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January 19th, 1939 (THURSDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Destroyers HMS KELVIN and KIPLING are launched

CANADA: Ottawa: The Canadian government is urged to take in a fair quota of refugees from Europe. The article....

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19 January 1940

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January 19th, 1940 (FRIDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: 

RAF Bomber Command: Reconnaissance of NW Germany for naval targets.

RAF Fighter Command: One enemy aircraft attacked off East Aberdeen, it was driven off damaged, there was no damage caused to British targets.

Escort carrier USS (ex-HMS) Charger laid down.

 

NORTH SEA: Seven ships of the First Destroyer Flotilla are operating out of Harwich with six other ships of the Flotilla who were returning from an operation off the Dutch coast when in calm weather a mine exploded. G class destroyer HMS Grenville quickly capsizes in the Thames 23 miles east of the Kentish Kcock light vessel at 51 39N, 02 17. The mine had been laid by a destroyer. Grenville's bow was the last part of the ship to disappear. Two ships from the Flotilla disregarded their safety and lowered boats to pluck 118 men from the water. Seventy-seven officers and crew lose their lives. (Alex Gordon and Dave Shirlaw)(108)

FRANCE: Premier Daladier asks General Gamelin and Admiral Darlan to "work out a memorandum on a possible intervention to destroy the Russian oilfields." For a long time the Third Reich has been receiving shipments of raw materials including oil from Russia.

GERMANY: Today is Eva Braun's birthday. As a present Adolf Hitler gives her a book of Bavarian poetry, Josef Filsers Briefwexel by Ludwig Thoma. He inscribes it with the words: "My darling Eva. A gift of love from the heart. Adolf Hitler. Berlin Jan. 19, 1940" (UPI)

VATICAN CITY: Vatican Radio and the Vatican newspaper, "L'Osservtore Romano" revealed to the world "the dreadful cruelties of uncivilized tyranny" the Nazis were inflicting on Jewish and Catholic Poles." (273, pp.74)(Russell Folsom)

FINLAND: The Finnish army stages an unsuccessful attack on Russian positions at Salla.

CANADA:

Patrol craft HMCS Cancolim chartered from American Can Company at a monthly charter rate of $370.00, from American Can Company. Returned Nov 1945

Flower-class corvettes ordered from Canadian yards - HMS Trillium, HMS Mayflower, HMS Eyebright, HMCS Chambly, HMCS Chicoutimi, HMCS Saskatoon and HMCS Lethbridge.

U.S.A.: Columbia pictures releases its 44th Three Stooges comedy, You Nazty Spy.

The Three Stooges vs. Hitler

Moe Howard was the first American actor to impersonate Hitler, predating Chaplin’s The Great Dictator by nine months. For that, he got on Hitler’s death list.

by Lynn Rapaport

Until the late 1930s the American movie industry was economically dependent on a world market for the success of its products. In Europe, more than 35,000 theaters showed American movies regularly. Although Adolf Hitler loved movies, he resisted seeing himself portrayed on screen. Under Nazi control, the German film industry forbade characterizations of Hitler as subject matter for film. Hitler was only to appear in newsreels and documentaries, and he wanted no artificial Hitlers as rivals.

Movies that dealt realistically with Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany were likely to be banned overseas. Hollywood feared that unless they avoided social and political issues, and only produced films considered "wholesome" and "pure entertainment," the federal government would censor the movies or break up the industry.

In 1934, spearheaded by William Harrison Hays, the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America created a production code (PCA) that imposed sharp restrictions on how movies treated a wide range of subjects. Article X of the Production Code stated: "The history, institution, prominent people and citizenry of all nations shall be presented fairly. No picture shall be produced that tends to incite bigotry or hatred among peoples of differing races, religions or national origins." This code was designed to secure the universal appeal of Hollywood movies and their financial success throughout the world.

Many films made in the early 1930s with political messages were removed from circulation until the 1960s.

