Showing posts with label Catroux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catroux. Show all posts

Saturday, October 22, 2016

October 18, 1940: Convoy SC-7 Catastrophe

Friday 18 October 1940

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Air Raid Warden protect children
Air raid warden Mary Couchman, 24-year-old, shields three little children as bombs fall. October 18, 1940.

Battle of Britain: Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering, perhaps gilding the lily a bit too much, on 18 October 1940 continues his lavish praise of the Luftwaffe's lackluster campaign during the Battle of Britain. He thanks his pilots for "reducing the British plutocracy to fear and terror." This statement smacks of overkill, but the Luftwaffe's success or failure reflects directly upon him, so the better he makes their failures sound, the better he looks as well.

The fickle weather of 1940 once again puts many flying operations to a stop. The increased strength of the RAF is shown as it successfully prevents the usual reconnaissance flights over England during the morning.

There are no large-scale raids. Instead, there are numerous small-scale intrusions. The largest incident involves some Junkers Ju 88s that Fighter Command intercepts over Kent on the way to London. However, that is the exception.

After dark, the Luftwaffe swings back into action. It bombs London, Bristol, Birmingham, Liverpool, Southampton, and East Anglia.  A direct hit on the Rose and Crown Pub results in 42 killed and 6 injured. The night's activity ends early, though, by 01:45, giving Londoners a chance to get some good rest. The Luftwaffe also lays mines in the Thames Estuary.

The Luftwaffe manages to lose 15 planes and the RAF only four. In the foul weather, pilots get disoriented and planes head off in the wrong direction. This happens on both sides. The RAF loses four Hurricanes when RAF No. 302 (Polish) Squadron becomes disoriented over Surrey and runs out of fuel and the planes have to land with dead sticks. This leads to four Hurricanes lost, along with their pilots. The Luftwaffe also has two planes crash back in France, killing the pilots.

There is an exchange of gunfire by the big coastal guns at Hellfire Corner (Straits of Dover), with little consequence.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Michael Gibson
Sergeant Michael Gibson is killed while defusing a bomb that fell on Coventry city center. After taking it to the Whitley Common, the bomb explodes, killing him and his squad of seven. Gibson is awarded the George Cross (posthumously) for an earlier incident on 18 September - obviously, he was a very brave man. The medal later sells at auction in 2012 for £93,000. Collectors view the George Cross as less valuable than the Victoria Cross, but fewer have been awarded and thus it is rarer.
European Air Operations: Poor weather restricts operations. RAF Bomber Command attacks the ports of Duisberg, Kiel and Hamburg, warehouses at Schwerte, Osnabruck, and Dortmund (also a factory there), and an aluminum factory at Lunen.

Major Werner Streib replaces Hptm. Radusch as Gruppenkommandeur of night fighter unit I./NJG 1. Meanwhile, a night fighter Do 17Z-10s of 4./NJG 1 shoots down an RAF Wellington bomber over the Zuider Zee in Holland.

Battle of the Atlantic: Convoys, by and large, and relatively speaking, have been unmolested until now. U-boats have been picking off stragglers and "independents," ships traveling alone. There have been various attacks on convoys, but they have been uncoordinated affairs that have not sunk more than a few ships at a time. That changes today with the first true wolfpack, directed and coordinated by U-boat headquarters in France. This marks a new phase in the naval war.

Half a dozen U-boats have been shadowing Convoy SC 7, which is an eastbound convoy that left Sydney, Nova Scotia on 5 October bound for Liverpool, for several days. SC 7 is composed of 35 ships but has had only a few escorts: destroyer HMS Scarborough, sloop HMS Fowey and corvette HMS Bluebell. Today, a couple of more escorts arrive from Great Britain: sloop HMS Leith and corvette HMS Heartsease. These five escorts, however, are outnumbered by the shadowing U-boats.

