May 31 through June 3, 1942 |
| by David H. Lippman |
|
May 31st, 1942...USS Enterprise sits northeast of Midway with USS
Hornet, and tops off fuel from oilers Cimarron and Platte.
The New Zealand War Cabinet approves the establishment of the Women's Royal New Zealand Naval Service in April. 500 women subsequently enlist and serve as plotters, coders, cooks, drivers, telegraph operators and in a range of other duties. To keep the Allies on their toes, the Japanese launch 3 midget submarines from the I-22, I-24 and I-27 in a co-ordinated attack against Sydney, Australia. The target for this operation is the glorious cruiser USS Chicago. The midget submarine from I-24 fire their torpedoes at the parked cruiser, and the fish race under the ship, hitting far less glorious ferryboat Kuttabul, which is serving as a depot ship, killing 19 Australian and 2 British sailors. One submarine is sunk by harbor defenses, the other two-man crew commits Hara-kiri. All four bodies are cremated with full military honors and returned to Japan. The third mini-sub credited with the attack on 'Kuttabul' escapes and disappears, and is not found until 2007. Of the two torpedoes fired, one strikes the Kuttabul, the other runs aground.
Things start to go wrong for the Japanese at Midway. That
evening, two Kawanishi flying boats are scheduled to refuel from
submarines at French Frigate Shoals, and fly on to Pearl Harbor
for a final reconnaissance mission, but when I-168 pokes its
periscope up at French Frigate Shoals, it finds the US seaplane
tender USS Ballard standing there. The plan, "Operation K," is
scrubbed. The Japanese will not know if the American carriers are
still in Hawaii. U-boat warfare is also raging off the US Eastern seaboard, in its fifth month. The Germans note 111 ships sunk in May, for a year-to-date total of 377, more than 100 between New York and Miami. British civilian casualties for May: 399 killed, 425 wounded.
In Europe, news of the Cologne raid spreads almost as fast
as the flames in the battered city. Warsaw ghetto Jews hear of
the attack on BBC radio. Emanuel Ringblum writes "Cologne was an
advance payment on the vengeance that must and shall be taken on
Hitler's Germany for the millions of Jews they have killed. So
the Jewish population of tortured Europe considered Cologne its
personal act of vengeance. After the Cologne affair, I walked
around in a good mood, feeling that, even if I should perish at
their hands, my death is prepaid!" US West coast cities San Francisco, San Diego, Portland, and Seattle, issue gas masks and steel helmets to firemen, police, and auxiliary services. In North Africa, Gen. Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps attacks the British 150th Brigade. The outnumbered defenders give ground grudgingly...Lt. Farmiloe engages a German Mark IV tank in single combat with his 6 lb. gun at a range of only 400 yards until a German shell hits his gun, wounding the whole crew. But the brigade uses up its supplies quickly. By dusk, the brigade is holding on, but exhausted. A captured British officer asks Rommel for more water. "You are getting as much as we are, half a cup per day. But I agree that we cannot go on like this. If we don't get a convoy through tonight, I shall have to ask General Ritchie for terms. You can take a letter to him for me." At Bir Hacheim, a supply convoy arrives with congratulations for the French defenders. It takes out the 600 Indians from 3rd Motor Brigade, 170 Italian PoWs, and various wounded men. June 1st, 1942...Rear Adm. Raymond A. Spruance briefs Task Force 16 on the impending battle of Midway, putting his Sailors in the picture at last. "The successful conclusion of the operation now commencing will be of great value to our country." The RAF launches another 1,000-bomber raid on Essen, which does less damage than the attack on Cologne. Essen, the headquarters of the mighty Krupp empire. Essen is a hard target, being in a valley, often covered by fog and industrial smoke. Joining Bomber Command on this strike (as in the Cologne raid) is No. 75 Squadron from New Zealand. The Liberty Barricade, a clandestine publication of the Polish Socialist Party in Warsaw, publishes an extensive account of Nazi gassings. "Bloodcurdling news has reached us about the slaughter of Jews," it opens. Aboard the Nagumo task force, carrier pilots, instead of training or going over targets, listens to records and relaxes. Overconfidence is rampant.
