Yesterday          Tomorrow

June 16th, 1939 (FRIDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Acting Pilot Officer Guy Gibson is promoted to Flying Officer and assigned with No. 83 Squadron, RAF. More...

Thousands of tiny frogs fall on Trowbridge, Wiltshire during a rain storm.

Destroyer HMS Jupiter commissioned.

AUSTRIA: OELAG the pe-Anschluss Austrian state airline is removed from the commercial register having being subsumed by Lufthansa.

AUSTRALIA: Four men are killed in a mining accident in Broken Hill, New South Wales.

 

Top of Page

Yesterday                  Tomorrow

Home

16 June 1940

Yesterday      Tomorrow

June 16th, 1940 (SUNDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM:

RAF Bomber Command: 4 Group (Whitley). Bombing - oil plant at Gelsenkirchen.

Churchill composes a message to all the Dominion Prime Ministers in the Cabinet room at Downing Street. He explains that Britain's resolve to continue the struggle alone "was not based upon mere obstinacy or desperation," but upon an assessment of "the real strength of our position."

Today, His Majesty’s Government offered to France a solemn union with Great Britain. The offer was conveyed to the Reynaud government by the British ambassador, Sir Ronald Campbell, who proposed that France and Britain should no longer be two nations but one Franco-British Union. The union’s constitution would set up joint institutions for defence, finance and foreign and economic policy, and every citizen of each country would become a citizen of the other - but France declines, they want release from it's obligation not to make a separate peace.

Auxiliary Merchant Cruiser HMS Andania is torpedoed and sunk by German U-A (the ex-Turkish Batiray) about 230 miles WNW of the Faröes Islands. The ship sank slowly and the Icelandic trawler Skallagrímur takes off the crew, so only two men are injured. (This is the third AMC on Northern Patrol duties to be sunk within a month.) The trawler continues on its course to Hull, but a destroyer takes off the men 36 hours after the rescue. (Alex Gordon and Dave Shirlaw)(108)

ÉIRE: Dublin: The premier, Eammon de Valera, recognises the potential German threat and mobilises Eire’s armed forces.

FRANCE: La Charite-sur-Loire: 9 Panzer (General Hubicki) conquers this small town. While scouting German Senior Radio NCO Balzereit of regimental intelligence discovers the secret records of the French General Staff inside the freight car of a military transport train. They include the plans for Caucasus bombing operation, along with target maps and aerial photographs of Baku and Batum. A short time later copies of the plans found their way to Moscow.

Premier Paul Reynaud resigns and is replaced by Marshal Petain.

French representatives in the US allow the British to take over previously place French orders for armaments. This assists by avoiding the US "cash and carry" statutes.

In various evacuations from France to Britain 21,474 men will be evacuated from St. Malo during the next 2 days; 32,584 from Brest; and 57,235 from St. Nazaire and Nantes over the next 3 days.

Brooke withdraws his headquarters to Vitre and begins planning for the embarkation of all British troops from several ports in Brittany and Normandy all the while being interfered with by his masters in London.

Tomorrow planning and embarkation will continue. At midnight (on the 17th) he received reports that just under 60,000 troops had left France. (Jay Stone)

 

MEDITERRANEAN SEA: RN: HMS Grampus (submarine) lost minelaying between Augusta and Syracuse, Sicily to torpedo boats 'Circe' and 'Clio'. Grampus fires off one torpedo, but the three Italian A/S ships drop 61 depth charges over the same spot for 15 minutes, when there is a large underwater explosion followed by much wreckage rising to the surface.

Odin class submarine HMS Orpheus ordered to patrol off Benghazi, is last from on this date. Nothing further is heard from her and she is believed either to have been mined or the victim of an accident. (This is the third British submarine to be sunk within a week in the Mediterranean). (Alex Gordon)(108)

Submarine HMS Morse Mined and sunk off Kerkenna.

CANADA: The French aircraft carrier Bearn, escorted by the training cruiser Jeanne DArc, sets sail from Halifax, Nova Scotia loaded with 44 aircraft for the Armeé de l'air.

Ch/Skr Clifford George Williams RCNR awarded Reserve Decoration.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: MS Wellington Star sunk by U-101 at 42.39N, 17.01W.

Top of Page

Yesterday      Tomorrow

Home

16 June 1941

Yesterday                       Tomorrow

June 16th, 1941 (MONDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Aldershot, Hampshire: In military custody, Rudolf Hess tries to commit suicide by throwing himself off a staircase, but only breaks a leg.

RAF Bomber Command: 2 Group: In operations against 'squealers', short-wave radio equipped trawlers used as early warning stations by the Luftwaffe in the North Sea, 3 Blenheims of 21 Sqn. sink a trawler, but not before one aircraft had struck the ships mast and cartwheeled into the sea.

Westminster: Commenting on industrial unrest, Capt. J. Henderson Stewart MP, declared in questioning the Minister of Labour, Ernest Bevin:

"Today, when the flower of our land has been mowed down through lack of arms to defend themselves, arms factories at home are frequent scenes of deliberate slacking, deliberate idleness and shameless agitation for higher and higher wages for the same work done."

Destroyer HMS Rapid laid down.

Destroyer HNLMS Kortenaer (ex-HMS Scorpion) laid down.

Minesweeper HMS Seaham launched.

Corvette HMS Bryony commissioned.



GERMANY: Gen. Eugen Meindl is awarded the Knight's Cross for his leadership in the opening phase of the battle for Crete and especially for the overall performance of his regiment in this campaign.

U-220, U-221, U-222 laid down.

U-406 launched.


