World War 2 TalkCalendarContact Us

Go Back   World War 2 Talk > Anniversaries > All Anniversaries

All Anniversaries All anniversaries relating to WW2


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 18-02-2008, 10:00 AM   #1091 (permalink)
Bodston
Very Senior Member
 
Bodston's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: just around the corner
Posts: 1,446
Bodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the rough
From 'Tank War' by Janusz Piekalkiewicz

Wednesday 18 February 1942
Quote:
Fighting in Burma
Rangoon; The British Reuters News Agency reported:
Since early this morning, powerful Japanese forces have been attacking Allied positions along the Bilin River (Burma).
__________________
My mother told me, I never should, play with the gypsies in the wood.
Bodston is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-2008, 10:02 AM   #1092 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
February 18, 1943
Nazis arrest White Rose resistance leaders

Hans Scholl and his sister Sophie, the leaders of the German youth group Weisse Rose (White Rose), are arrested by the Gestapo for opposing the Nazi regime.
The White Rose was composed of university (mostly medical) students who spoke out against Adolf Hitler and his regime. The founder, Hans Scholl, was a former member of Hitler Youth who grew disenchanted with Nazi ideology once its real aims became evident. As a student at the University of Munich in 1940-41, he met two Roman Catholic men of letters who redirected his life. Turning from medicine to religion, philosophy, and the arts, Scholl gathered around him like-minded friends who also despised the Nazis, and the White Rose was born.
During the summer of 1942, Scholl and a friend composed four leaflets, which exposed and denounced Nazi and SS atrocities, including the extermination of Jews and Polish nobility, and called for resistance to the regime. The literature was peppered with quotations from great writers and thinkers, from Aristotle to Goethe, and called for the rebirth of the German university. It was aimed at an educated elite within Germany.
The risks involved in such an enterprise were enormous. The lives of average civilians were monitored for any deviation from absolute loyalty to the state. Even a casual remark critical of Hitler or the Nazis could result in arrest by the Gestapo, the regime's secret police. Yet the students of the White Rose (the origin of the group's name is uncertain; possibly, it came from the picture of the flower on their leaflets) risked all, motivated purely by idealism, the highest moral and ethical principles, and sympathy for their Jewish neighbors and friends. (Despite the risks, Hans' sister, Sophie, a biology student at her brother's university, begged to participate in the activities of the White Rose when she discovered her brother's covert operation.)
On February 18, 1943, Hans and Sophie left a suitcase filled with copies of yet another leaflet in the main university building. The leaflet stated, in part: "The day of reckoning has come, the reckoning of our German youth with the most abominable tyranny our people has ever endured. In the name of the entire German people we demand of Adolf Hitler's state the return of personal freedom, the most precious treasure of the Germans which he cunningly has cheated us out of." The pair were spotted by a janitor and reported to the Gestapo and arrested. Turned over to Hitler's "People's Court," basically a kangaroo court for dispatching dissidents quickly, the Scholls, along with another White Rose member who was caught, were sentenced to death. They were beheaded--a punishment reserved for "political traitors"--on February 23, but not before Hans Scholl proclaimed "Long live freedom!"
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-2008, 10:08 AM   #1093 (permalink)
Bodston
Very Senior Member
 
Bodston's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: just around the corner
Posts: 1,446
Bodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the rough
From 'Tank War' by Janusz Piekalkiewicz

Friday 18 February 1944
Quote:
Fighting Continues at Cherkassy
Berlin; The German News Bureau reported:
Attention still focusses mainly on the fighting between Cherkassy and Zhashkov (Ukraine) on the southern flank of the Eastern Front, where German forces destroyed 9 Soviet armoured and assault guns and knocked another 17 tanks out of action in tough defensive fighting. Despite the incredible difficulties of the terrain which make every movement a strain, German armoured forces continued their attacks on the Soviet units amassed here, which greatly outnumbered them, and have taken more territory from them.
__________________
My mother told me, I never should, play with the gypsies in the wood.
Bodston is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-2008, 10:13 AM   #1094 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
HMS DARING (February 18, 1940)
British destroyer of 1,375 tons, launched in April, 1932 and torpedoed and sunk by two torpedoes from the U-boat U-23 (Kptlt. Otto Kretschmer-Knights Cross) while escorting convoy HN-12 from Norway to Britain. She sank about 30 nautical miles east of Duncansby Head in the northern tip of Scotland. Commander S. A. Cooper went down with the ship as did eight other officers and 148 ratings. One officer and four ratings, the only survivors, were picked up from the sea by rescue ships. The U-23 was scuttled on September 10, 1944, off the coast of Turkey.
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-2008, 10:26 AM   #1095 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
USS TRUXTUN & USS POLLUX (February 18, 1942)
Two American destroyers blown on to the rocks at Chambers Cove, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland, during a vicious snow blizzard. The ships were en route to the US Naval Base at Argentia, Newfoundland, when the blizzard struck. In poor visibility and raging seas, the USS Truxtun headed straight for the rocks at the base of a 200-foot high cliff and broke in two.
About two miles away the USS Pollux became stranded on the beach at Lawn Point. A group of sailors from the Truxtun managed to get ashore and alerted the Iron Spring Mine, a miners camp nearby. The miners hurried to the rescue of the two ships and within hours, 168 survivors were pulled from the boiling seas. From the Truxtun, only three officers and 43 ratings survived. Next day a total of 204 bodies were washed up on the shore.
In June, 1954, the US Government built a hospital on the Burin Peninsula as a memorial to the 204 sailors who died on that fateful night.
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-2008, 12:19 PM   #1096 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
HMS PENELOPE (February 18, 1944)

British cruiser (Captain George D. Belben) launched in 1935 and sunk by a torpedo from the German submarine U-410 (Oberleutnant Horst-Arno Fenski). The Penelopewas returning from the Anzio beach-head to Naples when she went down at 0718 hrs taking the lives of 417 members of her wartime complement of 623. The U-410 was later destroyed on March 11, 1944, during a US bombing raid on the Vichy Naval Base at Toulon.

