| |

|
Histories for 86th Blackhawk Division Association, Inc |

|

|

|
Lesser Known Facts WWII
Lesser Known Facts of WWII
http://members.iinet.net.au/~gduncan/facts.html.
TO all those who took part in World War11
PAGE ONE OF TWO PAGES
We all hear about the major battles and campaigns carried out by the
British, Germans and the Americans during World War 11. Historians and
authors have argued about their authenticity for years. Most of this
material has been done over and over again, but what about those small
instances of the war that have never been publicized. There were men and
women involved here that were just as important as those that took part in
the big campaigns. Here are some of those lesser known facts that you may
be unfamiliar with but are seldom mentioned in history books.
1939-1941
DID YOU KNOW THAT....?
THE FIRST SHOT OF WWII was fired from the German battleship 'Schleswig
Holstein' which was on an official visit to Poland and berthed in Danzig
harbour. At 4.30 am on September 1, 1939, the ship moved slowly down the
Port Canal and took up position opposite the WESTERPLATTE (area containing
Polish troop barracks and workshops) and at 4.47 am, the order to 'Fire'
was given.
World War II had begun. Seven days later the Westerplatte Garrison
surrendered.
THE INCIDENT which triggered the Second World War was the simulated attack
by the Germans on their own radio station near Gleiwitz on the Polish
border. To make it appear that the attacking force consisted of Poles,
prisoners from a nearby concentration camp were dressed in Polish uniforms
then shot and their bodies placed in strategic positions around the radio
station. A Polish speaking German then did a broadcast from the station to
make it appear that Poland had attacked first.
This was the excuse Hitler needed to invade Poland on September 1st. 1939.
The first Allied shot of the war was fired over the bows of the Australian
coaster 'Woniora' from a 6-inch gun emplacement guarding the entrance to
Melbourne's Port Phillip Bay. The 823 ton coaster had entered the bay at
9.15 p.m. on September 3, 1939 after a trip from Tasmania. Ordered to
heave to for inspection the coaster gave her identity but continued on
without stopping. A 100 pound shell, fired across her bow, soon changed
her captains mind. By a remarkable coincidence this was the same gun that
had fired the first shot of World War 1 when, hours after war was
declared, it fired on the German steamer Pfalz while it attempted to leave
Australian waters on August 5, 1914. The Platz was captured and served out
the rest of World War 1 as the Australian troopship 'Boorara '.
GERMAN WORKERS PARTY. In 1919, over forty different political parties
existed in and around Munich. The German workers Party was founded by 35
year old railway locksmith, Anton Drexler. In all, its membership was
around fifty. To give the impression that the number was higher,
membership cards started at number 500. When Hitler joined the party he
was given number 555. This was on September 12, 1919, when he attended a
meeting in the Sterneckerbrau Tavern in Munich. In February, 1920, the
party expanded its name to the Nationalist Socialist German Workers Party
or N.S.D.A.P. (Popular name at the time was Nazi Party) On September 15,
1935, the Swastika was officially incorporated into the German national
flag.
WHY THE THIRD REICH? This was the official name for the Nazi period of
government from January,1933, to May, 1945. The First Reich was the Holy
Roman Empire period of the German Nation begun in A.D. 962 when Otto the
Great was crowned in Rome. The Second Reich (or Empire) was founded by
Otto von Bismarck in 1871. When the Hohenzollern dynasty collapsed in 1918
with the abdication of Emperor William 11, the Second Reich came to an
end. This was followed by the Weimar Republic which lasted from 1918 to
1933. In turn it was followed by Hitler's Third Reich which he regarded as
an empire that would last a thousand years. Hitler adopted the term 'Third
Reich' in the early 1920s after the German writer Arthur Moeller von der
Bruck used it as a title for one of his books.
BIG BROTHER? Early in Hitler's career, Germany was divided into 42
districts called Gaue. Each Gau was supervised by a District Leader
(Gauleiter) ie, the Gauleiter for Berlin was Dr Joeseph Geobbels. Each Gau
was divided into circuits (Kreise) led by a Kreisleiter (Circuit Leader)
Berlin had 10 Kreise and each Kreise was then divided into Local Groups
(Ortsgruppe) headed by an Ortsgruppenleiter of which Berlin had 269. This
was further subdivided into Street Cells (Zellen) supervised by the
Zellenleiter, whose duty was to report on all anti-government activities
within the families living in that street. German civilians living abroad
were regarded as the 43rd Gau. All Leaders were required to swear
unconditional allegiance to their F?hrer.
HORST WESSEL An early convert to the Nazi party was 19 year old Bielefeld
born Horst Wessel who gave up his law studies to join the SA (Storm
Troopers). Working as a taxi driver and builders labourer he soon became a
leading orator at SA rallies. In 1929, he married Erna Jaenicke, an 18
year old prostitute. On the evening of January 14, 1930, a group of thugs,
led by Jaenicke's former boyfriend and pimp, Albrecht H?hler, called at
their lodgings at 62 Grosse Frankfurter Strasse, Berlin and in a fit of
jealous anger H?hler drew a pistol from his pocket and shot Wessel in the
mouth. He died five weeks later on February 23. Before his murder he had
composed a poem 'Die Fahne Hoch' (Fly the Flag High) which later was
changed to 'The Horst Wessel Song' and introduced into Nazi Party ritual.
It soon became Nazi Germany's second anthem and played after 'Deutschland
Uber Alles' (Germany Before All). Horst Wessel was buried in the
Nikolaifriedhof cemetery but after the war, in common with all other Nazi
graves, the headstone was removed.
MEMBERSHIP. In 1930 there were 129,583 members of the Nazi Party.
(NAtional SoZIaist) By 1933 membership had jumped to 849,009 and in the
early war years this had reached to more than five million.
SUPPORT. Before Hitler was appointed to lead the nation, massive
unemployment fueled the need for social change. Over seven million were
without jobs and support for the Communist Party continued to grow. The
introduction of conscription in 1935 reduced the labour market
considerably and by the end of 1936 there were reports of labour
shortages. Marriage loans were introduced to encourage young couples to
marry and have children, the repayments were reduced by one quarter on the
birth of every child. When Hitler withdrew Germany from the United Nations
in 1933, he had the support of over 90% of the population. With the return
to full employment, and with drunks, beggars, vagrants and prostitutes
cleared off the streets, vast work programs were introduced such as the
building of super highways (Autobahns). Even the opponents of the Nazi
Party were impressed with the accomplishments of the regime. The widely
published news of arrests and protective custody camps did little to
dampen the enthusiasm of the populace for the Hitler movement who in 1933
cast 40 million votes for the party. They could hardly do anything else as
all other parties were outlawed. Nevertheless, around three and a half
million voters cast an invalid vote, presumably to show their opposition.
SWASTIKA TREES. In 1937, a local businessman, an ardent follower of Adolf
Hitler, planted a 60 by 60 metre area of Larch trees in a forest near the
town of Zernikow, about 110 kms north of Berlin. The trees were planted
in the shape and format of a Swastika and could only be seen from the air.
During Autumn, when the Larch trees changed their colour to orange and
yellow they stood out strikingly against a green forest of surrounding
pine trees. Discovered many years after the war, this long forgotten
symbol of the Nazi era was finally removed by cutting down 27 of the 57
trees that made up the Swastika design. This was done in 2001 by the
Brandenburg State Forest authorities. Local farmer, Joachim Schultz
remarked " It was quite embarrassing. We were afraid that it could become
a pilgrimage site". Displaying the Swastika symbol is forbidden in Germany
today.
ESCAPE. On the 17th September, 1939, the Soviet Union invaded the eastern
part of Poland while Polish forces were fully engaged against the German
onslaught in the West. After the fall of Poland, remnants of the Polish
Army (over 70,000 men) those not taken prisoner by the Soviets, made their
way through Romania and Hungary to France where they regrouped. When
Germany invaded that country, around 24,000 Polish soldiers escaped to
Britain and reformed in Scotland as the 1st. Polish Army Corps. It was
while in Scotland, in 1941, that Polish signals officer, Lt. Jozef
Kozacki, designed the first practical electronic mine-detector called the
Mine Detector Polish Mark 1. It was soon mass produced and 500 were issued
to the British Army in time for use prior to the Battle of El Alamein.
GUESTS. At the outbreak of war, around 70,000 Germans and Austrians were
living in Britain. Most were refugees from the Nazis and considered
'safe'. Others, about 11,000, were restricted in their movements around
the country and ordered to report to their local police daily and to obey
an 8pm to 8am curfew. Some 230 from the eastern counties of England and
Scotland were interned in special camps set up throughout the country.
NON BRITISH. A total of 52,000 non-British persons were registered in
Australia during the war, 22,000 of them regarded as 'Enemies of the
State' ie. Germans and Italians, many of whom were interned for the
duration. After Pearl Harbor, Japanese residents were interned solely on
the basis of their nationality and many were deported back to Japan at
war's end. When Italy capitulated in 1943, most Italians were released
including the 17,000 prisoners of war captured in North Africa and shipped
to camps in Australia.
AUSTRIAN JEWS. Before the war there were around 206,000 Jews living in
Austria. Only 5,500 survived the Nazi occupation. Many who had converted
to Judaism through marriage were forced by the Nazis to renounce their
faith and be reclassified as non-Jews. Over 24,000, who had renounced
Judaism but had Jewish ancestry, were again classified as Jews.
TRAGEDY. On August 14, 1937, during the Japanese invasion of China, the
Japanese battleship Isuma (10,000 tons) was tied up at the dock in
Shanghai off what was called the Shanghai Bund. In an attempt to sink the
Isuma, Chinese planes bombed the harbour but mistakenly the bombs hit
crowded city streets, a department store and other adjacent buildings
along the Bund killing over 1,900 people.
THE FIRST RAF RAID OF THE WAR ended in near disaster. The day after war
was declared, RAF Wellington and Blenheim bombers attacked the German
naval ports of Wilhelmshaven and Brunsbuttel. Ten bombers returned to base
after failing to find the target. Seven were shot down by German
anti-aircraft batteries. Three planes prepared to attack British warships
in the North Sea until they discovered their mistake then went home. Eight
bombers found the target and attacked the battleships 'Scheer' and Hipper,
and the cruiser 'Emden', one of the Blenheim bombers crashing on the
ships' deck. In this raid occurred the first British casualties of the
war. Seventeen Royal Air Force men were killed. (The Emden was the only
Axis ship to attack the continent of India. It reached the shores of
Madras on the Bay of Bengal and fired its guns at Fort St. George)
FIRST PLANE SHOT DOWN IN BRITAIN. The first plane shot down over the
British Isles was a Heinkel 111, it was downed near Dalkeith in south
eastern Scotland on October 28, 1939. Two of the crew survived while two
others were killed during the attack, which is credited to Spitfires of
602 and 603 Squadrons.