The United States, in the throes of the Great Depression, followed an isolationist foreign policy to keep out of the war. Most Americans were unwilling to be drawn into European power struggles or to take sides between Hitler and his intended victims.

When the Second World War erupted in 1939, a Gallup poll showed that 96 percent of Americans opposed entering the war. Despite the Hays Code, politicians still suspected ideological aims in Hollywood films. Depending on the critic’

s political stripes, some saw isolationist propaganda, others saw interventionist propaganda.

Indeed, North Dakota Senator Gerald P. Nye, an isolationist, charged Hollywood with making feature films that were propaganda vehicles to mobilize the American public for war.

But despite the widespread presence and significant influence of Jews in the American film industry in the 1930s, Hollywood discreetly avoided making overtly anti-Nazi films. This attitude remained unchanged until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941.

In 1934, The Three Stooges signed with Columbia Studios to make eight two-reel comedies, or "shorts," annually, for a fee of $60,000 per year, which was divided evenly among the three performers. Two-reelers were in great demand by movie theaters across the country. Long before the advent of "coming attractions," shorts were considered "curtain raisers," to be shown before the full-length feature movie. Film historians estimate that by the late 1930s, about 88 million Americans two-thirds of the country’s population frequented their neighborhood movie houses weekly. There were approximately 17,500 theatres in the country then. Moviegoers were entertained by two-reel comedy shorts, newsreels and, sometimes, cartoons before each full-length feature.

The Stooges knew that with hard work, luck, and determination they could become household names by being seen by audiences nationwide on a weekly basis.

Between 1934 and 1959, the Three Stooges made 190 short subjects for Columbia Studios. Of these 190 Columbia shorts, eight dealt directly with the Second World War. Five were anti-Nazi: You Nazty Spy! (1940), its sequel, I’ll Never Heil Again (1941), Back From the Front (1943), They Stooge to Conga (1943) and Higher Than a Kite (1943). Two were anti-Japanese: The Yokes On Me (1944) and No Dough Boys (1944) and the eighth short, Gents Without Cents (1944) dealt with World War II on the home front.

While Charlie Chaplin envisioned the plot for a film about a mustached Jewish barber mistaken for the Führer, the German consulate in Los Angeles complained, and the Hays office told United Artists, the releasing company, that Chaplin "would run into censorship trouble." German sympathizers threatened to vandalize and set off stink bombs in theaters showing the film.

Shorts, however, were not regulated in the same way as feature films. The Three Stooges were unnoticed or ignored by the censors. In mid-1939, Jules White, head of Columbia Pictures Shorts Department and long-time producer and director of the Three Stooges comedies, walked into his brother Sam’s office and said that he was planning a comedy about Hitler. Moe would be Hitler, Curly would be Göring, and Larry would be Goebbels. Sam told his brother that the situation in Europe was grim, and asked if he could make it funny. "I’ll make it funny," Jules replied.

Filming began on December 5, 1939. It was shot quickly, in seven days.

Cutting was finished on December 26, 1939, and on January 19, 1940 Columbia pictures released its 44th Three Stooges comedy, You Nazty Spy. The film cost about $18,500 to make, and preceded the release of Charlie Chaplin’s The Great Dictator by nine months. Moe Howard of the Three Stooges was the first American actor to lampoon Hitler in film. It was also his favorite Three Stooges short.

In You Nazty Spy, three cabinet members, Mr. Ixnay, Mr. Onay and Mr. Amscray (pig-latin for Nix, No and Scram), are discussing solutions to the economic woes of their Kingdom, Moronica. Since the King of Moronica wants peace, which is not economically profitable, the cabinet members plot his overthrow, institute a dictator and start a war. They find Moe Hailstone, who with his cronies, Larry and Curly, is busy wallpapering the dining room.

They offer him the greatest opportunity of his life to be a dictator.

Pondering it, Moe runs his hand through his hair. Scratching under his nose, he accidentally attaches a piece of dark wallpaper that was stuck to his finger.

The tape mustache makes him look like Hitler. When Moe asks what a dictator does, he’s told, "He makes speeches to the people promising them plenty, gives them nothing and takes everything."