U-38 (Kptlt. Heinrich Liebe), operating out of Lorient, starts things off today, already having sunk the Greek freighter Aenos on the 18th. At 02:04, U-38 torpedoes and damages 3670-ton British freighter Carsbreck. The Carsbeck is carrying timber and thus is buoyant, and the ship manages to make port escorted by HMS Heartsease. The Leith and Heartsease attack U-38 without success, and then Heartsease joins Carsbeck as Convoy SC 7 sails on.

U-38, meanwhile, stumbles upon Convoy OB 229 in the same area. It torpedoes and sinks British freighter Sandsend. There are 34 survivors and five crew perish.

Now back down to four escorts, Convoy SC 7 heads into the night knowing it is in trouble. It is about 300 km northwest of Rockall.

Now, with U-38 out of the picture, five U-boats make a joint attack:
  • U-46 (Oblt.z.S. Peter-Ottmar Grau)
  • U-99 (Kplt. Otto Kretschmer)
  • U-100 (Kptlt. Joachim Schepke)
  • U-101 (Kptlt. Fritz Frauenheim)
  • U-123 (Kptlt. Karl-Heinz Moehle)
This is not a seat-of-the-pants operation, where everybody just "does their thing." Strict control is maintained throughout by Konteradmiral Karl Dönitz at his headquarters in Lorient. The convoy escorts are completely ineffective and do not prevent any attacks - though they are instrumental in saving a lot of lives of merchant marine sailors. The night becomes a wonderland of flaming and sinking ships, with one torpedoed after another going down in flames, drifting onto other torpedoed ships, and generally causing chaos over many square miles of the open sea.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Admiral Doenitz U-boat headquarters
Adalbert Schnee, Karl Dönitz and Eberhard Godt at the Kriegsmarine Headquarters in Berlin, Germany. January 1943.
U-101 torpedoes and sinks 3913-ton British iron ore cargo ship Creekirk at 21:12. Loaded with 5900 tons of iron ore, it sinks quickly with all 36 men perishing in the dark.

U-101 also torpedoes 4155-ton British freighter Blairsprey at 23:08. With a load of timber, the Blairsprey is buoyant and, while abandoned, remains afloat. Another U-boat, U-100, torpedoes it at 02:50 on the 19th, but that doesn't sink Blairsprey, either. The ship eventually makes the Clyde in tow and is beached, and later repaired.

U-101 also torpedoes 2962 ton British freighter Assyrian (the convoy commodore's ship). The Assyrian is out of formation because earlier it had spotted another U-boat and chased it in order to ram it - unsuccessfully. U-101 sends a torpedo into its starboard side, which puts out its lights and engines but leaves the crew enough time to abandon ship. There are 34 survivors and 17 men perish. Captain Kearon later was awarded Lloyd's War Medal for Bravery at Sea and the OBE.

U-101 had fired four torpedoes in rapid succession, one of which sank the Assyrian. While two miss, another hits and sinks Dutch freighter Soesterberg. There are 19 survivors and 6 men perish.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Fritz Frauenheim U-boat Captain
Kptlt. Fritz Frauenheim of U-101.
U-99, led by legendary captain Kretschmer on his fifth patrol, has an epic night. It sinks in rapid succession:
  • British 6055 ton freighter Empire Miniver (35 survive, 3 dead)
  • British 4815 ton freighter Fiscus (38 dead, 1 survivor)
  • Greek 3854 ton freighter Niritos (27 survive, one death)
  • British 5154 ton freighter Empire Brigade (35 survive, 6 dead)
  • Norwegian 1643 ton freighter Snefjeld (all survive)
  • Greek 5875 ton freighter Thalia (22 perish, 6 survive)
  • British 3106 ton freighter Clintonia (damaged, later sunk by gunfire from U-123) (34 survive, one death).
U-123 torpedoes and sinks 5556-ton British freighter Sedgepool. There are 36 survivors and three men perish.