AIR STRIKE The first air strike of the war from carrier borne aircraft was
from the British carrier HMS Furious. On April 11, 1940, 18 Swordfish from
816 and 818 Squadrons took off from the deck of the carrier to bomb enemy
ships in Trondheimsfjord, Norway. All returned safely.
THE "V" FOR VICTORY SIGN was the idea of a Belgian refugee in London,
Victor De Laveleye. In a short-wave broadcast from London, he urged his
countrymen to chalk the letter "V" on all public places as a sign of
confidence in ultimate victory. This was plugged in all BBC foreign
language programs and later supported by the two finger "V" sign of the
British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill.
RAF BLUNDER. Due to the fact that British fighter planes were not fitted
with IFF equipment (Identification Friend or Foe) at this time of the war
and the ground radar operator believing he was coordinating an attack on
enemy machines, RAF Spitfires from No.74 Squadron shot down two Hurricanes
of No. 56 Squadron by mistake on September 6, 1939. At about the same
time, ground anti-aircraft fire brought down a Blenheim of No. 64
Squadron. One pilot was killed. There were no German aircraft in the area
at the time. This was the first time that Spitfires had fired their guns
in anger. The Spitfire pilots were subsequently exonerated from any blame
at a court martial and from then on the highest priority was given to the
production of Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) equipment.
THAT WAS NOT THE ENEMY! During the period 1939 to 1942, twenty Blenheim
fighter-bombers were shot down through mis-identification by RAF pilots
and anti-aircraft fire (Seven were shot down by Hurricanes). This resulted
in the deaths of thirty two aircrew with seven others injured. Nineteen
other aircraft were damaged by being fired upon by mistake.
THE RAFs FIRST KILL. On October 16, 1939, German JU 88s from the island
of Sylt, attacked naval ships in the harbour at Rosyth, Scotland. About to
enter dry dock for repairs was the battlecruiser HMS Hood, but the pilots
had strict orders not to attack. A personal order from Hitler stated
'Should the Hood already be in dock, no attack is to be made, I won't have
a single civilian killed'. After the raid, in which the 9,100 ton cruiser
HMS Southampton was damaged, Spitfires from RAF Turnhouse near Edinburgh,
attacked the departing JUs and one was shot down, hitting the sea off Port
Seton. This was the first enemy plane to be brought down by RAF Fighter
Command.
ON NOVEMBER 5, 1939, Colonel Hans Oster, Chief of Staff in the Abwehr
(German Military Intelligence) under Admiral Canaris, warns Colonel
Jacobus Sas, the Dutch military attach?n Berlin, that Hitler plans to
invade Holland and Belgium within the next few days. In fact the attack
did not take place until the 10th of May, 1940. Both Oster and Canaris
were arrested after the July Plot and hanged on April 9, 1945 at the
Flossenb?rg concentration camp.
ON DECEMBER 27, 1939, two German Army officers were killed by Poles during
a scuffle in a Warsaw bar. The bar owner was immediately hanged and 120
Polish men and boys were selected at random and shot.
FROM 1933 ONWARDS. The music of German Jewish composer, Mendelssohn, was
banned in Germany. Soon after, all Jews were dismissed from symphony
orchestras and from the Opera. Books published by Jewish authors were
burned in April, 1934, and one of the leading newspapers, the 'Vossische
Zeitung' was forced out of business because it was owned by the 'House of
Ullstein' a Jewish firm. The same thing happened to the German Jewish
newspaper, the 'Judische Rundschau'.
YOUTH ALIYAH. In 1936, the 'Youth Aliyah' (Movement of Children)
organization concerned itself with the emigration of Jewish children from
Germany and Austria, to stay with British families who had agreed to care
for them. The British Home Office had given permission for them to come to
Britain, and many of them lived with families in Kent and in Scotland.
They attended the special Youth Aliyah schools where they learned about
their future lives in Palestine.
LEBENSBORN SOCIETY was one of the most bizarre experiments of the SS.
Sponsored by the head of the SS, Heinrich Himmler, his idea was to breed a
race of super pure blooded Nordics. Tall, fair haired and blue eyed men
and women, who were near perfect physical specimens, were chosen. Nursing
homes were set up (mostly properties confiscated from Jews and maintained
with the money from their bank accounts) to accommodate the mothers until
their babies were born. They could then keep their SS babies or put the
child up for adoption in a one hundred per cent Nazi non-Catholic family.
The first home opened was at STEINHORING near Munich, on December 12,
1935. Later, others were established at WERNIGERODE, at ACHERN (Baden) at
KLOSTERHEIDE (Berlin) at BAD POLZIN (Pomerania) at WEINERWALD (Vienna) at
VEGIMONT (Belgium) and in February, 1944, the home at LAMORLAYE, near
Paris, was opened and reserved for the children of German officers and
French mothers. The number of children born in these homes is not known,
as records were destroyed at the end of the war. However, one set of
registers was found intact and showed that more than 2,000 births were
registered at STEINHORING.
THE KIDNAPPINGS. Initiated as early as 1940, a number of Nazi agencies
became responsible for the selection of children in occupied countries
whom they thought could be 'Germanized' by placing them in German homes.
In Poland ,these children were simply kidnapped from their homes or torn
from the arms of their mothers on the street, their only crime being that
they had fair hair, blue eyes, or they just 'looked Aryan'. The main
reception centres for selection and racial testing of these children were
set up at POZNAN, PUSHKAU, BROCKAU, POTULICE and the special home in the
monastery at KALISZ in Poland, and in the Lebensborn home at BAD POLZIN.
Once in these homes the children were forbidden to speak Polish. In
Poland, over 200,000 children were kidnapped by the SS and the NSV (the
female counterpart of the SA, known as the Brown Sisters). Between 40 and
50 thousand children were kidnapped in Russia, and in the Hungarian
Ukraine, another 50,000 were kidnapped. Children under six years of age
were adopted out to German families who were told that their parents were
killed in air raids. Children from seven to twelve were placed in special
institutions such as State Boarding Schools, Reich Schools, in Napolas
Schools (Nazi Political Training Schools) or put in the B.D.M. (League of
German Girls). Children who failed to pass the selection tests were simply
put on trains leaving for Kalisz or Auschwitz, to disappear without trace.
After the war, the International Refugee Organization, searched for these
children who were put up for adoption.
Only between 15 and 20 per cent (about 25,000) were traced and returned to
their original families.
OSTRACIZED. In Norway there were around 10,000 children born of parents
who were members of Vidkum Quisling's pro-Nazi party, and of love affairs
between Norwegian girls and German soldiers. After the war, these children
were rejected as so-called 'German kids', maltreated and despised, treated
with contempt, in fact refugees in their own country. Considered social
misfits, few have received a proper education. To relieve Norway of this
embarrassing problem Sweden adopted a few hundred of these children and
around 250 were sent to homes in Germany. Since the war, many have tried
to get their Norwegian citizenship back but in each case their application
has been refused. Up until 1963, any German male who wanted to visit
Norway had first to prove that he had not been in the country between 1940
and 1945. In 1986, The League of Norwegian War Children Lebensborn was
established. Through its efforts, many of these children have found their
unknown fathers. Now, 50 years later, these war children only wish
'integration and acceptance with following freedom from anguish'. Today,
the League maintains contact with around two hundred former NS children.
About ten Lebensborn homes were in use in Norway and today these former
homes are among the best tourist hotels.
In 1940, work began in Britain on biological weapons. One idea put forward
was for cattle-cake to be impregnated with Anthrax and dropped by RAF
planes to infect Germany's livestock. This idea was adopted and about five
million such cakes were made but were never used operationally.
CAUGHT! During a routine inspection of the Japanese merchant vessel
Asama Maru on January 21, 1940, in the Indian Ocean, officers of the
British cruiser HMS Gloucester discovered twenty-one German civilians on
board. All were highly qualified technicians being sent to Japan to
service German surface raiders and U-boats soon to be operating in the
Pacific area. The technicians were removed and interned as
prisoners-of-war but as Britain was not at war with Japan at this time the
Asama Maru was allowed to proceed to her destination.
PROPOSAL. In a last desperate attempt to save France from capitulating and
to keep her army fighting, Churchill and General De Gaule proposed that
Britain and France become one united nation. In a telephone call from
London on June 16, 1940, to the French Premier, Paul Reynaud, the message
stated: ?The two Governments of the United Kingdom and the French Republic
make the declaration of indissoluble union and unyielding resolution in
their common defense of justice and freedom against subjection to a system
which reduces mankind to a life of robots and slaves. The two Governments
declare that France and Great Britain shall no longer be two nations but
one Franco-British Union. Every citizen of France will enjoy immediately
citizenship of Great Britain; every British subject will become a citizen
of France. All the armed forces of Great Britain and France will be placed
under the direction of a single War Cabinet?. The proposal caused an
uproar in the French Cabinet of which Churchill wrote ?Rarely has so
generous a proposal encountered such a hostile reception?. Without Cabinet
support, Reynaud resigned and a new government was formed under Marshal
P?in who immediately negotiated an armistice with Germany. (P?in,
World War 1 hero of Verdun, was later tried and sentenced to death, later
commuted to life imprisonment. He died in 1951)
HOME TO THE REICH. This was the motto on the party badge of the
Luxembourg VDB party formed in July, 1940, after the German occupation.
The VDB (Volksdeutsche Bewegung) was a movement whose avowed aim was to
bring Luxembourg into partnership with Hitler's Third Reich. Founded by 62
year old Professor Damian Kratzenberg, son of a German father and
Luxembourg mother, its membership grew to around 69,000 by the end of
1942. Most members were blackmailed into joining with the threat of losing
their jobs if they refused. After the war, hundreds of Luxembourgers were
brought before the courts on charges of collaboration with the enemy.
Eight death sentences were actually carried out, among them Professor
Kratzenberg.
THE FIRST BOMBING RAID ON BERLIN was on August 25/26, 1940, just two days
after the German Luftwaffe had mistakenly bombed London. Of the 81 RAF
bombers taking part, 27 failed to locate the target and five were shot
down. A year later, on August 8, 1941, the Russians bombed the city for
the first time. In all, Berlin suffered 363 air raids during the war.
AIR RAID CASUALTIES. In the six months from May to November, 1940, the RAF
had killed 975 German civilians in air raids over Germany. At the same
time, road accidents in Germany had killed 1,845 persons. German air raids
on Britain for the same period killed around 15,000 people.
CZECH BRIBERY. At the time of the Munich crises, Czechoslovakia was paying
senior British politicians and journalists, the sum of 2,000 Pounds
Sterling per year in return for a promise to topple Neville Chamberlain
and his Government.
GERMAN IMPORTS? Up till 1933, the German S,A. (Brownshirts) were equipped
with revolvers and machine guns 'Made in USA'.