Moronica gets a new flag snakes entwined into the shape of a swastika, and a slogan, "Moronica for Morons." There is talk of a beer hall putsch, Moe orders a book burning, and sends an innocent man to a "concentrated camp."

Moe plans the conquest of the country Starvania and assembles the famous Peace Conference of Oompola, arguing for a corridor through the country, Double Crossia. In the end, Moe plans to throw his country’s dissidents to the lions.

Instead, the Three Stooges get eaten by the lions, and the film ends with a burping lion wearing the Reichsführer’s hat.

Although the Stooges are killed in You Nazty Spy, they are back running Moronica in the sequel, I’ll Never Heil Again, released in July 1941, five months before Pearl Harbor. Hailstone is bent on world domination, and fights with the Axis powers for control. In both shorts, their confrontations are treated as games--checkers and basketball and are resolved with the demise of Hitler, the Nazis and the Axis powers.

The Three Stooges were anti-heroes, flaunting their Jewishness at a time when assimilation and ethnic self-denial were integral to the American film industry. Using comedy form the Stooges shatter the image of Hitler and the Nazis. Moe’s lampooning of Hitler is mindful of a Purim masquerade, when we dress up as Haman only so that we can hiss at his name.

All of the Stooges’ families had fled anti-Semitic persecution in Europe in the late 1800s, and in a small way the two-reelers helped bring the Nazi threat to the forefront of moviegoers’ attention. While the Jewish immigrants who founded the motion picture business were reticent to critique Nazi Germany on film, the Stooges wore their Jewishness unselfconsciously, and maligned the man who was exterminating their people back in Europe. So who had the last laugh? Columbia Studios, which made money on the popular shorts.

ATLANTIC OCEAN:  SS Telnes sunk by U-55 NW of Orkneys.

At 2109, the unescorted SS Quiberon was hit in the stern by one torpedo from U-59 and sank within four minutes off Great Yarmouth.

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19 January 1941

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January 19th, 1941 (SUNDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Fair Isle, Orkney: The Lerwick lifeboat arrives to collect the German airmen who crashed here two days ago and take them to Shetland. Karl Heinz Thurz, the pilot of the Heinkel He-111, turns 21 today.

GERMANY: Berchtesgaden: A chastened Mussolini arrived here today to plead with Hitler for military aid. The location is significant - until now, the two dictators have met on "equal terms" on their borders. Count Ciano found the Duce "frowning and nervous" on his special train - clearly worried that Hitler would be insultingly condescending to him after Italy's string of defeats in North Africa, Greece and Albania. Much to his surprise - and obvious relief - Mussolini found Hitler cordial and welcoming. The Fuhrer has already agreed to bolster the Italian army in Libya with anti-tank formations and squadrons of the Luftwaffe, and to send an army corps of two and a half divisions to Albania. The price to the Duce is total subordination to Hitler in all military matters.

MEDITERRANEAN SEA: The destroyer HMS Greyhound, escorting a convoy to Greece sinks Italian submarine 'Neghelli' off Phalconera in the Aegean.

MALTA: In further aerial attacks, slight damage is done to the damaged aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious

ERITREA:  British forces of the 4th and 5th Indian Divisions in East Africa under Major-General William Platt, acting on information obtained by breaking the Italians' coded messages, invade Italian-occupied Eritrea. British Intelligence had been privy to secret Italian communiques from Africa for the past five months; every instruction sent from one Italian military unit to another was analyzed by the Brits. The Italian viceroy in Ethiopia was unwittingly receiving and transmitting every Italian military secret-and weakness. Consequently, British forces were able to organize a strategy to advance on Italian-occupied territory, with Italian troop movements in mind. 

U.S.A.:  Secretary of State Cordell Hull responds to German Chargé d'Affaires Hans Thomsen's protest over the incident concerning the tearing down of the Reich flag over the consulate in San Francisco yesterday, promising a full investigation. 

