Showing posts with label parachute decoys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parachute decoys. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2016

August 14, 1940: Sir Henry's Mission to America

Wednesday 14 August 1940

14 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com crashed Heinkel 111
In this colorized photo, 11-year-old cousins Wendy Atherton and Cathie Jones stand with Heinkel He 111P-2 of 8./KG27 near their home at Border House Farm near Chester in Cheshire, August 14, 1940. The German plane had been targeting RAF Sealand along with two other planes and was shot down (along with the other two planes) by Spitfires from RAF Hawarden after bombing the airfield.

Battle of Britain: The fickle weather once again turns against the Germans on 14 August 1940, with clouds and rain. This gives the British a chance to repair some of the damage wrought to airfields and radar stations in recent days before another massive Luftwaffe onslaught.

Operations do not even begin until noontime when Bf 110 Zerstörers of Epr.Gr 210 attack RAF Manston. Despite the absence of RAF fighter cover (above the low-hanging clouds dealing with the German escort), the British anti-aircraft fire is deadly and downs several of the attackers. The attack accomplishes little, only damaging some Blenheim bombers and destroying some hangars. Emblematic of the Luftwaffe problems is a collision between two of the Bf 110s over the airbase which kills three of the four men in them.

Another raid at the same time takes place further north, where approximately 300 Luftwaffe planes cross the coast near Dover and split off into multiple groups with different targets. One detachment sinks the Gate Light Vessel, another attacks Hawkinge. JG 26, Adolf Galland's unit, once again demonstrates that it is an elite formation by protecting the Stukas competently and allowing only one to be shot down.

Another major raid occurs at 17:07 when medium bombers attack RAF Middle Wallop, RAF Andover and the railway at Southampton. These attacks are reasonably effective, with hangars destroyed at Middle Wallop and radio equipment destroyed at Andover.

There are other, smaller raids of less consequence that still result in losses. British sloop HMS Kingfisher and tug Carbon are damaged in Portland Harbour. Once again, the Luftwaffe attacks the Bristol Aeroplane Company at Filton and nearby industrial targets. Other raids target various railway and air installations, such as Whitchurch airfield and the station at Westons Mare. A major air battle develops over Dover during the afternoon, with JG 51 aces Hauptman Walter Oesau and Oblt. Josef "Pips" Priller getting victories.

Oberst Alois Stöckl, Gruppenkommandeur of KG 55, is killed in his Heinkel He 111 near Wallop and replaced by Oblt. Hans Körte.

After dark, the Luftwaffe sends over a few lone raiders, but nothing major develops. The score for the day once again is lopsided, with most accounts giving the losses as about 20 for the Luftwaffe and around 5 for the RAF. Accounts vary widely, especially on the Luftwaffe side.

14 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Daily Herald headlines
The British newspapers are full of glorious feats of derring-do by the British military which have only a slight semblance to reality. It is all about "smashing" Italian attacks and wild estimates of Luftwaffe losses, not so much about crumbling British defenses in British Somaliland and RAF bombing raids with catastrophic losses.
European Air Operations: There is an unusual air raid alert in Berlin around midnight, only the fourth of the war, but it appears to be a false alarm. The British in fact raid oil installations, airfields and railway targets at Bordeaux, Cologne, and other typical targets in northwestern Europe.

Western Front: The final informal Royal Navy evacuations from southern France, which have been continuing clandestinely at Mediterranean ports since June, conclude. This terminates Operation Ariel. It is estimated that 191,870 people have been evacuated in Operation Ariel, which excludes the other two major evacuations, Operations Dynamo and Cycle.

German Government: The debate and confusion about Operation Sea Lion continues within the German high command. Admiral Raeder yesterday told Hitler that the Kriegsmarine cannot protect and supply any landings on a broad front. Today, army Commander-in-chief Field Marshal Heinrich Alfred Hermann Walther von Brauchitsch, who is the projected leader of the operation, has his say. Von Brauchitsch proposes just the opposite of what Raeder suggested was feasible, namely, landings on a broad front with multiple landing sites (similar to what the Allies later did on 6 June 1944). This makes perfectly good sense from an army perspective, stretching out the British defenses and creating multiple opportunities for success. However, it makes no sense whatsoever from a naval perspective because the Kriegsmarine simply doesn't have the ships to supply and defend multiple beachheads.

This illustrates that none of the branches of the Wehrmacht have the slightest understanding of what the others need and are capable of delivering. The confusion is exacerbated by the fact that there is little communication between the German army, navy and air force and even less cooperation (the Luftwaffe, for instance, absolutely blocks the creation of a separate marine air force as an infringement on its own powers). Hitler is fine with all of this - part of his managerial style is to create warring fiefdoms within the German state, with himself as the only one who has all the information and the ability to coordinate solutions - the ultimate arbiter. It is a variant on the Shakespearean "I want around me men who are fat" dictum from "Julius Caesar," and it enables him to maintain absolute power within the Reich (Hitler also follows the dictum to the letter with portly crony Hermann Goering).