FINLAND: In anticipation of Barbarossa, Finnish troops are withdrawn from the island of Morgonland, which they were using to observe Soviet naval traffic at the occupied port of Hanko, on the south-westerly tip of Finland, and the surrounding waters are mined by both sides. (Cris Wetton)

LIBYA: Operation Battleaxe: The British move south to the Sidi Omar area, where action continues throughout the morning. Two-pounder and Besa fire cause much damage among a large concentration of Germans, who later withdraw in a north-easterly direction.

The attack at Halfaya had not been as successful as had been hoped, and although Fort Capuzzo was taken at bayonet point by the infantry the Germans were reported to be forming for a strong counterattack.

The 15th Panzer counter-attacked around Capuzzo by night, while the 5th Light made a hook around the British left flank, with the aim of reaching the Halfaya Pass and cutting off both British divisions from supply or escape down the escarpment. The 4th Indian Division struggles to hold 15th Panzer. Halfaya remains in German hands.

7th Armoured Brigade was attacked by the 5th Light, which came swinging round the left flank of the division. By nightfall, 7th Armoured Brigade was down to just 25 tanks.

SYRIA: Further French attacks on Jezzine are repulsed by 25 Aust Bde. Before dawn a French mobile column of 7th Chasseurs d’Afrique, a company of Senegalese and some artillery under Col. Lecoulteux capture El Quneitra from 1st Bn Royal Fusiliers after an all-day fight, taking 470 prisoners. This cuts key roads behind 5 Ind Bde (Damascus) and 7 Aust Div (Merdjayoun). Despite this disaster in his rear, Brig Lloyd (5 Ind Bde) sends one Indian battalion to the Kuneitra road to cut off the French in turn, and aggressively continues his advance on Damascus. Alarmed by the general French counter-attack over the whole front, Generals Wilson and Lavarack throw in their few reserves. Leading elements of 16 Brit Brigade arriving from Egypt are diverted to Deraa; 2/3 MG Bn is sent to hold crossings on the Jordan; Brig Berryman (BGRA 1st Aust Corps) is placed in command of all troops around Merdjayoun. (Michael Alexander)

Bennett decided to advance down the hill against the French flank. Lieutenant Copp's platoon fixed bayonets and charged, then Marshall's platoon charged on his right, while Dwyer's men, farther to the right, established themselves overlooking the track along which the French would have to withdraw to Ferdisse. Copp's platoon advanced among the French with Tommy guns and bayonets, and the enemy ran. Buttrose's company joined in the chase, and his mortars and Dwyer's Bren gunners poured fire into the fugitives. More than fifty French troops were killed. Both companies then took up defensive positions on the high ground west of Rachaya until, about 5 p.m., orders came from Monaghan to withdraw to Bmeriq. They did so and took up positions there that night. Thirty-two French cavalry horses, fine Arab stallions, were captured in the fight at Rachaya. The battalion used them to mount its messengers and for officers' chargers . Finally these horses were handed over to the 6th Cavalry Regiment to mount a troop known as the "Kelly Gang".....  (Daniel Ross)(197)

Fleet Air Arm torpedo-bomber flying from Cyprus sink the large Vichy destroyer Chevalier Paul, while it is trying to bring in a supply of ammunition. A second super-destroyer VAQUELIN, succeeds in reaching Beirut but is then damaged by British air attack. (Peter Beeston)

During the campaign a RN cruiser and destroyer force, including HMAS Perth and HMS Leander, provide close support on the Army's flank. They also fight a series of actions with Vichy French warships as well as German aircraft. A number of destroyers are damaged, but a French destroyer and submarine are sunk.

JAPAN: Tokyo: The US government hands the Japanese a sharp diplomatic protest, stating that in 11th and 14th June, a twin-engined Japanese military aircraft had flown over Guam at very high altitude. The Japanese government denies all knowledge of this.

CANADA: Corvette HMCS Vancouver (ex-HMCS Kitchener) laid down Esquimalt, British Columbia.

U.S.A.: New York: The editorial for the New York Times reveals the disarray of Roosevelt">Roosevelt's defence program:

In the ninety days following passage of the act (Lend-Lease) the United States had sent to Britain, China and other nations fighting in defence of freedom less than $11,000,000, of newly produced supplies. And of this $8,000,000 represented agricultural products.

The U.S. State Department orders all German consular establishments be closed and all German consular officials, agents, clerks, and employees to leave the country. Also included in this order are German nationals connected with the German Library of Information in New York City, the German Railway and Tourist Agencies, and the Trans-Ocean New Service. The Germans are ordered out of the country by 10 July 1941. The reason given for this action is that these agencies "have been engaged in activities...of an improper and unwarranted character" and "wholly outside the scope of their legitimate duties."

Destroyers USS Gillespie and Gansevoort laid down.

Top of Page

Yesterday        Tomorrow

Home

16 June 1942

Yesterday Tomorrow

June 16th, 1942 (TUESDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: London: Churchill nominates Anthony Eden, the foreign secretary, to succeed him if he dies.

Minesweeping trawler HMS Tranquil was sunk in a collision off Deal, Kent.

Minesweeper HMS Albacore commissioned.

Destroyer HMS Bramham commissioned.

MS Trawlers HMS Product and Professor commissioned.

Minesweeping trawler HMS Prospect launched.

 
 

FRANCE: Paris: Jean Zay, minister of education in the Popular Front is taken from the prison where he has spent the war and shot by the roadside. Zay was Jewish - Je vous Zay (a pun on "I hate you"), as Céline referred to him.

GERMANY: U-302 commissioned.

BALTIC SEA: Finnish s/s Argo sunk at Bogskär by Soviet submarine Shtsh 317.