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19 January 1942

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January 19th, 1942 (MONDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM:

In a letter to General Ismay, Churchill writes regarding the defences of Singapore; paragraph 4:

"An attempt should be made to use the fortress guns on the northern front [land side] by firing reduced charges and by running in a certain quantity of high explosives if non exists."[p.51]. The Chiefs of Staff followed with a letter the next day, also quoted directing Wavell to make full preparations for using fortress guns on landward defence against attacks. (Wyatt Reader)

Minesweeping trawler HMS Sir Gareth launched.

Submarine HMS Sahib launched.

Submarine HMS Splendid launched.

GERMANY: Directors of German armament firms were told today that they must increase production by 10% this year. The message was delivered by Robert Ley, the leader of the German Work Front. Increasing number of foreign workers, as well as PoWs, will be forced to work in German factories during the course of the year. Armaments remain the main priority and the Nazi authorities intend to offer productivity bonuses in the form of tobacco or brandy for armament workers. Improved conditions for working mothers are also promised, but there is a sterner side to the productivity drive, too: the workforce is also to be motivated by the threat of various punishments for "slackness", including transfers to concentration camps.

Reports by the Security Service of the SS speak of "idleness" and "insubordination" towards superiors. Certainly Germans  do not like the longer working hours - the average working week is up from 47 to 49.2 hours this year.

Field Marshal Fedor von Bock is appointed to succeed Field Marshal Walter von Reichenau as Commander in Chief Army Group South, Eastern Front. Von Reichenau died of a stroke on 17 January. 

U.S.S.R.: The Red Army recaptures Mozhaisk, 100km west of Moscow.
Heavy fighting continues on the southern front; the Germans in the Crimea recapture Feodosia. Soviet paratroopers are landed south of Smolensk to help organize partisan action in the German rear. 

MIDDLE EAST: General Claude E. Auchinleck, General Officer Commanding Middle East Command. issues operations instructions to Commander, British Troops in Egypt (BTE), and Commander, Eighth Army, restating that the objective in Libya is Tripoli and outlining a plan for a defensive stand in the event the Libyan offensive cannot be continued. 

BURMA: Japan takes Tavoy, with a good airstrip. Because of this, it is decided to withdraw the Mergui garrison by sea to Rangoon at once, although Mergui has not yet been attacked. The balance of the Chinese 93d Division, Chinese 6th Army, is ordered to move into Burma. 

MALAYA: After fierce battles to defend road-blocks in the Muar/Yong Penang area, only 850 out of 4,500 Allied troops escape.
Bitter fighting continues in the Muar-Yong Peng area. The 53d Brigade of the British 18th Division, under command of the Indian 11th Division, takes responsibility for the strategic positions west of Yong Peng, a defile and a bridge, but loses them. The Muar force (Indian 45th Brigade and two Australian battalions), now isolated, is ordered to withdraw; HQ of the Indian 45th Brigade is bombed and most of the senior officers are killed and an Australian takes command of the brigade. “East Force” is formed consisting of the Australian 22nd Brigade, 2/17th Dogra Battalion and the Jat Battalion. 
     With Japanese troops 30 miles (48 kilometres) from Singapore island, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill cables his top commander on the spot, General Archibald Lord Wavell, General Officer Commanding Australian-British-Dutch-American (ABDA) Command, South West Pacific,  to ask what sort of defences the island has. Wavell's answer, “There are neither plans nor fortifications to defend the north side of this ‘impregnable fortress.’ " Churchill is staggered, and orders what Wavell has been pushing for, digging entrenchments. The defenders of Singapore react by hiring local labour to dig trenches...then waste five days arguing over how much overtime pay they should get. 
     Churchill orders Wavell and Lieutenant General Arthur Percival, General Officer Commanding Malaya, to fight to the last man, and refuse to surrender. Wavell is happy to comply, but Singapore's immense 15-inch (38 cm) guns face the ocean...not the north, where the Japanese armies are. 

