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1938     GERMANY: Chancellor Adolf Hitler gives General Wilhelm Keitel, Chief of the Armed Forces High Command (OKW), secret directives for Operation GREEN against Czechoslovakia. 

March 28th, 1939 (TUESDAY)

POLAND: Polish Foreign Minister Josef Beck tells the German Ambassador to Poland that ‘any attempt by Germany against Danzig, “would be regarded as grounds for war.” 

SPAIN: Madrid, falls to Franco, marking the end of the Spanish Civil War. The war had been a testing ground for some German weapons and tactical developments. (Michael Ballard)

The Spanish Civil War ends when the Republican defenders of Madrid surrender, bringing to an end the bloody three-year conflict. The war began in July 1936 when General Francisco Franco led a right-wing army revolt in Morocco, which prompted the division of Spain into two key camps: the Nationalists and the Republicans. Franco's Nationalist forces rapidly overran much of the Republican-controlled areas in central and northern Spain, and Catalonia became a key Republican stronghold. During 1937, Franco unified the Nationalist forces under the command of the Falange, Spain's fascist party, while the Republicans fell under the sway of the communists. Germany and Italy aided Franco with an abundance of planes, tanks, and arms, while the Soviet Union aided the Republican side. In addition, small numbers of communists and other radicals from Great Britain, France, the U.S., the U.S.S.R., and elsewhere formed the International Brigades to aid the Republican cause. The most significant contribution of these foreign units was the successful defence of Madrid until the end of the war. In June 1938, the Nationalists drove to the Mediterranean and cut Republican territory in two. Later in the year, Franco mounted a major offensive against Catalonia. In January 1939, its capital, Barcelona, was captured, and soon after the rest of Catalonia fell. With the Republican cause all but lost, its leaders attempted to negotiate a peace, but Franco refused. Up to a million lives were lost in the conflict, the most devastating in Spanish history. 

 

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28 March 1940

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March 28th, 1940 (THURSDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM:

New blue 1 pound and mauve 10 shilling notes are announced.

London: The new French Premier, Paul Reynaud, arrived in London today with General Gamelin (Allied C-in-C), for a meeting of the Supreme War Council. In a "solemn declaration" issued after the meeting, Reynaud and Chamberlain pledged their governments never to agree to "an armistice or treaty of peace except by mutual agreement".

Reynaud flew London with a plan for bombing Soviet oilfields in the Caucasus, aimed at stopping oil deliveries to Germany and crippling the Soviet Union. The British are unenthusiastic.

A plan to stop Swedish iron ore deliveries to Germany is also being worked on by the British Chiefs of Staff after the Supreme War council discussed a joint Anglo-French operation to lay mines in Norwegian territorial waters and, if the Germans seem ready to interfere, to send a military expedition to Norway. The contingency plan prepared for such an eventuality has had to be abandoned, however, because the excuse for landings in Norway was to have been a clause in the constitution of the League of Nations allowing transit for troops if they were going to the aid of a victim of aggression. This is now invalid, of course, because of the Finnish surrender. The operation is timed to start on 5 April but is later deferred to 8 April, a vital difference in view of the timing the Germans fix for their own landings. 

Most of Germany's iron ore from Sweden comes through ice-free Narvik in northern Norway. The allies had hoped to use the Finnish war to persuade Norway and Sweden to allow them to land forces in the northern regions of those two countries, ostensibly to aid Finland but mainly to interrupt Germany's iron ore supplies. Norway and Sweden firmly rejected this infringement of their neutrality. Now the Allies are preparing to go ahead with their plan, irrespective of the pleas of neutrality.

RAF Fighter Command: One German bomber was shot down off the northeast coast of Scotland and another damaged by fighters over the North Sea. A trawler was damaged in an attack by 8 German aircraft in the North Sea; the trawler was damaged and 2 men wounded.

NORTH SEA: Denmark Strait: HM Armed Merchant Cruiser Transylvania intercepts the German merchant ship Mimi Horn, but she is scuttled by her crew.

CANADA: Elections return MacKenzie Kings's Liberal Party to power.

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March 28th, 1941 (FRIDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: The RAF declares its "Eagle" Squadron, crewed by US volunteers, to be operational.