U-123 torpedoes and damages British freighter Skekatika, which has grown tired of the slow pace of Convoy SC 7 and run ahead of it. This is one of those situations where those who figure that the faster ships should just go at their own pace are proven wrong. Skekatika's crew of 36 all survive and are taken on board HMS Fowey.

U-46 torpedoes and sinks 4885-ton British freighter Beatus in Convoy SC 7. All 37 men aboard are rescued.

U-46 also torpedoes and sinks 1996 ton Swedish freighter Convallaria in Convoy SC 7. Everybody aboard survives and is taken on board HMS Fowey.

U-100 torpedoes and damages Dutch freighter Boekelo. U-123 later comes along and finishes her off. All 25 men aboard survive.

U-46 torpedoes and sinks 1572 ton Swedish freighter Gunborg. All 23 men aboard survive and are taken aboard HMS Bluebell.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Convoy SC-7
Locations of ships lost in Convoy SC 7.
Just to sum up, the ships lost in Convoy SC 7.
  • Trevisa (1,813 grt. ca.)
  • Languedoc (9,512 grt. br.)
  • Scoresby (3,843 grt. br.)
  • Aenos (3,554 grt. gr.)
  • Beatus (4,885 grt. br.)
  • Convallaria (1,996 grt. sw.)
  • Creekirk (3,917 grt. br.)
  • Empire Miniver (6,055 grt. br.)
  • Gunborg (1,572 grt. sw.)
  • Niritos (3,854 grt. gr.)
  • Fiscus (4,815 grt. br.)
  • Assyrian (2,962 grt. br.)
  • Soesterberg (1,904 grt. nl.)
  • Boekelo (2,118 grt. nl.)
  • Empire Brigade (5,154 grt. br.)
  • Sedgepool (5,556 grt. br.)
  • Thalia (5,875 grt. gr.)
  • Snefjeld (1,643 grt. nw.)
  • Shekatika (5,458 grt. br.)
  • Clintonia (3,106 grt. br.)
Meanwhile, Convoy HX 79 also is about to get devastated. This also is an eastbound convoy of 49 ships which left Halifax on 8 October 1940. This is a case of two convoys merging as they funnel into the Western Approaches, making one formless mass with ships exposed to attack everywhere the U-boats can look. Prien, in fact, initiated the entire attack because he spotted HX 79 and informed U-boat headquarters about it. However, those attacks occur on the 19th and 20th, which is where we will address them.

There is also U-boat action elsewhere.

German patrol craft (U-Jäger) UJ 116 and UJ 118 of the 5th German anti-submarine flotilla are operating in the North Sea off Texel when they spot British submarine HMS H49 ((Lt R. E. Coltart). They depth-charge and sink it. There are 21-25 deaths (accounts vary), and only one man, Leading Stoker George William Oliver, survives. He winds up in Marlag M as a POW for the rest of the war. This is a known war grave off Terschelling. Divers visiting it have been prosecuted by the Dutch government.

Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Argus sails to Reykavik, Iceland to take aboard planes of RAF No. 701 Squadron.

Royal Navy 448 ton anti-submarine trawler Kingston Cairngorm, in tow since being mined off Portland on the 17th, sinks at 03:18.

The Luftwaffe bombs and damages 159-ton British trawler King Athelstan about 20 km off Mizzen Head.

Royal Navy heavy cruiser HMS Cornwall seizes Vichy French freighter Indochinois off Casablanca. It boards it with a prize crew and sends it to Freetown.

Convoy OA 231 departs from Methil, Convoy SL 52 departs from Freetown.

Royal Navy escort destroyer HMS Exmoor (L 61, Lt. Commander Robert T. Lampard) is commissioned.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com sinking ship

Battle of the Mediterranean: General de Gaulle meets with General Catroux. This is a relationship fraught with intrigue because technically Catroux outranks de Gaulle (though technically they both no longer serve in any nation's army). De Gaulle is known to fear that the British will replace him with Catroux. This meeting allays some of de Gaulle's fears on that score, but this will not be the last time that a possible battle for supremacy of the Free France movement arises.