BORNEO: Beginning at 0700 hours, the Japanese landing force from the ships that had anchored in Sandakan Harbour yesterday because of the weather, come ashore unopposed in Sandakan. The British Governor surrenders British North Borneo to the Japanese and they send the European residents home where they will remain until May 1942. 
 

COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES: On Bataan, the II Corps continues their efforts to regain positions along the Balantay River on the west flank, the 45th Infantry (-), Philippine Scouts, reaching the river in the region between the U.S. 3lst Infantry and the Philippine Army (PA) 41st Division. The 31st Infantry, however, is under increasingly strong pressure. The Japanese column driving down the Abo-Abo River valley reaches positions near Guitol and is engaged by the 31st Division and elements the 21st Division, PA. The I Corps restores the outpost line in a counterattack but is forced to abandon it a£ter nightfall. Elements of the 92d Infantry, PA, are sent to block Japanese infiltrators from Mt Silanganan, on the corps’ eastern flank. 
     Nine USAAF Far East Air Force B-17 Flying Fortresses based at Singosari Airdrome on Java, are dispatched to attack shipping at Jolo Island in the Philippine Islands. Three aircraft abort due to weather but the remaining six bomb the ships and then land at Del Monte Field on Mindanao Island in the Philippines. 
     Motor torpedo boat PT-31 is damaged when her engines fail because of what is believed to be sabotaged gasoline and she runs aground on reef north of Mayagao Point, Bataan. 

AUSTRALIA: The ground echelons of two USAAF B-17 Flying Fortress squadrons that arrived in Australia by ship on 22 December, depart for service at Singosari Airdrome on Java, Netherlands East Indies. 

PHOENIX ISLANDS
: USAAF Hawaiian Air Force B-17s of Task Group 8.9 fly antisubmarine mission from Canton Island in the Phoenix Islands. 

CANADA: Patrol craft HMCS Valdes (ex-fishing vessel Departure Bay II) commissioned.

Corvette HMCS Kamsack departed St John's to escort Convoy SC-65 to Londonderry.

U.S.A.: Lindbergh meets with two friends, Juan Trippe of Pan Am and Guy Vaughan of Curtiss-Wright. At the meeting, both are enthusiastic about hiring him but several days later, Trippe calls and tells him that "obstacles had been put in the way." Several days later, Trippe tells him that "The White House was angry with him for even bringing up the subject and told him 'they' did not want Lindbergh to be connected with Pan Am in any capacity." Vaughan also told him that the situation was "loaded with dynamite." It became clear that any company with a government contract had to get clearance from the Administration before employing Lindbergh.

Lindbergh's cousin was Chairman of the US Maritime Commission and he arranged a 15-minute meeting with "Wild Bill" Donovan, who became head of the OSS. They discussed the possibility of Lindbergh studying international air transportation but nothing came of it. Another friend was Lieutenant Colonel P.R. Love, commanding officer of the 50th Transport Wing at Wright Field, Ohio. Love tried to get Lindbergh back in the military but was told to dismiss the idea. Then the president of United Aircraft came up with several projects that he thought Lindbergh could handle for the company. 

Ten days later, it was leaked that United had sold aviation equipment to Japan and Germany before the war (like many other companies) and the offer was withdrawn. United did not need any other adverse publicity.

The 317 Nisei members of the HTG (Hawaiian Territorial Guard) are discharged without explanation and classified as 4-C, “enemy aliens”. (Gene Hanson)

Escort carriers USS Barnes and Block Island laid down.

Actor James Stewart receives his wings and is commissioned into the USAAF. (Jay Stone)

ATLANTIC OCEAN:  In attacks against unescorted coastal shipping, German submarines sink unarmed merchant ships off the East Coast of the U.S.