Lewes, East Sussex: The novelist and essayist  Virginia Woolf (born Adeline Virgina Stephen) drowns herself in the River Ouse because she fears another breakdown from which she might not recover.. She was 59. She suffered mental breakdowns in 1895 and 1915.

GERMANY: Daily Keynote from the Riech Press Chief:

Yugoslavia is not kindly disposed toward Germany. When you report events there, your news captions should be shaded so as to make this somewhat clearer but without taking on the form of a threat. Offer no commentary at any time.

YUGOSLAVIA: Belgrade: The Italian Stefani News Agency reported:

This morning at 10:00 A.M., the members of Yugoslavian Premier Simovic's new government were presented to the king. Shortly after that, King Peter Swore his fealty to the constitution in the presence of the Patriarch and high dignitaries of the Serbian Orthodox Church.

King Peter's motorcade from the royal palace to the cathedral, and the return trip to the palace, had the air of a genuine triumphal procession.

British Field Marshal Sir John Dill, Chief of the Imperial General Staff, flies to Belgrade to determine the intentions of the new government headed by Air Force General Dusan Simovic. There is little Dill can offer the Yugoslavs and no agreements of any importance are reached. 

MEDITERRANEAN SEA:The Battle of Cape Matapan. (Cape Matapan is the southern extremity of the Greek mainland, projecting into the Ionian Sea.) This naval battle pits the Italian fleet under Vice Admiral Angelo Iachino, consisting of  the battleship Vittorio Veneto, the heavy cruisers Bolzano, Fiume, Pola  Trento, Trieste and Zara, the light cruiser Giuseppe Garibaldi and 17 destroyers, vs. the Royal Navy fleet under Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham, consisting of the battleships HMS Barham, Valiant and Warspite, the aircraft carrier HMS Formidable, the light cruisers HMS Ajax, Gloucester and Orion and HMAS Perth, plus 11 RN and two RAN destroyers. The battleships never were in range of each other, but Formidable's aircraft and RAF bombers began attacking the Italian  fleet once in range.

Around 08.30, south of Crete, Adm Pridham-Wippell is in action with an Italian cruiser squadron. Just before noon he finds himself between them and the battleship 'Vittorio Veneto' which has now come up. An attack by Swordfish from HMS Formidable fails to hit the Italian battleship, but enables the RN cruisers to extricate themselves. The Mediterranean Fleet heavy units arrive, but their only chance is to slow down the Italians before they can reach Italy.

The battleship Vittorio Veneto is hit by one torpedo at about 1510 hours, but is still operational. The cruiser Pola is hit and immobilized by a Swordfish bomber and left behind as the Italian squadron turned about to return to base. Admiral Iachino then sent two heavy cruisers and four destroyers back to pick up survivors. The British Battle Fleet continued steaming towards the Italian and picked up the damage cruiser Pola on radar.

At 19.30 a third strike southwest of Cape Matapan stops heavy cruiser 'Pola'. All this time RAF aircraft are attacking but without success.

 Later this evening, two more heavy cruisers - 'Fiume' and 'Zara' with four destroyers are detached to help 'Pola'.

At about 2230 hours, the Battle Fleet is about 1,300 yards (1188 meters) from the Pola and the other six ships who do not suspect that the British are there. Before they reach the Pola, Admiral Cunningham's ships detect them. The three RN battleships open fire with their 15-inch (38,1 centimeter) guns crippling the 'Fiume', 'Zara' and the destroyers 'Alfieri' and 'Carducci'. They are finally sunk by four destroyers led by HMAS Stuart. The battleship Vittorio Veneto escapes and arrives at its base in Italy tomorrow. The Italians lose 2,303 in this battle. 

Cutlasses are used for the last time by the Royal Navy when the Italian heavy cruiser POLA is boarded by the gunners from 'A' Turret, HMS JERVIS, board the battle-damaged Italian ship and rescue the remaining 257 of her bemused crew before sinking the ship. (Bernard de Neumann)
 

Italian torpedo boat 'Chinotto' sinks on a mine laid by HMS Rorqual.

ETHIOPIA: The Italians abandon Diredawa, a town northwest of Harar, and withdraw towards Addis Ababa. 

SOUTH AFRICA: A South African Airways Lockheed Model 18-08 Lodestar, msn 18-2034, registered ZS-AST, crashes into a mountain at Elands Bay. All ten aboard are killed. 

