensive efforts in a bid to avoid destruction. However, the Japanese ignored the declaration and bombed the city. On the 23rd December 1941 MacArthur made one of the most difficult decisions of his career. Under the threat of impending disaster he decided to withdraw his forces to the Bataam Peninsular. The plan was successful and had far reaching results. 75,000 American troops based at Luzon were saved from defeat. It also kept a large number of Japanese troops tied up in the Philippines and not releasing them for further invasions in the region.

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The Japanese attacked Thailand without warning on the 8th December 1941. The prime target was the airfield at Prachuap Khri Khan. When the wing commander was informed of the invasion he gave orders to resist. Equipped with six heavy and two light machine guns he turned on the Japanese troops surrounding the area. Of the four aircraft that attempted to take off three were shot down and the fourth who managed to take off was armed with four 50 kg bombs. Due to heavy rain and fog the pilot could not locate the Japanese transport in Ao Manao harbour. With the airfield surrounded and as the Japanese proceeded to occupy the airfield orders were issued to destroy instruments in the control tower and the tower set alight. Resistance by the Thai air force lessened as night fell. With ammunition running low the following morning the exhausted Thais received a telegram ordering the defenders to cease fighting as an armistice had been arranged. The defenders suspected it was trick and continued to resist. With renewed vigour the invaders mounted further attacks and slowly pushed the defenders back. At 10.00 am the wing commander ordered the command building and all military documents to be burned. Whilst this was happening the senior medical officer ordered the hospital building evacuated and set on fire. A civilian car bearing a small white flag arrived containing a number of Thai government officials. A direct order from the Prime Minister was handed to the wing commander ordering him to cease fire and fighting ended at 12.35 p.m. on the 9th December 1941. The Thais suffered 42 killed and 27 wounded. The Japanese losses were estimated to be 217 killed and 300 wounded but cannot be confirmed as they cremated the bodies.

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The British Crown colony of Hong Kong was attacked on the 8th December 1941, the same day as the attack on Pearl Harbour. As Japan had not declared war on the British Empire, the attack was in violation of international law. When the attack began the British were outnumbered by nearly four to one.  The British was commanded by Major-General Christopher Maltby consisting British, Canadian, Indian, local Hong Kong Chinese Regiment and the Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps. A total of approximately 14,000 men opposed the 50,000 Japanese troops attacking them. The battle commenced just after 8.00 a.m. and Maltby organised the defence of the island, splitting it into an Eastern and Western Brigade. The Japanese began a systemic bombardment on the island’s North Shore on the 15th December 1941. Demands for surrender on the 13th and 17th December 1941 were rejected and on the evening of the 18th Japanese troops crossed the Harbour and landed on the island. The Japanese advanced inland and on the 18th December 1941 approximately 20 Commonwealth gunners were executed, although they had surrendered. The morning of the 19th December 1941 a further massacre of medical staff took place in the Salesian mission. Such was the ferocity of the attack they annihilated the headquarters of the Western Brigade. Brigadier John Lawson was the commander of the Western Brigade and was killed. A British counter-attack on the 20th December 1941 did not meet with any success and the island became split in two and with British Commonwealth troops doggedly hanging on. Water supplies began to run out as the Japanese had captured the countries reservoirs. On the morning of the 25th December 1941 Japanese soldiers entered the British field hospital and in the St. Stephens College began to torture and kill a large number of injured soldiers and medical staff. With further resistance futile the governor of Hong Kong Sir Mark Aitchison-Young surrendered in person to the Japanese on the 3rd floor of Peninsular Hong Kong Hotel. The garrison held out for 17 days. The loss to British forces were unconfirmed but were officially recognised as being 1,111 killed, 1,167 missing and 1,362 wounded. 10,000 men were captured and the equipment losses were one destroyer captured, four gunboats, one minelayer and three MTB’s sunk. A total of five aircraft were lost. The Japanese suffered 675 killed, 2079 wounded and one aircraft damaged. The civilian casualties amounted to approximately 4,000 killed and another 300 severely wounded. This day is known in Hong Kong as “Black Christmas,

——

Britain had the British Commonwealth, while America, the Dutch and the French had established colonies in the Far East and Pacific. On the 8th December 1941 the Japanese attacked the Gilbert Islands in order to gain control of the raw materials in the region. The Gilbert Islands, which consists of a chain of sixteen islands, were completely occupied by the 10th December 1941.

Wake Island was simultaneously attacked by Japan to coincide with the attack on Pearl Harbour on the 8th December 1941. The Japanese over-ran the island and the invasion ended on the 23rd December 1941 with the surrender of American Forces.

The Malayan Campaign began on the 8th December 1941 when the Japanese launched an amphibious assault on the northern shoreline. For the British and her allies defending the colony the campaign was a complete disaster. The Japanese had air and naval supremacy and the infantry had bicycles allowing them to move quickly through thick jungle terrain. As the Japanese advanced the British were forced to retreat and despite the Royal Engineers destroying over one hundred bridges it did little to delay the Japanese advance.

On the 16th December 1941 the Japanese attacked Borneo to enable them to occupy the oilfields in Sarawak. They had encountered very little resistance from the British as the terrain wasn’t very suitable for a proper defensive arrangement. In 1941 Borneo was divided between the Dutch East Indies and the British protectorate. The Brooke family, the so called “White Rajahs” had ruled Sarawak northwest Borneo for almost a century and by 1888 had become a British protectorate. The government was aware of the forthcoming attack on Borneo and by the 23rd December 1941 Japanese forces had landed and occupied the area. To combat this the Brooke government had ordered the complete and total destruction of the oilfields and refineries. After hearing of the attack on Pearl Harbour on the 8th December 1941 they knew Borneo would soon be a target. By the evening of the 8th the destruction was complete and the landing grounds around the oilfields were made unfit for use on the 9th December 1941. The government and oil officials evacuated by sea to Kuching on the 13th December 1941. The destruction of the oilfields and refineries had been carried out just in time before the invasion.   

In Burma on the 24th December 1941 Rangoon was subjected to a series of air raids by the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service. Rangoon, in 1941, was the capit of Burma and the first city to be attacked after air raids on various locations on the mainland. These air raids were in preparation for the invasion of the country in 1942. Japanese General Michio Sugawara had planned for a heavy raid on Rangoon on the 23rd December 1941. With eighty bombers and thirty fighters available the Japanese commenced to attack on the morning of the 23rd.   When the Japanese attack group reached Rangoon there were clear skies and a light breeze giving excellent vision for the attack on the selected targets. Once news reached the British operations room at Mingalow airfield the defenders were ordered to scramble to enable them to intercept the enemy bombers, who arrived forty minutes after the first warning. Fifteen of the slower Japanese bombers attacked Mingalow airfield of which five were lost. The defenders were unable to prevent the Japanese from dropping high-explosive and incendiary bombs on the city. The docks were paralyzed, public transport halted and the district near the docks was burnt-out. The civil service broke down although the firemen performed well in the crisis. According to Japanese records seven bombers were shot down and one crashed on the return journey. The British Buffalo fighters did not sustain any losses but four Tomahawk fighters were shot-down and two pilots killed in the battle. Seventeen Allied military personnel were killed on the Mingalow airfield and approximately 1,000 to 2, OOO civilians were killed during the raid.          