(1) At 0516, the unescorted and unarmed SS Norvana was hit just after the stack by one torpedo from U-123 south of Cape Hatteras after a first torpedo fired at 04.41 hours had missed. The explosion sent pieces of the ship into the air, some of them hitting the U-boat in a distance of 450 meters and caused the ship to sink within one minute, leaving no survivors among the eight officers and 21 crewmen on board. The US Navy later found an empty lifeboat from the Norvana off Wimble Shoals;

(2) At 0909, the unescorted and unarmed SS City of Atlanta was torpedoed by U-123 about 12 miles south of the Wimble Shoals Buoy and about eight or ten miles off the coast of North Carolina, after Hardegen had spotted the navigational lights of her. The torpedo struck the port side forward of the #3 hold. The ship quickly took a sharp list, making it difficult for the crew of eight officers and 38 crewmen to abandon ship. The vessel rolled over in about ten minutes before any of the four lifeboats could be lowered. The U-boat surfaced on the starboard side flashed a searchlight to read the name of the ship and left. Only one officer and two men survived by clinging to wreckage and were picked up by the American railway car carrier Seatrain Texas after six hours;

(3) At 1034, the unarmed SS Malay was shelled by U-123 off Oregon Inlet, while steaming in an unescorted convoy of five ships with dim navigational lights set. The U-boat fired ten shots of which five or six struck from about 650 meters. The shelling killed one man, destroyed two lifeboats, damaged the crew’s quarter and started a fire on the tanker. Then the U-boat left to follow another ship, torpedoed at 1201 hours the Ciltvaira and returned to the tanker. In the meantime the passing Scania helped the crew of Malay by passing fire fighting equipment. The eight officers and 26 crewmen got the fire under control and the ship under way. U-123 fired at 1244 hours, her last torpedo, hitting the #7 starboard side tank, just aft of amidships in 35°40N/75°20W. The crew abandoned ship in three lifeboats, but one capsized and four men drowned. The survivors circled the ship for about an hour before re-boarding her. The dead man and three badly injured were later taken off by boats from the Chicamacomico Coast Guard Station. The Malay reached Hampton Roads, Virginia under own power the same day;

(4) At 1201, the unescorted SS Ciltvaria was torpedoed and damaged by U-123. She was taken in tow, but was later abandoned and sank off Carolina in 35.46N/74.37W. The ship had a crew of Finns, Swedes, Danes, Estonians and a few other nationalities;

(5) a Canadian steamer is sunk 192 miles (309 kilometres) east of Cape Hatteras in position 35.00N, 72.30W. SS Lady Hawkins of the Canadian National Steamships Company passenger-liner, sunk off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina by U-66 (Zapp). The ship had been proceeding alone from Boston to Hamilton, Bermuda. Approximately 250 crewmembers and passengers were lost from the 321 persons onboard. Three lifeboats were launched as the ship sank but two were never seen again. The SS Coamo recovered one lifeboat, containing 71 survivors, after five days adrift. Five other people in the boat died before they were rescued.

 

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19 January 1943

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January 19th, 1943 (TUESDAY)

GERMANY:

U-542 launched

U-170 commissioned.

U.S.S.R.: Stalingrad: The siege of the German Sixth Army is holding down 90 out of 259 Soviet formations.

MEDITERRANEAN SEA: Destroyer HMS Antelope and corvette HMCS Port Arthur sank Italian submarine Tritone while escorting Convoy MKS-6 off Bougie, Algeria.

BURMA: Donbaik: Havildar Parkash Singh (b.1913), 8th Punjab Regt., rescued three carriers and two wounded men; he had already, under heavy fire, rescued two carrier crews on 6 January. (Victoria Cross)

CANADA: Federal cabinet order-in-council grants Custodian of Enemy Alien Property the right to dispose of Japanese Canadians' property without owners' consent.

Minesweeper HMCS Mahone arrived Liverpool, Nova Scotia for refit.

U.S.A.: Aleutians: Attu Island is subjected to a naval bombardment, by a US fleet of two cruisers and four destroyers.

Destroyer escorts USS Hebert C Jones, Whitman and Otterstetter launched.

Destroyer escorts USS Blair and Inch laid down.

 

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19 January 1944

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January 19th, 1944 (WEDNESDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Submarine HMS Vivid commissioned.