U.S.A.: A team of physicists reports the discovery of a new isotope of uranium which it calls plutonium-239.
[This turns out to be an entirely different element. (Tom Hickcox)]

Republic Pictures releases the first episode of "The Adventures of Captain Marvel." This serial is the first featuring a comic strip or comic book hero.

The Commanding Officer of the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown (CV-5) after five months operational experience with the CXAM radar, reported that aircraft had been tracked at a distance of 100 miles (160 km) and recommended that friendly aircraft be equipped with electronic identification devices and carriers be equipped with separate and complete facilities for tracking and plotting all radar targets.

Hart informed by the Navy Department that he would be retained in command of the Asiatic Fleet beyond his retirement age: Hart turned 64 on June 12, 1941.

Construction of Ford’s Willow Run, Michigan, Plant begins. Before the war, Henry Ford had boasted nonchalantly that Ford could produce 1,000 airplanes per day provided there was no interference from stockholders or labor unions. So when Ford was asked to build subassemblies for the Consolidated B-24 Liberator, it was no surprise that Ford pushed for a deal that would allow Ford to construct the entire bomber. The contract included US$200 million toward the construction of a new production facility. (With inflation, US$200 million in 1941 is equal to US$2.5 trillion in 2003 dollars.) Production got off to a slow start but by the middle of 1944, Willow Run churned out a B-24 every 63 minutes and by the end of the war, Willow Run had produced more than 8,500 B-24s
     The Commanding Officer of the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown (CV-5) after five months operational experience with the CXAM radar, reported that aircraft had been tracked at a distance of 100 miles (161 kilometres) and recommended that friendly aircraft be equipped with electronic identification devices and carriers be equipped with separate and complete facilities for tracking and plotting all radar targets. 

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28 March 1942

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March 28th, 1942 (SATURDAY)

FRANCE: The Resistance unit Francs-tireurs et partisans is created.

St. Nazaire: OPERATION CHARIOT: The "Normandie" dry-dock, the biggest in occupied Europe, vital to enemy warships such as the TIRPITZ, is a flooded ruin after an extraordinary night in which the destroyer HMS CAMPBELTOWN (ex USS Buchanan DD-191) was converted into a delayed action bomb and rammed onto the dock gates at 20 knots.

Commandos then swarmed on shore to sabotage other key parts of the dock. One demolition party had just 90 seconds' start on its own charges, placed 40 feet below ground. At 11.30 this morning, about 12 hours after the start of the operation, when over half of the Combined Operations raiders were dead or captive, the destroyer blew  up, killing more than 380 Germans exploring the ship. The base is now only usable by submarines, whose facilities remain untouched.

The operation was precisely planned and well-executed. But its success was due in a large part to the heroism of the men involved. Some 611 men went into action (345 Royal Navy; 257 Commando; four doctors; three liaison officers and two journalists) of whom 169 were killed - 104 from the navy and 200 captured.

The naval forces were commanded by Cdr. Robert Edward Dudley "RED" Ryder, RN, while the Army commandoes were led by Lt-Col. Augustus Charles Newman, the Officer Commanding Number 2 Commando, both on board MGB-314.

The plan called the RN force to boldly sail up the Loire estuary at night and penetrate into St. Nazaire harbour, at which point HMS Campbeltown, modified to carry 9,600 pounds of delayed action high explosives (24 x 400 pound depth charges encased in concrete), and under command of Lt.Cdr. Stephen Halden “Sam” Beattie, RN, would ram the forward caisson of the Normandie dock at high-speed, and scuttle herself. Immediately thereafter the commandos carried on board Campbeltown, the MGB, and 12 of the the motor launches, would land at three separate locations, push ashore, and destroy the various harbour installations used in operating the dock. After this was accomplished, the commandoes would re-embark on the small craft and run for home.

A flotilla of 17 motor launches and two other small craft joined the trip up the Loire estuary. Only four would return. Surprise was lost and only one launch would put its men ashore. Some local residents thinking it was a full-scale invasion, joined in the fighting against the Germans. 