The Germans open the day in North Africa by hurling Ju 87
Stuka dive bombers at the 150th Brigade, covering the sky with a
dense pall of smoke. British gunners man their 25-lbr. guns until
the last man is left...he fires each gun in turn until he is shot
down. 150th is out of everything but determination, and the
Germans overrun their posts. Brigadier Haydon orders his men to
destroy their 25-lbr. field artillery pieces. The last stand is
by B Company, 5th Green Howards, at 2 p.m. Rommel himself drives
to the scene to honor Haydon's gallantry, but finds the brigadier
lying dead among his men, killed by a shellburst. Rommel has
opened his supply route to his rear. 150th Brigade has held out for
three days. During that time, Ritchie had ample opportunities to
attack with his 8th Army, but has not. Gen. Auchinlek, in overall
command, prods Ritchie to attack, but Ritchie does not. Six months later, a British artillery officer passing the Cauldron sees the guns still in position and the bodies of their crews sprawled around them. At Bir Hacheim, the French advance with probes, their Marine-manned Bofors AA guns shooting down four Ju 87 Stukas. The US Supreme Court invalidates a 1935 Oklahoma law for the sterilization of criminals with three felony convictions on the grounds that it is discriminatory. The law excludes liquor violations, embezzlers, and political offenders. June 2nd, 1942...Amid cold and wet rain, with visibility down to 100 feet, USS Yorktown joins up with carriers Enterprise and Hornet off Midway. All the US has to throw at Japan are three carriers, seven heavy cruisers, one light cruiser, and 15 destroyers. The Japanese are moving in towards them behind weather fronts. A thousand Jews are deported from Vienna to Maly Trostenets concentration camp near Minsk, and shot.
The British finally attack the Cauldron and run into a ring
of German 88mm guns, all freshly resupplied. Rommel despatches
two motorized divisions, the German 90th Light and the Italian
Trieste, to take Bir Hacheim. The Germans open up a massive five-day artillery bombardment on besieged Sevastopol, with everything they can muster. Filipino President Manuel Quezon, racked by tuberculosis, addresses the US House of Representatives, and tells them that the Filipino people will fight alongside the Americans until the Axis is defeated. The same day, the Western Defense Command announces that Japanese-Americans and Japanese aliens will be removed from 60,000 square miles of California. That affects 10,000 people. June 3rd, 1942...USS Washington and all of Task Force 99 spend the day cleaning, burnishing, polish, and painting their ships, amid heavy rain. Teak decks are scrubbed, lifelines get a new coat of white paint, brightwork gets polished (even though they are polished every four hours anyway). "We really have been cleaning," writes SN Mel Beckstrand. "I have never in my life seen cleaning like this, even in the most scrupulous homes." William Joyce, better known to his listeners as Lord Haw- Haw, broadcasts from Berlin on the Cologne raid. "Mr. Churchill boasts of the attack on Cologne as an instalment of the hell that Germany is to receive. The German attitude is 'Give us more hell, as much as you can, and we shall repay the hell with interest." The Nazis round up 110 Jews in Warsaw, and shoot them, including two pregnant women. At 9 am, an American PBY Catalina, near the end of its patrol arc, spots 27 ships heading towards Midway. "Do you see what I see?" asks pilot Ens. Jack Reid. "You're damned right I do," answers co-pilot Howard Ady. "It must be the whole Jap Navy!" Actually, it isn't. It's the transport and seaplane force, escorted by destroyers and the light cruiser Jintsu. But the Americans react with vigor, hurling nine B-17 bombers at the force. They claim to sink "two battleships or heavy cruisers" and two transports. They in fact hit nothing. The Japanese ships plod on towards Midway.
At Bir Hacheim, the Germans move in 105 mm guns, superior to
the French 75s. Rommel sends in two captured British officers
with a surrender demand, reading "To the troops at Bir Hakim. Any
further resistance will only serve to shed more useless blood.
You will suffer the same fate as the two British brigades which
were exterminated at Got el Ualeb (the Cauldron) two days ago. We
shall cease fire when you raise the white flag and come towards
us without arms." Koenig does not reply, and tells his men "Our
task is to hold the ground, whatever the cost, until our victory
is complete. This order must be clearly conveyed to all ranks.
Good luck to you all." The House of Representatives unanimously sends to the Senate formal declarations of war on Bulgaria, Hungary, and Rumania, all Axis allies. The same day, the Office of Price Administration issues tougher gasoline rationing, to curb bootleggers. Six types of ration coupon books will be issued.
170 miles from Dutch Harbor in the Aleutians, the Japanese
carriers Ryujo and Junyo crack on 25 knots to break out of a
storm. On the flight decks, crews roll 1,000-lb. bombs into place
while pilots squeeze into their life jackets. In charge of
launching the strike is Lt. Cdr. Masatake Okumiya, the man who
sank the gunboat USS Panay in 1937. Weather delays launching
until 2:43 am, when the ships steam out of the fog. Okumiya
swings his green launching lamp in a wide semicircle, and Lt.
Masayaki Yamaguchi, the strike leader, rolls his Aichi "Val" dive
bomber down the deck, into the air, and banks into a spiral to
await the rest of his team, beneath 400-foot cloud cover. Operation Kottbus kicks off in the Soviet Union with more than 16,000 troops attacking the partisan redoubt called the "Republic of Palik" near Polotsk. |
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