BRITAIN'S FIRST CIVILIAN CASUALTIES REMEMBERED. On April 30, 1940,
anti-aircraft fire shot down a German Heinkel 111 bomber while on a mine
laying sortie off the east coast of England. The bomber crashed on to a
house in Upper Victoria Road in Clacton-on-Sea in Essex killing the
occupants, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Gill. They became the first civilians,
of more than 60,000 killed in England during the war. Frederick and
Dorothy Gill were buried in an unmarked grave in the Burrs Road Cemetery.
In 1994, the grave site was discovered and a proper Commonwealth War
Graves Commission headstone was erected and dedicated on the 59th
anniversary of their deaths. The German aircraft was actually on a mine
laying operation over the North Sea, but the crew became disorientated due
to heavy fog. Flying blindly until just before midnight the Heinkel
crossed the coast near the radar station at Bawdsey in Suffolk.
Anti-aircraft batteries along the coast at Bawdsey, Felixstowe and Harwich
opened fire on the bomber. Ironically the Heinkel did not receive a direct
hit, but it is thought that exploding shells underneath the aircraft
caused considerable damage to the aircraft controls. Eyewitnesses have
said that it does appear that the pilot tried desperately to find a
landing area because the pilot released flares as it circled Clacton and
Holland-on-Sea before flying out to sea again, then returning at a
considerable lower altitude. The German bomber hit the chimney's of a
number of houses before crashing in the house occupied by the Gill family.
After the bomber crashed, the live mine that it was carrying exploded and
this is what caused the widespread damage as shown below.
BRITAIN'S NEXT CASUALTY. The third civilian killed in an air raid on
Britain was twenty seven year old James Isbister, during a German raid on
Scapa Flow in the Orkney's on July 24, 1940. On a previous raid on
November 13, 1939 during an attack on the Shetland's, all that resulted
was a large bomb crater in the countryside and the only fatality was a
rabbit, which gave rise to the marching song 'Run Rabbit, Run' . There is
some speculation that the 'Rabbit' was actually purchased from a local
butcher and placed in the crater for effect....or a laugh! But this must
be the worlds most famous dead rabbit.
ON SEPTEMBER 24/25, 1940 the French Air Force (Vichy) attacked British
military installations at Gibraltar, dropping 600 tons of bombs on the
fortress. This was in reprisal for the British naval attack on French
warships at Mers-el-Kabir on July 3, 1940 and for the attempted occupation
of Dakar on September 23rd.
TURNCOATS. After the debacle at Mers-el-Kabir and Dakar, the Vichy Foreign
Minister, Pierre Laval, declared that the French WW1 air ace, Colonel Rene
Fonck, had organized some 200 French pilots prepared to join Germany in
the fight against Britain.
TRAITORS? Some 8,000 Frenchmen donned the Wehrmacht uniform and formed the
Charlemagne Division of the Waffen SS. They fought so well on the Eastern
Front that many were awarded the Iron Cross for their bravery. After the
war, when the survivors of the Charlemagne Division returned to their
homeland, they were treated in a most brutal and inhumane fashion when the
French Resistance extracted their revenge on all collaborators.
INCOME Churchill's gross income from his writings alone
were...1933...13,981 Pounds Sterling, 1934...?6,572, 1935...?13,505,.
1936...?16,321, 1937...?12,914.
As Prime Minister he received ?10,000 per annum.
FOR SALE. In March of 1938, Churchill was broke, his share account with
his stockbrokers was ?18,000 in the red. He asked The Times to advertise
his home 'Chartwell' for sale, inviting offers of ?20,000. A few days
before the ad was to appear, Sir Henry Skrakosch, a South African gold
mining millionaire, agreed to pay off his debts and Chartwell was
withdrawn from the market. Skrakosch was a Jew, born in Czechoslovakia.
CLOSE CALL. On December17, 1939, five ocean liners carrying 7,450 men of
the First Canadian Division, arrived at Liverpool. Unknown to them, they
had narrowly escaped what could have been a major sea disaster. The
passenger liner Samaria , showing no lights, had passed right through the
convoy unaware of the convoy's position. It struck the wireless masts of
the escorting carrier HMS Furious on her port side, struck a glancing blow
on the port side of the next ship astern, the liner Aquitania , then
passed close down the starboard side of the third and fourth ships sailing
in line ahead.. If the Samaria had collided head on with the Furious ,
the ships following would have all crashed into her. During the last
three years of war, the Cunard liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth
carried a total of 1,243,538 American and Canadian soldiers across the
Atlantic.
THE ALTMARK INCIDENT. The Altmark was a tanker and supply ship serving the
German battleship 'Graf Spee'. Survivors from the nine ships sunk by the
Graf Spee were now Prisoners of War on the Altmark. On 16th of February,
1940, after a hectic search by The Royal Navy, the Altmark was located in
the Jossing Fjord on the southern tip of Norway where she had taken refuge
from the pursuing British destroyers. In violation of international law,
the British destroyer HMS Cossak entered the Fjord and with an armed
party boarded the Altmark. After a brief skirmish the crew was overpowered
and 299 British prisoners freed. Members of the Altmark?s crew were
machine-gunned as they fled across the ice during the boarding. It was
this incident that caused Hitler to accelerate his plans for his
occupation of Norway, believing that the British would not respect
Norwegian neutrality.
IN ONE OF HIS FAMOUS SPEECHES Churchill asked America 'Give us the tools
and we will finish the job'. But America wouldn't 'give' anything without
payment. After two years of war, Roosevelt had drained Britain dry,
stripping her of all her assets in the USA, including real estate and
property. The British owned Viscose Company, worth ?125 million was
liquidated, Britain receiving only ?87 million. Britain's ?1,924 million
investments in Canada were sold off to pay for raw materials bought in the
United States. To make sure that Roosevelt got his money, he dispatched
the American cruiser, 'Louisville ' to the South African naval base of
Simonstown to pick up forty two million Pounds worth of British gold,
Britain's last negotiable asset, to help pay for American guns and
ammunition. Not content with stripping Britain of her gold and assets, in
return for 50 old World War 1 destroyers, (desperately needed by Britain
as escort vessels) he demanded that Britain transfer all her scientific
and technological secrets to the USA. Also, he demanded 99 year leases on
the islands of Newfoundland, Jamaica, Trinidad and Bermuda for the setting
up of American military and naval bases in case Britain should fall. (Of
the 50 lend-lease destroyers supplied to Britain, 7 were lost during the
war. After 1943, when no longer useful, eight were sent to Russia, while
the others were manned by French, Polish and Norwegian crews)
QUOTE. Lord Beaverbrook was later to exclaim 'The Japanese are our
relentless enemies, and the Americans our un-relenting creditors'.
LORD HAW HAW. American born William Joyce lived in England from 1921. In
1933 he joined the British Union of Fascists led by Sir Oswald Mosley.
Attracted by Hitler's ideology, he moved to Germany in 1939 and began
broadcasting Nazi propaganda from a Berlin radio station. British troops
dubbed him Lord Haw Haw after a statement by Professor Arthur Lloyd James
of London University, an authority on English language pronunciation, who
said that he thought some BBC announcers were too 'haw, haw' in their
diction. William Joyce was convicted of treason at the Old Bailey in
London and hanged on January 3, 1946.
AMERICANS COME HOME. In May, 1940, the US Ambassador to London, Joseph
Kennedy, urged the 4,000 or so Americans living in Britain to pack up and
go home. Over seventy responded to this plea by joining the British Home
Guard. Called the 1st.American Squadron of the Home Guard, it was led by
General Wade H. Heyes. Kennedy was hostile to the whole idea, fearing that
all would be shot as 'francs-tireurs' when the Germans occupied London.
SANCTUARY. At the beginning of the war, many government and crowned heads
of Europe sought refuge in Britain. By 1941, those that set up residence
in the capital included Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, Poland's
former Prime Minister, Wladyslaw Sikorski, King Haakon of Norway, King
Peter of Yugoslavia, King George 11 of Greece, President Benes of
Czechoslovakia, Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg, Prime Minister
Pierlot of Belgium and Charles de Gaulle of France. Through the services
of the BBC they were able to speak and encourage their people at home.
S.O.E. Special Operations Executive, formed in July, 1940, on Churchill's
orders to 'Set Europe Ablaze'. With headquarters at 64, Baker Street,
London, its first recruits were originally from the armed forces but later
both men and women were recruited from the civilian sector. Speaking a
foreign language, especially French, was essential before being passed on
to Military Intelligence for a security check. Training courses included
Parachute and First Aid training at Ringwood airfield near Manchester
followed by four weeks radio and cipher training. Physical fitness, small
arms and map reading, were conducted in the Western Highlands of Scotland
where all forms of Commando and clandestine warfare were also taught.
Among many of its famous secret agents were Violet Szabo and Odette
Sansom. The average survival time in the field was just three months. Of
the 418 SOE agents sent to Europe, 118 failed to return. Only one plane, a
Lysander of 161 squadron and its pilot, Newzealander F/O James Bathgate,
were lost.
CHUNGKING DISASTER. The worst tragedy to hit this Chinese town was in
June, 1941. Situated at the junction of the Kialing and Yangtze rivers,
the town of Chungking was repeatedly bombed by the Japanese. To shelter
the inhabitants the local authorities built under the city the world's
largest dugout shelter (estimated capacity: 30,000). During one air-raid,
lasting over four hours, the ventilation system broke down and hundreds of
people rushed outside to catch a breath of fresh air between raiding
waves. A sudden alarm sent then rushing back clogging the shelter's narrow
entrance. Those inside clawed and tore at each other in a mad frenzy as
they tried to get out. The guards lost their heads and locked the milling
mass inside and then fled. With the air cut off, those inside slowly
suffocated. The first official count of the dead was put at 461. A week
later the death toll finally amounted to around 4,000.
KILLED ON WAY TO FUNERAL. On November 21, 1941 one of Germany's leading
air aces, Oberst Werner Moelders, 1913-1941, was killed when the plane, an
HE-111 bomber, in which he was a passenger, hit a factory chimney in fog
and rain near Breslau while on his way to the state funeral of General
Ernst Udet (1896-1941) Chief Air Inspector General of the Luftwaffe, who
committed suicide on November 17, 1941. Moelders, who had achieved 115
kills, 68 of which were achieved in the western theater, was replaced by
the fighter ace, Adolf Galland (103 kills) who retained the post until
January, 1945.
EDDIE CHAPMAN. A deserter from the Coldstream Guards in the 1930s he then
turned to crime. A safecracker by profession and serving fourteen years in
jail on Jersey in the Channel Islands, at that time under German
occupation, he volunteered to spy for the Germans in England. He was
trained at the Abwehr sabotage school at Nantes in France and then was
parachuted into England on December 20, 1942, with a mission to blow up
the DeHavilland aircraft factory at Hatfield, in Hertfordshire, which was
producing the new fighter-bomber, the Mosquito. After landing, he
contacted British Intelligence who contrived a plan to blow up part of the
factory not in use, giving the Germans the impression that the mission had
succeeded. On returning to Jersey for more work, Eddie Chapman (Code Name
'ZigZag') was decorated with the German Iron Cross. After the war, Chapman
was also given a British decoration, the only Englishman thus awarded!