The British cruiser HMS Penelope
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-2008, 02:44 PM   #1097 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
I.J.N. OITE (February 18, 1944)
On the eve of the American carrier-borne air strike on the Japanese naval base at Truk Lagoon, the Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Oite (1,270 tons) sailed for Japan escorting the light cruiser Agano. Both ships were due for a refit. When about 200 miles from the island, the Agano was torpedoed and had to be abandoned by her crew. The 523 crewmembers were taken on board the Oite which was ordered to proceed back to Truk. The air attack against ships anchored in the Lagoon was by now taking place (Code-named Operation Hailstorm). As the Oite approached the entrance to the Lagoon she came under heavy attack by Avenger torpedo carrying planes from the carrier USS Yorktown. With her back broken, and within minutes, the Oite plunged 240ft. to the bottom. Almost all the 523 rescued crew of the Agano perished together with the Oite's own complement of 150 officers and ratings.
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 19-02-2008, 10:22 AM   #1098 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
February 19, 1945
Marines invade Iwo Jima

On this day, Operation Detachment, the U.S. Marines' invasion of Iwo Jima, is launched. Iwo Jima was a barren Pacific island guarded by Japanese artillery, but to American military minds, it was prime real estate on which to build airfields to launch bombing raids against Japan, only 660 miles away.
The Americans began applying pressure to the Japanese defense of the island in February 1944, when B-24 and B-25 bombers raided the island for 74 days. It was the longest pre-invasion bombardment of the war, necessary because of the extent to which the Japanese--21,000 strong--fortified the island, above and below ground, including a network of caves. Underwater demolition teams ("frogmen") were dispatched by the Americans just before the actual invasion. When the Japanese fired on the frogmen, they gave away many of their "secret" gun positions.
The amphibious landings of Marines began the morning of February 19 as the secretary of the navy, James Forrestal, accompanied by journalists, surveyed the scene from a command ship offshore. As the Marines made their way onto the island, seven Japanese battalions opened fire on them. By evening, more than 550 Marines were dead and more than 1,800 were wounded. The capture of Mount Suribachi, the highest point of the island and bastion of the Japanese defense, took four more days and many more casualties. When the American flag was finally raised on Iwo Jima, the memorable image was captured in a famous photograph that later won the Pulitzer Prize.
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 19-02-2008, 12:21 PM   #1099 (permalink)
Peter Clare
Legendary Member
 
Peter Clare's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Neverland
Posts: 5,671
Peter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nicePeter Clare is just really nice
USS PEARY DD-226 (February 19, 1942)
Old four stack destroyer of 1,190 tons commissioned on October 20, 1920. On the 10th of December, 1941, The Peary lost eight of her crew during an air attack on the Cavite Navy Yard in the Philippines where she was moored. In February, 1942, she was sunk during the fifty minute surprise Japanese air attack on Darwin Harbour. This was the first time enemy bombs had fallen on Australian soil.
Four American pilots at a nearby RAAF airfield struggled to get their fighters into the air but were shot down during their attempt to gain altitude. The destroyer Peary, in harbour replenishing her fuel tanks, and now attempting to free her moorings, fought an uneven battle. One bomb hit the forward ammunition magazines, another caught her in the stern. With her guns blazing, she slowly sank stern first at about 1:00pm, taking with her over half her complement of 143 men. Altogether, 80 crewmen died on the gallant Peary and 13 were wounded. One of the Peary's 4-inch guns was salvaged and now forms part of the Peary Memorial in Bicentennial Park in Darwin. A bronze plaque bears the names of all those who died.
__________________
On weald of Kent I watched once more
Again I heard that grumbling roar
Of fighter planes; yet none were near
And all around the sky was clear
Borne on the wind a whisper came
'Though men grow old, they stay the same'
And then I knew, unseen to eye
The ageless Few were sweeping by
Peter Clare is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 19-02-2008, 05:49 PM   #1100 (permalink)
Bodston
Very Senior Member
 
Bodston's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: just around the corner
Posts: 1,446
Bodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the roughBodston is a jewel in the rough
From 'Tank War' by Janusz Piekalkiewicz

Friday 19 February 1943
Quote:
Beromünster Radio (Switzerland)
Day after day the Russian High Command has been issuing special victory communiqués marking the stages of the Soviet advance. . . At the same time, Berlin reported the evacuation of Rostov and Voroshilov by German troops. . . The recapture of Rostov means that the entire stretch of the rail line connecting Moscow with the Caucasus is now once again in Russian hands, as are the oil pipelines leading from the Caucuses oilfields to the mouth of the Don.
__________________
My mother told me, I never should, play with the gypsies in the wood.
Bodston is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Boer War Stuff dbf Prewar 29 21-07-2008 11:20 AM
THE WAFFEN-SS: Divisional Service History, Brigade/Battalion Unit List + Unit Notes. Christos Axis Units 74 30-05-2008 11:42 PM
The NIH in Italy - Part One- At War Wise1 North Irish Horse 0 22-07-2006 01:15 AM
List Of D-Day Related Titles salientpoints Books, Movies, TV 2 14-04-2004 02:56 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:44 PM.
vBSkinworks


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0