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(Other Theatres)

Following the attack by Japan on Pearl Harbour, various Declarations of War brought about the beginning of global warfare.

(1) Canada and Australia declared war on Japan on the 7th December 1941.

(2) America, Britain, the Netherlands and New Zealand declared war on Japan on the 8th December 1941.

(3) Australia and South Africa declared war on Japan, and China officially declared war on Japan, Germany and Italy on the 9th December 1941.

(4) Germany and Italy declared war on America who immediately responded by declaring war on Germany and Italy on the 11th December 1941.

(5) India declared war on Japan on the 12th December 1941.   

(6) Romania declared war on the USA & UK who both reciprocated by declaring war on Romania on the 12th December 1941.

(7) On the 13th December 1941 when Bulgaria and Hungary declared war on America and Britain, retaliation was immediate when both countries issued reciprocal declarations of war.

——

In Africa, the involvement of the Belgian Congo during the Second World War began with the German invasion of Belgium in May1940. Despite Belgium’s surrender, the Congo remained in the conflict on the Allied side, administered by the Belgian government in exile. The Belgian Congo provided much needed raw materials such as copper and rubber to the United Kingdom and the United States. The Belgian colonial authorities demanded greater efforts to increase productivity which led to strikes from the workforce. A lack of European skilled labour forced the colonial government for the first time to train the native Congolese workforce into skilled labour positions.  On the 3rd December 1941 local mine workers went on strike demanding more pay, as they were paid less than their white colleagues and at the same time living costs were rising. The following day 1400 workers had downed tools and refused to go back to work when requested by the colonial government. 15 were shot dead by the military. On the 9th December 1941 the strikers and their leader Leonard Mpoyi were invited to negotiations and despite various concession including a 30% pay rise being offered the strikers refused. The governor Amour Baron shot and killed Mpoyi and then ordered his soldiers to fire on the strikers. Officially there were approximately 30 workers killed and the miners went back to work on the 10th December 1941.

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In Germany, the “Night and Fog” Decree was issued by Hitler on the 7th December 1941. The secret decree was signed by Field Marshall Wilhelm Keitel, Chief of the German Armed Forces High Command. The decree allowed German authorities to abduct individuals alleged to be endangering German security in German occupied territories. Political Activists and resistance helpers were the most targeted. They were arrested and either shot or spirited away under cover of “Night and Fog” to concentration camps so they effectively vanished without a trace.

Hitler personally took command of the German Army on the 19th December 1941. General Field Marshall Walther von Bravchitsch performed the function before Hitler took control. Owing to his defeats on the Eastern Front, his failure to capture Moscow in the winter months and his heart attack led Hitler to become Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the German Army. Hitler was often criticised over his military operation on the Eastern Front.

——

Rosa Dainelli was an Italian doctor who was working in Ethiopia after the last regular Italian forces surrendered at Gondar in November 1941. She became an active member of Fronte di Resistenza (Resistance Front) who fought the Allies in the Italian guerrilla war in Ethiopia from December 1941 to summer of 1943. The resistance fought in the hope of an Italian victory with Rommel’s help in Egypt.

The French island of St. Pierre and Miquelon is located off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada. In the election of the 24th December 1941, for the first time a free expression of the male population voted better than 98% for the policy of Free France. Frenchman of the island had been governed since 194O by the Henri Philippe Petain, Head of the State of Vichy-France regime. The island from then on was governed by the Free French who were Allies of the United States and Britain.                           

On the island of Vågsøy off the west coast of Norway a British/Norwegian Combined Operations raid was conducted against German positions on the 27th December 1941. A combined force of British commandos plus 12 Norwegians from the Norwegian Independent Company gave a total of 570 troops on the raid known as Operation Archery. The raid was supported by the Royal Navy who provided the fire power. Also in support were Royal Air Force bombers and fighter bombers. The objective of the raid was to subdue, secure and eliminate the Germans on Måløy Island which dominated the town. A very effective naval bombardment preceded the dawn landing and all objectives were achieved. The German opposition in the town of Måløy was greater than expected as a unit of experienced German troops were on leave from the Eastern Front. Bitter house to house fighting ensued. Having destroyed four factories, the fish oil stores, ammunition/fuel stores, the telephone exchange and various military installations the commandos began their withdrawal at about 2.00 pm. Most of the town was in flames and the naval assault force sank 10 vessels. The German Coastal Artillery was prevented from being effective owing to technical difficulties but one of the 130 mm guns scored a hit on the cruiser HMS Kenya. The Royal Navy suffered no losses to their ships but they did lose four men killed and four wounded. Eight RAF aircraft were shot down. The commandos suffered 17 men killed and 53 men wounded but took 98 prisoners and a complete copy of the German Naval Code. This raid was enough to persuade Hitler to divert 30,000 troops to Norway and build more coastal and inland defences.

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(U.S.A.)

Civil Air Patrol was created on the 1st December 1941 with Major-General John F. Curry as the first National Commander. In his capacity as Director of the Officer of Civilian Defence Fierllo H. LaGuardia issued, through Congress, the Administration Order No 9 thereby creating the organisation. CAP was seen as a way to use America’s civilian resources to aid the war effort.  Civilian aviation would otherwise be grounded. CAP carried out many missions including anti-submarine patrols and warfare, border patrols and courier services throughout the Second World War.

On the 12th December 1941 the French built liner SS Normandie had been in New York Harbour since the outbreak of the war in 1939.  She was moored up in New York after completing her 139th transatlantic crossing from her home port of Le Havre in France and was compelled to seek haven there. The American government interred her on 3rd September 1939 under the “Right of Angary” and the American Coast Guard took possession of her. “Angary in the Oxford English Dictionary is defined as “A BELIGERENT’S RIGHT (SUBJECT TO COMPENSATION FOR LOSS) TO SEIZE OR DESTROY IN CULTURAL PROPERTY UNDER MILITARY NECCESSITY”. At the outbreak of war, although interred, Normandie remained in French hands with Captain Hervé Lehvédé and his French crewmen aboard to maintain the ship. Approximately 150 U.S. Coast Guardsmen were detailed to go aboard to prevent any sabotage. On the 12th December 1941 the Coast Guard removed Captain Lehvédé and the crew and the ship was transferred to the U.S. Navy and renamed USS Lafayette. Plans were approved on the 20th December 1941 to convert her to a troop carrier. When she was built as an ocean liner in 1935 Normandie was the largest and fastest passenger liner afloat and remains the most powerful steam turbo-electric liner ever built. Her main rival on the pre-war transatlantic crossing was the British liner RMS Queen Mary.

