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This Day in WWII 31 October 1939 - 1944


Donster
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libmag.jpg

(The November 6, 1943 issue of Liberty shows two fun-loving U.S. Marines scaring the bejeesus out of a Japanese soldier with a jack-o-lantern on the end of an M-1 rifle.)

1939: Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov boasts: "One swift blow to Poland, first by the German Army and then by the Red Army, and nothing was left of this ugly offspring of the Versailles Treaty!". He also accuses the British of aggression.

dustyanderson1.jpg Dusty Anderson

1940: The Battle of Britain is now considered as over by the British Air Ministry.

1940: British civilian casualty figures announced for October: 6,334 killed and 8,695 seriously injured.

dustyandersonwitch.jpg Dusty Anderson

1940: British troops occupy Canea in Crete. Italians claim advance towards Salonika in Greece.

1940: RAF bomb Naples for the first time.

lillianwells.jpg Lillian Wells

1941: The US destroyer Reuben James escorting Convoy HX-156 is sunk by U-552 (Kapitänleutnant Erich Topp) with the loss of 100 of her crew. The destroyer is the first US naval casualty in the hitherto undeclared war between Germany and the United States that existed after President Roosevelt authorised the use of American naval vessels to escort Lend-Lease convoys bound for Britain.

1941: British air raid casualties in October remain low at 262 killed. RAF raid occupied Europe on all but six days with Hamburg and Cologne bombed three times. Dover the only serious British casualty.

veronicalakewitch.jpg Veronica Lake

1941: The RAF's Mediterranean raids continue, with Benghazi being bombed 14 times and Tripoli 10 times.

1943: The U.S. Fifth Army resumes its offensive to the North of the Volturno.

1944: The British reach the river Mass, south of Rotterdam and establish a bridgehead. The Canadians reach Walcheren.

gracebradley.jpg Grace Bradley

1944: 25 Mosquitoes make a highly successful low-level attack on the Gestapo HQ in Aarhus, Denmark, killing 200 Gestapo officials and destroying all records on the Dutch resistance movement.

1944: On the orders of Prime Minister Churchill, British troops occupy Saloniki in Greece to assist the new government in its efforts to prevent a take-over by Communist insurgents in the wake of the recent withdrawal of German troops from Greece.

witchbath.jpg Unknown Witch Bath

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