Later he set up a health farm and died aged 83 in 1997 leaving a wife and
daughter.
THE LAST EXECUTION in the Tower of London was on August 14, 1941. German
spy, Josef Jakobs, was executed while seated tied to a chair, by an eight
man firing squad from the Scots Guards. Jakobs had parachuted into Britain
on January 31, 1941, and broke his leg on landing. He lay all night in a
field until his cries for help were heard next morning.
PETROL, PAY & WHISKY. In July, 1939 petrol in Britain was rationed to 200
miles per month. Brand names disappeared, only 'Pool' petrol was available
at four shillings and two pence a gallon. In 1940, the manufacture of new
cars was stopped, and in 1942, petrol for private use was not allowed. The
average wage in Britain in 1939 was ?3 nine shillings for men and ?1
twelve shillings for women. For newly enlisted servicemen, the pay was two
shillings a day! A bottle of whisky cost 13 shillings and sixpence. The
price of gold was ?8 an ounce. To conserve wood the government requested
all women to wear flat-heeled shoes.
HERMANN'S QUOTE. On August 9, 1939, Hermann G?ring boasted about the
strength of the German Luftwaffe. He said ' Not a single bomb will fall on
the Ruhr. If an enemy plane reaches the Ruhr, my name is not Hermann
G?ring, you can call me Meier'.
QUOTE. On hearing of a proposal to fire-bomb the Black Forest, Britain's
cabinet minister, Kingsley-Wood, said in September, 1938, 'Oh, we can't do
that, that's private property, next you will be insisting that we bomb the
Rhur!'
THE FIRST U-BOAT CAPTURED. The first German U-Boat captured was the U-39
(Sept. 14, 1939). The British destroyers Firedrake, Faulkner, and the
Foxhound , forced the U-39 to the surface with depth charges after the
U-boat had fired two torpedoes at the aircraft carrier Ark Royal. The
U-39 was damaged and sank after the crew was removed.
MEIN KAMPF. The original title of Hitler's Mein Kampf was ''4 & 1/2 Years
of Struggle Against Lies, Stupidity and Cowardice''. His publisher, Max
Amann, later changed the title to Mein Kampf (My Struggle). By 1939, the
book had sold over 5 million copies, making Hitler a millionaire. Up to
1945, the book had a total printing of just over 10,000,000 copies. His
official salary was 60,000 Marks per annum. In 1934, Hitler declared his
income for 1933 as 1,232,355 Marks. Most of this was from royalties from
his book. He also received a fraction of a cent for every postage stamp
sold bearing his image.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES. There were 6,034 Jehovah's Witnesses in Germany when
Hitler assumed power in 1933. Between 1933 and 1935, a total of 5,911
Witnesses were arrested as 'Enemies of the State'. Forced to wear a purple
armband they were considered traitors because they refused to sign a
pledge of loyalty to the Third Reich. Over 2,000 died of ill treatment in
the concentration camps. Of these, around 200 were executed. Under the
Nazi dictatorship, Jehovah's Witnesses were among the first to be
persecuted. On September 15, 1939, the first conscientious objector,
August Dickman, a Jehova's Witness, who had refused military service, was
publicly shot. This execution was supposed to set an example to others who
would refuse to serve in the German armed forces. In May of that year, the
first transport of prisoners to the Ravensbr?ck Concentration Camp was
made up of female Jehova's Witnesses.
HERMANN HOMMEL, uncle of Albert Speer, Hitler's personal architect, was
once engaged to Anneliesse Henkell of the famous Champagne family. She
later married Joachim von Ribbentrop who became German Ambassador to
London.
QUOTED BY HITLER. In 1939, Hitler said ' Whoever succeeds me must be sure
to have an opening for a new war. In future peace treaties, we must
therefore always leave open a few questions that will provide a pretext.
That's Statesmanship!'
FIRST BOMB DROPPED. The first bomb of the war to land on German soil was
dropped on December 3, 1939. A Wellington bomber of 115 Squadron,
attacking German shipping in the North Sea, suffered a 'hang up' when one
of its bombs failed to drop. It fell off on the return trip over the
island of Heligoland.
RAF KILLS BRITISH WOMAN IN GERMANY. In the first British air attack on a
mainland population center, 36 RAF planes bombed the rail yards of Monchen
Gladbach on May 10, 1940. The raid killed one person... an Englishwoman.
ON AUGUST 16, 1940, two German JU 88 bombers dropped their bombs on the
RAF airfield at Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, setting fire to 46 fully
fueled parked Oxford trainers of No 2 Service Flying Training School. Six
others were badly damaged as were 11 Hurricanes parked nearby.
BOMBLOAD WAS 13 TONS OF LEAFLETS. The first night of the war (Sept.3,
1939) a force of ten Whitley bombers dropped thirteen tons of propaganda
leaflets over Hamburg, Bremen and the Ruhr. On Sept.30, leaflet carrying
balloons were launched from France by Britain's No 1 Balloon Unit.
I.S.K. (Internationalen Sozialistischen Kampfbundes) Composed of
ex-members of the German Socialist Party who were expelled from the Party
and fled to England in 1928. In England, they formed their own Party, the
ISK. It was led by Willi Eicher and from its ranks came many volunteers
for secret service work in the Reich.
GERMANS IN CUSTODY. In 1939, there were 302,535 Germans in protective
custody in Germany for their political views. By the end of the war, over
800,000 Germans had spent time in prison or in a concentration camp.
DEATH SENTENCES. Between 1933 and 1944, a total of 13,405 death sentences
were passed in Germany. Of these, 11,881 were carried out. In the first
few months of 1945 another 800 were executed, over half of them German
nationals. By the end of the war there were 46 offenses that were
punishable by death.
THE MOTHERHOOD CROSS was awarded each year on the 12th of August (the
birthday of Hitler's mother) to all German mothers of large families. The
Motherhood Cross of Iron was given to women with four children, the Silver
Cross to mothers of six, and the Gold Cross to a mother of eight. Hitler
always acted as honorary godfather to the tenth child born to any German
mother ( Mothers Cross in Gold and Diamonds) This was a continuation of
the practice initiated by President Hindenburg. Hitler Youth organizations
were expected to salute mothers wearing the Cross. By 1939 around three
million German mothers had been so decorated by what the ordinary man in
the street called the 'Order of the Rabbit' (Kaninchenorden)
C.O.R.B. The (Children's Overseas Reception Board) established in June,
1940, successfully organized the evacuation of 1,530 children to Canada,
353 to South Africa, 577 to Australia, 202 to New Zealand and 838 to the
USA. Within ten days of its opening, CORB received 211,000 applications.
Disaster overtook them on September 17, 1940, when the ship, the 'City of
Benares ' was torpedoed while on its way to Canada.
Seventy seven children died in the lifeboats from exposure while awaiting
rescue.
VOLUNTEERS. When Russia attacked Finland on November 30, 1939, over 8,000
men and women in Britain offered their services to fight the Russians.
Around 228 men of the British section of the International Volunteer Force
was on its way to Finland when the armistice was signed on the 12th of
March, 1940. They arrived at Lap on the 19th of March and by June, 1942,
the last of the volunteers had left Finland for home. Thirteen men were
left behind and became prisoners of war in Germany. Following the British
ultimatum to end their conflict with Russia, the governments of Britain,
Canada, New Zealand and India declared war on Finland, Hungary and
Rumania. In Britain, 150 Finnish nationals were arrested, and in the USA
six Finnish ships were seized and placed under protected custody. In their
battle with the Soviets in 1939/40 the Finns suffered 24,923 killed, the
Soviet forces, around 48,000 killed.
THE ADOLF HITLER FUND. Steel Baron Gustav Krupp, proposed that all
employers contribute a quarterly sum based on their payroll. Called the
'German Industry's Adolf Hitler Fund', it added many millions to Hitler's
coffers. In the twelve years of his dictatorship Hitler disposed of over
305 million Reichsmarks. Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach was unable to
stand trial for war crimes because of his senility and died at Bl?hnbach
near Salzburg on January 16, 1950. However, his son Alfred was tried as a
war criminal because large numbers of concentration camp inmates were used
as slave labourers in the Krupp factories. He was sentenced to twelve
years in prison but was released three years later in 1951 and allowed to
return to his position as head of the Krupp Steel Works.
THE BERGHOF. Three thousand two hundred and eighty one feet above
Berchtesgaden, a lawyer named Winter from Buxtehude near Hamburg built the
Bavarian style house called Haus Wachenfeld. (the maiden name of his wife
was Wachenfeld). The house was rented to Hitler in 1928 for 100 marks per
month. When he finally bought the property, after becoming Chancellor, it
was shown on picture postcards as 'The little cottage of the People's
Chancellor'. The architect Alois Delgado was called in to rebuild and
enlarge the house which was then renamed 'The Berghof'.
THE DEMISE OF THE BERGHOF. In the vicinity of Hitler's chalet, houses were
built for G?ring, Goebbels and Bormann, and a special road was
constructed from Berchtesgaden to the Berghof. On April 25, 1945, a force
of 318 RAF Lancaster bombers unloaded a total of 1,232 tons of bombs on
the area scoring three direct hits on one wing of the Berghof and damaged
nearly every other building. Of the hundreds of workers and residents who
had taken shelter in the underground bunkers only six were killed. Then
the vandals, looters and souvenir hunters moved in to ransack the place.
Even the badly damaged carpets were cut up into strips and carried away.
Shortly before the American troops arrived on May 4, the SS set fire to
the house with gasoline. At 5.05 PM on 30th of April, 1952, the ruins of
the Berghof were blown sky-high on orders of the Bavarian government. The
ruins were removed and the area reforested. The former site is now a level
sports field and golf course with a new ultra modern hotel built on the
former site of G?ring's house.
THE EAGLE'S NEST. This masterpiece of construction was built on the
summit of the 6,017 ft wooded Kehlstein mountain high above Berchtesgaden.
Officially known as the Kehlsteinhaus, the hexagon shaped building was
built as a conference and entertainment center for visiting diplomats at
the request of Martin Bormann and presented to Hitler on his 50th
birthday. The name 'Eagle's Nest' was coined by Francois Poncet the French
ambassador after a visit there in 1938. It was never known as a Teahouse
but today gets confused with the actual teahouse Hitler used, the
Mooslahnerkopf Teehaus, situated not far from his residence, the Berghof.