A Royal Navy operation including two Saunders-Roe London Flying boats of RAF 202 Squadron and destroyers HMS Firedrake, HMS Vidette, and HMS Wrestler find Italian submarine Durbo 120 miles east of Gibraltar (off Alboran Island). The British forces torpedo and sink the Italian submarine, with everybody on board surviving. The 48 Italians become POWs (ultimately in the US). This sinking has lasting consequences because, before sinking the sub, Royal Navy sailors get aboard and grab documents that will be helpful in tracking down other submarines.

Royal Navy submarine HMS Regent, having collided with a caique in the Ionian Sea, arrives at Malta for repairs with damage to its forward hydroplanes.

The South African Air Force, based in Sudan, attacks the Italian airfield at Barentu. The RAF attacks various Italian bases, including Benghazi, Sollum, Gura, Diredawa, Rhodes (an airfield) and the Dodecanese Islands.

At Malta, Governor Dobbie responds to a recent memorandum from the Chief of the Imperial Staff which suggested that additional forces need not be stationed on the island to repel an invasion, as forces could be transported in quickly. This degenerates into an argument over tactics - Dobbie wants the ability to attack the landing zones, while the Imperial Staff feels a counter-attack after a four-day delay (the minimum amount of time to bring in new forces) would suffice. Dobbie is probably right because the islands are so small that any delay likely would result in quick defeat.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com streetcar San Francisco
North Judah streetcar, San Francisco, California. October 18, 1940.
Battle of the Pacific: US schooner Director II runs aground off Gladstone, Queensland and is lost.

German raiders Orion and Komet, operating in tandem, rendezvous with supply ship Kulmerland at Lamotrek Atoll in the Caroline Islands.

Italian/German Relations: Having made his decision to invade Greece on the 15th, Mussolini has been studiously quiet about it. Italian Foreign Minister Count Ciano has told neither the German ambassador nor his German counterpart. The decision has immense implications for Germany, but Mussolini throughout the war occasionally allows his annoyance at being the junior partner in his relationship with Hitler to manifest itself.

Finally, word starts seeping out today. First, Lt. General Emil (Enno) von Rintelen, Wehrmacht liaison to Rome, tells the OKW that Mussolini has decided to attack Greece on the 26th. In this sense, he is almost acting in the role of a spy, as perhaps the Italian Generals don't even realize this is still top secret information. The information is outdated because army commander Marshal Badoglio already had convinced Mussolini to postpone the attack for two days, until the 28th. However, it is the first information Germany receives about Mussolini's intentions at all.

Then, Ciano sends an odd telegram to German Foreign Minister Ribbentrop stating that army commander Marshal Badoglio had opposed any Greek invasion and even Mussolini had been hesitant. Ciano professes himself enthusiastic about it, which is at odds with his usual attitude toward military entanglements. The telegram does not even say that such an invasion has been planned - it comes out of the blue as if the Germans already should know about the operation. All of this rather casual communication creates an appearance of insincerity or deception, to put it mildly.

All of this information sends the German command at Zossen and the Foreign Ministry into a whirlwind of activity. They contact their agents from Belgrade to Ankara to Tirana to Rome to get confirmation, and General von Pohl (liaison to the Italian Air Force) confirms that he has heard the same thing. Ribbentrop, meanwhile, remains in the dark about the status of the projected Italian operation, as the Italians are being cute about divulging the information.

Italian/German/Greek Relations: Germany and Italy begin ratcheting up pressure on Greece, submitting demands to the Greek government which they do not expect to be met.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com War Illustrated
The War Illustrated, Vol. 3 No 59, October 18, 1940.
Japanese/Dutch Relations: There are reports that the Japanese and the government in the Dutch East Indies in Batavia have reached a "concrete understanding" on oil deliveries to Japan. The actual agreement will be signed on the 19th.