The conference of top British and American leaders, codenamed Arcadia, headed by Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin D. Roosevelt met in Washington from the 22nd December 1941 to 14th January 1942. The conference led to a series of major decisions that shaped the war effort. Coming two weeks after America entered the Second World War the major policy of the Arcadia Conference was to defeat Germany in Europe. Based in Washington the establishment of the “Combined Chiefs of Staff” was set up to approve of the military decisions of both the U.S. and Britain and would be under one Supreme Commander. Arcadia also drew up proposals to keep China in the war, a system for coordinating shipping and to find reinforcements to be sent to the Pacific. With the exception of the conference drafted the “Declaration by United Nations” all the decisions were secret. The declaration committed the Allies to not making a separate peace with the enemy and to employ all resources until victory was achieved. Arcadia included an immediate invasion of North Africa, sending American bombers to bases in England and the British to increase their military strength in the Pacific. Combined military resources under one command in the “European Theatre of Operations” was also agreed.

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At the end December 1941 most of the world was at war.

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SECOND WORLD WAR October 1941

 SECOND WORLD WAR October 1941

(Eastern Front)

The Lithuanian city of Vilnius was the spiritual and cultural centre of Eastern European Jewry which was known as “The Jerusalem of Lithuania”. Nazi Germany occupied Lithuania when they invaded the Soviet Union under Operation Barbarossa in June 1941. With the collaboration of the Nazis, Lithuanian leaders were in favour of ethnic cleansing of the Jewish and Polish residents of Vilnius. On the 1st October 1941, the Vilnius Ghetto Yom Kippur Aktion began. Two separate ghettos had been organised, Ghetto I and Ghetto II, in an area situated in the Jewish quarter of Vilnius Old Town.  Ghetto I was used for Jewish people with work certificates and Ghetto II was for Jews without. On Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement, 1st October 1941) the first of three Aktions took place in Ghetto II. On the 16th October 1941, Jewish people were told they were being transferred to a third ghetto where there was a shortage of workers. They laid down in the street refusing to move where dozens were killed following the order to shoot. The remainder were sent to Ponary, situated south west of Vilnius. On the 21st October 1941 the second Aktion occurred when 1,000 Jews were murdered at Ponary. On the 24th October 1941 about 2,500 were deported from Vilnius to Ponary and murdered. Ghetto II had thus been liquidated and ceased to exist.

In Poland, near the border with the Ukraine, Majdanek concentration camp was opened on the 1st October 1941 by the German occupying forces. As part of Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union and following the Battle of Kiev there were a large number of Soviet prisoners-of-war. In July 1941 Reichsführer – S.S. Heinrich Himmler ordered a new concentration camp to be built to hold at least 25,000 POWs. Construction was carried out by 150 Jewish forced labourers and assisted by 2,000 Red Army POWs. By mid-November 1941 only 500 were alive such were the harsh conditions they were subjected to. The site was initially intended as a labour force camp rather than an extermination camp. It was to become one of the largest of Nazi-run concentration camps when seven gas chambers, two wooden gallows and 277 structures were added. By mid-December 1941 barracks for 20, 000 was ready when a typhus epidemic broke out. By January 1942 all the slave labourers, POWs and Polish Jews were dead.

Operation Typhoon was launched on the 2nd October 1941 as part of the German invasion of the Soviet Union codenamed Operation Barbarossa. So successful was the invasion that the German Army, who were better equipped, better led, better trained and more experienced in battle, had plunged deep into the industrial heart of the Soviet Union. The defeat of the Soviet Union depended on the German army subduing them before the onset of winter.  German Dictator Adolf Hitler wished to have defeated the Soviet Union by the end of October 1941 and therefore his army and air force had been sent to the Eastern Front with only their summer kit. On the 6th October 1941 the Soviet Dictator Joseph Stalin had recalled Georgy Zhukov from the Leningrad Front to take charge of Moscow’s defence. Zhukov recognised the German army’s vulnerability to the Russian winter and was happy to hold the German’s at bay until the alternative snows and torrential rain halted their advance and they became virtually immobile. German legions were within sight of Leningrad in the north, while to the south German and Romanian troops were threatening the petrochemical and agricultural production in the Ukraine and the Crimean regions. German troops had captured Smolensk in the east which was only 288 km (180 miles) from Moscow. With the approaching winter German Panzer troops were hampered by the muddy ground on the 13th October 1941 owing to the first snowfalls and subsequent thaw. Hitler wanted a push toward Moscow and was confident that would result in “The Last, Great Decisive Battle of the War”.  The German Army continued their advance to Moscow but were hindered by the Red Army’s resistance just at the time when the temperatures began to fall. When the Soviet resistance was overcome the German Panzers continued to press on toward Moscow. On the 15th October 1941 Stalin ordered the government and the Communist Party to evacuate Moscow and to continue to operate from Kuibyshev (Now Samara). Stalin remained in the Soviet capital along with a limited number of officials in order to boost Soviet confidence in the government. Zhukov ordered reinforcements and troops from Siberia began arriving on the 18th October 1941. A Soviet official announcement on the 19th October 1941 stated that the Siege of Moscow had begun.

Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union the Nazis incorporated the Polish town of Stanislawow into the Western Ukraine as part of the District of Galicia. On the 12th October 1941 between 10,000 and 12,000 Jews were murdered in the so-called Bloody Sunday massacre. By the order of German S.S. Commander Hans Krueger thousands of Jews were gathered at the town’s market square and were escorted to the Jewish cemetery where mass graves had already been prepared. The Jews were forced to give away their valuables and to show their papers. Groups of men, women and children were ordered to strip naked and proceed to the graves where they were massacred by machine gun and rifle bullets. This Aktion, known as hthe Bloody Sunday massacre was unprecedented in Holocaust history up until that date.

On the south west coast of the Ukraine the massacre of the Jews in the city of Odessa took place between the 22nd and 23rd October 1941. Prior to the Second World War 30% of Odessa’s population, numbering 180,000 were Jewish. Following a two month siege German and Rumanian troops captured Odessa on the 16th October 1941. At the end of the siege approximately 80,000 to 90,000 Jews remained, the rest either having fled or been evacuated by the Soviet Union. On the 22nd October 1941 the Rumanian military commander General Ioan Glogojeanu had established his headquarters in the N.K.D.V. building in readiness to occupy the city. The retreating Soviet troops had planted a radio-controlled mine in the building prior to the surrender of the city. The mine exploded and the building collapsed, killing 67 people of whom 16 were officers including Glogojeanu. The Jewish people and the Communists were held responsible for the explosion. The response was that Rumanian and German troops arrived at Odessa on the 23rd October 1941 with orders to kill 5,000 to 10,000 hostages. Rumanian and German occupiers raided apartments of Odessa citizens and many were either shot or hanged. 5,000 Jews were ordered to the village of Dalnik on the 24th October 1941. The first 50 were marched to an anti-tank ditch and executed by the Lt-Col. Nicolae Deleanu. The city of Odessa lost about 10% of its citizens in the first week of the Rumanian occupation.