MALTA: The full fury of the Mediterranean sea war has fallen upon two convoys heading for Malta. The idea was to dissipate the increasingly powerful German air strength by sending two convoys simultaneously to Malta: one from Gibraltar [Operation Harpoon] and the other from Alexandria [Operation Vigorous]. But both convoys have hit trouble.

Although British ships and aircraft succeeded in sinking a heavy Italian cruiser, the TRENTO, and damaging the battleship LITTORIO, the escorts have suffered badly. The cruiser HMS HERMIONE was sunk by U-205 at 33 30N, 26 10E, soon after the second convoy, Operation Vigorous, was forced to turn back to Alexandria, and three destroyers, HMS Hasty, HMS AIREDALE and today HMS NESTOR, were sunk in bombing attacks. HMS NESTOR is disabled in an attack by Ju.87's and taken in tow. After the tow has broken twice and after receiving warnings of S-boat activity, it was decided to scuttle Nestor south of Crete at 33 36N, 24 27E. This convoy sailed without carriers or capital ships, relying on a small RAF force for cover.

Operation Harpoon had a covering force of a battleship, HMS MALAYA, two carriers, HMS EAGLE and HMS ARGUS, three cruisers, HMS LIVERPOOL, HMS CHARYBDIS and HMS Kenya, and eight destroyers and the anti-aircraft cruiser HMS CAIRO.

Germany has now sent some Stukas to this battleground from the Russian front in order to reinforce what was initially a largely Italian operation.

From dawn until dusk men on convoy escort ships are therefore on action stations, sweating under anti-flash clothing, their steel helmets getting hotter and hotter under the Mediterranean sun. Throughout the day the Stukas attack in waves, diving directly out of that sun, loosing off their bombs then flying off at wave-top height to pick up another load. (Alex Gordon)(108)

MEDITERRANEAN SEA: Destroyer HMAS Nestor bombed by German aircraft off Derna in the eastern Mediterranean (position 33°36\'N, 24°30\'E). The ship was straddled by heavy bombs, which caused heavy damage to her boiler rooms. Taken in tow by the British destroyer HMS Javelin but at 0530 hours the next morning the destroyer began to settle by the bow. Permission was granted to scuttle the ship. The Javelin took off the crew and at 0700 hours HMAS Nestor was scuttled by depth charges.

HMS Hermione was torpedoed by the German submarine U-205, North of Sollum and sank in position 33.20N, 26.00E. 87 Crewmembers went down with the ship.

Destroyer ORP Kujawiak sunk by a mine off Malta.

NORTH AFRICA: The British retreat from El Adam conceding any chance of moving west of Tobruk.

CANADA:

U.S.A.: Congress authorizes an increase in the USN's airship strength to 200 airships.

Destroyer USS Longshaw laid down.

CARIBBEAN SEA: At 0230, the unarmed and unescorted Arkansan had discontinued her zigzag course about 45 minutes before when the lookouts sighted a surfaced U-boat. The ship increased immediately the speed and turned away, but it was too late and within one minute two torpedoes from U-126 hit amidships. The explosions wrecked the radio antenna and the ship took an extreme port list. Most of the crew of ten officers, 28 men and two workaways abandoned ship in one lifeboat, despite of the fact that she was still moving at seven knots. The Arkansan sank after 20 minutes 70 miles west of Grenada. One officer and three crewmen could not be accounted for after the attack. The survivors were picked up by the USS Pastores and were landed at Trinidad.

At 0320, the unescorted Kahuku was torpedoed by U-126 about 90 miles west of Grenada, while steaming a zigzagging course at 9.5 knots. Lookouts spotted the wake of the torpedo about 20 yards away from the ship before it struck on the starboard side abaft the bridge about 8 feet below the waterline in the engine room. The eight officers, 28 crewmen, ten armed guards (the ship was armed with one 4in, two 20mm, two .50cal and one .30cal guns), 17 survivors from the Cold Harbor and 46 survivors from the Scottsburg abandoned ship in two lifeboats and three rafts in some chaos, due to the extra men aboard. The armed guards fired a few shots from the after gun, but soon left the ship. A coup de grâce was fired at 04.15 hours, but the ship remained afloat after the hit. The U-boat surfaced and fired between 0500 and 0526 approximately 30 shells on the bridge and the radio room, one shell hit the after magazine and the ship sank at 0620 hours. The master, one officer, four crewmen, three armed guards and eight survivors died. Some men were picked up by U-126 and placed on rafts, but Able Seaman Archie Gibbs, a survivor from Scottsburg stayed aboard for four days, until he was placed on board the small Venezuelan vessel Minataora about 45 miles off Curaçao and landed there. The remaining survivors were picked up by the American patrol vessels USS Opal and YP-63 and landed at Trinidad.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: At 1410, the Nueva Alta Gracia was sunk by scuttling charges by U-161 after being stopped by gunfire.

At 0401, the Managua was hit by one torpedo from U-67 in the stern and sank within eleven minutes.