Anglo/Japanese Relations: The British in India suspend indefinitely the export of scrap iron to Japan. This follows upon a similar ban imposed by the United States and appears to be tied to the re-opening of the Burma Road.

US Military: Heavy cruiser USS Louisville arrives in Rio de Janeiro as part of the continuing "Show the flag" operation.

China: The Chinese announce that in the first 18 hours of the re-opening of the Burma Road, more than 1500 tons of cargo have embarked on the long journey from Lashio (the start) to Kunming (the terminus). The truck convoys travel at night and a mile apart to avoid attacks. The trucks are described as "the latest American types."

The Japanese also have noticed the Burma Road's opening, and today the Japanese South China Seas Fleet Command announces that they sent 36 planes to bomb sections of the road (Bunna Road) at and near Kunming. This included a bridge which they "seriously damaged." Naval Air Force Commander Chikao Yamamoto (not the famous Yamamoto), noting bad weather over the target, states:
Heaven helped us by enabling us to sight and bomb the bridge. We saw no enemy aircraft and no anti-aircraft fire. 
There is some confusion about how the road will be used; the Colonial Secretary (N.L. Smith) issues, then retracts, a statement that gasoline and some other prohibited items under the July Anglo-Japanese agreement would be sent over the road. The Japanese would not be happy with that, and they retain the ability to pressure the British enclaves in Hong Kong and elsewhere.

French Homefront: The Vichy government publishes the new anti-Semitic laws (Statute of 4 Oct 1940) that it has recently announced. This specifies that Jews who are not French citizens are no longer protected by French laws and will be housed in new "Special camps." Now, where could they have gotten that idea?

British Homefront: Another evacuation of London children begins. Some 2000 depart every day for the more rural parts of the country. In fact, many Londoners now are living in caves in Kent. Most, however, have relocated to places such as Reading, Basingstoke, and Oxford.

18 October 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Nash car ad
An ad in The Pilot (Vass, N.C.), 18 October 1940. 
October 1940

October 2, 1940: Hitler's Polish Plans
October 3, 1940: British Cabinet Shakeup
October 4, 1940: Brenner Pass Meeting
October 5, 1940: Mussolini Alters Strategy
October 6, 1940: Iron Guard Marches
October 7, 1940: McCollum Memo
October 8, 1940: Germans in Romania
October 9, 1940: John Lennon Arrives
October 10, 1940: Führer-Sofortprogramm
October 11, 1940: E-Boats Attack!
October 12, 1940: Sealion Cancelled
October 13, 1940: New World Order
October 14, 1940: Balham Tragedy
October 15, 1940: Mussolini Targets Greece
October 16, 1940: Japanese Seek Oil
October 17, 1940: RAF Shakeup
October 18, 1940: Convoy SC-7 Catastrophe
October 19, 1940: Convoy HX-79 Catastrophe
October 20, 1940: Convoy OB-229 Disaster
October 21, 1940: This Evil Man Hitler
October 22, 1940: Aktion Wagner-Burckel
October 23, 1940: Hitler at Hendaye
October 24, 1940: Hitler and Petain
October 25, 1940: Petain Woos Churchill
October 26, 1940: Empress of Britain Attack
October 27, 1940: Greece Rejects Italian Demands
October 28, 1940: Oxi Day
October 29, 1940: US Draft Begins
October 30, 1940: RAF Area Bombing Authorized
October 31, 1940: End of Battle of Britain

2020

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

September 16, 1940: Italians Take Sidi Barrani

Monday 16 September 1940

16 September 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Roosevelt draft Selective Service Act
President Roosevelt signs the Selective Service Act, reinstating the draft.