The Slovak Republic had gained independence from Czechoslovakia in March 1939 and was placed under the protection of Nazi Germany. Many Jews emigrated before October 1941 and at the same time 15,000 Jews were expelled from Bratislava to the Stobodka Ghetto in Poland on the 22nd October 1941. Originally the Slovak government attempted to deport the Jews as a substitute for providing Slovak workers to help the war effort. The original proposal was that 20,000 male Jews aged 16 and above would be for use as German forced labour. The concern for the Slovak government was that too many retained Jews would be a burden on the state. A financial agreement was reached where slave labour would be supplied by the Slovaks and the Germans would deport the remaining Jews, for them never to return. The Slovak government later claimed they were unaware the Germans were systematically exterminating the Jews under its control.

The battle for Kharkov began on the 6th October 1941. As a city, Kharkov lies directly south of Moscow on the borders of the Soviet Union and the Ukraine. The city was one of the largest Industrial centres of the Soviet Union with the main German objective being the capture of the railway system and the military factories. The Germans needed to secure Kharkov In order to protect their flanks now that the battle for Moscow was under way. By the 21st October 1941 the German 101st Light Division had reached within 6 km (3.75 miles) of the western outskirts of the city. The following day, the 22nd October 1941, a German reconnaissance was ordered to ascertain the Soviet defensive strength. On the same day a Soviet infantry battalion supported by tanks attacked the Germans. The attack was repulsed and two Soviet tanks were disabled. By the 20th October 1941 the Soviet leadership realised they would have to retreat and the evacuation of all the industrial enterprises were almost complete. Before the Germans had a chance to attack, 70 major factories were evacuated by being transported on 320 trains taking equipment away from the city. The Germans occupied the evacuated city on the 24th October 1941.

The port and city of Sevastopol is on the southern point of the Ukraine on the coast of the Black Sea. The Axis Powers of Germany and Romania attacked the Soviet defenders for control of city following Operation Barbarossa. This would give the Axis Powers an open route in their drive toward Moscow. By late October 1941 several attempts had been made to capture the city by the Axis Powers, however, these attacks were repelled. The Axis Powers were on the outskirts of the city but the planned major offensive was delayed by heavy rains. The Axis Powers opted to conduct a siege campaign and the Siege of Sevastopol began on the 27th 0ctober 1941.

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(Other Theatres) 

India, a multi-religious British Colony, had joined the Allies against Nazi Germany at the beginning of the Second World War and her armies were engaged in various theatres. However, Mahatma Gandhi, a 72 year old anti-colonial nationalist urged his followers to begin a passive resistance against  British rule in India on 3rd October 1941. His opposition to India participating in the Second World War was that India was denied democratic independence from Britain. India was being denied but her troops were fighting for Britain opposing Nazism and Fascism for the freedom of other occupied countries. Despite Ghandi’s opposition, the Indian army numbered just under 200,000 men at the beginning of the war. By the end of the war it had become the largest volunteer army in history, rising to over 2.5 million men in August 1945. The Indian Army fought for the British Empire mainly in Africa, the Middle East and Burma. Ghandi continued his campaign throughout the war and beyond until India achieved independence in 1947.

Although still neutral the United States of America was operating naval warships in the Atlantic. Two separate incidents involving American warships occurred during this period. In mid-October 1941 the first incident was when U.S.S. Kearney, a Greaves-class destroyer was docked in the U.S.-occupied port of Reykjavik in Iceland. A nearby British convoy was attacked by a wolf pack of German U-boats who had overwhelmed her Canadian escorts. Kearney along with three other U.S. destroyers were ordered to assist. Upon reaching the action Kearney dropped depth charges on the U-boats then followed up with a barrage throughout the night. On the 17th October 1941 U-boat U-568 fired a torpedo at Kearney which struck her on the starboard side. She sailed out of the danger zone when the crew had confined the flooding to the forward fire room then sailed back to Iceland for temporary repairs. The torpedo attack cost the lives of 21 men with a further 22 injured. On the 25th December 1941 Kearney sailed for Boston Massachusetts for permanent repairs. After the permanent repairs Kearney went on to see action in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and other theatres of war. Following the U.S. entry into the Second World War Hitler cited the attack of the wolf pack as an act of provocation which justified the German declaration of war against the U.S. in December 1941. The second incident was after the Clemson-class destroyer U.S.S. Reuben James had joined the Neutrality Patrol guarding the Atlantic and Caribbean approaches to the U.S. since the beginning of the Second World War. By March 1941 she had joined the established force who escorted convoys sailing for Britain. The U.S. force only escorted convoys as far as Iceland and British escorts took over from there. On the 31stOctober 1941 Reuben James along with 4 other destroyers were escorting Convoy HX156 near Iceland when they were attacked by a German submarine wolf pack. Reuben James positioned herself between the wolf pack and an ammunition ship in the convoy. The Reuben James was torpedoed by U-boat U-552 who had aimed at the merchant ship. The entire bow was blown off when a magazine exploded. The after section floated for a few minutes but the bow sank immediately. 100 members of the crew were killed leaving only 44 enlisted men who survived. All seven officers were among those who did not survive the attack.

In America the policy had been to help the British with financial aid but not joining in the war. In March 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Lease-Lend Bill. On the 30th October 1941 China and the Soviet Union had been included in the approved $1 billion dollar Lease-Lend aid to Britain.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe had started the war with China in 1937. By 1940 Konoe no longer believed that a military solution to the “China Affair” was possible. His aim was to seek a diplomatic solution by having Germany mediate a peace settlement with China. Hideki Tojo, as Army Minister expanded the war with China by placing Japanese troops in the southern part of Vichy French Indochina. Japan and Italy had entered into a tripartite agreement in September 1940 with Germany which included occupied Vichy-France.  The Imperial Conference between Japan and America was fixed to be concluded in early October 1941. The deadline had passed on the 16th October 1941 with no progress to resolve the problem of the “China Affair”. The United States immediately imposed economic sanctions on Japan including a total embargo on all oil and petrol exports. Konoe resign as Prime Minister on the 16th October 1941 as he felt politically isolated and that Emperor Hirohito no longer trusted him. The majority of the government favoured military action. On the 17th October 1941 Tojo became the new Prime Minister of Japan. In his first radio speech Tojo said he favoured “world peace” but also stated his determination to resolve the “China Affair” on Japanese terms. By the 21st October 1941 negotiations between Japan and America appeared to be heading toward failure.

In Luxemburg on the 19th October 1941 the German occupiers declared the territory to be free of Jews. When Germany occupied Luxemburg in May 1940 among the population there were approximately 3,500 Jews. Many of these Jews had arrived in Luxemburg from Germany to escape persecution where they were then encouraged to leave the country for Vichy-France. By October 1941 emigration was forbidden but not before nearly 2,500 had already left. When in Vichy-France the Jews were no better off as they were forced to wear the yellow Star of David badge. Most of them were later deported to concentration camps. In Luxemburg the Nazi authorities began to deport the remaining Jews to concentration camps in Poland. On the 19th October 1941 Luxemburg was declared “Judenfrei” (“cleansed of Jews”).