At 0417 U-87 fired one torpedo at the leading ship of Convoy XB-25 northeast of Cape Cod during a gale and fired at 0418 a second torpedo at another ship. British freighter SS Port Nicholson torpedoed and sunk by German U-boat U-87 KptLt. Joachim Berger CO, in the Atlantic NE of Cape Cod, in position 42.11N 69.25W while on a voyage from Avonmouth, Barry and New York to Wellington via Halifax and Panama, with a cargo of 1600 tons of automobile parts and 4000 tons of military stores, part of convoy XB.25 comprising 5 ships. 79 crew and 4 gunners were rescued by HMCS Nanaimo (K101) Lt Thomas James Bellas RCN, CO. Master and three crew with 6 men from Nanaimo reboarded vessel to attempt salvage. Berger observed how the first hit and thought that the second missed, but apparently both hit Port Nicholson. At 0421, a spread of two torpedoes was fired which both hit Cherokee. The Cherokee was struck by one torpedo on the port side under the bridge. The explosion lifted the vessel out of the water, destroyed the chart house and incoming water gave the ship a sharp list to port. The speed was increased and the rudder was turned hard right, but a second torpedo struck the port bow 90 seconds later, causing the ship to sink by the bow with a 60 degrees list to port within six minutes. The rough seas and the extreme list prevented the launching of lifeboats and only seven rafts were cut loose. The ship carried nine officers, 103 crewmen, 11 armed guards (the ship was armed with one 4in, two .50cal and two .30cal guns) and 46 US Army passengers. Three officers, 62 crewmen, one armed guard and 20 passengers died. 44 survivors were picked up by the steam merchant Norlago and landed them at Provincetown, Massachusetts the same day. 39 others were picked up by USCGC Escanaba, which took them to Boston, Massachusetts. All but 4 from corvette were lost when vessel sank later, the Master Harold Charles Jeffrey and three crew of Port Nicholson as well as AB Leslie Horne V-9632, of Winnipeg, Manitoba; Lt John Molson Walkley of Montreal, Province of Quebec; both RCNVR of Nanaimo.

Top of Page

Yesterday Tomorrow

Home

16 June 1942 16 June 1943

Yesterday     Tomorrow

June 16th, 1943 (WEDNESDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Minesweeper HMS Ararat commissioned.

Escort carrier HMS Trouncer launched.

GERMANY:

U-473, U-547, U-983 commissioned.

U-290, U-989, U-990 launched.

U-878 laid down.

ITALY: SICILY: Wave after wave of Allied bombers flew unmolested over Sicily today, dropping thousands of tons of high explosive on ports, airfields and other military targets. The island is being "softened up" for an invasion - although Rome radio is still talking of Sardinia as a possible target. An announcer described the country's present situation as "the gravest in the whole of her modern history."

Four British battleships are on station in Gibraltar, and intensive training is under way both in North Africa and in Scotland, where a beach near Troon is being used for commando "rehearsals", although few know the actual destination. Two more Italian islands have surrendered. White flags fluttered over tiny Linosa on 13 June as soon as the British destroyer HMS NUBIAN appeared. Closer to Africa, Lampedusa was pounded heavily from the sea and air before surrendering on 12 June. A British fighter pilot, Sergeant Jack Cohen, force-landed on the island with engine trouble in the middle of the bombardment. Italians came running up to his aircraft waving white flags and shouting: "Can't you stop this?"

Cohen was forced to shelter from Allied bombs and shells for two hours. Italian engineers helped him to men his aircraft, and he flew off to tell the navy that Lampedusa was surrendering. The capture of Pantelleria and the other islands has virtually closed the Sicilian narrows to German and Italian shipping.

MEDITERRANEAN SEA: U-97 (Type VIIC) is sunk in Mediterranean, west of Haifa at position 33.00N, 34.00W by depth charges from an Australian Hudson aircraft (Sqdn 459/T). 27 dead, 21 survivors. (Alex Gordon)

ALGERIA: King George invests Generals Bernard Montgomery and Henry Maitland Wilson with knighthoods.

SOLOMON ISLANDS: The IJN launches its largest air raid since 7 April 1943, by dispatching an estimated 50 Aichi D3A Navy Type 99 Carrier Bombers, Allied Code Name "Val," and 70 Mitsubishi A6M Navy Type 0 Carrier Fighters, Allied Code Name "Zeke," against USN vessels at Guadalcanal and Tulagi preparing for Operation TOENAILS, the invasion of New Georgia Island in the central Solomon Islands. 

A coastwatcher sights this force just after 1200 hours local and 104 Allied aircraft, RNZAF Kittyhawks; 12 P-38G Lightnings, 14 P-39D, K and N Airacobras and 21 P-40 F and Ms of the  USAAF; USMC F4U Corsairs; and USN F4F Wildcats are scrambled to meet the raid. 

Numerous dogfights ensue over Savo and Tulagi Islands, and Cape Esperance and Koli Point on Guadalcanal; Allied aircraft claim 79 aircraft shot down with the loss of six Allied fighters and five pilots; AA claims 17 more aircraft. 

The Japanese succeed in damaging three ships [tank landing ship USS LST-340 and cargo ship USS Celeno (AK-76) are beached] and cause considerable destruction on Guadalcanal Island. This is the last daylight raid launched by the Japanese against Guadalcanal.

Also this day Jay Zeamer Jr., and Joseph Sarnoski of the USAAF with a volunteer crew fly a daylight solo B-17 reconnaissance mission that is considered to be suicidal. Fighting off attacks by twenty Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Navy Type 0 Fighters ("Zeros") they completed the mission. Sarnoski died in the mission and Zeamer lost a leg. (Lloyd Sunderland)

BOUGAINVILLE: A coastwatcher convalescent camp is betrayed and raided by 80 Japanese and 40 natives. Eight Australians are killed or executed later. (Michael Alexander)

TERRITORY OF ALASKA: : Operation KE, the Japanese resupply and evacuation of Kiska Island, Aleutian Islands continues. The submarine HIJMS I-156 lands three tons of weapons and ammunition and two tons of food and evacuates 70 civilians and two sailors.

CANADA: Frigate HMCS Magog laid down Montreal, Province of Quebec.

Frigate HMCS Waskesiu commissioned.

U.S.A.:

The first convoys for the Invasion of Sicily, Operation Husky, sail from the US.