DENMARK: Copenhagen: Early today, German military patrols swept through the deserted streets of Copenhagen, occupied all the city's police stations and disarmed and arrested the entire police force. The move, ordered by SS Lt-Gen Gunther Pancke, followed the capture by a German patrol vessel of a boatload of refugees fleeing to Sweden. The Germans believe the Danish police have been aiding the escape of wanted Danes. Last week, the chief of the police passport department and his assistant fled to Sweden to escape arrest.

GERMANY:

U-484, U-1168 commissioned

U-1013 launched.

U.S.S.R.: Soviet troops of the 59th Army take Novgorod, and push on to Estonia.

In a co-ordinated offensive by the garrison troops and the armies of the Volkhov front, the Russians have torn a 25-mile gap in the German siege lines.

In doing so they have smashed seven enemy divisions and captured 37 of the long-range guns which have been systematically bombarding the city in an attempt to fulfill Hitler's threat to destroy it when it was first besieged in September 1941. Tonight the Germans are reeling back from the beleaguered city. Columns if grim-faced Russian soldiers swing through its battered streets heading, south to Krasnoye Selo or out across the ice of Kronstadt Bay to Oranienbaum where a pocket of Russians has held out since the first days of the siege.

The pocket was reinforced in great secrecy before the battle opened a week ago. Men of the Second Shock Army were ferried in by boat at night. They hid by day, and when they came storming out they took the Germans by surprise.

ITALY: British forces establish bridgeheads on the north side of the Garigliano.
Backed by naval gunfire, troops of the British X Corps led by General Richard McCreery have crossed the lower Garigliano river in landing craft and established vital bridgeheads on the northern bank. 

Minturno falls to the US 5th Army, which now attempts to cross the heavily defended Rapido river. The 56th Division succeeds in the crossing; however fierce German fire has stopped a crossing by the 46th Division. German commander, General von Vietinghoff, is transferring two armoured divisions to face the new threat.

PACIFIC: From Glen Boren's war diary aboard the USS BUNKER HILL: 

Got underway by 0600. By noon, we had the air group safely aboard with only one problem, The tail hook pulled out of Fox 13 and it crashed into the barrier and messed it up quite a bit.

The Destroyer "Burns" is with us again and I have been trying to get to it to see a friend from home...We are escorted by five Battleships this time A first also. We soon learned we were headed for Funafute.

Jack McKillop adds from DANFS (101) On 8 December 1943, Alabama, along with five other fast battleships, carried out the first Pacific gunfire strike conducted by that type of warship. Alabama's guns hurled 535 rounds into enemy strong points, as she and her sister ships b ombarded Nauru Island, an enemy phosphate-producing center, causing severe damage to shore installations there. She also took the destroyer Boyd (DD-644), alongside after that ship had received a direct hit from a Japanese shore battery on Nauru, and brought three injured men on board for treatment.

She then escorted the carriers Bunker Hill (CV-17) and Monterey (CVL-26) back to Efate, arriving on 12 December. Alabama departed the New Hebrides for Pearl Harbor on 5 January 1944, arrived on the 12th, and underwent a brief drydocking at the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard. After replacement of her port outboard propeller, and routine maintenance, Alabama was again underway to return to action in the Pacific.

USS Indiana (BB-58)
Indiana steamed to Pearl Harbor 21 October 1943, and departed 11 November with the support forces designated for the invasion of the Gilbert Islands. The battleship protected the carriers which supported the Marines during the bloody fight for Tarawa.

USS Massachusetts (BB-59)
Massachusetts arrived at Noumea, New Caledonia, 4 March 1943. For the next months she operated in the South Pacific, protecting convoy lanes and supporting operations in the Solomons. Between 19 November and 21 November, she sailed with a carri er group striking Makin, Tarawa, and Abemama in the Gilberts; on 8 December she shelled Japanese positions on Nauru; and on 29 January 1944 she guarded carriers striking Tarawa in the Gilberts. 