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

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

Date                Time   Location         Damage

03/09/1941                Nevendon     An unexploded Parachute flare found 300 yards

South of Burnt Mills Road.  No damage or casualties.

04/09/1941                Pilgrims          1 – H.E. unexploded found in cornfield at Sandpit

Hatch                         Lane, 65 yards from road.  No damage or casualties.  Date and time of falling not known.  (disposed of BDS 20.9.41).

09/09/1941                Warley            2 – H.Es unexploded on open ground at rear of

refuge dump in Magpie Wood.  No damage or casualties.  Date and time of falling not known.  (disposed of BDS 4.10.41).

18/09/1941    00.20  Foulness       2 – Paramines exploded in the mud 300 yards East

Island             of sea wall 1/2 mile North East of Fisherman’s Head.  Windows of garages on Government property at Court End broken.  No casualties.

19/09/1941                Pitsea             1 – A.A. unexploded Shell found at Sewage

Disposal Farm, 20 yards East of Pumping Station.  Date and time of falling unknown.  No damage or casualties.  (Disposed of BDS 5.10.41).

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

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

Date                Time   Location         Damage

04/01/1941                Great Warley 1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in garden of 22 Mount

Crescent.  No damage or casualties.  B.D.S 6.2.41.

04/01/1941    02.05  Great Warley 5 – H.Es exploded at Warley Barracks 20 yards

from swimming pool.  1 located remainder of wood.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

05/01/1941    15.30  Great              10 – H.Es exploded in fields in line from 500 yards

Burstead        West of St Marys, Crays Hill to Bridge Farm.  No damage or casualties.

05/01/1941    20.45  Great Warley I.Bs (a number) on open ground near The

                                                            Thatcher’s Arms P.H.  No damage or casualties.

05/01/1941    20.55  Herongate     I.Bs (a number) fell in Thorndon Park and 10 or 12

near The Boars Head.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

05/01/1941    22.00  Doddinghurst            1 – H.E. exploded at Howells Farm,

                                                            Doddinghurst Road.  No damage or casualties.

06/01/1941    09.00  Great              1 – H.E. unexploded in a field 1/4 mile East of

Wakering       Wakering Common Road.  No damage or casualties.  (Dealt with by B.D.S. 11.1.41).

06/01/1941    10.05  Brentwood     16 – H.Es exploded in the Gas Company’s Sports

Ground, 5 exploded in Brickfields (slight damage to property) 5 exploded and 1 unexploded in vicinity of Railway Station, 1 fatal, 7 serious and 13 slight casualties.  Considerable damage to property.  (unexploded removed right away by B.D.S. from Railway).

06/01/1941    14.25  Pitsea             1 – H.E. exploded on footpath outside “Cartref” St

                                                            Michaels.  No damage or casualties.

07/01/1941    14.40  Little Warley  7 – H.Es exploded, 2 in fields of Brickfields, 3 in

field at rear of Waterworks, 1 in field at “The Goldings” and 1 in hedge of a lane between Thatcher’s Arms and Hall Farm, Great Warley.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

07/01/1941    16.10  Rochford       7 – H.E. exploded on or near Rochford Aerodrome. 

No damage or casualties.

08/01/1941    N/K     Hutton            1 – H.E. unexploded on Martins Farm 400 yards

                                                            North of Rayleigh Road.  No damage or casualties.

09/01/1941    N/K     Great Warley 1 – H.E. unexploded 100 yards from Lodge at

entrance to Boyles Court.  No damage or casualties.  BDS 29.11.41.

10/01/1941    N/K     Canewdon    1 – H.E. exploded 200 yards West of Loftmans

                                                            Farm.  No damage or casualties.

11/01/1941    19.40  South             I.Bs (a number) over a wide area.  No casualties, 1

Benfleet         bungalow completely gutted, 1 extensively damaged and 11 slightly damaged.  Gas main damaged.  “Westbury” I.B. through roof slight damage.

11/01/1941    19.55  Pitsea             I.Bs (a number) fell on Pitsea Estate.  2 houses

badly damaged. A Chapel and 10 houses slightly damaged, 1 serious, 1 slight casualty.

11/01/1941    19.55  Basildon        I.Bs (a number) over a wide area. A bungalow, a

farmhouse and a school slightly damaged.  No casualties.

11/01/1941    19.56  Thundersley I.Bs (a number) fell on Bread & Cheese Hill, 1

slight casualty.  A garage used as a Furniture Depository and 2 bungalows damaged.

11/01/1941                Brentwood     1 – A.A. unexploded Shell at Brickhouse Farm,

Doddinghurst Road.  No damage or casualties.  (Removed B.D.S. 25.2.41).

11/01/1941    20.15  Pilgrims          1 U.X.B.A. bomb board, wire and parachute and

Hatch             circular board found near PC Dayer’s house.  No damage or casualties.  (disposed of by B.D.S 13th).

11/01/1941    21.15  Mountnessing          1 U.X.B.A. bomb board, wire and parachute

and circular board found at Swallows Cross.  Bomb in hedge at Bullmans Farm.  (Disposed of by B.D.S 13th).

11/01/1941    22.30  Doddinghurst            2 – Parachutes and a large quantity of wire. 

A heavy explosion was heard when this material grounded.

12/01/1941    18.25  Doddinghurst            1 U.X.B. with wire and parachute attached

at Stockfield.  Also a parachute and wire only in a field near Shepherds Inn.  (Disposed of by B.D.S. 13th).

12/01/1941                Pilgrims          1 U.X.B Small Yellow with parachute attached

Hatch             near Ashwells (Disposed of by B.D.S. 13th).  Also 1 parachute only at Ashwells.

12/01/1941                Doddinghurst            1 – U.X.B.  Small Yellow with a parachute

and wire attached in Howgego’s field, Dagwood Lane.  (Disposed of B.D.S. 15th)

12/01/1941                Doddinghurst            1- U.X.B.  Small Yellow near “The Warren”

                                                            Blackmore Road.  (Disposed of by B.D.S. 16th).

12/01/1941    18.30  Basildon        1 – H.E. unexploded in a field 300 yards South of

Burnt Mills and 600 yards East of Rectory Road.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    18.40  Pitsea             1 – H.E. exploded in a field between Rectory Road

                                                            and Pound Lane.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    18.45  Pilgrims          1 – H.E. exploded in garden of “Dorna” Hatch

                                    Hatch             Road, 4 houses slightly damaged.  No casualties.

12/01/1941    18.50  Wickford        5 – H.E. exploded at Atherstone Gardens and a

number of I.Bs in open ground.  Slight damage to property.  No 1 Police Houses, telephone wires and electric cables down.

12/01/1941    18.50  Rayleigh        1 – H.E. exploded in upper Edwards Hall,

                                                            Eastwood Rise.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    19.00  Brentwood     1 – H.E. exploded in Crown Square, Crown Street,

8 slight casualties.  4 houses demolished, 14 houses and a school seriously damaged.  16 houses slightly damaged.  Water and gas mains damaged.  2 unclassified roads closed.