The motion picture "Coney Island" premieres in New York City. This musical comedy, directed by Walter Lang, and starring Betty Grable, George Montgomery, Cesar Romero and Phil Silvers, is set at the turn of the century and has con man Montgomery attempting to change brash singer Grable. The film is nominated by a Best Musical Scoring Academy Award.

Comedian Charles Chaplin, 54-years-old, marries his fourth wife, 18-year-old Oona O'Neill, daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill, in Carpenteria, California. They have eight children and remain married until his death on 25 December 1977.

Destroyer Escort USS Sturtevant commissioned.

Destroyer USS Wickes commissioned.

Destroyer escort USS Fleming launched.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: Corvette HMCS Arvida arrived Iceland for repair of depth charge damage.

An aircraft from RAF 547 Sqn attacked U-600, killing one crewman. The aircraft was shot down

27 men died when U-97 was lost and 21 men survived.

Top of Page

Yesterday   Tomorrow

Home

16 June 1944

Yesterday                       Tomorrow

June 16th, 1944 (FRIDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: The USAAF's Eighth Air Force in England flies two missions.

Mission 416: 370 bombers, including 22 Pathfinders are dispatched to four airfields and four CROSSBOW (V-weapon) supply sites in France; one B-17 is lost:

1. Of 146 B-17 Flying Fortresses, 38 bomb Laon/Athies Airfield, 38 hit Juvincourt Airfield, 18 hit railroad targets of opportunity and 17 hit Laon/Couvron Airfield; one B-17 is lost.

     Personal Memory:  Our first (and only) abort.

This was to be our 16th mission and our target was to be the airdrome at Juvincourt, France where the Aredo Jet was being tested. We were looking forward to another Milk Run to add to our growing collection. We were to form up over Molesworth at 25,000 feet in order to avoid traffic from other fields. This was to be our bombing altitude also, but as we climbed over the field in our "Buzz Blonde" we found that we could only get to 23,000 feet due to a lack of manifold pressure on engine number 3. We could only get 20 inches while the norm was 29 inches. We made several attempts to repair the engine by changing the amplifiers. We ran the turbo up to number 10 and turned the turbo screw full on. None of this worked and we had to abort and return to the field. There is an investigation every time a plane aborts or gets lost, but the engineering section confirmed that the abort was justified due to a burned out waste gate motor on number 3 engine. Also found was a sheared bolt on  number 4 mixture control. This alone might have caused us to abort had we been unable to lean out the fuel at altitude thereby using extra fuel. The ground crew got busy making repairs for the next mission. What I had assumed would be a milk run today resulted in flak damage to fourteen of our planes and one wounded crewman.They had to make an emergency landing at Northampstead to quickly get aid. You never know what might be in store! Later when we finally went to this same target it was anything but a milk run! Score: Milk Runs: 11, Others 4, Providence (?) 1 (Dick Johnson)

2. 224 B-24 Liberators are dispatched to bomb airfields and CROSSBOW sites; B-24s attacking V-weapon supply sites are: 48 hit Renescure, 44 hit Sautrecourt, 43 hit Domleger and 21 hit Beauvoir; airfields attacked are: 17 hit Beauvais/Tille, 17 hit Authe and 12 hit St Andre de L'Eure.

VIII Fighter Command missions for the day are:

1. 165 P-38s, 88 P-47 Thunderbolts and 172 P-51 Mustangs escort the bombers above, they claim 1-0-0 Luftwaffe aircraft; no losses. 

2. 70 P-51s perform a sweep against stalled trains between Angouleme and Poitiers, dropping external fuel tanks on them and firing the tanks by strafing; the same tactics are used on trains in the marshalling yard at Saint-Pierre-d'Ecideuil; heavy damage is inflicted on both targets, including heavy troop casualties.

3. 50 P-38s and 75 P-47s make fighter-bomber attacks on troops in the Arras-St Pol area; at St-Pol-sur-Ternoise a large number of railroad cars are burned by oil and phosphorus bombs and strafing attacks; other marshalling yards, a power station, railroad station, trains, barges, tanks, trucks, gun emplacements, AA tower and an armored vehicle are attacked; A total of about 400 railroad cars are attacked and about half of them set on fire. In general the fighter attacks are highly effective; three P-38s are lost. 

Mission 417: Ten B-17s drop leaflets in France during the evening.

FRANCE: US forces cross the River Douvre in Normandy.

King George VI of Great Britain visits troops in Normandy.

In order to secure favourable defensive positions the 101st conducted a few small actions. This continued on June 17. They were the last real combat for the division in Normandy. For the next two weeks until relieved by the 83rd Infantry Division the 101st held strong defensive positions to the south and southwest of Carentan. See Rendezvous with Destiny by Rapport and Northwood, pages 221-224, 247 (Jay Stone)

Bad weather prevents bomber operations by the USAAF's Ninth Air Force based in England; 500+ fighters strafe and bomb rail lines, bridges and highway traffic on the Cherbourg Peninsula.  

GERMANY: U-2324 launched.

ITALY, Umbria: The British X Corps liberate Spoleto, Italy.

The USAAF's Fifteenth Air Force in Italy dispatches almost 600 bombers to attack targets in Austria and Czechoslovakia; B-17s attack the Kragan and Florisdorf oil refineries around Vienna; B-24s bomb the industrial area at Bratislava, Czechoslovakia and the Lobau and Schwechat oil refineries and Winterhafen oil depot in the Vienna area. Between 200 and 250 fighters attack the formations and 15 USAAF aircraft are shot down; the bombers and escorting fighters claim 70 aircraft destroyed.

FINLAND: Commander of the Isthmus Troops Lt. Gen. Karl Oesch gives orders for the III and IV Corps to withdraw to the third Finnish line of defence (VKT-line) while delaying the enemy.

