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To: Homer_J_Simpson

July 1st, 1945 (SUNDAY)

GERMANY: British troops withdraw from Magdeburg, which now becomes part of the Soviet occupation zone.
JAPAN: During the night of 1/2 July, the Twentieth Air Force dispatches 564 B-29s of the USAAF’s XXI Bomber Command on one mining and four incendiary missions.
Mission 240: 152 B-29s attack the Kure urban area destroying 1.3 square miles (3.4 square km), 40% of the city; 2 other B-29s hit alternate targets.
Mission 241: 154 B-29s hit the Kumamato urban area destroying 1.0 square mile (2.6 square km), 20% of the city; 1 other B-29 hits an alternate target; 1 B-29 is lost.

Mission 242: 100 B-29s bomb the Ube urban area destroying 0.42 square miles (1.1 square km), 23% of the city.

Mission 243: 126 B-29s attack the Shimonoseki urban area destroying 0.51 square miles (1.32 square km), 36% of the city; 5 other B-29s hit alternate targets; 1 B-29 is lost.

Mission 244: 24 B-29s mine Shimonoseki Strait and the waters at Nanao and Fushiki.

148 Iwo Jima based P-51s are dispatched to hit airfields in the Nagoya area (Kasumigaura, Itami, Hamamatsu, and Nagano); they claim 2-0-0 aircraft in the air and 3-7 on the ground; 2 P-51s are lost.

Patrol Bombing Squadron One Hundred Eighteen (VPB-118) based at Yonton, Okinawa with PB4Y-2 Privateers, fly their last mining mission off Korea having dropped 195 aerial mines.

For the first time since the Doolittle Raid on 18 April 1942, B-25s attack the Japanese home islands; 33 B-25s, operating in two flights from Okinawa, and escorted by USMC F4U Corsairs, bomb Chiran Airfield on Kyushu Island: two others hit Yaku-shima Island in the Osumi Islands.

Elements of Task Forces 30 and 38 set sail from Guam and Leyte Island, Philippine Islands for attacks on the Japanese home islands. The aircraft carriers assigned are:

Task Group 30.6, the Antisubmarine Warfare Group

- USS Anzio (CVE-57) with Composite Squadrons Thirteen and Sixty Six (VC-13 and VC-16)

Task Group 30.8, the Logistics Support Group

- Task Unit 30.8.1

- USS Roi (CVE-103) as an aircraft transport

- USS Steamer Bay (CVE-87) with VC-93

- USS Thetis Bay (CVE-90) as an aircraft transport

- Task Unit 30.8.2

- USS Admiralty Islands (CVE-99) as an aircraft transport

- USS Hollandia (CVE-97) as an aircraft transport

- USS Kitkun Bay (CVE-71) with VC-63)

Task Force 38

- Task Group 38.1

USS Belleau Wood (CVL-24) with Light Carrier Air Group Thirty One (CVLG-31)

USS Bennington (CV-20) with Carrier Air Group one (CVG-1)

USS Hancock (CV-19) with CVG-6

USS Lexington (CV-16) with CVG-94

USS Jacinto (CVL-30) with CVLG-49

- Task Group 38.3

USS Bataan (CVL-29) with CVLG-47

USS Essex (CV-9) with CVG-83

USS Monterey (CVL-26) with CVLG-34

USS Randolph (CV-15) with CVG-16

- Task Group 38.4

USS Bon Homme Richard (CV-31) with Night Carrier Air Group Ninety One [CVG(N)-91]

USS Cowpens (CVL-25) with CVLG-50

USS Independence (CVL-22) with CVLG-27

USS Shangri-La (CV-38) with CVG-85

USS Yorktown (CV-10) with CVG-88

BORNEO: The reinforced 7th Australian Division (Reinforced) (less one brigade), General Milford, land at Balikpapan. Naval support is from the TF commanded by Admiral Barbey.
An Australian Army corps lands at Balikpapan, Borneo to seize the oil fields. The area had been bombed by the US Thirteenth Air Force for three weeks and the Navy had been shelling the area for two weeks. This is the last major amphibious operation of WWII.

Preceding the landings, 83 Thirteenth Air Force B-24s bomb beach targets and the landings themselves are screened by B-25s laying a smoke screen. Also supporting the landings are USMC and USN aircraft of Task Group 78.4 consisting of:

- USS Block Island (CVE-106) with Marine Carrier Air Group One (MCVG-1) comprised of Marine Fighting Squadron (carrier-based) Five Hundred Eleven [VMF(CVS)-511 and Marine Torpedo Bombing Squadron (carrier-based) Two Hundred Thirty Three [VMTB(CVS)-233].