In the event, the wooden hulled, petrol engined motor launches proved to be too entirely too vulnerable to German defensive fire - ten being sunk. Of the 12 troop carrying MLs, only three were able to land their commandoes - of the remainder, four were sunk and the other five forced to retire with their commandoes still aboard. Regardless, not of the craft that remained were able to remain in the harbour long enough to embark the commandoes that did get ashore. Amazingly, however, the commando parties that did get ashore managed to destroy all of the key objectives, the Normandie pump house, and both caisson winding houses. Realizing that there was to be no return to the UK, the commandoes then attempted, in large, unsuccessfully, to fight their way inland and escape into the French countryside. However, it was not until next morning when the delayed action charges on HMS Campbeltown belatedly exploded, totally destroying seaward facing caisson and opening the dock to the sea that the raid could be judged a resounding success.

Admiral Mountbatten, commanding Combined Operations, sought a second destroyer to retrieve the raiders but was overruled.

The force was one destroyer [HMS Campbeltown, ex. USS Buchanan (DD-191)] , one Fairmile "C" motor gun boat [MGB-314], one motor torpedo boat [MTB-74], five torpedo equipped and eleven non-torpedo equipped Fairmile "B" motor launches [MLs 156, 160, 177, 192, 262, 267, 268, 270, 298, 306, 307, 341 (aborted), 443, 446, 447, 457] carrying 624 personnel (356 RN, 263 Army, 3 foreign, and 2 civilian). This was supported by one submarine beacon ship [HMS Sturgeon], and a support force of two Hunt class destroyers [HMS Atherstone and HMS Tynedale].

Besides the ten MLs and MTB lost in the harbour during the attack, on the return voyage one further ML was, after an epic but one-sided fight, sunk in action with the German torpedo boat Jaguar, and subsequently three more, as well as the MGB, were scuttled after having their crews removed to the British covering force destroyers. Casualties included 169 killed (103 RN, 66 Army and 212 prisoners of war (79 RN, 133 Army). Five of the Army commandoes did manage to evade German forces and eventually returned to the UK via Spain. The epic nature of the raid can be easily seen in the awards granted to the participants, which totalled:

5 Victoria Crosses: Ryder; Beattie; AB William Alfred Savage, RN (MGB-314); Newman; Sgt. Thomas Frank Durrant, RE (1 Commando) [fight with Jaguar]

4 Distinguished Service Orders

17 Distinguished Service Crosses

11 Military Crosses

4 Conspicuous Gallantry Medals

5 Distinguished Conduct Medals [DCM viz DSM above]

24 Distinguished Service Medals [DSM correct above]

15 Military Medals

51 Mentioned in Dispatches

The French also awarded 6 Croix de Guerre's (CdeG) and 2 Chevaliers of the Legion d' Honour.

(Mark E. Horan)

St. Nazaire: Lt-Cdr Stephen Halden Beattie (1908-75) steamed HMS CAMPBELTOWN into the port gates under withering close-range fire and scuttled her as planned; many crew died. (Victoria Cross)

St. Nazaire: Cdr. Robert Edward Dudley Ryder (1908-86), commanding the naval force, led HMS CAMPBELTOWN in, and helped to take off her crew before escaping under an intense German barrage. (Victoria Cross)

St. Nazaire: AB William Alfred Savage (b.1912) fired his unshielded pom-pom gun aboard Cdr Ryder's motor gun boat with great coolness until he was killed. (Victoria Cross)

St. Nazaire: Sgt. Thomas Frank Durrant (b.1918),Royal Engineers, fired his Lewis gun aboard a launch in spite of wounds from which, in captivity, he died. (Victoria Cross)

St. Nazaire: Lt-Col. Augustus Charles Newman (1904-72), Essex Regt, led the troops on the raid. Ignoring his own safety, he inspired his men until they were surrounded and captured. (Victoria Cross)

During the night of the 28th/29th, 14 RAF Bomber Command aircraft fly leaflet missions, nine over Paris and five over Lens. 

NETHERLANDS: During the night of the 28th/29th, individual RAF Bomber Command Blenheims bomb Schipol and Soesterburg Airfields. 