HITLER'S FATHER, ALIOS SCHICKELGRUBER (1837-1903) was born in Strones,
Austria. He was the illegitimate son of a Johann Georg Hiedler and his
peasant girl friend, Anna Marie Schickelgruber. In May 1842, they became
man and wife but Alois continued to use his mother's name. He was brought
up by his father's brother Johann Hiedler who, in 1876, took steps to
legitimize Alois who then started to use the name Hitler. A witness at
Alois's legitimization was a relative by the name of Johann H?ttler and it
is possible that Alois used the name after the parish priest confused the
two names Hiedler and H?ttler and wrote Hitler in the registry. By this
time Alios was thirty-nine years old. After his mother died his father
married for the third time on January 7, 1885, to his second cousin, Klara
Poelzl (1860-1908) twenty-three years younger than he. Alios and Klara
Hitler became the parents of Adolf Hitler. Klara bore her husband five
children, three of whom died young: Gustav 1885-1887, Ida 1886-1888, Adolf
1889-1945, Edmund 1894-1900 and Paula 1896-1960.
WILHELM KUBE, Gauleiter of Brandenburg, anti-Semite and deputy in the
Prussian State Assembly, was removed from office in 1936 for suggesting
that Frau Buch, Martin Borman's mother-in-law, was half Jewish. During the
war he became District Commissioner in the Occupied Eastern Territories
where, in 1943, he was murdered by his Russian housekeeper, Yelena
Mazanik, who had placed a bomb under his bed. Mazanik was a member of the
Belorussian partisan movement. The reprisals were swift and horrific,
whole villages being wiped out and around 1,000 males were rounded up and
either shot or hanged.
POLAND. After the fall of Poland, Himmler issued a top secret document to
all eastern Gauleiters. In it he proposed that 'racially valuable people
from Poland be removed and Germanized'. The masses were to become a
'leaderless nation of common labour'. They were not to be taught anything
more than simple arithmetic and how to write their own name. They could
earn enough for simple living needs but the lowest German peasant must
still be ten percent better off than any Pole. They could keep their
Catholic priests so they would for ever remain 'dull and stupid'. All
intellectuals were to be exterminated. It was Hitler's intention to
obliterate all traces of Polish history and culture. Even towns and
villages were renamed in German.
MERCY KILLINGS. The first discussion on 'mercy killing' took place in the
Kasino Hotel in Zoppot, near Danzig, where Hitler was celebrating his
victory over Poland. At this time about a quarter of a million hospital
beds were being used in Germany's mental institutions, beds that were more
urgently needed for the treatment of wounded soldiers. Hitler confided to
his personal surgeon, Dr. Karl Brandt, that half of the permanently
hospitalized insane patients could be put away, adding that 'under no
circumstances was the real cause of death to be divulged to the next of
kin'.
DEPORTEES. Around four hundred thousand Polish women were deported to
Germany to work in factories or placed in German households as servants.
Holland and Belgium hold the sad distinction in Western Europe of having
the smallest percentage of deportees to return to their homeland. Out of
126,000 Dutch deportees only 11,000 were repatriated. Of the 25,631 Jews
deported from Belgium only 1,244 survived the war. One hundred and forty
died fighting with the partisans.
GYPSIES. Another group singled out for deportation were the Gypsies.
Defined as non-Aryan, as were the Jews, both groups were forbidden to
marry Germans. Those already married to Germans were exempted from
deportation but were sterilized as were their children when they reached
the age of twelve. Before the war, 1,500 Gypsies were rounded up in
Germany and sent to Dachau, another 440 Gypsy women were sent to
Ravensbruck. In 1940, around 30,000 Gypsies were deported to Poland and in
Austria, around 4,300 were transported to the death camp at Chelmno and
gassed. In 1942, a special camp for Gypsies was constructed in Auschwitz
called Section B11e. During World War 11 about 231,800 Gypsies were put to
death.
W.A.S.P. (WOMES AIRFORCE SERVICE PILOT) Originally named 'Women's
Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron', an organization responsible for ferrying
planes from the factories to airfields across the USA and Canada.
Disbanded on 20th December,1944, after having delivered 12,650 planes of
77 different types. Of the 1,074 women who graduated, thirty eight lost
their lives during the war (this was equal to one fatality in every 16,000
hours of flying) and eleven were killed while training. These brave women,
who gave their lives for their country, were deemed ineligible for burial
with military honours. They were given a second class funeral without the
American flag. (Britain had a similar female ferry organization).
W.A.A.F. WOMENS AUXILIARY AIR FORCE. The women's branch of the RAF was
formed on June 28, 1939. Their tasks were; general duties, office clerks,
operation room plotters, radar operators, telephonists etc. To the control
room they became known as "Boarding School Girls" while many pilots
referred to them as the "Beauty Chorus". In September of that year it
comprised 230 officers and 7,460 airwomen. By 1945 its ranks numbered
170,000. During the war 187 WAAFS were killed and four listed as missing.
HIDING BRITAIN'S TREASURES. Between August 23 and September 2, 1939,
Britain's art treasures and other historical artifacts were removed from
the National Gallery and from Hampton Court and transported to Wales for
safe keeping. They were eventually housed, 1,750 feet above sea level, in
the tunnels of the slate quarry at Manod, near Ffestiniog in North Wales.
Atmosphere was maintained at a steady 65 degrees F. with 40 degrees of
humidity. All were returned safely to London in 1945. But the best kept
secret of all, was the destination of the Crown Jewels. To this day, the
hiding place has never been revealed. Britain's gold reserves, valued at 7
billion dollars, were taken to Canada in the cruiser HMS Emerald and
stored in the vaults of Montreal's banks.
LUFTWAFFE BOMBS ITS OWN COUNTRY. On the 10th of May, 1940 three Luftwaffe
planes, HE 111s, bombed the German town of Freiburg by mistake, killing 57
people. The crews thought they were over a French town. The fragments of
the bombs found later, confirmed the bombs as German, but German
propaganda claimed the raid to be a terror attack by the French Airforce,
justifying subsequent bombing of French towns.
JEWISH REFUGEES FOR CUBA? On May 13, 1939 the 16,732 ton German luxury
liner St. Louis set sail from Hamburg with 937 Jewish refugees on board.
They believed they had bought visas to enter Cuba. Arriving in Havana they
were told that their visas were worthless, in fact, a confidence trick of
some Cuban politicians out to make money. Not allowed to disembark, quite
a few passengers committed suicide rather than return to Germany. The ship
then set sail for Miami in the hope that the US would accept them. This
was not to be, the opposition too great as the country already had two
million unemployed. Negotiations then took place between Britain, France,
Holland and Belgium. England agreed to take 287, France-224, Holland-181,
and Belgium-214. On June 17, the St. Louis docked in Antwerp and
disembarkation began. It marked not the end of their journey but the
beginning of an even more tragic episode in their lives. Those accepted by
Britain survived the war but those who settled in France, Holland and
Belgium, were overtaken by the Holocaust when Germany invaded these
countries. By the summer of 1941 only 167,245 Jews remained in Germany.
(The St. Louis survived the war and in 1946 was converted to a floating
hospital ship at Hamburg).
JEWISH REFUGEES FOR JAPAN. After the German takeover of Poland close to
15,000 Polish Jews trudged the wet and muddy roads of Poland in an attempt
to escape the Nazi holocaust and reach the relative safety of Vilna in the
Baltic state of Lithuania. When Russia formally annexed Lithuania in June,
these desperate refugees were once again trapped. Russia didn't want its
Jews, Britain was unwilling to let them into Palestine, in fact the rest
of the world turned its back on these unfortunate people. In Lithuania the
Soviets tried to create a communist utopia and anyone wanting to leave was
considered mad or a traitor to the cause. Those who applied for permission
to leave ended up in the slave labour camps of Siberia. Finally, when exit
permits were issued the Intourist Office demanded 200 American dollars
from each for their trip across Russia to Japan. The first group of 72
Jews were then on their way to the Russian port of Vladivostok. From there
it would be a short hop, skip and jump to Japan where it was hoped a visa
for the USA would be issued. After crossing the Sea of Japan their ship
docked at Tsuruga in Japan, the only country willing to welcome them. As
more refugees began to arrive they found accommodation in Kobe and in
Japanese controlled Shanghai where a one square mile area was set aside
for them. This in effect was the creation of the first Jewish Ghetto in
Asia. Before the harsh winter of 1943/44 ended around 300 Jews had died
from Typhus and other diseases. Worse was to come. A Japanese radio
station within the camp was targeted by by US bombers. The raid killed 250
people including 31 Jews.
THE FUGU PLAN. As the war situation for Japan grew more hopeless, the big
fear was what would the Japanese response be to losing the war. Japan had
signed a pact of neutrality with Germany and Italy and Germany was
demanding that Japan stop treating the Jews with kid gloves. Would they
all be executed as a final show of loyalty to Nazi Germany? It was then
decided to reincarnate the Fugu Plan formulated in 1939 to settle the Jews
in a new Jewish state in Manchukuo in Manchuria where the Japanese would
co-operate with the Jews to build a better society after the war. With
Japan's surrender, the Shanghai Jews were lucky to survive the war. In
1948, the state of Israel was created and here the last remaining Jews of
Shanghai were resettled.
KIDNAP PLANS Believing that the Duke of Windsor was pro-German, Hitler
sent his SS Intelligence Chief, Walter Schellenberg, to Spain where the
Duke was on holiday. His mission, to lure the Duke back to Germany with a
promise of 50 million Swiss francs. If this failed, he was to be
kidnapped. Schellenberg, thinking that the whole operation was too
difficult, hesitated. In the meantime, Britain got wind of the plot and
had the Duke removed to a more secure haven in the Bahamas, where he spent
the rest of the war.
DISASTER OFF NORWAY. Only a week after the war broke out, the British
submarine Oxley was patrolling off the coast of Norway along with her
sister ship the Triton. Somehow the Oxley had sailed into the sector
patrolled by Triton. The Commander of the Triton , Lt. Cdmr. Steel,
sighted an unidentified submarine on the surface and when challenged
received no reply. Assuming the other submarine to be hostile, he ordered
two torpedoes to be fired. The unidentified submarine disappeared, leaving
two survivors swimming towards the Triton. One can only imagine the shock
the Triton's crew experienced when they pulled the Oxley's Commander, Lt.
Cdmr. Bowerman and one other survivor, Able Seaman Gluckes, out of the
water. They happened to be standing on the bridge when the torpedo hit.
Fifty-three of Oxley's crew perished. Apparently the Oxley's signal
answering apparatus had malfunctioned and failed to answer in time.