Marshal Mannerheim orders the Olonets Group (Lt. Gen. Paavo Talvela) on the Olonets Isthmus (between lakes Ladoga and Onega) and the II Corps (Maj. Gen. Einar Mäkinen) on the Maaselkä Isthmus (between Lake Onega and White Sea) to start withdrawing back towards the 1939 border. The situation on the Karelian Isthmus is critical, and the troops are needed there.

Gen. Talvela's Olonets Group is relatively strong, although it has already lost units to reinforce the defenders in Karelia. It consists of Maj. Gen. Antero Svensson's V Corps (Maj. Gen. Kaarlo Heiskanen's 11th Division and Maj. Gen. Selim Isaksson's 7th Division) and Maj. Gen. Aarne Blick's VI Corps (Maj. Gen. Kustaa Tapola's 5th Division, Maj. Gen. Antti Kääriäinen's 8th Division and the 15th Brigade). Gen. Talvela has already lost his reserves (the 17th Division and 20th Brigade) to the Karelian Isthmus, and now the V Corps HQ and 11th Division are also transferred there. The Onega Group will start its withdrawal tomorrow at 10 pm.

German supplies start again flowing to Finland. To strengthen the Finnish AT-defences, more than 10,000 Panzerfausts are transported by motor torpedo boats and aircraft. Luftwaffe units and Sturmgeschütz-Brigade 303 together with the 122th Infantry Division are on their way. Naturally the German help is conditional - on 12 June Hitler had decided that "as long as the Finns fight, help will be given, but as soon as they start negotiating [peace with the Soviet Union], all supplies will be terminated".

Six Finnish VMV Patrol boats surprise four enemy G-5 type motor torpedo boats at Halli. One of them is sunk and another captured.

PACIFIC OCEAN: US Fifth Fleet battleships under the command of Admiral Ainsworth shell Guam.

Marines advance on Saipan taking Chaan Karoa and Point Afetna. This links the 2nd and 4th Marine Divisions. The 165th Infantry Regiment and three Field Artillery Battalions of the 27th Infantry Division landed on Saipan. The 165th (the old New York Fighting 69th Regiment of American Civil War fame), was tasked with sweeping the southern shore of Saipan and taking Aslito Airfield.

Carrier-based aircraft from the USN's Task Groups 58.1 and 58.4 again mount attacks on Iwo Jima, in the Volcano Islands, and Chichi Jima and Haha Jima, in the Bonin Islands, during the afternoon. Targets include airfields, fuel supplies and barracks. Two F6F Hellcats and their pilots are lost. After the attacks, both task groups retire to the Mariana Islands.

In response to the sighting of the IJN's First Mobile Fleet sailing from the Philippines towards the Mariana Islands by a U.S. submarine, Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, commander Fifth Fleet, orders that the antiaircraft screens around USN carriers be augmented by drawing additional cruisers and destroyers from fire-support and shore-bombardment groups. The entire burden of ground-support missions and on-call air-support is shifted from the fast carriers of Task Force 58 to the escort aircraft carriers of the Fifth Fleet.

Carrier-based aircraft of Task Groups 58.2 and 58.3 attempt to neutralize all of the airfields on Guam and Tinian. The airmen maintain that big guns should also be used against these targets but their suggestions are ignored.

A TBM Avenger from an escort aircraft carrier drops heavy weapons to a USMC infantry battalion on Saipan but the aircraft is too low and many weapons are damaged or destroyed.

CANADA: Corvette HMCS Asbestos commissioned. (Asbestos is named after a town in Quebec north of Sherbrooke. Asbestos gets its name from one of the largest deposits of asbestos in the world.) (Dave Hornford and Dave Shirlaw)

Tel(SO) Donald Warner Oberson RCNVR awarded Mention in Dispatches.

U.S.A.:

CINCPAC COMMUNIQUÉ NO. 51, Chichi Jima, and Haha Jima in the Bonin Islands and Iwo Jima in the Volcano Islands were attacked by carrier aircraft on June 14 (West Longitude Date). Thirty-three enemy fighters which attempted to intercept our forces at Chichi Jima were shot down. Four multi-engined seaplanes were damaged at Chichi Jima At Iwo Jima two airborne enemy aircraft were probably destroyed and 14 were destroyed on the ground.

One medium cargo ship was sunk by bombing at Chichi Jima, and four small cargo ships and six small craft were damaged. A medium transport, discovered underway near the Bonins, was heavily damaged by aircraft and later sunk by one of our destroyers. One hundred and twelve survivors were rescued and made prisoners of war.

Ground installations, including barracks, airfields, and fuel tanks were bombed by our aircraft.

Our losses were four aircraft and five flight personnel.

CINCPAC COMMUNIQUÉ NO. 52, United States assault troops are engaged in bitter fighting against defend-ing forces on Saipan Island. On June 14 (West Longitude Date) and during the night of June 14-15 our troops were withdrawn a short distance toward the beach in some sectors in the face of intense mortar and artillery fire. Positions were consolidated and during the night our Naval forces carried out a heavy bombardment of enemy strong points.

On the morning of June 15 enemy resistance in the strongly held sector north of Charan Kanoa was broken. At midday a major element of our forces commenced an attack which advanced our line nearly one half mile in the southern sector of the island. Lesser advances were made in other sectors.

Our assumption that Saipan Island would be strongly held because of its strategic location in the Japanese defensive system has been proven correct. Preliminary estimates indicate there are upwards of two divisions of enemy troops defending Saipan. (Denis Peck)

Destroyer USS Hyman commissioned.

Minesweeper USS Pirate commissioned.