GERMANY: Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop asks Japanese Ambassador to Germany Count Oshima to secure a Japanese attack on Russia simultaneously with Germany's "crushing blow." The Japanese would attack at Vladivostok and Lake Baikal but the Japanese take no action. 
     During the night of the 28th/29th, RAF Bomber Command dispatches 234 aircraft,
146 Wellingtons, 41 Hampdens, 26 Stirlings and 21 Manchesters to attack Lübeck; 204 attack the city.  This raid was the first major success for Bomber Command against a German target. The attack was carried out in good visibility, with the help of an almost full moon and, because of the light defenses of this target, from a low level, many crews coming down to 2,000 feet (610 meters). The force is split into three waves, the leading one being composed of experienced crews with Gee-fitted aircraft; although Lübeck was beyond the range of Gee, the device helped with preliminary navigation. More than 400 tons (363 metric tonnes) of bombs are dropped; two thirds of this tonnage was incendiary; 191 crews claimed successful attacks. German sources show that 1,425 buildings in Lübeck are destroyed, 1,976 are seriously damaged and 8,411 are lightly damaged; these represented 62 per cent of all buildings in Lübeck. The casualties in Lübeck were 312 or 320 people killed (accounts conflict), 136 seriously and 648 slightly injured. The attacking force loses 12 aircraft, seven Wellingtons, three Stirlings, a Hampden and a Manchester. Other targets hit during the night include individual attacks on Emden, Heligoland, Husum and Sylt and two aircraft bomb Kiel.  
 

INDIA: New Delhi: India is to be the first non-white country in the British Empire to have Dominion status - after the war. The announcement was made by Sir Stafford Cripps, the lord privy seal, who is visiting India. he warned that the offer is conditional on "wide acceptance", and, by implication, on support for the war.

Yesterday Cripps spent over two hours with the Congress leader, Mahatma Gandhi, an uncompromising pacifist. The meeting was hardly the dialogue that Cripps expected. The exasperating Gandhi has taken a vow of silence and spoke not a word.

Tomorrow Cripps will talk to Mohammed Jinnah, the pro-Allied leader of the Moslem League. No-one wants Cripps to fail more than Winston Churchill, who only sanctioned Cripps' offer under pressure from the US and often states that he is not fighting the war to preside over the dismemberment of the British Empire.

BURMA: General Harold Alexander, General Officer Commanding Burma Army, at the request of Lieutenant General Joseph Stilwell, Commanding General American Army Forces, China, Burma and India and Chief of Staff of the Chinese Army, agrees to attack on the Irrawaddy River front. Reconnaissance  elements of the Burma I Corps clash with the Japanese at Paungde, southeast of Prome. 

COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES
: The Japanese, moving into position for all-out offensive against Bataan, feint against I Corps and push in the outpost line of Sector D on the II Corps front. Increasingly heavy air and arty bombardment of Bataan is lowering efficiency of defence force as well as destroying badly needed materiel. Efforts to run the blockade and supply the garrison with necessary items have virtually failed, and supply situation is growing steadily worse. 

AUSTRALIA
: P-40 pilots of the USAAF 9th Pursuit Squadron (Interceptor) based at Darwin, Northern Territory, shoot down three Japanese twin-engine bombers over Darwin at 1310 hours. 
     The air echelon of the  USAAF 28th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) transfers from Melbourne, Victoria, to Cloncurry, Queensland, with B-17 Flying Fortresses; a detachment begins operating from Perth, Western Australia; the ground echelon is in the Philippine Islands. 

TERRITORY OF HAWAII:  U. S. Navy codebreakers at Pearl Harbor decipher a message that reveals the Japanese plan a major offensive north of Australia in early May. 

U.S.A.
: Elements of the USAAF's I Bomber Command that are engaged in antisubmarine operations are placed under operational control of the U.S. Navy's Eastern Sea Frontier.

Frank Sinatra's record of "Night And Day" makes it to the Billboard Pop Singles chart. The song is from the motion picture "The Gay Divorcee" starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. This is his first single to make the charts and it stays there for 3 weeks and rises to Number 17.

Units of the USAAF I Bomber Command engaged in antisubmarine warfare patrols off the East Coast are placed under operational control of Commander, Eastern Sea Frontier, USN. 

 

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March 28th, 1943 (SUNDAY)

FRANCE: 70 of 103 Eighth Air Force B-17s and B-24s dispatched bomb a marshalling yard at Rouen.

BALTIC SEA: Finns and Germans begin laying an anti-submarine net across the Gulf of Finland. When patrolled actively, it effectively closes the Soviet submarines at the eastern end of the Gulf.

TUNISIA: Ninth Air Force P-40s support ground forces in eastern Tunisia while Twelfth Air Force aircraft support ground operations in western Tunisia.