LILI MARLENE. The famous tune was composed by Norbert Schultz in only
twenty minutes in 1938. Originally called 'Song of the Sentry' it was
first sung by Lale Andersen, a little known Swedish singer, and then
forgotten until 1941. German troops had taken over Belgrade radio station
and found they had only a few records to play to their troops in the
Balkans. One was 'Lili Marlene' and it was played twice nightly for the
next eighteen months. The broadcasts were picked up by Rommel's troops in
North Africa and also by the British 8th Army. A British lyric writer,
Tommy O'Connor, then gave the song a more sentimental wording for the
British troops. Norbert Schultz survived the war and was congratulated by
Montgomery at an El Alemein reunion. He died on October 16, 2002, age 91,
at Bad T?lz, Bavaria. Poor Lale Andersen spent much of the war in a
concentration camp because she was overheard to say 'All I want is to get
out of this horrible country'. The poem 'Song of the Sentry' was first
written by Hans Leip of Hamburg in 1923. In the latter part of the war the
Germans had their own version....
An der Laterne, vor der Reichskanzlie,
H?en unsere Bonzen, der F?hrer ist
dabai ,
Da wollen wir bieeinander stehn, Wir
wollen unsern F?hrer sehen,
Wie einst am ersten Mai, Wie einst am
ersten Mai.
MARRIAGE LOAN (Ehestanddarlehen). In Germany, financial aid was given to
encourage young couples to marry and set up house and help raise the
birth-rate. Between August 1933 and the end of 1936, a total of 694,367
marriages were financed. From these marriages, 485,285 children were born.
THE CAPTURE OF "THE SEAL". The only British submarine to be captured at
sea was the HMS Seal. On May 5, 1940, she was damaged while laying mines
in the Kattegat (between Denmark and Sweden). Attempting to reach Sweden
the badly damaged HMS Seal was spotted by two Arado seaplanes which
proceeded to drop bombs around the wallowing submarine. Realizing that the
ship would inevitably be sunk, the captain, Lt. Cmdr. Lonsdale,
surrendered by waving a white sheet from the conning tower. One of the
Arados then landed on the water and took the captain on board. A radio
message to a nearby German fishing trawler on submarine patrol , the
Franken, soon had the entire crew of HMS Seal on board as POWs.
INTERNED. When the French 45th Army Corps was encircled by General
Guderian's armour in France in 1940, the Corps, consisting of 45,000 men
was forced to seek refuge in neutral Switzerland. The 12,000 Poles who had
enlisted in the Corps, remained interned until the end of the war. All the
others, including 29,000 Frenchmen and Moroccans were repatriated in 1941
under an agreement between Germany and Vichy France.
SECOND CHANCE. Just before the 'Fall of France' around 400 German Air
Force personnel were held in French prisoner-of-war camps. The majority
were pilots who had been shot down by British fighters. Churchill was
concerned at the prospect of their being liberated by the German armies as
they advanced through northern France. He requested that they be sent
immediately to a POW camp in England. The transfer was never carried out
owing to the speed of German advance, and so the Luftwaffe pilots were
liberated to become available once more, this time for the forthcoming
'Battle of Britain'. Later, Churchill remarked, "We had to shoot them down
a second time".
GERMAN AIRCRAFT CARRIER. The building of the first German aircraft carrier
Graf Zeppelin was begun in the Deutsche Werk shipyard at Kiel on Dec 28,
1936. With a displacement of 28,000 tons, it was launched on Dec. 8, 1938
by Countess Hella von Brandenstein-Zeppelin in honour of her father.
Further construction of the ship was suspended in 1939 and again in 1942
because of the failure to produce an acceptable combat aircraft to operate
from its deck. Work on the ship progressed slowly throughout the war but
it never saw action. At the end of the war the ship was scuttled in the
Baltic Sea to prevent it falling into the hands of the Russians. However,
the Russians raised the ship and loaded it with war booty. It was being
towed to a Russian port in 1947 when it capsized and sank because of an
overloaded flight deck!.
THE FIRST MAJOR WARSHIP sunk by air attack during wartime was the German
light cruiser Konigsberg. Skuas from HMS Ark Royal flew 330 miles on
April 9, 1940, from the Naval Air Station at Hatston in the Orkney's to
dive bomb the ship lying at Bergen.
SNOWBOUND (April, 1940). Norwegian pilots faced a dilemma when over two
feet of snow fell on their airstrip near Trondheim. The advancing Germans
were only hours away and here they were stuck, impossible to take off and
escape. Nearby, a large herd of Reindeer was being driven to their spring
pastures in the mountains by their Lapp keepers. Bribed by a bottle or two
of alcohol, the herdsmen agreed to drive the Reindeer down the airstrip
thus trampling the snow into a hard compact surface, enough to enable the
planes to take off.
LOSSES. The Norwegian Campaign cost Britain 4,400 killed. Norway lost
1,335 men and the French and Polish troops together lost 530. German
casualties were 1,317 killed.
GUN ACCIDENTS. Copenhagen, in German occupied Denmark, was a favourite
spot for German officers on R & R. In an effort to 'get their own back'
members of a Danish resistance group opened up an Arts and Craft shop
specializing in scroll work. They offered to personalize the officers side
weapons by fitting ivory handles to their Lugers and cover the gun with
artful designs and scroll work. Some were customized as gifts for fellow
officers serving on other fronts. Trade was brisk, but what was not
explained was that the barrels were being modified by reducing the
diameter inside and weakening the breach of the gun which when fired for
the first time would blow up in the officers face. Of course these guns
were never fired while the officer was on leave and any 'accidents' at the
front were put down to 'casualties of war'. According to Harry Jensen, the
only survivor of the resistance group, hundreds of these Lugers were
modified this way before they closed shop.
CODENAME FELIX. The German code name for the capture of Gibraltar , the
Canary Island s and the Cape Verde Islands. Issued on Directive No.18 by
Hitler on November 12, 1940, it was never put into operation, partly
because of the refusal of Spain to join the Axis. Spain was in no position
to fight another war, the civil war of 1936-39 had left the country a
shambles, her cities in ruins.
NEUTRAL IRELAND. Although a member of the British Commonwealth, Ireland
(Eire) remained neutral throughout the war. The Prime Minister, Eamonn De
Valera, refused repeated requests by Britain for the use of port
facilities at Cobh, Berehaven and Lough Swilly on the west coast of
Ireland during the Battle of the Atlantic, ports that Britain considered
essential to her survival. (These ports were closed to the Royal Navy in
1939 just as Britain was preparing to go to war). In December, 1941,
Hitler had considered invading Ireland and using it as a platform for the
assault on the British mainland. If this had proceeded it would have
marked the end for Britain. It was Admiral Raeder who changed Hitler's
mind, pointing out that in the face of Britain's huge naval superiority it
was quite out of the question. The help De Valera gave the Germans was to
refuse Britain the use of airfields and submarine bases in Ireland which
would have set back the U-boat operations in the Atlantic. The use of the
Berehaven port for instance would have enabled our anti-submarine escorts
to operate a further 180 miles out into the Atlantic. How many ships and
seamen's lives this would have saved is a matter of conjecture. Enlistment
in the British Army however, was popular and around 42,000 Irishmen joined
the armed forces or went to sea in the Merchant Navy. Eight won the
Victoria Cross, Britain's highest award. These servicemen, when returning
home on leave had to wear civilian clothes to avoid any political
embarrassment should they come home in a British uniform. Thousands more
went to England to work in British munitions factories during the war.
Whenever an Irishman died in battle he was reported in De Valera's press
as having died while working in Britain.
THE BOMBING OF BELFAST. Northern Ireland was totally unprepared for
enemy air attack during the initial stages of the war. Who on earth would
want to bomb Belfast? was the thought running through the minds of its
citizens at the time. However, this complacency was shattered when late on
April 15, 1941, over 150 German bombers rained bombs, incendiaries and
parachute mines onto the streets of the city. Panic reigned as thousands
of people fled to the surrounding countryside inundating small towns and
villages with terrified refugees. At 1.30AM on the 16th, John MacDermott,
Northern Ireland's Minister of Public Security, then did something that no
government minister had ever done before nor would ever do again, he
telephoned Dublin in neutral Ireland and pleaded for help. Fifteen minutes
later the city's central telephone exchange received a direct hit which
served all local and trunk lines out of Belfast. Back in Dublin, in a
technical breach of neutrality, de Valera immediately ordered thirteen
fire trucks to be sent north to help fight the devastating fires that
spread around the city. Dead animals and human corpses lay sprawled all
over the place. It is doubtful whether the Luftwaffe intended to target
the civilian population. The first target flares were dropped to
illuminate the harbour and factory areas but had drifted in a light wind
across the city and away from the intended targets. This seems to have
been the case when on Sunday May 4/5 a total of 204 enemy bombers returned
to finish the job on the docks and industrial area. In the first raid 745
persons were killed, in the second raid 164 persons lost their lives. This
was worse than the much publicized raid on Coventry where 554 lives were
lost.
DUNKIRK (May 26, 1940). The seven day evacuation from Dunkirk begins. A
fleet of 861 ships and small boats set sail from Britain in a desperate
attempt to save the troops trapped on the beach. Within ten days a total
of 224,585 British soldiers were picked up and brought home. At the same
time, 112,546 French and Belgian troops were also saved. Unfortunately,
about 40,000 French soldiers had to be left behind, causing a certain
amount of bitterness among the troops. A total of 231 rescue boats and six
destroyers were sunk during the operation. The RAF Fighter Command lost
106 planes. During the evacuation from Dunkirk, the big mistake the
Germans made was the use of the Stuka dive bomber. If the Luftwaffe had
used horizontal bombing instead of dive bombing, the losses to the British
Expeditionary Force would have been far greater.
CHURCHILL SPEECH? After the Dunkirk evacuation, Churchill delivered his
memorable speech to the House of Commons. Later in the day the speech was
broadcast by the BBC to the rest of the world. What the listeners didn't
know was that the speech was read by Norman Shelley who impersonated
Churchill's voice. Winston had said "I am rather busy, get an actor to do
it".
WORLD RECORD. Owing to a navigational error, on October 17, 1940, two
British destroyers, HMS Fame and HMS Ashanti, ran aground in fog and
drizzle at Whilburn on the river Tyne. HMS Fame caught fire as fuel pipes
in the engine room ruptured. Thinking that the invasion had started,
defence lookout posts on shore raised the alarm and at 5am National Fire
Service crews and Volunteer Life Brigade units from South Shields and
Sunderland arrived at the scene. In about five hours a total of 272
crewmen from the two ships were brought ashore by Breeches Buoy thus
establishing an all-time world life-saving record for a rescue of this
type. The two destroyers were eventually refloated, repaired and returned
to service.
GRAND THEFT. The loot the Germans transported back to the Reich from
Holland was staggering.....13,786 metal working machines..... 2,729
textile machines.....18,098 electric motors.....358 printing
presses.....31 dredgers.....over 7,000 barges.....90,000 lengths of
railway line and a half million sleepers.....over 60,000 motor
cars.....40,000 trucks and 25,000 motor bikes. 154,647 kilos of Dutch gold
disappeared into the Reichsbank's safes in Berlin. On top of this, 320,000
cows, 472,036 pigs and 114,220 horses were stolen. A total of 346 works of
art were stolen including 27 Rembrants, 12 Hals, 47 Steens, 40 Rubens and
12 Van Goghs. Most of these paintings were recovered after the war.
FIRE BRIGADE TRAGEDY. April 20th,1941, was Hitler's birthday and the
Luftwaffe celebrated the event by dropping 1,000 tons of bombs on London.