German Military: Pursuant to Adolf Hitler's statements that Operation Sealion could be set in motion with "four or five days" of a maximum Luftwaffe effort, Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering on 16 September 1940 holds a meeting with his top lieutenants to announce another change in strategy. The supposed coup de grace on the 15th did not go as planned, with little damage to London and huge losses to the Luftwaffe.

Everybody in the German High Command is confused because the RAF was supposed to be kaput. The bomber guys blame the fighter pilots for being late to their stations, while the fighter jocks point their fingers at the bombers for taking so long to get into formation, thereby giving the RAF plenty of warning

Goering rather belatedly comments that the change of strategy to bomb London was a poor idea. He issues new orders to his commanders to return to the earlier strategy of bombing RAF airfields while bombing London at night. At this point, however, the constant changes in objectives and advanced season are wearing on the Luftwaffe's morale, not to mention the staggering losses taken on the 15th of September, "Battle of Britain Day." The results of that day, though, pretty much seal the case that the Luftwaffe is not, in fact, winning the battle, so tinkering with strategy at this point is increasingly futile.

16 September 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Daily Herald

British Military: Air Vice Marshal Park of No. 11 Group also has a meeting. While everyone is happy with the turn in the battle, Park does some tinkering of his own:
  • squadrons must focus on going to their assigned places;
  • squadrons needed to gain higher altitude earlier (the Bf 109s maintain a high altitude and thereby have the advantage);
  • squadrons operating together needed to stick together as intended.
Overall, things are going well for the RAF, but the Luftwaffe's numerical superiority remains.

Battle of Britain: The weather is poor, and Luftwaffe attacks are light. A raid at 07:30 toward London fizzles, with the bombers turning back after Fighter Command mounts a full-scale interception.

A later fighter sweep by Bf 109s of JG 51 achieves little, with RAF Fighter Command slow to intercept and getting in little combat (and the German fighters accomplishing little).

During the night, the Luftwaffe sends over heavy formations. The Germans drop 200+ tons of bombs on London's dock areas and the residential areas of Bethnal Green West Ham, East Ham, Hackney, and Shoreditch. The Bristol area takes damage, as do Liverpool and Manchester. In a typical incident of poor bombing accuracy, bombs fall on the golf course at Hebburn.

Otherwise, Luftwaffe raids are minimal and scattered. A Pirateneinsatze ("Pirate Raid") by a Heinkel He 111 targets the Bristol Aeroplane Company at Filton, a favorite Luftwaffe target, but the pilot apparently gets lost and returns to base.

There are few claims filed, with the score for the day generally considered to be in single digits for both sides, with an advantage for the RAF. Major Werner Mölders of JG 51 shoots down a Hurricane for his 38th victory.

The coastal guns at "Hellfire Corner" exchange salvoes in the morning without causing much damage.

16 September 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com RAF pilot Archie McKellar
On 16 September 1940, F/L Archibald A "Archie" McKellar of No 605 Squadrons RAF uses more tracer ammunition than usual in his Hurricane Mk I UP-A night fighter and shoots down a He 111 lit up by searchlight.
European Air Operations: The RAF focuses on the invasion ports, sending 155 bombers against Antwerp, Calais, Ostend, Dunkirk, and Veere. In addition, Bomber Command targets barge convoys at Ostend and Zeebrugge and the usual airfields in northwest Europe. During these raids, the British capture the Germans engaged in the practice of amphibious landings for Operation Sealion, causing casualties. The poor weather keeps the bombers on the ground after dark.

Battle of the Atlantic: The British continue their erratic approach toward Vichy French ships today. One day they fire on them, the next they allow French warships to pass by unopposed. Today, they resume attacking them.

South of Dakar, British cruiser HMS Cumberland - on patrol as part of Operation Menace - spots 4185 ton Vichy French freighter Poitiers heading for Dakar. After taking off the crew, the Cumberland sinks it with gunfire.

The British also seize 5135 ton Vichy French freighter Touareg near the Congo River.