Montgomery telegraphs Churchill: "Eighth Army has inflicted severe defeat on enemy."

NEW GUINEA: Fifth Air Force B-17s, B-24s and B-25s bomb numerous targets along the north coast.

SOLOMON ISLANDS: Thirteenth Air Force P-38s and a US Marine Corps F4U attack a seaplane base at Poporang Island and in the Shortland Islands. A Japanese destroyer is encountered and seriously damaged by strafing.

U.S.A.: Washington: Japan's outer defensive perimeter was crumbling as the Allied leaders met at Casablanca in January to chart the way ahead. 

In spite of their warnings of possible disaster, the please of the "have nots" of the Pacific war theatre went unheeded. In allotting arms and resources the Allied leaders have only fifth priority to the Pacific. The agreed "beat Hitler first" grand strategy was not seriously challenged.

Although Pacific commanders were disappointed, the combined chiefs of staff at the Casablanca conference directed that the Allies were to retain the initiative in the Pacific and prepare for a full-scale offensive when Germany has been defeated. At the outset they were to take the Japanese bastion, Rabaul, secure the Aleutians, and then advance east to west across the Pacific through the Gilberts and Marshalls towards Truk and the Marianas.

However, at a conference of Pacific commanders in Washington it was revealed that available reinforcements were not sufficient for an advance all the way  to Rabaul. It was therefore agreed that the scope of the tasks would have to be limited to New Guinea, the Solomons and other strategic islands.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: U-77 type VIIC is sunk at 0115 east of Cartagena, Spain at position 37.42N 00.10W, by 4 depth charges and 1 bomb dropped from 2 British Hudson aircraft of 48 and 233 Squadrons. 9 of U-77 crew survive, but 38 are lost. 36 of those who lost their lives are buried ashore in the cemetery of Cuacos de Yuste, Caceres, Spain. (Alex Gordon)

 

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March 28th, 1944 (TUESDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Westminster: The government is defeated by a single vote when the House of Commons carries an amendment to introduce equal pay for women teachers. 


FRANCE: 364 Eighth Air Force B-17s, escorted by 453 P-38s, P-47s and P-51s, bomb four airfields.

ITALY: Twelfth Air Force A-20s, A-36s, B-25s and P-40s attack railroad bridges and marshalling yards, a tank factory and support the Anzio beachhead. Fifteenth Air Force B-17s and B-24s attack marshalling yards, bridges and industrial targets.

U.S.S.R.: Ukraine: As the Germans retreat in haste from the waters of the southern Bug River, Nikolayev falls to the Red Army. The 3rd Ukrainian Front is now developing an assault toward the port of Odessa.

 

BURMA: Over 130 Tenth Air Force A-31s, B-24s, B-25s and fighters attack supply dumps and support ground troops.

Air Commando Combat Mission N0.39 3:00 Flight Time Hailakandi, Assam to Mahnyin, Burma. Bombed Japanese troop position. 

I was very sick prior to and during the mission. Had chills, fever and a terrific backache. 

Notes: From March 29 to April 9 I was in the hospital at Hailikandi. I had malaria, evidently caused from our overnight stay at Broadway. We had no blankets or mosquito nets. Got the nine-day quinine cure and a short pass to Calcutta. I don't think Calcutta has ever impressed anyone. The lack of sanitation, the smells, and just plain dirty has been long remembered by me. While I was in the hospital, a GI in a bed next to me with malaria and dropped mumps died. I did not even get to know his name. (Chuck Baisden)

INDIA: Headquarters of the Twentieth Air Force's XX Bomber Command is established at Kharagpur. The XX Bomber Command will control all B-29s in the India.

NEW GUINEA: Fifth Air Force B-24s bomb Hollandia.

MARSHALL ISLANDS: Seventh Air Force B-25s bomb Jaluit, Mille and Maloelap Atolls.

NEW BRITAIN ISLAND: Thirteenth Air Force B-24s, B-25s and P-40s bomb an airfield and a supply area.