Many schools in the city were standing empty, the children already
evacuated to the country. The Old Palace School in St. Leonards Street,
Poplar, was now sub-station 24U of the London Auxiliary Fire Service. The
playground was ideal for training and the parking of fire appliances. On
the night of April 20, fire service crews were standing by in anticipation
of a heavy raid on the Capital. At precisely 1.53am, a land mine, dropped
from a Luftwaffe bomber, scored a direct hit on the school. Thirty two
firemen and two fire women were killed. The bodies of the two firewomen,
mother of three Winifred Peters and twenty one year old Hilda Dupree, on
duty in the watch room, were never found. This was the largest loss of
Fire Brigade personnel ever suffered in the history of the service in
Britain.
SURPRISE! SURPRISE! Australia's 'invasion' of Portuguese East Timor (now
Timor Luru Sae) on December 16, 1941, was the first time in history that
Australia violated another country's neutrality. Aussie troops (Sparrow
Force) invaded Dutch West Timor and the 2/2nd Independent Company landed
on the shore near Dili, the capital of Portuguese East Timor and so
pre-empt a Japanese takeover. They proceeded immediately to surround the
airport. Well armed, and expecting to do battle with the Portuguese
military, they approached the administration building, guns at the ready.
Suddenly the main door opened and out stepped a civilian Portuguese
official who tipped his hat and in perfect English said "Good afternoon".
Dumbfounded, the troops stared at each other in disbelief. Not a shot had
been fired. Unknown to Sparrow Force , the Australian and Portuguese
governments had previously agreed to a peaceful 'invasion' of the island
to help protect the inhabitants from a possible Japanese invasion which
did in fact take place two months later on February 20th,1942.
AWARD. The German 'Grand Cross of the Golden Eagle' was presented to Henry
Ford, the American car manufacturer, by a German diplomat in the USA on
July 30, 1938, on behalf of Adolf Hitler. In his book, 'Entnazifizierung
in Bayern' the German author, Niethammer, suggests that the failure of the
Americans to bomb the Ford car plant outside Cologne, was all a part of a
capitalist plot. In that same year, the senior executive of the General
Motors German branch received the same award. Both firms had invested
heavily in Germany. In 1929, General Motors had bought up 80% of the
German automobile firm of Opel.
ISOLATIONISTS. Members of the 'America First' party held a rally on the
28th of April, 1941, in Chicago. In the speeches, mention of Winston
Churchill's name drew boos from the 10,000 person audience. A speech by
Colonel Charles Lindbergh, the respected US isolationist, was interrupted
by applause when he said that England was in a desperate situation, her
shipping losses serious, 'her cities devastated by bombs'. Two months
later, the city council of Charlotte, NC, changed the name of Lindbergh
Drive to Avon Terrace.
DOCUMENTS. For his 50th birthday, several leading industrialists presented
Hitler with a case containing the original scores of some of Richard
Wagners music. They had paid nearly a million marks for the collection.
Towards the end of the war, Frau Winifred Wagner asked Hitler to transfer
these manuscripts to Bayreuth. Hitler refused, saying he had placed them
in a far safer place. The manuscripts involved included the scores of '
Die Feen', ' Die Liebesverbot', ' Reinzi ', 'Das Reingold' , 'Die
Valkure', and the orchestral sketch of ' Der Fliegende Hollander'.
These lost documents have never been found.
JEWS IN GERMANY. When Frederick William von Hohenzollern (1620-1688) was
elected Margrave of Brandenburg, he found no Jewish permanent settlement
in his state. In 1650, he invited some Polish Jews to conduct trade in
Berlin, and in 1671, he welcomed fifty wealthy Jews from Vienna to settle
in the capital. So began the Berlin Jewish community. In 1933, the Jewish
population of Germany was 503,000. Of these, 170,000 lived in Berlin, 25%
were living on charity. At the war's end, only 23,000 were living in
Germany. About 100,000 German Jews perished in the Auschwitz-Birkenau
camp. Names and last known addresses of around 128,000 German Jews,
victims of the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany, are listed in the
German Gedenkbuch (Memorial Book) in the Federal Archives in Berlin.
(previously the Bundesarchives at Koblenz)
Sources differ as to the exact number of Jews killed in the Holocaust. The
latest statistics put the number at 5,433,900 (about 41 %) of which just
over 1.2 million died in Auschwitz. Official estimates are, year by year,
gradually being revised downwards. (The World Center of Contemporary
Jewish Documentation in Paris now states that only 1,485,292 Jews died
from all causes during WW11 and that there were not even six million Jews
in Europe at that time. Professor Paul Rassinier, the French historian,
who spent some time in concentration camps, utterly refutes the myth of
six million dead and says that Jewish casualties could not have exceeded
1.2 million. Raul Hilberg, the Jewish historian, estimates an even lower
figure of 896,892). The country that suffered most, was Poland, it had a
pre-war Jewish population of around 3.2 million, some 2.9 million of whom
were annihilated (88%). Of Europe's Jewish children, alive in 1939, only
11 percent survived the war, an estimated one and a half million being
murdered. Of all the Nazi occupied countries in WW11, the percentage of
Jews saved in Poland was the smallest. The attitude of the vast majority
of the Polish population towards Jews was violently anti-Semitic,
surpassed only by their vehemently anti-German hatred. Even the Polish
police joined the Nazis in rounding up Jews for deportation to the death
camps. It must be said however that around 50,000 Jews were saved by Poles
who helped hide them at the risk of their own lives. The "Council for Aid
to Jews' provided false Aryan documents and gave refuge to many of the
persecuted Jews. Unfortunetly, many of these 'aid workers' along with
their entire families, paid with their lives. (In all, Poland suffered
4,900,000 dead in WW11)
CONCENTRATION CAMPS. The term was first used by the Spanish to describe
their camps set up in Cuba during the Spanish-American War of 1898. The
first Concentration Camp, for the sole purpose of the physical destruction
of prisoners was set up in Holmogor by the Bolsheviks in 1921. The idea in
German minds that the British invented concentration camps was fostered by
Dr.Joseph Goebbels during the 1930s. Propaganda picture postcards in 1938
of genuine Russian camps, were re-labeled for issue as 'Genuine British
Concentration Camps in South Africa'. The British camps in South Africa,
set up during the two and a half year long Boer War, were for internment
purposes only, but the lack of proper supervision, negligence and poor
hygiene, gave the camps a bad name and caused the deaths of over 30,000
inmates, mostly from outbreaks of typhoid and measles.
EXTERMINATION CAMPS. The first camp in which Jews had been gassed was
Chelmno in Poland. The first gassings took place in December, 1941. This
was the first camp mentioned by name in the West. A train had left Holland
on November 20 carrying 726 deportees, on the 24th, another train with 709
Jews departed and on November 30 a total of 826 Jews were deported. All
the Dutch people knew was that the trains were heading east for Poland.
The word 'Auschwitz' was unheard of in the West until April 18, 1943 when
an eye-witness report reached London. However this report was never made
public. In 1942, the Allies knew of the wholesale massacres taking place
in camps such as Chelmno, Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor and Majdanek but the
horror of Auschwitz was still to emerge. Conferences were arranged,
telephone calls and telegrams exchanged, discussions took place and notes
were passed back and forth but nothing was actually done and all this time
the deportations and killings went on and on. Even in December, 1943, when
the airfield at Foggia in Southern Italy was captured, thus bringing the
camps within range of Allied bombers (a round trip of just under1,300
miles) the camp at Auschwitz was still not identified as the destination
of the deportee transports. On May 31, 1944, the complex at Monovitz was
photographed for the second time and Auschwitz itself was photographed
but the row upon row of prisoners huts, which was holding around 52,000
prisoners, failed to register as an extermination camp in the minds of
Allied intelligence services.
On April 7, 1944, two Jewish prisoners, Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler,
escaped from the camp and headed for Slovakia where they reached the
village of Skalite on Friday, April 21st. Next morning they travelled to
Zilina where they contacted the Jewish Agency. Their report, together with
the report of two other escapees, Peter Mordowicz and Arnost Rosin,
eventually reached London and on June 18 brief details were heard on the
radio during a broadcast from the BBC. This alerted the outside world to
the reality of Auschwitz. The first photographs to reach the west was of
corpses scattered around the Majdanek camp. These were taken by the Red
Army on January 3, 1945. Auschwitz had still to be liberated.
SAVED. Many Jewish lives were saved by an anti-circumcision operation
performed by some caring doctors. Dr. Josef Jaksy, a Czechoslovakian
urologist, made a small incision on the patients penis and then issued a
certificate that stated that they had recently been circumcised for purely
medical reasons. Dr. Feliks Kanabus, a Polish surgeon, with the help of
two other doctors, pooled their knowledge and performed around 140
operations by attaching skin from other parts of the body to the penis in
order to hide the circumcision.
DEPORTED. Between 1942 and 1944, a total of 25,257 Jews were shipped out
of Belgium on twenty eight train convoys. Among them were 5,430 children
under the age of sixteen, the youngest only thirty-nine days old. At the
end of the war only 1,207 were still alive when the concentration camps in
Poland were liberated. A further 5,034 managed to escape across the border
to seek refuge in France. Unfortunately these were rounded up after the
fall of France in 1940 and deported, via Drancy, to Auschwitz. Of these,
only 317 survived.
BERGEN-BELSEN CONCENTRATION CAMP. On April 15, 1945, the camp was
liberated by British troops. Scattered around the grounds were around
10,000 decaying corpses which the troops had to bury using bulldozers.
Some of the survivors who had been transferred to Belsen from Auschwitz,
stated that living conditions here were far superior to those in
Auschwitz. But this was soon to change as trains bringing thousands of
inmates from camps in the east began to arrive in Belsen. Conditions
became catastrophic during the final months of the war as transports
bringing food supplies to the camp were increasingly being destroyed on
the roads and railways by Allied bombers. Gross overcrowding, inadequate
supplies of food, water and medicines and an uncontrollable outbreak of
typhus caused the deaths of about 37,000 inmates up to the day of
liberation. In the few weeks after the British takeover another 13,000
died in spite of all the care taken to preserve life. But in striking
contrast to the distorted press coverage at the time the Belsen
Concentration Camp was not an extermination facility. There was no
deliberate intention by the Germans to starve the prisoners to death at
Belsen (officially designated as a convalescence camp). No gas chambers
were discovered and the crematorium consisted of only one furnace in which
to cremate the dead. The Camp's Commandant, Josef Kramer, along with his
chief physician Dr Fritz Cline, quarantined the camp and did everything in
their power to prevent the catastrophe, even appealing to higher authority
for more transport to fetch vegetables and other foodstuffs from the
countryside. In spite of their efforts both Kramer and Cline were executed
after being found guilty at the Belsen War Crimes Trial. (In June, 1945,
the whole camp had to be burned down)
LEGAL RESIDENTS. By 1942 there were only 9,150 foreign Jews legally
resident in Switzerland, 980 more than in 1931. Many of these were the
richer Jews who had fled Germany leaving behind their shops, factories and
other properties. These were quickly snapped up, dirt cheap, by
unscrupulous Swiss businessmen who made their fortunes out of Jewish
miseries.
