Posted on 01/28/2012 5:38:27 AM PST by Homer_J_Simpson
Carroll V. Glines, The Doolittle Raid
http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1942/jan42/f28jan42.htm
Red Army on offensive in Ukraine
Wednesday, January 28, 1942 www.onwar.com
On the Eastern Front... Soviet forces make successful attacks in the Ukraine.
In the United States... The USAAF 8th Air Force is formed in Georgia.
In Brazil... Brazil breaks off diplomatic relations with the Axis powers.
In South Africa... Numerous bomb explosions disrupt electricity to the gold mines in the Rand.
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/andrew.etherington/month/thismonth/28.htm
January 28th, 1942
UNITED KINGDOM: Sloop HMS Wild Goose laid down. (Dave Shirlaw)
GERMANY: Rastenburg: Hitler decorates the Luftwaffe ace pilot Adolf Galland with the Diamonds to the Knight’s Cross. Göring is appalled that the jewels are paste.
U-489 laid down
U-91 commissioned. (Dave Shirlaw)
U.S.S.R.: Soviet Marshal Konstantin Timoshenko advances into the Ukraine. The Ukrainians are happy to see him, as the Germans have been practicing massacres. (Jack McKillop)
LIBYA: The Indian 4th Division is authorized to withdraw from Benghazi since armored elements of the 13 Corps, British Eighth Army, are too busily engaged to assist it. The Indian 7th Brigade, the last to withdraw, finds its line of retreat blocked but breaks out to the south and eventually makes its way back to Eighth Army. Rommel’s troops enter Benghazi as the British retreat; this is the fourth time the city has changed hands. (Jack McKillop)
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA: Pro-Axis extremists blow up five power stations in an attempt to sabotage supplies to the Rand gold mines.
PACIFIC OCEAN: The British carrier HMS INDOMITABLE delivers 48 Hurricane fighters, destined for Singapore to Java.
The aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CV-6) becomes the first heavy ship to refuel at sea by night, doing so in the central Pacific at 2000 hours local from the oiler USS Platte (AO-24), under blackout conditions. The successful evolution takes five hours. (Jack McKillop)
LOUISADE ARCHIPELAGO: The Japanese land on Rossel Island, the easternmost island of this archipelago. The island is located about 490 miles (789 kilometres) east-southeast of Port Moresby, New Guinea, and 420 miles (676 kilometres) west-southwest of Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, an ideal position to block shipping from either point. The Japanese immediately begin building an airfield. (Jack McKillop)
BURMA: Pilots of the 1st and 2d Fighter Squadrons, American Volunteer Group (AVG, aka, The Flying Tigers), shoot down six Nakajima Ki-27, Army Type 97 Fighters (later given the Allied Code Name Nate) over and near Mingaladon Airdrome, Rangoon, between 1150 and 1210 hours local. (Jack McKillop)
MALAYA: East Force continues their unopposed withdrawal toward Singapore Island. The Japanese reach Benut and continue southward behind the Indian 11th Division. A gap develops between the two brigades of the Indian 9th Division withdrawing along the railroad and the 22d Brigade becomes isolated from the main body. In Singapore, Lieutenant General Arthur Percival, General Officer Commanding Malaya Command, summons his commanders and finds he has no reserves and only one of the islands 15-inch (38,1 cm) guns points northward. (Jack McKillop)
Four USAAF Far East Air Force B-17 Flying Fortresses from Java stage through Palembang Airdrome on Sumatra and attack Kuala Lumpur. (Jack McKillop)
Only 21 of the 51 Hawker Hurricane fighters that arrived in Singapore on 13 January are still serviceable. (Jack McKillop)
NETHERLANDS EAST INDIES: USAAF Far East Air Force B-17 Flying Fortresses based at Singosari Airdrome, Java, attack Kendari Airdrome on Celebes Island. (Jack McKillop)
The RAAF begins evacuating the two flights of No. 13 Squadron, with its few remaining Lockheed Hudson bombers, from Laha Airdrome on Ambon Island. (Jack McKillop)
The Japanese submarine I-165 left Surabaya on 21 January 1943 headed for the Western Australian coastline. It arrived at a position about 7 kms off the small township of Port Gregory, 64 kms north of Geraldton, at around midnight (Tokyo time) on 28 January 1943.