The larger planning flaw is that nobody has anticipated being placed in this situation so quickly, with France vanquished and England the next step. The Germans are not used to or comfortable with planning major strategic naval operations - something they had difficulty with during the First World War, too. Wehrmacht staff planning is concentrated in the Heer (army) because Germany by tradition is primarily a land power (not necessarily by choice in 1940, but the restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles had eviscerated the navy). The naval staff and resources are simply inadequate for the job. In essence, the Germans have no idea what they are doing regarding a cross-channel invasion, and they are building castles in the sand with their vapid plans that are pure abstractions without any grounding in experience or reality. It is little wonder that Hitler is casting about for new victims in other directions that he can ravage on good old reliable terra firma.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-59 (Kptl. Joachim Matz) torpedoes and sinks 2,339-ton British rice freighter Betty about 25 miles north of Ireland at 20:34. There are 4 survivors and 30 crew perish in the night.

British destroyers HMS Malcolm and Verity, accompanied by three torpedo boats, attack a German convoy of six Kriegsmarine armed trawlers and three S-boats off of Texel Island, Holland. The German lose a trawler and one of their own S-boats and also suffer damage to other ships.

The Kriegsmarine conducts minelaying in the North Sea.

Battle of the Mediterranean: British submarine HMS Rorqual sinks Italian freighter Leopard.

In Malta, there are no enemy air raids. Governor-General Dobbie complains to the War Office that he has insufficient men to man his anti-aircraft artillery and requests reinforcements. The War Office, for its part, inquires about two celebrity Italian pilots, General Cagna and Prince Pallavicini, who apparently were KIA.

Battle of the Pacific: German raider Orion is operating off of Nouméa, New Caledonia. It launches its Arado Ar 196 floatplane, but the plane has mechanical issues and lands far away. The Orion eventually finds and recovers it, restoring the raider's "eyes."

British Somaliland: Major General Godwin-Austen watches the Italians side-stepping his defenses along the coast road to Berbera. With the enemy almost in a position to cut the vital road, he bows to the inevitable. He requests permission to evacuate not just from that position, but from the country altogether. General Wavell of Middle East Command does not return an immediate decision.

Evacuations from Berbera, the capital of the British government, commence. The British and Australian warships take off 5700 troops and 1500 "non-essentials" (civilians and wounded) across the gulf to Aden.

14 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Sir Henry Tizard
Sir Henry in 1940.
Applied Science: Sir Henry Thomas Tizard leaves Great Britain on a disguised ocean liner (some sources say he flew) ahead of the rest of his team (popularly known as the "Tizard Mission," officially the British Technical and Scientific Mission) headed for Ottawa, Canada. Whether or not he has with him the famous "box of secrets" (including plans for the Supercharger, Gyroscopic gunsights, and the Cavity Magnetron, among other things) as stated by many sources is unclear and probably false; some reliable sources state that the box came across with the rest of his team on a later date.

The RAF supposedly is trying to use wire nets called "spaghetti shells" to drop on Luftwaffe planes and destroy them, but this idea does not go very far.

Terrorists: One of the German preoccupations is inciting a revolt by the Irish against the British as a distraction, and perhaps even converting them into a military ally. To this end, they send IRA Chief of Staff Sean Russell to Ireland aboard a U-boat, where it is hoped he will coordinate an uprising. Today, however, he perishes unexpectedly of a perforated ulcer aboard the U-boat and is buried at sea.

Anglo/US Relations: President Roosevelt and his advisors continue wrangling over the proposed destroyers-for-bases deal with Great Britain. The destroyers will all be Clemson-class and Wickes-class destroyers built circa 1917-1922, manned solely by British seamen. The US Navy already is coordinating with the Royal Navy for their transfer, though nothing is official yet.

14 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com USS Pope destroyer
USS Pope (DD 225), a typical Clemson-class destroyer which served in the Far East during World War II.
US Military: The US military always maintains military plans that seem arcane and improbable - for instance, plans for the invasion of Canada always are locked away in the files - and they go by the designation "Rainbow." Today, President Roosevelt reviews and approves "Rainbow 4," a comprehensive plan to defend the Americas by using every armed man in the United States, including the National Guard, the Reserves, and everyone who can be drafted.

Rainbow 4 assumes the fall of France (already done) and of the UK (still prospective) and a combined German/Italian/Japanese offensive. The initial US response would be to occupy British, French, Dutch and Danish possessions in the Western Hemisphere while trying to avoid conflict in the Pacific. The US fleet would be concentrated in the Caribbean, and the US army would protect only North America and the most northern parts of South America.