THE CABINET WAR ROOMS. The nerve center of British planning and conduct of
the war was the War Cabinet Rooms. Situated at Storey's Gate in London,
close to the houses of Parliament, the Foreign Office and Downing Street.
Its location was one of the best kept secrets of the war. The War Rooms
were once the cellars of the Board of Education building and covered an
area of six acres with around 150 rooms including sleeping quarters,
canteens and dining rooms. The roof was reinforced with tram lines and a
six foot thick layer of cement. Churchill had doubts that it could
withstand a direct hit from a 500lb bomb. At the height of the war, over
600 people worked in the War Rooms which were abandoned on August 15, 1945
as no longer required.
Only six rooms were kept, preserved exactly as they were, as a memorial to
those dark days of 1939/45. They are now open to the public.
BOMBING BY THE RAF. The first of the 4,000lb bombs dropped on German soil
was on the city of Emden on March 31, 1940, when two Wellington bombers
raided the city. Each bomb carried a parachute to retard its descent. In
1940, 14,369 tons of bombs were dropped on Germany by the R.A.F. In 1941,
34,954 tons and in 1944, 579,384 tons.
DRESS SENSE. The bombing of German cities had a curious effect on how
people dressed. Afraid that their best clothes could be lost or burned,
German women preferred to wear them on all occasions. In the air-raid
shelters particularly, it seemed that every women owned a fur coat!.
ICE CREAM SHIP. The war's most unusual ship was commissioned in 1945 at
a cost of around one million dollars. It was the US Navy's 'Ice Cream
Barge' the world's first floating ice cream parlor. It's sole
responsibility was to produce ice cream for US sailors in the Pacific
region. The barge crew pumped out around 1,500 gallons every hour! The
concrete hulled vessel had no engine of its own but was towed around by
tugs and other ships. A second barge, also in the ice cream business, and
under the command of a Major Charles Zeigler, was anchored off Naha.
U.S. PILOTS. Seven American volunteer pilots fought alongside the RAF
pilots during the Battle of Britain. One, P/O William Fiske, died of
wounds on August 17, 1940. (Could P/O Fiske have been the first American
casualty of World War 11?) Only one of the other six, P/O Haviland,
survived the war. During the Battle of Britain , the German Luftwaffe lost
1,882 planes, the RAF lost 1,265 planes. In all, 537 pilots were lost to
Fighter Command, 718 pilots to Bomber Command and 280 pilots were lost to
Coastal Command.
EAGLE SQUADRONS. Many American pilots served in the Royal Air Force and in
order to circumvent the US Neutrality Act they assumed Canadian or South
African nationality. They formed the Eagle Squadrons, approved by the
British Air Ministry in September, 1940, and operated within the RAF
Fighter Command. The first Eagle Squadron was No. 71 Squadron, formed with
Hurricanes at RAF Station Kirton-in-Lindsay, Lincolnshire. The ultimate
total of US pilots thus serving numbered 243 with additional squadrons
Nos.121 and 133 operating from Kirton-in-Lindsay and Coltishall
respectively. After the US entry into the war the Eagle Squadrons were
transferred into the US 8th. Air Force.
INVASION. As of Sept.16, 1940, in spite of RAF bombing, the build-up of
invasion barges in the German held Channel ports continued to increase.
Reconnaissance photos showed 600 barges at Antwerp, 230 at Boulogne, 266
at Calais, 220 at Dunkirk, 205 at Le Havre and 200 at Ostend. This was in
anticipation of a second attempt at an invasion of Great Britain in 1941
after the winter had subsided.
SPITFIRE v HURRICANE. Contrary to popular belief, it was the Hurricane,
not the Spitfire, that saved Britain during the dark days of 1940. The
turn-around time (re-arm, refuel etc.) for the Spitfire was 26 minutes.
That of the Hurricane, only 9 minutes from down to up again. During the
Battle of Britain the time spent on the ground was crucial and as one
fitter/mechanic of No.145 Squadron quipped: "If we had nothing but Spits
we would have lost the fight in 1940". The Spitfire was an all metal
fighter, slightly faster, had a faster rate of climb and had a higher
ceiling, while the Hurricane had a fabric covered fuselage, was quicker to
repair and withstood more punishment. With the for's and against's of both
fighters they came out about even. The majority of German planes shot down
during the four month period were destroyed by Hurricanes. For much of the
Battle of Britain, the Spitfires went after the German BF 109s at the
higher altitudes, while the Hurricanes attacked the bomber formations
flying at lower altitudes. This cost the enemy a total of 551 pilots
killed or taken prisoner. During the war a total of 14,231 Hurricanes and
20,334 Spitfires were produced. The famous Rolls-Royce 'Merlin' engine
evolved through 88 separate marks and was fitted in around 70,000 Allied
aircraft during the six years of war.
FUEDING. During the Battle of Britain, a bitter feud developed between 12
Group Commander Leigh-Mallory and the New Zealand Commander of 11 Fighter
Group, Keith Park. At the height of the battle, Leigh-Mallory failed to
send his forces to the aid of Park. Park never forgave him for this. When
Leigh-Mallory was made Commander of Allied Forces after D-Day the American
Air Force Commander General Spatz, made it clear that under no
circumstances would he serve under him.
SPONSORED FIGHTERS. Many Spitfires used in the Battle of Britain were
sponsored by private companies and individuals. Money raised in cities,
towns and villages was used to buy a Spitfire at a cost of ?5,000 each.
They bore names such as Dogfighter bought by a well known Kennel Club,
Dorothy was bought by women whose name was Dorothy, Gingerbread by
red-haired men and women, Unshackled by donations from POWs and so on.
The largest donation received came from Queen Wilhelmina of the
Netherlands who donated ?215,000 to purchase an entire squadron of 43
Spitfires.
INTO THE FIRE. In February, 1941, men of the Australian 22nd Brigade (8th
Division) boarded the liner Queen Mary anchored off Toronga Park Zoo in
Sydney. Embarking more troops when the ship called at Fremantle in Western
Australia, the ship left harbour and turned north. It was then that the
troops were told that their destination was Singapore, not Europe where
all the action was. To be used as garrison troops in this outpost of
Empire was a bitter disappointment for the 5,750 soldiers on board. Two
weeks later Japanese forces attacked Singapore and the garrison was forced
to surrender. In the defence of the city, 1,789 Australian soldiers died.
The fighting in Malaya and including Singapore, cost the Australians 2,178
killed and 1,306 wounded. Two days after the surrender 14,792 Australians
and some 35,000 British troops found themselves behind the walls of Changi
Prison as prisoners of war.
SHELTER TRAGEDY. At 11.12pm on Saturday, May 3rd 1941, the air raid sirens
sounded in North Shields, a town on England's north-east coast. A lone
German bomber dropped four bombs on the town, two exploding harmlessly,
the third hitting a private house killing the two occupants. The fourth
bomb made a direct hit on the three-storey Wilkinson's Lemonade Factory,
the basement of which was used as a communal air raid shelter and on this
night was crammed with 192 men, women and children. The top three storyes,
filled with heavy factory machinery, collapsed onto the basement trapping
the occupants and killing 102 persons including 36 children under the age
of 16. Three others died later in hospital bringing the final death toll
in the shelter to 105. On September 8, 1940, a direct hit on an air-raid
shelter in the Peabody Housing Estate in Whitechapel, London, killed 78
persons.
THE FIRST AMERICAN MERCHANT SHIP to be sunk by the Japanese was the 2,140
ton steamship Cnythea Olson on passage from Tacoma to Honolulu. Sunk on
December 7, 1941. The crew of 33 and two military men were all lost.
LUCKY HIT. During the attack on Pearl Harbor, a Hawaiian DC-3 airliner,
coming in to land, was hit by a Japanese tracer bullet and set on fire. A
minute later, the plane was hit by another bullet which hit the valve of a
fire extinguisher, thus putting out the fire!.
PEARL HARBOR. The unprovoked attack on the American naval base in Hawaii
on December 7, 1941, launched the Pacific War. Casualties were 2,403
Americans killed, 1,178 wounded. Four battleships were sunk and five
damaged. All told, 188 planes were destroyed and 162 damaged. The Japanese
attacking force consisted of 31 ships with 253 aircraft. Japanese losses
were 29 planes downed and 5 midget submarines lost. In total, 64 deaths.
(The first American casualty of the Pacific War was seaman Julius
Ellsberry from Birmingham, Alabama, who was killed during the attack) On
January 26, 1942, a Board of Inquiry found the Commander-in-Chief US
Fleet, Admiral Kimmel and the Commander-in-Chief Hawaiian Department,
General Short, guilty of dereliction of duty. Both were dismissed.
SUICIDE? Stalin's son, Jakov Dzhugashvili, a 2nd Lieutenant in the
artillery corps, was captured on May 16th, 1942 and interned in the
Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp where he was later shot while trying to
escape. (Some sources say he committed suicide). In 1943, an attempt was
made by the Germans to exchange Jakov for Field Marshal Paulus who was
captured after the fall of Stalingrad. The request was refused by Stalin.
Although he grieved for his son he is quoted as saying 'I will not
exchange a private for a Field Marshal'. Over two million Soviet prisoners
of war were liberated by the Red Army. All were to suffer at the hands of
Stalin who always maintained that Russia had no POWs, all were considered
traitors to the Motherland for allowing themselves to be captured.
PLANE CRASH. The son of Italy's dictator, Benito Mussolini, was killed in
an air crash on August 7, 1941. Twenty-three year old Bruno, second son of
the Fascist leader, died when the four-engined bomber he was testing,
crashed near San Guisto Airport at Pisa. Mussolini flew at once to the
Santa Chiara Hospital and sat beside his son's body for hours before
talking to the five wounded survivors.
ASPIDASTRA. The codename given to the powerful 500KW transmitter which was
purchased from America for use in broadcasting propaganda on the German
controlled wave-lengths. It cost Britain ?111,801, 4 shillings and 10
pence to buy the apparatus from the RCA factory in Camden, New Jersey.
Another sum of ?16,000 was spent to prepare the site and erect the masts
near Crowborough in Essex. The transmitter first became
Posted by Brownie Shoultz Oct 30 2004 12:56:37:000PM
|
|

|
|
 |
|