U-99 (Kplt. Otto Kretschmer) continues to stalk Convoy SC 3. at 02:41, it torpedoes and sinks 1327 ton Norwegian freighter Lotos just northeast of Rockall (off the coast of Ireland). Everyone on board (17 men) survives.

U-59 (Kptlt. Joachim Matz), on her 12th patrol, torpedoes and sinks 4616-ton British collier Bibury in the Atlantic south of Iceland. All 39 onboard perish.

Dutch 5918 ton freighter Stad Schiedam (City of Schiedam) sinks south of Bermuda due to a suspicious explosion. While terrorism is suspected at the time, it now is believed that the old ship (launched in 1911) had mechanical issues that caused sparks, igniting its load of sulfur. Everyone survives, the 12-man crew spend five days in a life raft in the middle of the Atlantic before being picked up by a passing freighter (SS White Crest).

British 4098 ton freighter Incemore runs aground at East Cape on Anticosti Island, Quebec and is a total loss.

The Luftwaffe bombs and sinks 6588-ton freighter City of Mobile (formerly Kentucky) in the Irish Sea near Portaferry, County Down. Everybody on board survives.

The Luftwaffe also bombs and sinks 8323-ton troopship HMT Aska. There are about 300-600 survivors, while 30 people perish (sources vary because multiple ships picked up survivors and landed them at different places). The ship is loaded with French troops from West Africa. The ship burns and drifts for days before finally sinking near Gigha. While it sinks in shallow water, it is never re-floated.

British destroyers HMS Worcester and Wild Swan collide in Harwich Harbour, causing damage to the latter.

British destroyer HMS Holderness is damaged by a mine in the North Sea and requires repairs.

Convoys OA 215 and MT 171 depart from Methil, Convoy FN 282 departs from Southend, Convoy FS 283 departs from the Tyne.

16 September 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Luftwaffe pilot Hauptmann Joppien
Hauptmann Hermann-Friedrich Joppien (I./JG 51) receives the Ritterkreuz (Knight's Cross) on 16 September 1940, after his twenty-first victory.
Battle of the Mediterranean: The Italians complete their offensive. They send 50 tanks and supporting artillery toward Alam el Dab, near Sidi Barrani, in an attempt to outflank the British. The British continue withdrawing, this time from Alam Hamid to Alam el Dab. They engage in scorched earth demolitions as they go, suggesting they don't expect to be returning any time soon. The Italians (1st Blackshirt "23 Marzo" Division) occupy Sidi Barrani by sunset. The coast road in this area has an alternate route on cliffs overlooking the road, and the Italians advance on the road while the British retreat on the cliffs.

The Italians make various threats over Italian radio to continue their advance toward the railroad station at Mersa Matruh, 70 miles further down the coast road. In fact, they stop at Sidi Barrani and dig in. Eventually, they form a chain of fortified encampments in an arc reaching into the desert. They also occupy all the points they bypassed, such as Buq Buq and Sidi Omar, and repair the road and lay a water pipe (the Italians are awesome road-builders in the desert). The British set up a defensive line in front of Mersa Matruh and leave the 11th Hussars forward as a screening force.

While the media at the time claims that the Italians suffered thousands of casualties a day, in fact, their total casualties are about 550 men. The British, in turn, suffer very few casualties, retreating in good order to their railhead, and this time Churchill is more appreciative of an efficient withdrawal than he was in British Somaliland. Both sides engage in fighter sweeps on their enemy's advanced positions, to little effect.

The entire Italian offensive accomplishes little beyond occupying the worthless ground, but it fulfills Mussolini's desire to look like Hitler's partner. He has other projects in mind anyway, in Albania. However, Mussolini chafes at his army's inactivity and continually prods Marshal Graziani to resume the offensive toward Matruh, which is planned for December. As Mussolini tells Graziani, he just wants the army to attack, not occupy places:
Once again I repeat that there are no territorial objectives. It is not a question of aiming for Alexandria nor even Sallum. I am only asking that you attack the British forces facing you.
Graziani, however, is a cautious commander, is worried about his supply line and the size of the British forces opposing him, and goes no further.