Coast Guard-manned Army vessel FS-256 was commissioned at New York with LT C. E. Thorsen, USCGR as her first commanding officer. On 17 July 1944 she departed New York for the Southwest Pacific. She was assigned to and operated in the Southwest Pacific area. LTJG K. F. Erickson, USCGR succeeded Thorsen on 3 October 1945. The ship was decommissioned 14 October 1945.

ATLANTIC OCEAN: The unescorted Columbine was torpedoed and sunk by U-198 25 miles NW of Cape Castle, South West Africa. The master, 19 crewmembers and six passengers were lost.

U-804 attacked by a Norwegian 333 Sqn Mosquito. 8 men were wounded but the boat was not seriously damaged. 2 of the air crew were saved by U-1000 on 18 June and taken to Norway for questioning.

Top of Page

Yesterday        Tomorrow

Home

16 June 1945

Yesterday                       Tomorrow

June 16th, 1945 (SATURDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Sloop HMS Opossum commissioned.

Frigate HMCS Stettler departed Londonderry for Halifax, Nova Scotia.

BELGIUM: Brussels: Achille van Acker, the Belgian prime minister and is entire cabinet resign in protest against the contemplated return of King Leopold.

GERMANY: Dachau: Nearly 2,500 people have died, mainly of typhus, since the camp was liberated on 29 April.

JAPAN: OKINAWA: Mt. Yuza falls to US forces.

Off Okinawa at 2030 hours local, a single, low-flying Japanese aircraft drops a torpedo which hits the destroyer USS Twiggs (DD-591) on her port side, exploding her number 2 magazine. The plane then circles and completes its kamikaze mission in a suicide crash. The explosion enveloped the destroyer in flame; and, within an hour, she sinks. Despite the hazard of exploding ammunition, 188 survivors are rescued from the oily waters; among the 162 dead and missing is her commanding officer.

NEW GUINEA: Seafires, Fireflies and Avengers from the aircraft carriers of the British Pacific Fleet have carried out a series of devastating attacks on Japanese bases in the Caroline Islands north of here over the last two days. To their surprise they met no Japanese aircraft, and only one plane was shot down from the ground. The raid started badly. One pilot radioed back: "Hell, the boss is in the Oggin." Translated from the Fleet Air Arm slang this meant that the Flight Commander's Avenger was in the sea, having crashed on take-off.

CANADA: Capt (E) John Grant Knowlton RCN">RCN, Capt Humphrey McMaster RCN, Capt Leslie Frederick Banyard RCNR, Cdr (E) Herbert Lane Elliott RCNR, A/Cdr Harry "The Horse" Freeland RCNR, Capt Joseph Patrick Connolly RCNVR, Surg/Capt David Walker Johnstone RCNVR, A/Cdr Alexander McAllister McLarnon RCNVR, A/Cder Reginald "Cowboy" Jackson RCNVR, Cdr (L) William Hugh Greg Rogers RCNVR, Paym/Capt Richard Walter Underhill RCNVR awarded OBE.

Capt Thomas Colin Anderson CN SS Delwarnic, Capt James William Childs CN SS Connector, Capt Victor Nathan Clarke CN Liscombe Park, Capt Carl JR Kohler SS Dufferin Park awarded MBE (Civil)

Wt(E) Duff Morrison Pennie RCN, Wt(E) David Cormack RCNR, Skr/Lt Stanley Francis Ellis RCNR, A/LCdr Lester Alton Hickey RCNR, Cd(S) Alfred Richard Armstrong Taylor RCNR, A/LCdr Breen Philip Young RCNR, A/LCdr Ansten Anstensen RCNVR, A/LCdr Richard Cassils Chenoweth RCNVR, A/LCdr John Henderson Kyle RCNVR, A/LCdr(E) Ian Norton MacKay RCNVR, LCdr Wilfred McIsaac RCNVR, A/LCdr Arthur Martin Peregrin Scaife RCNVR, Lt(SB) Norah Janetta COOPER WRCNS awarded MBE

2nd/Officer Salvator Peter Berna CP SS Whiteshell Park, 2nd/Officer Douglas Zealand Creaser, 3rd/Officer Douglas Gordon Daupinee CN SS Colborne,

Ch(E) Phillip Knight CN SS Delwarnic, 2nd(E) Thomas Hutchinson Mearns CN SS Chomody awarded MBE

A/LCdr Charles Patrick Nixon RCN, A/Cdr St. Clair Balfour RCNVR, Lt James MacMurray Hay RCNVR awarded DSC

P/Matron Alma Rae Fellowes awarded Royal Red Cross

A/Matron Catherine Adeline Jane Evans RCN and N/S Margaret Isabelle Green RCN awarded Associate Royal Red Cross

Lt George Olaf Rundle RNCR awarded Bar to George Medal

PO)HSD) David Gray RCNVR awarded DSM

Ch/Ymn Frederick Harold Ames RCN, CPO John James Ashworth Clarke RCN,

CPO/Ck(S) Ross Douglas Eison RCN, CPO/Stk Delamark Steven Lowe RCN, PO Clare Lorne Ball RCNR, CPO/Sto Clyde James Brennan RCNR, SPO Walter Stanley Chemist RCNR, CPO John Leopold Christopher RCNR, PO/Patrol, William Arthur Johnson RCNR, A/CPO Hugh Patrick McVeigh RCNR, CPO(TC) Douglas William Pike RCNR, LS John William Wells RCNR, CPO/Wtr Angus McFayden Smith Allan RCNVR, ERA 3/cl Herbert Arthur Coulman RCNVR, A/Ymn George Patrick Fenn RCNVR, L/Sig Thomas Jamieson RCNVR, CPO/Sto Arthur Andrew Jourdin RCNVR, A/CPO Ronald Anthony Norman RCNVR, CPO/Sto Roy Smith RCNVR, CPO/MM 3 William Nelson Smith RCNVR, L/SBA Herbert Treller RCNVR, A/CPO/Shipw, Frank Veinor RCNVR, MAA Phyllis Ross Sanderson WRCNS awarded BEM

Fishing/Skr's, Fred Chetwyne, Sydney Christie and Douglas Smith awarded BEM (Civil) for rescue of crew of SS Gertrud Rask

Fishermen Danny Bower, Rodman Branne, Cecil Chetwynd, Earl Christie, Fred Crowell, Foreman Newell and Julius Purdy awarded King's Commendation for Brave Conduct in rescue of crew of SS Gertrud Rask.

