Posted on 02/14/2010 5:40:53 AM PST by Homer_J_Simpson














William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich

Winston S. Churchill, The Gathering Storm
Editorials - 12-13
Finlands Verdun *
Homes at $ 2,500
The State Budget
Civil Service Reform *
Aeronautical Archives
Children of Jimmu Tenno
Two National Weeklies
* A couple lines didnt print in readable form. Just pretend this is Madlibs and make up your own wording.
a cool little clip has General George Marshall inspect the arrival of B-17s to a Puerto Rican Airbase.
That's what I get for not reading the caption. I saw "First Flying Fortress" and stopped. I assumed the people standing in front of the plane were the officers of the flight crew.
http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1940/feb40/f14feb40.htm
British merchant ships to be armed
Wednesday, February 14, 1940 www.onwar.com
From London... The British government announces that all British merchant ships in the North Sea will be armed. In addition, it will allow British citizens to volunteer for the Finnish Foreign Legion.
In Britain... IRA operatives plant five bombs in Birmingham. Two shops are damaged.
In the North Sea... A Hudson of Coastal Command locates the German supply ship Altmark in Norwegian waters.
In the Vatican... Rationing is introduced.
From Helsinki... The Finnish Note (circularized to many foreign governments) accuses the USSR of adopting illegal methods of warfare, including indiscriminate bombing of unprotected towns, hospitals and railway trains and abuse of the white flag (some Soviet troops having feigned surrender before attacking).
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/andrew.etherington/month/thismonth/14.htm
February 14th, 1940
UNITED KINGDOM: British citizens are given permission to join the Finnish Foreign Legion.
The government says that North Sea merchant shipping will be armed.
Birmingham: Five IRA bombs explode.
Destroyer HMS Garth launched.
Corvette USS Saucy (ex-HMS Arabis) launched. (Dave Shirlaw)
NORTH SEA: A Lockheed Hudson Mk. III of RAF No. 220 Squadron Coastal Command, based at Thornaby, Yorkshire, locates the German supply ship Altmark in Norwegian waters. (Jack McKillop)
FRANCE: The first four “groupes francs” of French airborne troops are today operational. The troops are called “infanterie de l’air” and the original two groupes (GIA) were formed on 1st April, 1937. They are named the 601st and 602nd GIA. (Stuart Millis)
GERMANY: U-513, U-514, U-515, U-516, U-517, U-518, U-519, U-520, U-521, U-522, U-523, U-524 ordered. (Dave Shirlaw)
VATICAN CITY: Rationing is introduced.
GIBRALTAR: The U.S. passenger liner SS Manhattan is detained at Gibraltar for several hours by British authorities but allowed to proceed; not as fortunate is freighter SS Exermont, which is also detained there. (Jack McKillop)
CANADA: The RCAFs No.110 (Army Co-Operation) Squadron sails from Halifax, Nova Scotia, for Britain. This is the first RCAF squadron to be sent to Europe. (Jack McKillop)
Flower-class corvettes HMCS Wetaskiwin (ex-Banff), Agassiz, Chilliwack, Trail, Kamloops, Dawson, Alberni, Nanaimo, Edmunston ordered. (Dave Shirlaw)
U.S.A.: Submarine USS Grampus laid down. (Dave Shirlaw)
ATLANTIC OCEAN:
At 0800, the Langleeford, a straggler from convoy HX-18, was torpedoed by U-26 about 70 miles northwest of Fastnet, Ireland and sank after 13 minutes. Four crewmembers were lost. The master and 29 crewmembers were landed at Ross, Co Clare
SS Sultan Star sunk by U-48 at 48.54N, 10.03W.
SS Martin Goldschmidt sunk by U-53 at 55.53N, 12.37W.
At 0135, the Gretafield, a straggler from convoy HX-18, was torpedoed and set on fire by U-57 southeast of Noss Head. Ten crewmembers were lost. The master and 30 crewmembers were picked up by armed trawlers HMS Peggy Nutten and Strathalladale and landed at Wick. The burning Gretafield drifted ashore at Dunbeath, Caithnesshire at 58°14´15N 03°25´45W. On 19 March, the tanker broke in two and was declared a total loss. (Dave Shirlaw)
http://worldwar2daybyday.blogspot.com/
Day 167 February 14, 1940
Finland. Finnish troops start pulling out of the Lähde sector of the Mannerheim line, withdrawing to rearguard positions and leaving a gap in the Line 2-3 km wide and 6 km deep. Kirvesmäki stronghold on the Taipale River changes hands for the fourth time in 3 days. Soviets attack with artillery, aircraft and tanks; they retake the Kirvesmäki stronghold. Finns are out of reserves and cannot mount a counterattack.
Graf Spees supply ship Altmark, after waiting in the South Atlantic for several weeks, reaches Norwegian territorial waters off Trondheim. Altmark’s Captain Heinrich Dau intends to remain in Norwegian neutral waters and avoid attack by the British.
Battle of the Atlantic. German U-boats exact a heavy toll on merchant ships carrying food and fuel in British waters, sinking 4 steam merchant for a total of 29,000 tons.
1.35 AM, U-57 hits British tanker SS Gretafield (13000 tons of fuel oil) with 1 torpedo (10 dead) 20 miles east of Wick, Scotland. Gretafield drifts ashore burning. 31 survivors are picked up by armed trawlers HMS Peggy Nutten & Strathalladale. http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/251.html
5 AM, U-53 sinks Danish SS Martin Goldschmidt west of Ireland (15 dead, 5 survivors picked up by Norwegian SS Berto). http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/249.html
8 AM, U-26 sinks British steamer Langleeford (6800 tons of wheat) 70 miles northwest of Fastnet, Ireland (4 lives lost). The Germans question the survivors, give them food & dressings and set them on course to Ireland. 30 survivors make landfall at Ross, Co. Clare. http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/250.html
5 PM, U-48 sinks British merchant SS Sultan Star (9000 tons of food) 200 miles west of Lands End (1 dead). Destroyers HMS Whitshed, Vesper and Acasta drop 22 depth charges but U-48 escapes undamaged. 72 survivors in lifeboats and picked up by HMS Whitshed and landed at Plymouth the next day. http://www.uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/252.html

Viipuri: enemy bombers damage the castle bridge and Viipuri Castle itself.
Photo: SA-KUVA
Russians lose 30,000-40,000 in Summa
February 14, 1940: First Birthday of battleship BISMARCK [launched 14 FEB 1939].
I bet we hear more from Bismarck when he hits the "terrible twos."
This is an astounding edition. I start reading these “newspapers” and can’t stop.
That’s a funny story on page 9 about the US major who bumped into a Finn lieutenant and apologized in Russian, whereupon the Finn punched him in the jaw.
Also, the page 6 story about “Soviet massing” is loaded with the kind of information today’s NY Times likes to publish about US tactical schemes and positions.
"Such conditions render likely the possibilities of a general European war and, in conjunction with Far Eastern conditions, they threaten a world conflagration."
Two new battleships costing $65,000,000 each, which will be launched in the Spring, although equal to craft of other nations, should not be duplicated because they soon may be obsolete.
My Dad served on the USS Leonard F. Mason, launched 1946. He was on the first crew (and therefore “owned a plank”). The destroyer ended up having a very proud history. Anyway, if you have about 3 minutes to kill, here’s a cool video (with cool music!) of the Mason in the Gulf of Tonkin, 1973.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9fwcnLmq8U
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