The Royal Navy sallies from Alexandria. During the night, HMS Illustrious launches an air raid on the Italian base at Benghazi. The British also mine the harbor there. The Italian fleet there takes a beating, losing two destroyers and two cargo ships during the day. Cruiser HMS Kent independently shells Bardia and is badly damaged by torpedo planes.

At Malta, Governor Dobbie warns that the island is running out of food stores. The island does, however, have ample fuel stocks with strict rationing. Everything is vulnerable to bomber attack, so the government is building underground storage tanks.

16 September 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Milwaukee Sentinel

Battle of the Indian Ocean: German raider Pinguin captures 4111-ton Norwegian freighter Nordvard. The Germans put a prize crew on board the Nordvard and send it off toward Bordeaux, where the captured Norwegian crew will be forwarded on to their country.

German/Soviet Relations: The Soviets take notice of the Wehrmacht troops using their new transit rights in Finland (they are en route to Narvik) and are concerned. Of course, they would be a lot more concerned if they knew what was going on in Fuehrer Headquarters.

German/Spanish Relations: Spanish Minister Serrano Suñer visits Berlin to discuss Germany's request for bases in the Canary Islands and elsewhere. He indicates that Spain would require a lot in return and, in effect, denies the request.

Free France: General Georges Albert Julien Catroux, recent commander of French Indochina, arrives in London. He joins the Free French movement, having met General Charles de Gaulle during World War I. Catroux is the most senior officer of the French Army to transfer allegiance (including de Gaulle) and becomes the commander-in-chief of the Free French forces (under de Gaulle).

New Caledonia pledges its allegiance to the Free French upon the appointment of Governor Henri Sautot of New Hebrides to replace Governor Pélicier.

US Military: Cruiser USS St. Louis, carrying the Greenslade Board, arrives in St. John, Newfoundland to inspect the new US base there (transferred as part of the destroyers-for-bases deal).

China: The Communist Chinese continue their offensive, with the New 4th Army capturing Jiangyan in Jiangsu Province.

Dutch Homefront: The SS actively recruits for the new Dutch SS formation.

American Homefront: President Roosevelt signs the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, reinstating the draft.

16 September 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Life Magazine
"Jessie Woods Starting Private Plane at Memphis Airport, Flight Across America," Life Magazine, September 16, 1940.
September 1940

September 1, 1940: RAF's Horrible Weekend
September 2, 1940: German Troopship Sunk
September 3, 1940: Destroyers for Bases
September 4, 1940: Enter Antonescu
September 5, 1940: Stukas Over Malta
September 6, 1940: The Luftwaffe Peaks
September 7, 1940: The Blitz Begins
September 8, 1940: Codeword Cromwell
September 9, 1940: Italians Attack Egypt
September 10, 1940: Hitler Postpones Sealion
September 11, 1940: British Confusion at Gibraltar
September 12, 1940: Warsaw Ghetto Approved
September 13, 1940: Zeros Attack!
September 14, 1940: The Draft Is Back
September 15, 1940: Battle of Britain Day
September 16, 1940: italians Take Sidi Barrani
September 17, 1940: Sealion Kaputt
September 18, 1940: City of Benares Incident
September 19, 1940: Disperse the Barges
September 20, 1940: A Wolfpack Gathers
September 21, 1940: Wolfpack Strikes Convoy HX-72
September 22, 1940: Vietnam War Begins
September 23, 1940: Operation Menace Begins
September 24, 1940: Dakar Fights Back
September 25, 1940: Filton Raid
September 26, 1940: Axis Time
September 27, 1940: Graveney Marsh Battle
September 28, 1940: Radio Belgique Begins
September 29, 1940: Brocklesby Collision
September 30, 1940: Operation Lena

2020