PALAU ISLANDS: Task Force 58 closes on the Palau Islands preparatory to a three-day air strike. The aircraft carriers assigned to Task Force 58 for this operation are: 

Task Group 58.1

USS Enterprise (CV-6) with Carrier Air Group Ten (CVG-10)

USS Belleau Wood (CVL-24) with Light Carrier Air Group Twenty Four (CVLG-24)

USS Cowpens (CVL-25) with CVLG-25

Task Group 58.2

USS Bunker Hill (CV-17) with CVG-8

USS Hornet (CV-12) with CVG-2

USS Cabot (CVL-28) with CVLG-31

USS Monterey (CVL-26) with CVLG-30

Task Group 58.3

USS Lexington (CV-16) with CVG-16

USS Yorktown (CV-10) with CVG-5

USS Princeton (CVL-23) with CVLG-23

USS Langley (CVL-27) with CVLG-32 

TIMOR ISLAND: Fifth Air Force B-24s attack Penfoei.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: S class submarine HMS Syrtis and all 48 of her crew are lost in the Norwegian Sea exact position unknown. There is no clear explanation for her loss, although the Germans claimed to have sunk a submarine by shore battery fire off Bodö around this time, but there is no supporting evidence. (Alex Gordon)(108)

 

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March 28th, 1945 (WEDNESDAY)

GERMANY: The US III Corps takes Marburg.
891 Eighth Air Force B-17s, escorted by 345 P-51s, bomb targets in Berlin and Hannover while 215 Ninth Air Force A-20s, A-26s and B-26s bomb two oil-storage depots and other targets.

General Eisenhower radios to Stalin in regard to future plans regarding a push south, leaving Berlin. He orders the Allied forces not to advance beyond the Elbe, thus leaving Berlin to the Soviets. As recently as last autumn Churchill and Roosevelt were contemplating a thrust to get to the city before the Russians. But western forces are still some 200 miles short, while the Russians are less than 50 miles away. Eisenhower says that he is not prepared to risk the lives of his men for the pursuit of political advantage over an ally.

The critics of the supreme commander's decision argue that the British, Canadians and Americans are meeting almost no resistance and could easily be first to Berlin, while the Russians are up against the fanatical SS units ready to fight to the last. Churchill, who has just returned from a visit to the Allied forces in Germany, is filled with foreboding. He believes that Stalin will exploit the political advantage to be gained by raising the Red Flag over the Führer's capital. The British prime minister intends to appeal to Eisenhower to change his mind. "We should shake hands with the Russians as far to the east as possible," he says.

Berlin: Hitler forces Guderian, his chief of the army general staff, to take six weeks' sick leave after a series of disagreements.

POLAND: Gydnia falls to the Soviets.

BURMA: Over 30 Tenth Air Force fighters attack the Japanese battle lines.
The Japanese effort to take Maiktila fails.

Members of the Burmese National Army fighting with the Japanese rise up and kill their commanding officers.

CHINA: Almost 170 Fourteenth Air Force B-25s and fighters attack river traffic, airfields and other targets. During the night of 28/29 March, ten XX Bomber Command B-29s mine the mouth of the Hwangpoo River and the south channel of the Yangtze River at Shanghai.

FRENCH INDOCHINA: Fifth Air Force B-24s and B-25s attack port facilities at Hanoi and Haiphong and coastal targets. During the night of 28/29 March, 17 XX Bomber Command B-29s mine waters at Saigon and Camranh Bay.

MALAYA: During the night of 28/29 March, 32 XX Bomber Command B-29s mine waters in the Singapore area.

The US submarine Trigger (SS-237), commanded by David R. Connole, is lost. Probable cause of loss is attributed by ASW and a/c in East China Sea All hands are lost. (Joe Sauder)

NETHERLANDS East Indies: B-24s of the RAAF No. 25 Squadron stage through Corunna Downs to hit Japanese shipping in the Lombok Strait. (Mike Mitchell)

BONIN ISLANDS: Seventh Air Force P-51s attack Chichi Jima and five B-24s hit the island during the night.

COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES: Fifth and Thirteenth Air Force A-20s, B-24s and B-25s attack targets on Mindanao, Luzon, Cebu and Negros. Army ground units capture Lahug and Opon Airdromes on Cebu.

RYUKYU ISLANDS: Aircraft of Task Force 58 and Task Group 52.1 continue attacking preinvasion targets on Okinawa. The Royal Navy's Task Force 57 retires to refuel.

TRUK ATOLL: Ten Seventh Air Force B-24s bomb Truk.

 

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