Commander Tatenosuke Tosu fired about 10 shells from the 3.9 inch (100 mm) deck guns of I-165 towards Port Gregory. The purpose of the attack was apparently to draw the Allies’ attention away from the fierce battle at Guadalcanal some 3,250 kms away!! (Denis Peck)
COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES: In the II Corps area on Bataan, the 41st Infantry, Philippine Army (PA), completes its movement into the Sector C line, taking up positions between 31st and 51st Divisions, PA, elements. The Japanese renew their attack against the corps in the evening: some Japanese troops cross the Tiawir River in front of Sector D, where they are halted; others attempt to move forward in Sector C without success. From the west coast, in the I Corps area, the Japanese move eastward along the corps’ main line of resistance to the 1st Division, PA, sector, where defence preparations are not yet completed; during the night of the 28/29th, the Japanese breach the main line of resistance (MLR) there and pour southward through the gap. As the enemy force becomes divided in dense jungle, two pockets, called the Little Pocket and the Big Pocket, are formed, Little Pocket about 400 yards (366 meters) below the MLR and Big Pocket nearly a mile (1.6 kilometres) behind the MLR. In the South Sector, Scouts of 2d Battalion, 57th Infantry, Philippine Scouts (PS), attack Longoskawayan Point and advance two thirds of its length before artillery support is obstructed by Pucot Hill. The 3d Battalion of the 45th Infantry, PS, attacks the enemy beachhead at Quinauan Point, but jungle terrain and the enemy make progress slow and costly. At night the 3d Battalion is reinforced by Company B of the 57th Infantry, PS. In the Anyasan-Silaiim sector, the ground echelon of the USAAFs 17th Pursuit Squadron (Interceptor) and Philippine Constabulary elements push almost to the coast of Anyasan Bay, but the Constabulary troops, fearing a counterattack, withdraws in confusion after dark. (Jack McKillop)
AUSTRALIA: The USAAF activates the first U.S. air transport unit in Australia. None of its original complement of 14 officers and 19 enlisted men had been trained for transport operations; they just happened to be available. The aircraft assigned to the unit are two old Douglas B-18 Bolo bombers, one Douglas C-39 (Model DC-2-243) transport which had been flown down from the Philippines and five new Douglas C-53 (Model DC-3A-405) transports recently arrived from the U.S. None of these aircraft has a cargo door, i.e., one wide enough to load and unload cargo other than humans. (Jack McKillop)
The Australian Directorate of Air Transport is formed at Amberly Field, Brisbane, Queensland.
U.S.A.: The Air Corps Ferrying Command was ordered to arrange for ferrying 60 B-25s by an means to destinations specified by the Dutch Government. Consolidated Aircraft was contracted to fly 8 aircraft in February 1942; 16 in March; and from 15 to 32 per month until all 60 were delivered. The Dutch also contracted with the British Overseas Airways Corp (BOAC) to ferry 20 aircraft from West Palm Beach, Florida, to Australia via Africa. (Jack McKillop)
The Air Force Combat Command activates Headquarters 8th Air Force at Savannah AAB, Savannah, Georgia, under command of Brigadier General Asa N Duncan. The 8th is originally designated as the U.S. air element of Operation GYMNAST, the early plan for the Allied invasion of northwest Africa. (Jack McKillop)
BRAZIL: The Brazilian government breaks off relations with the Axis along with Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay.
The Third Conference of Foreign Ministers of the (21) American Republics at Rio de Janeiro is concluded. Despite the efforts of Argentina and Chile, Pan-American unity is preserved; within days, all Latin American nations that had not already done so (except Argentina and Chile) sever ties with Germany, Italy, and Japan. Today, Brazil and Paraguay break diplomatic relations with Germany, Italy and Japan. (Jack McKillop)
ATLANTIC: Sighted sub, sank same.” During an antisubmarine sweep astern of convoy HX 172, the crew of a PBO-1 Hudson of USN Patrol Squadron Eighty Two (VP-82) based at NAS Argentia, Newfoundland, attacks a surfaced submarine off Cape Race, Newfoundland. Although the pilot (Aviation Machinist’s Mate First Class Donald F. Mason) reports “sighted sub, sank same,” no U-boat is lost on this date. (Jack McKillop)
"The saga of the ship Struma demonstrates the desperate measures Jews took to flee Nazi persecution and reach Palestine.
Crammed with 769 Romanian Jews, the ill-equipped cattle boat left port in December 1941.
It barely reached its first destination of Istanbul, Turkey, where the British refused visas to Palestine and the Turks would not permit the passengers to disembark.
Desperate pleas proved fruitless, and the Turks at last towed the boat to open seas and ordered it to sail, even though it lacked both food and fuel.
"The final tragedy struck on February 24, 1942, when the boat was sunk by a torpedo, possibly fired mistakenly by a Russian submarine."
Looks like the Muslim infiltration of the UK is well underway by this point, as they convert a private residence into a ‘shrine’.
Re: Japanese submarine I-165 at Port Grtegory.What “fierce battle at Guadalcanal”?
Etherington got the years scrambled again. I guess I better alert him.
If Mr. E. follows the link I left him at his site and reviews today's thread I hope he doesn't take offense at this rather flippant comment in the previous reply. Considering the amount of information to be found at the homepage.ntlworld.com daily diary the number of slip ups is insignificant. There are just enough items out of place to keep us on our toes.
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