PO Clifford John Bell RCNVR and A/PO Edwin Thompson Hughes RCNVR awarded Second Mention in Dispatches

 CPO/Sto James Cooper RCN, PO Candido De Candido RCN, CPO/Sto Walter Alwin Elliott RCN, PO Henry James RCN, CPO Murray Beasley Miller RCN, A/PO Gordon Campbell Mitchell RCN, CPO George Henry Charles Pearce RCN, CPO Donald Edward Snelgrove RCN, CPO/Sto George Henry Thomas RCN, CPO/Elec Cedric Stanley Watling RCN, Lt Wilred Orvin Oakley BARBOUR RCNR, SPO Daniel Brown RCNR, CPO Hugh Brown RCNR, Lt John Foggo Carmichael RCNR, ERA 4 Thomas Ernest Davies RCNR, Cd(E) Joseph William Edmundson RCNR, CPO/ERA Francis Feener RCNR, A/SPO Jack Charles Harnett RCNR, LS Roby Emmerson Hatfield RCNR, SPO John Lockwood RCNR, ERA 3 Thomas Joseph McCrate RCNR, ERA 3 William E. McLaren RCNR, CPO/ERA Karl Moe, RCNR, Cd(E) George Cairns Ness RCNR, SPO Herbert John Perrett RCNR, AB (LTO) Donald Raymond Phillips RCNR, Lt Lewis Dennis Quick RCNR, LS Allyn Morgan Ripley, A/SPO Andrew Lang Ritchie RCNR, Skr/Lt John Winton Sharpe RCNR, AB George Sibleyh RCNR, Wt(E) Walter Edgar Spershott RCNR, CPO Ralph Sydney Tiner RCNR, CPO Frank Wagg RCNR, A/LCdr Matthew Howard Wallace RCNR, PO Dean Nelson Wood RCNR, Skr/Lt Henry Esson YOUNG RCNR, Surg/Lt John Douglas Boyd Baird RCNVR, Lt Donald Richard Baker RCNVR, L/Sig George Charles Bayfoord RCNVR, PO Charles Edward Bell RCNVR, Lt Donald Patterson Best RCNVR, CPO/MM John Buchan RCNVR, A/CPO Larence Elswood Chapman RCNVR, CPO/MM Charles Kenneth Clarke RCNVR, A/CPO Daniel Cunningham RCNVR, PO John Morley Davies RCNVR, ERA 3 Allan Goss Daivs RCNVR, Lt Edmond Joli De Lotbiniere RCNVR, A/Cdr Thomas Grant Denny RCNVR, ERA 3, James Alexander Duncan RCNVR; CPO/MM Robert Pankburst Edwards RCNVR, Lt Frank Kinnear Ellis RCNVR, Lt John Forbes Evans RCNVR, A/LCdr Harold Frederick Farncomb RCNVR, SBA James Douglas Freeborn RCNVR, AB Anthony Gordon Genova RCNVR, LS William Arthur Gilder RCNVR. Lt Kenneth David Heath RCNVR, A/LS Paul Hebert RCNVR, L/Tel Edward John Hickey RCNVR, CPO William Anderson Irving RCNVR, Lt Edward Gilbert Jarvis RCNVR, ERA 3 James Hollywell KERR RCNVR; L/Ck Gordon Wilfred KUHN; L/Sup/A Joseph Donat Hector Laine RCNVR, PO/Stk Donald Chalmers Lipsit RCNVR, ERA 3 Charles Little RCNVR, Lt John Gordon McClelland RCNVR, ERA 3 Charles Wilson McHugh RCNVR, CPO/ERA Keith McIntyre RCNVR, PO/Sup Robert Beverley Millar RCNVR, Ymn Richard John Moore RCNVR, A/L/Tel John Francis Mulvaney RCNVR, Lt William George Mylett RCNVR, PO Rodger J. Oullette RCNVR, A/PO Robert Tait Porter RCNVR, Lt Thomas Beattie Robson RCNVR, AB Norman Reginald Rutherford RCNVR, SPO William Charles Scott RCNVR, PO Charles Rupert Selzer RCNVR, S/Lt Frank Herman Sheppard RCNVR, A/CPO Stanley Simpson RCNVR, L/Std Peter Deas Sinclair RCNVR, Lt Donald William Green Storey RCNVR, CPO/MM Roland Laurie Talbot RCNVR, A/LS Ray Johnson Tibert RCNVR, A/LCdr George Fitzgerald Webb RCNVR, A/LCdr Richard Sugden Williams RCNVR, Lt Gerald Gray Zaphe RCNVR awarded Mention in Dispatches

Corvettes HMCS Chicoutimi, Edmunston and Matapedia paid off Sorel Province of Quebec.

U.S.A.:

Destroyer USS Stickell launched.

Destroyer USS Ozbourn laid down.

Top of Page

Yesterday        Tomorrow

Home