Outside the realm of planning and in actual reality, destroyers USS Wake and Wainwright continue their "Show the flag" operation in South America and depart Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for Bahia, Brazil.

Admiral Hart makes it to Shanghai aboard the submarine USS Porpoise and transfers his flag to yacht USS Isabel.

Luxembourg: German Chief of the Civil Administration Gustav Simon bans all opposition parties, rips up the nation's constitution, and makes German the only authorized language. Even the term "Grand Duchy" is prohibited in official documents. Simon is setting a precedent for future occupations, where the occupying military authorities are relatively benign (save for Einsatzgruppen and the like), but the follow-up civil administrations enact draconian and punitive laws which quickly stoke local anger.

British Homefront: As the day dawns, local citizens in Derbyshire, Yorkshire, and southern Scotland awaken to find large numbers of parachutes on the ground with cryptic military messages and German equipment attached. There also is a report from Creswell Farm of enemy parachutists, which proves false.

This all results from a German propaganda effort to sow confusion and dissension among the British populace by air-dropping items in the British rear which have the appearance of being related to an actual invasion - though to what end is a bit unclear, as there is no follow-up. If you make a feint, but don't use that diversion to actually attack anywhere... what's the point? It also may be counter-productive in the long run, making you look like all talk and no action. For a day or two, though, the operation does create massive fear and even panic among the locals.

14 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Flugsport
German flying magazine Flugsport, 14 August 1940.
August 1940

August 1, 1940: Two RN Subs Lost
August 2, 1940: Operation Hurry
August 3, 1940: Italians Attack British Somaliland
August 4, 1940: Dueling Legends in the US
August 5, 1940: First Plan for Barbarossa
August 6, 1940: Wipe Out The RAF
August 7, 1940: Burning Oil Plants
August 8, 1940: True Start of Battle of Britain
August 9, 1940: Aufbau Ost
August 10, 1940: Romania Clamps Down On Jews
August 11, 1940: Huge Aerial Losses
August 12, 1940: Attacks on Radar
August 13, 1940: Adler Tag
August 14, 1940: Sir Henry's Mission
August 15, 1940: Luftwaffe's Black Thursday
August 16, 1940: Wolfpack Time
August 17, 1940: Blockade of Britain
August 18, 1940: The Hardest Day
August 19, 1940: Enter The Zero
August 20, 1940: So Much Owed By So Many
August 21, 1940: Anglo Saxon Incident
August 22, 1940: Hellfire Corner
August 23, 1940: Seaplanes Attack
August 24, 1940: Slippery Slope
August 25, 1940: RAF Bombs Berlin
August 26, 1940: Troops Moved for Barbarossa
August 27, 1940: Air Base in Iceland
August 28, 1940: Call Me Meyer
August 29, 1940: Schepke's Big Day
August 30, 1940: RAF's Bad Day
August 31, 1940: Texel Disaster

2020

Friday, August 12, 2016

August 13, 1940: Adler Tag

Tuesday 13 August 1940

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Bf 109E-1
Messerschmitt Bf 109E-1 of Oberleutnant Paul Temme, Gruppe Adjutant of I/ JG 2 "Richthofen" which crashed near Shoreham airfield in Sussex on 13 August 1940.

Battle of Britain: Today is the projected start of the final Luftwaffe offensive designed to destroy England. There is morning fog on 13 August 1940, so Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering decides at the last minute to postpone Operation Adlerangriff, which is scheduled to commence today on "Adler Tag" (Eagle Day). However, Goering waits too long and, while he stops some formations, other formations already are in the air on their way to their targets. Rather than an overpowering start, there is a confusing series of disjointed attacks on random targets.

The Luftwaffe is in the air at first light. With radar spotting gathering formations at 05:30, RAF Fighter Command gets Nos. 64 and 111 Squadrons airborne over RAF Hawkinge and Manston to protect the airfields which have become the Luftwaffe's new favorite targets.

Instead of those airfields, though, KG 2 sends over 50 Dornier Do 17s against Eastchurch airfield and the port of Sheerness. Goering's interference, though, prevents most of the escort fighters from meeting them. This is the infamous "bombing raid without escorts." Paradoxically, at first, this works to the Luftwaffe's advantage, as the RAF radar spotters figure the bombing raid is on a much smaller scale than it actually is and fails to send a massive force of interceptors. With little interference, the bombers wreck Eastchurch, destroy a handful of Blenheim bombers on the ground and head back to base. RAF Nos. 74 and 151 make a belated interception and shoot down five of the Dorniers on the way home, but "the damage is done." There are 16 deaths and 48 other casualties at Eastchurch, but the station is back in operation by the end of the day.