12/01/1941    19.00  Pilgrims          1 – H.E. exploded 150 yards East of Ashwells

                                    Hatch             Farm, School Lane.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    19.05  Laindon         1 – H.E. exploded at Castle Lane, Primrose Hill. 

                                                            Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

12/01/1941    19.10  Barling           1 – I.B. burnt out at Clays Street Farm.  No

                                                            damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    19.10  Sutton            2 – H.Es exploded Temlle Farm, 400 yards West of

Sutton Road.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

12/01/1941    19.19  Little Warley  I.Bs (a number) burnt out in fields North of Arterial

Road, near Warley Street.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    20.15  Rochford       7 – H.Es exploded in fields at Blatches Farm. 

                                                            Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

12/01/1941    21.20  Little                7 – H.Es exploded in fields at Hatches Farm.  No

                                    Burstead        damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    21.40  Canvey          4 – H.Es exploded near Scars Elbow Fort.  2 in

Island             fields and 2 in River Thames.  No damage or casualties.  Also I.Bs (a number) on 70 ton Lighter named “WYE” near O’Dells Dump, Northwick Road.  No casualties.  Boat damaged and

12/01/1941    21.40  Dunton          I.Bs (a number) burnt out in fields between Dunton

Colony and Dunton Hall Farm.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    21.50  Hadleigh        5 – H.Es, 4 exploded and 1 unexploded in and near

The Crescent, and a number of I.Bs near Burrows Recreation Ground. 1 H.E. exploded 70 yards North of Scrubbs Lane, 1 unexploded 100 yards West of Woodfield Road and 3 exploded on open ground behind Woodfield Road, 2 fatal casualties (females 14 months and 9 years) 4 serious and 5 slight casualties, 1 bungalow demolished, slight damage to other property.  Water and gas mains damaged, sewer damaged and three unclassified roads closed.

12/01/1941    22.10  Dunton          7 – H.Es exploded in fields at rear of Dunton

                                                            Wayletts Farm.  No damage or casualties.

12/01/1941    22.28  Shenfield       1 – A.A. Shell exploded in School Chase.  No

                                                            damage or casualties.

13/01/1941    N/K     Potton            1 – H.E. unexploded on saltings 1/2 mile North of

Island             Farmhouse and 35 feet from sea wall and 50 yards West of Storehouse on North East side of sea wall.  No damage or casualties.

16/01/1941     01.04  Brentwood     A German Dornier 17 shot down by night fighter

crashed in flames in Hartswood 100 yards from junction of Woodman and Hartswood Roads.  Machine completely burnt out.  Remains of 3 bodies found in wreckage.

16/01/1941    05.15  Canvey          A German Heinkel 111 shot down by night fighter

Island             crashed in flames in River Thames 100 yards South of Oil Wharf Jetty Hole Haven.  Occupants 2 dead and 3 prisoners (1 at Oldchurch Hospital).

18/01/1941    15.35  Billericay        10 – H.Es 8 exploded and 2 unexploded in fields

East of Lawness Farm.  No damage or casualties.  (Dealt with by B.D.S. 9.4.41).

18/01/1941    16.45  Hockley          Barrage Balloon grounded in a field near

Homefield Farm, Greensword Lane.  Damage to electric cables.

19/01/1941    21.00  Nevendon     1 – H.E. exploded in a field 300 yards East of

Nevendon Hall Farm and 300 yards South of Arterial Road.  No damage or casualties.

19/01/1941    21.05  Pitsea             I.Bs (about 40) burnt out on Marsh land near the

Reclaimation Coy Limited works.  No damage or casualties.

19/01/1941    22.00  Great              Damage to ceilings and windows at “Corduville

Wakering       Villa” High Street by nose cap of A.A. Shell.  Also damage by shrapnel to roof of Methodist Chapel.  No casualties.

20/01/1941    02.05  Hutton             I.Bs (a number) burnt out on open ground in

vicinity of L.N.E.R. Brands Farm and Petrol storage dump, Wash Lane.

21/01/1941    10.45  South Weald 1 – A.A. exploded Shell at Coxtie Green Farm. 

                                                            Slight damage to cowshed.  No casualties.

21/01/1941    15.00  Pitsea             An enemy plane flew low over the district and

machine gunned indiscriminately.  No casualties.  Damage to bungalow.

21/01/1941    15.55  Billericay        16 – H.Es 15 exploded and 1 unexploded and a

number of I.Bs in fields opposite Ardleighs Garage at Harts Corner.  One heavy H.E. exploded near Cullis’ Sheet Metal Factory South Green.  1 soldier killed, 2 soldiers and 3 civilians injured.  Extensive damage to factory and other property.  Telephone and electric cables down.  Water main damaged.  (Unexploded removed by B.D.S).

22/01/1941                Hutton            1 – H.E. unexploded found behind military hut on

Brands Farm, Wash Lane.  No damage or casualties (believed to have fallen 20.1.41).

22/01/1941                Laindon         1 – A.A. unexploded Shell on footpath 150 yards

East of Church Road.  No damage or casualties.  (disposed of B.D.S. 4.2.41).

24/01/1941    12.00  East Horndon           A white balloon 8 feet diameter deflated

found in a wood 1/2 mile West of East Horndon roundabout.

29/01/1941    20.00  South Weald 1 – H.E exploded on grass verge opposite 38

Wealdside Cottage.  Telephone wires and water main damaged.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

29/01/1941    20.30  Mountnessing          3 – H.Es exploded, 2 in fields called Thoby

Fields North East of Mountnessing Mill and 1 in field North Corner House Café, Burnthouse Lane.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

29/01/1941    20.50  Great Warley 2 – H.Es exploded in fields 1/4 mile North of

Stoney Hills Farm.  Slight damage to 2 houses.  No casualties.

29/01/1941    21.00  Downham     3 – H.Es exploded in fields 200 yards from De

                                                            Beauvoir’s Arms.  No damage or casualties.

29/01/1941    21.30  Downham     2 – H.Es exploded in fields 600 yards East of White

                                                            Lillies Farm.  No damage or casualties.

30/01/1941     13.30  Wickford        2 – H.Es exploded, 1 200 yards South of A.127 and

1 exploded 150 yards East of Pipps Hill.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

30/01/1941    13.45  Pitsea             1 – H.E. exploded and about 50 I.Bs burnt out 300

yards East of Sea Transport Depot and Sewerage Works.  1 ewe killed and overhead electric cables down.

30/01/1941    16.30  Laindon         1 – A.A. unexploded Shell fell in the garden of

“Rosena” Borthwick Drive.  No damage or casualties.  (dealt with by B.D.S. 6.2.41).

31/01/1941    11.15  Herongate     1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in the garden of

“Woodlands” Blind Lane.  No damage or casualties.  (Dealt with by B.D.S. 24.2.41).

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service December 1940

Air Raid Damage Reports Brentwood Division Essex Fire Service December 1940.