USS North Carolina (BB-55)
With Enterprise, in the Northern Covering Group, North Carolina sortied from Pearl Harbor 10 November for the assault on Makin, Tarawa, and Abemama. Air strikes began 19 November, and for 10 days mighty air blows were struck to aid marines a shore engaged in some of the bloodiest fighting of the Pacific War. Supporting the Gilberts campaign and preparing the assault on the Marshalls, North Carolina's highly accurate big guns bombarded Nauru 8 December, destroying air facilities, beach defence revetments, and radio installations. Later that month, she protected Bunker Hill (CV-17) in strikes against shipping and airfields at Kavieng, New Ireland and in January 1944 joined Fast Carrier Striking Force 68, Rear Admiral Marc M itscher in command, at Funafuti, Ellice Islands.

USS Washington (BB-56)
Washington tarried at Efate for less than two weeks. Underway on Christmas Day, flying Rear Admiral Lee's flag, the battleship sailed in company with her sistership North Carolina and a screen of four destroyers to conduct gunnery pra ctice, returning to the New Hebrides on 7 January 1944. 

Eleven days later, the battleship departed Efate for the Ellice Islands. Joining TG 37.2-carriers Monterey and Bunker Hill and four destroyers en route, Washington reached Funafuti, Ellice Islands, on 20 January. Three days lat er, the battleship, along with the rest of the task group, put to sea to make rendezvous with elements of TF 58, the fast carrier task force under the overall command of Vice Admiral Marc A. "Pete" Mitscher. Becoming part of TG 58.1, Washington screened the fast carriers in her group as they launched air strikes on Taroa and Kwajalein in the waning days of January 1944. Washington, together with Massachusetts and Indiana, left the formation with four destroyers as screen and shelled Kwajalein Atoll on the 30th. Further air strikes followed the next day.

CANADA: Minesweeper HMS Felicity launched Toronto, Ontario.

U.S.A.:

Escort carrier USS Lunga Point laid down.

Destroyer escort USS Walter C Wann launched.

Minesweeper USS Invade laid down.

Destroyer escorts USS Jenks and Cofer commissioned.

Escort carrier USS Saginaw Bay launched.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: U-641 Sunk  in the North Atlantic south-west of Ireland, in position 50.25N, 18.49W, by depth charges from the British corvette HMS Violet. 50 dead (all hands lost). (Alex Gordon)

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19 January 1945

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January 19th, 1945 (FRIDAY)

FRANCE: Versailles: Montgomery is furious as Eisenhower rejects his strategy for a push to the Rhine in favour of General Bradley's.

GERMANY: U-2371 laid down.

U-4706 launched.

U.S.S.R.: Polar Fleet: DD "Deyatelnii" (ex-I 45 "Churchill") - by U-boat, in Rinda bay area, at Kolsk Gulf.  (Sergey Anisimov)(69

Moscow: The fears of the Polish government in London came true today when President Bierut, the leader of the Soviet-sponsored Lublin Committee, issued a decree announcing the round-up of "irresponsible members" of the Home Army and followers of the London government. The decree urged all armed forces in the liberated areas to outlaw the "Home Army murderers who are provoking civil strife". Of General Bor-Komorowski, the leader of the Warsaw uprising, it says: "His provocative rising and later surrender of arms considerably aided the Germans." There seems little doubt now that the Lublin Committee intends to carry out a purge of all those who do not follow the communist line.

SOUTH AFRICA: ASW trawler HMS Northern Isles beached and lost near Durban

CHINA: Japanese troops take Chingyuan, on the Canton to Hankow railway.

BURMA: L/Naik Sher Shah (b.1917), 16th Punjab Regt., broke up two attacks by crawling among the Japanese and firing at close range. Wounded, he went in a third time, but was killed. (Victoria Cross)

MALAYA: Submarine HMS Penang damaged by Japanese aircraft near Penang. Sunk by Japanese surface forces later that day. No survivors.

U.S.A.: The federal government relinquishes control of the United States' railways after settling a wage dispute.

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