- USS Gilbert Islands (CVE-107) with MCVG-2 comprised of VMF(CVS)-512 and VMTB(CVS)-143.

- USS Suwanee (CVE-27) with Escort Carrier Air Group Forty (CVEG-40) consisting of Fighting Squadron Forty (VF-40) and Torpedo Squadron Forty (VT-40.During the day a flight ofUSNaircraft from Suwanee bombs and rockets barracks that have been captured by the Australians who had neglected to advise the aviators; several Australian soldiers are killed.

Because of the massive firepower at his disposal the Australian commander chose to attack directly at the heart of the enemy’s defences, relying on saturation bombardment to obliterate resistance. Earlier the Australian government told MacArthur that it did not want the 7th Division used. MacArthur insisted that another division could not be substituted in time.

CHINA: Chinese forces liberate Liuchow.

CANADA: Corvettes HMCS North Bay and Stellarton paid off Sorel, Province of Quebec.

HMC ML 074, 089, 095 and 096 paid off.

825 (TBR) Sqn reformed, ASH-fitted Fairey Barracuda II aircraft at RNAS Rattray for HMCS Warrior.

U.S.A.: Vol III No 11 of US Intelligence Bulletin picks up what was covered in Tactical and Technical Trends. (Bill Howard)

In the U.S., New York State establishes the New York State Commission Against Discrimination to prevent discrimination in employment because of race, creed or natural origin; it was the first such agency in the United States.

During WW II, the Military Intelligence Service (MIS) produced numerous documents, most commonly known are the Intelligence Bulletins. The Military Intelligence Special Series continues with “Japanese Parachute Troops.” (William L. Howard)

German PoW Lt-Gen Willibald Borowietz is killed in an auto accident. He is the highest ranking PoW buried at Fort Benning, Georgia. He holds the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves. (Elliott Minor, Associated Press Writer, Published November 15, 2004)


5 posted on 07/01/2015 4:55:58 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

44th US sub reported lost today of 52 total lost during the war. 8 during the last 6 weeks of the war was a grim toll, 20% od US submariners were lost during the war.

My dad’s sub at the time the Irex was in the Panama Canal when the war ended. Very glad for the A bomb. He joined 12-8-41 was discharged in 1947.


8 posted on 07/01/2015 8:20:41 AM PDT by Leto
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

German PoW Lt-Gen Willibald Borowietz is killed in an auto accident. He is the highest ranking PoW buried at Fort Benning, Georgia. He holds the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves


Here it says he died in a bathtub:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willibald_Borowietz

He was held as a POW by the United States in Camp Clinton, Mississippi, where he comitted suicide by electrocuting himself in a bathtub on 1 July 1945. Officially his death was attributed to a cerebral hemorrhage.[1]

Here it says he was fatally wounded in an accident and then committed suicide

http://deutsches-afrikakorps.blogspot.com/2010/12/generalleutnant-willibald-borowietz.html
Notes:
He was captured in Tunis on 13.5.1943, US captivity until 01.6.1943
Fatally Wounded in an accident (01 July 1945) then committed suicide in the same day


10 posted on 07/01/2015 10:58:40 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Camp Clinton


http://www.kilroywashere.org/004-Pages/JAN-Area/04-D-Jackson-POW.html

Only camp that house German Generals

http://mshistory.k12.ms.us/index.php?id=233

POWs return home

The war in Europe ended in May 1945, but the POWs remained in the compounds and continued to work — some for almost a year after the war ended. American soldiers were mustered out of the military quickly and efficiently, but President Harry Truman decided that a labor shortage existed in the United States and that the POWs should remain in this country until the labor shortage was over. Some POWs did not get home to Germany until mid-1946. They had been in the Mississippi camps almost three years.


11 posted on 07/01/2015 11:36:59 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

It might be possible the following had something to do with the generals suicide? (if he had a conscience)


http://home.arcor.de/kriegsgefangene/memoirs/ramcke/page_8.html
About mid-June 1945, a large number of copies of an extra edition of an illustrated magazine, showing the atrocities committed in the concentration camps, were delivered to us without explanation by the camp administration. Many pictures were obviously fakes. General von Arnim as highest ranking German POW made a statement to the War Department that German soldiers had nothing to do with these things in the concentration camps and that they had not even known of them.


16 posted on 07/01/2015 11:52:51 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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