Date                Time   Location         Damage

01/12/1940    23.15  Pilgrims          1 – H.E exploded in a field at junction Coxtie Green

Hatch             Road and Wheelers Lane.  Considerable damage to property.  Poultry killed.  Water main damaged.  Overhead Telephone wires down.  Road blocked (open 2nd).

02/12/1940    20.15  Doddinghurst            2 – H.Es, 1 exploded on edge of wood near

Rilston Lodge Church Lane.  Damage to property, 14 persons rendered homeless, 1 unexploded in a drained pond between Solid Lane and Cottages, near Wacketts Farm.  No casualties.

04/12/1940    21.00  Billericay        Damage to lamp standard on Southend Road and

buildings at Southend Farm by drifting Barrage Balloon.

04/12/1940    21.20  Rochford       2 – H.Es unexploded, 1 on Golf Course and 1 200

yards North West of Westborrow Hall (exploded 9.12.40)  No damage or casualties.

04/12/1940    21.30  Hullbridge     10 – H.Es exploded at Poolehurst Farm, Cracknells

Farm and Kingsland Farm.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

04/12/1940    21.55  Coxtie Green 2 – H.Es, 1 exploded and 1 unexploded at back of

Coxtie Green House.  White Horse Road.  Road closed (open after 96 hours).  Damage to property.  Telephone wires down.  No casualties.  D.B.S. 7.2.41.

04/12/1940    22.30  Rayleigh        Drifting Barrage Balloon fouled the Overhead

electric cables at Little Wakering drifting in a South Easterly direction and caught on a pylon at Wheatleys Farm and burnt.  Wires and ropes and gear salvaged.

04/12/1940    22.55  Ingrave           3 – H.Es unexploded, 1 in field opposite Womens

Institute Dunnings Lane, 2 in Thorndon Park between 10th fairway and Lake, (1 exploded in a plantation the 5th).  No damage or casualties.

05/12/1940    15.00  Billericay        1 – H.E. unexploded in a field 200 yards East of

Cox Farm Road.  Green Lane.  (exploded 31.12.40 by B.D.S.)  No damage or casualties.

05/12/1940    21.30  Hockley          8 – I.Bs on Marshes 350 yards North of Beckney

                                                            Farm.  No damage or casualties.

08/12/1940    18.55  Rayleigh        10 – I.Bs fell on open ground and burnt out at St

Walter Rayleigh Drive, Victoria Road, Station Crescent, Lancaster Road, Highfield Crescent and Barranting Square.  No damage or casualties.

08/12/1940    21.25  East                1 – H.E exploded in a field at rear of Meadow

Horndon        House 200 yards South of A.127.  No damage or casualties.

08/12/1940    21.30  Herongate     30 – I.Bs on The Elms, Elm Cottage, Herongate

House and The Poplars and about 26 on op ground.  Damage to property.  No casualties.

08/12/1940    22.35  Canvey          I.Bs (a number) fell in the vicinity Long Road. 

Island             Damage at  Green Stores and June Villa, Long Road.  Damage to property.  No casualties.

09/12/1940    00.05  Childerditch  1 – H.E exploded in Brickfields Road 30 yards

                                                            North of Arterial Road.  No damage or casualties.

09/12/1940    00.15  Langdon        2 – H.Es, 1 exploded and 1 unexploded near West

Hills                Ham Sanatorium Dry Street.  Unexploded in Orchard 200 yards East of buildings.  No damage or casualties.  B.D.S. 22.3.41.

09/12/1940    01.00  Foulness       2 – H.Es exploded in narrow gut creek, Rushley

Island             Island 3/4 mile East of The Island Farm House.  No damage or casualties.

09/12/1940    01.10  Doddinghurst            I.Bs (a number) fell in the vicinity of

Woodlands Blackmore near Hendersons Garage.  No damage or casualties.

09/12/1940    01.35  Hadleigh        1 – H.E exploded in centre of Park Chase London

Road, 6 slight casualties.  Extensive damage to property.  Gas main damaged (S.L.T. 21.12.40)

09/12/1940    01.35  Crays Hill       I.Bs (a number) approx. 100 fell on open ground at

                                                            Crays Hill Farm.  No damage or casualties.

09/12/1940    01.45  Doddinghurst            2 – H.Es exploded, 1 in field near Wantz

Cottages and 1 H.E. and 1 Oil I.B. in vicinity of “Red House” Poultry Farm, slight damage to 2 Poultry houses.  No casualties.

09/12/1940    02.00  Ramsden       3 – H.Es unexploded, 1 at DeBeauvoir’s Farm

Bell House    (exploded at 08.00) 1 South of Railway lines (exploded  at 09.55) causing damage to Railway Embankment.  Up track closed.  And 1 at DeBeauvoir’s Farm 400 yards East of Farm.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.  (Railway line open 10.12.40).

09/12/1940    02.00  Crays Hill       2 – H.Es, 1 exploded 250 yards West of St Marys

Church and unexploded 10 yards from crater (exploded 11.12.40)  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

09/12/1940    04.10  Hadleigh        1 – H.E. exploded in road outside School House. 

The Avenue.  Damage to four houses, gas main damaged.  Telephone wires down.  The Avenue blocked (S.L.T. 21st).

09/12/1940    04.10  Crays Hill       1 – H.E exploded in a field 10 yards from A.129

and 300 yards Billericay side of Whiteridge.  No damage or casualties.

09/12/1940    04.30  Vange            2 – H.Es exploded in fields 40 yards South of High

Street and 100 yards West of Vange Church.  Extensive damage to property.  Telephone wires down.  No casualties.

09/12/1940    04.30  Little                1 – H.E. exploded in a field between Sudburys

                                    Burstead        Farm and Blind Lane.  No damage or casualties.

09/12/1940    06.30  Canvey          7 – H.Es, 4 unexploded in river in front of West

Island             Point, Thorney Bay (3 exploded at 16.50 hrs, 1 remaining) and 3 exploded near Southend Water Works emergency Pumping Station Haven Road.  Pumping Station badly damaged.  Water supply not affected.  No casualties.

09/12/1940    08.38  Foulness       3 – H.Es exploded and 15 I.Bs burnt out on Wick

                                    Island             Farm.  No damage or casualties.

11/12/1940    20.30  Mountnessing          1 – H.E unexploded in Lodge field, Thoby

                                                            Lane.  No damage or casualties.

11/12/1940    20.49  North              I.Bs (a number) burnt out in fields at North Benfleet

                                    Benfleet         Hall Farm.  No damage or casualties.

11/12/1940    21.00  Wickford        2 – H.Es exploded in a field North West of Wantz

Corner, Chelmsford Road.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

12/12/1940                Rayleigh        Parachute of a flare found in a field near Crow Hill. 

                                                            Now at Rayleigh Police Station.

12/12/1940    02.15  Paglesham    14 – H.Es exploded, 1 on East Hall Road.  Closed

(open 13.12.40) 2 beside East Hall Road, 5 on South Hall Farm.  4 at Church Hall Farm and  2 on East Hall Farm.  No damage or casualties.

12/12/1940    21.10  Mountnessing                      4 – H.Es, 2 exploded and 2

unexploded in Moat field off Church Lane.  No damage or casualties.

12/12/1940    22.27  Mountnessing          3 – H.Es, 2 exploded in a field on

McCheyne’s Farm and 1 unexploded in 2nd meadow North West of Great Cowbridge Grange Farm.  No damage or casualties.  Disposed of B.D.S. 17.12.40.

13/12/1940    02.52  Canvey          6 – H.Es exploded in the River Thames 100 yards

                                    Island             East of Oil Wharf Jetty.  No damage or casualties.

13/12/1940    19.50  Canvey          1 Parachute mine exploded in mid-air between

Island             Canvey and the Kent Coast.  No damage or casualties.

13/12/1940                Rayleigh        Parachute flare found in field near Crow Hill (taken

                                                            by R****

14/12/1940    01.55  Sutton             2 Parachute mines, 1 exploded 400 yards North

and 1exploded 500 yards West of Beauchamps Farm Shopland.  No casualties.  Considerable damage to property.  Parachute of 1 mine at Rochford Police Station.

14/12/1940    01.55  Paglesham    2 Parachute mines, 1 exploded on South Hall

Marshes and 1 unexploded on Hare Marshes.  Slight damage to property.  Unexploded removed to Portsmouth 16th by Military.

14/12/1940    09.40  Little Warley  1 – A.A. unexploded Shell found in a field 200

                                                            yards East of Hall Lane.  No damage or casualties.

14/12/1940    18.18  Canvey          10 – H.Es exploded, 1 on “Beachville” Clinton

Island             Road, HQ of 96th Light A.A. Battery R.A. extensive damage to property.  1 soldier fatal casualty.  Military hut fired.  Underground telephone cables and telegraph pole damaged and 9 exploded in fields North and South of Canvey Road in line from Cooks Farm to Clinton Road.  S.L.T. on Canvey Road B.1014.  (open 14.12.40).

15/12/1940    20.08  Foulness       7 – H.Es exploded North West of Church End on

                                    Island             Nazewick Farm.  No damage or casualties.

15/12/1940    20.20  Canvey          2 – H.Es exploded and 1 Oil I.B. burnt out in the

Island             River Thames 500 yards off Scars Elbow Fort.  No damage or casualties.

17/12/1940                Paglesham    1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in orchard of East Hall. 

                                                            No damage or casualties.

17/12/1940                Dunton          1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in centre Verge opposite

telegraph pole 328, Arterial Road.  No casualties. (Disposed of by B.D.S. 30/12/40).

20/12/1940    21.10  Great Warley 1 – H.E exploded in field 80 yards West of District

Nurses house.  Slight damage to property.  No casualties.

20/12/1940    23.55  Basildon        2 – H.Es, 1 exploded and 1 unexploded on Honey

Pot Lane.  The unexploded H.E. exploded at 11.30 the 21st, causing two casualties (slight) both Wardens.  Extensive damage to property, water main and telephone wires (Wardens names Norman and Clements)  Road open 17.1.41.

21/12/1940    05.45  Creeksea       Segt Hazlegrove and Pte Haige of the Duke of

Wellington Regt.  Stationed at Hawkwell were taking part in manoeuvres at Creeksea when they walked across land mines buried in the ground on land which was fenced off running parallel with Creeksea Road, 1 mine exploded and they were both practically blown to pieces.

23/12/1940    19.45  Ingrave           7 – H.Es exploded and about 100 I.Bs burnt out in

Thorndon Park in vicinity of Hatch Farm, 1 in garden of Rushbottom Cottage Rectory Lane.  Damage to property, 2 Salmonds Farm (damage to property) 2 Willows Farm, 1 dairy Farm and 1 at Fouchers Farm.  No casualties.

23/12/1940                Brentwood     1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in garden of Curressys,

Ongar Road.  No damage or casualties.  (Disposed of by B.D.S. 24.1.41).

23/12/1940                Brentwood     1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in grounds of “Learigg”,

Cornslands.  No damage or casualties.  B.D.S. 26.2.41.

27/12/1940     20.18  Hockley          1 – H.E. exploded at junction of Greensword Lane

                                                            and Lower Road.  No damage or casualties.

27/12/1940    20.30  Little Warley  1 – H.E. exploded at entrance of Codham Hall

Lane.  The lane is partly blocked by debris.  No casualties.  (Lane open 29.12.40).

27/12/1940    20.40  South Weald Windows broken at The Chequers P.H. by mine

                                                            exploding at Navestock.

27/12/1940    20.40  Barling           2 – H.Es exploded, 1 at Shoulderstick Hall and 1 at

& Sutton        Beauchamps Farm house.  Damage to property.  Aeroplane trip wires down.  No casualties.

27/12/1940    21.00  Little Warley  I.Bs (about 100) burnt out at junction of Hall Lane

and Arterial Road.  Slight damage to property And about 1 ton of hay destroyed in a stack.  No casualties.

27/12/1940    21.00  Hockley          1 – I.B. burnt out in a ditch at Marylands Wood.

No damage or casualties.

27/12/1940    21.00  Great              9 – H.Es exploded in line 100 yards North West of

Burstead        Barleylands Sewerage Works.  No damage or casualties.

27/12/1940    21.01  Billericay        I.Bs (a number) burnt out in fields 400 yards West

                                                            of Barleylands House.  No damage or casualties.

27/12/1940    21.12  Buttsbury       1 Parachute mine exploded 200 yards South East

of Shoulder Hall.  Slight damage to Shoulder Hall.  No casualties.

27/12/1940    21.13  Billericay        1 Parachute mine exploded 50 yards North of

“Stricklands” Buckwyns Estate.  Damage to 8 houses.  No casualties.

27/12/1940    Night  South             1 – Parachute mine unexploded in garden of

Fambridge     “Greenways” Fambridge Road.  Tail cap found 1/2 mile from River.  Fambridge Road closed.  (Rendered safe by Admiralty 29.12.40)  Road open ( Rest of entry missing on original).

27/12/1940    21.40  Canewdon    1 – A.A. unexploded Shell in a field 30 yards West

                                                            of Lion House.  No damage or casualties.

27/12/1940                Ashingdon    1 – Parachute mine unexploded on Marshes 400

yards South of Ashingdon School (Rendered harmless by Admiralty 29.12.40).

28/12/1940                Coxtie Green Harley Cottage in lane nr Eagle Inn.  Roof serious

and 12 panes of glass broken from blast and debris from H.E. exploded by B.D.S. during afternoon.

29/12/1940    18.30  Pitsea             2 – H.Es, 1 exploded in garden of “The Sheilings”

Rectory Road.  Slight damage to property and 1 unexploded in a field 40 yards from Rectory Road.  B.1011 closed (H.E. exploded 3.1.41 road open.  Damage to 12 houses and shops.)  No casualties.

29/12/1940    19.30  Brentwood     1 – A.A. Shell exploded on Ingrave Road opposite

“Rannock” 200 yards South of 3 Arch Bridge.  Slight damage to property and road.  No casualties.