Goering finally sends the code for the operation to begin - "Adlerangriff" - in the afternoon at 14:00. This time, the attack is designed to open a seam in the defenses via an elaborate head-fake. A diversionary "free ride" mission by Bf 110s with no target over the south coast draws off the RAF interceptors. The twin-engine fighters lose five planes, but also mete out damage to the Spitfires. Unfortunately, the bombers arrive late - three hours late - and the RAF fighters are back in the air ready to meet them. StG 77 sends 52 Stuka Ju 87 dive bombers against Southampton, the Isle of Wight and nearby points. Despite a fighter escort from JG 53, the massive RAF fighter presence downs 5 bombers, which in any event have little success with their bombing mission due to the weather.

There are other bombing raids that do a little better. An attack on RAF Andover is successful, but it is a secondary airfield and not of much consequence to the overall battle. RAF Middle Wallop takes some damage, but it is not put out of action for long.

An afternoon attack by Stukas proceeding over the Thames estuary is protected by JG 26, probably the premier Luftwaffe formation at this stage of the battle. The Stukas get through, and RAF Detling is their objective. They completely wreck the airfield, which is used by Coastal Command for patrols and reconnaissance. The Stukas kill 67 people and destroy 22 aircraft on the ground for probably the biggest Luftwaffe success of the day. A secondary target, RAF Rochford, is hidden by cloud cover and the Stukas allocated to that target return to their French bases with their bombs.

Towards midnight, Heinkel He 111s attack one of their favorite targets, the Bristol Aeroplane Company at Filton, and also the Spitfire factory at Castle Bromwich, Birmingham. As part of the war of nerves, the Luftwaffe drops special packages by parachute over England and Scotland. The contents of the parachute decoys, which include radios, maps and similar items of use by ground troops, are designed to suggest that the invasion already is in progress - which it, of course, is not.

Top RAF ace James Harry Lacey is shot down during the day by a Heinkel He 111, but survives and immediately returns to his No. 501 Squadron unit at RAF Croydon.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Grosser Kurfurst battery Cap Gris Nez France
The Grosser Kurfurst battery in Pas de Calais, France. It is composed of four 28 cm (11 inches) guns at Cap Gris Nez, French. It begins firing on Dover on 13 August 1940. The shells could reach several miles inland.
Overall, the day is close to a disaster for the Luftwaffe. The Germans fly twice as many sorties, about 1500 (1000 by fighters) versus 700 by the RAF fighters, and lose several times the number of planes as the RAF does. The Luftwaffe losses are not insignificant. Most estimates place the losses as 37-42 Luftwaffe planes and 13 RAF fighters (many planes on both sides make it back to base but are badly damaged and essentially write-offs, so loss figures vary widely). It appears most accounts of the battle fail to take into account the planes lost by the RAF on the ground, and there are other mitigating factors mentioned below, so the day is not quite as devastating as the traditional lopsided "loss" figures indicate. However, it absolutely is not a good day for the Luftwaffe and a feeble beginning to the Adlerangriff offensive.

The fault for the fiasco lies in several places: the weather, the meteorologists who predicted good weather, Goering for his interference, the over-complex planning by the Luftwaffe planners, poor target selection (why not just throw everything at the radar stations?), and the quite fundamental fact that the Luftwaffe planes, particularly the medium bombers and dive-bombers, are not suited for their new strategic mission.

At heart, the Luftwaffe failure on Adler Tag is an intelligence failure: the Luftwaffe high command does not realize that the airfields are not the weak link of the RAF defenses, but rather the radar stations are. If the fragile radar masts can be knocked down and their control centers demolished, they will require time and effort to replace them. Simply putting craters into airfields that bulldozers can cover over in a couple of hours is not a strategic solution. The rabid and unproductive attacks against the same targets over and over and over - such as the aircraft factory at Filton near Brighton - show a clear lack of imagination and insight by the planners.

Does Adler Tag by itself decide the campaign? Absolutely not. The Luftwaffe remains ready to ramp up the attacks and the day's losses are manageable. However... things cannot continue like this for the Luftwaffe. The ratio of their losses of both planes and experienced pilots relative to those of the RAF is becoming alarming.

The day is a rude awakening for the Luftwaffe top brass who have been hearing fantasy tales from their pilots who cannot see the forest for the trees and depict a British Empire on the verge of defeat. It is a classic case of the pilots who make it back shouting loudly that everything is going wonderfully, while dead men tell no tales. Anecdotal tales of German aircrew taken prisoner indicate that morale in the Luftwaffe remains sky-high, and the confident captured Germans fully expect to be returning home soon after the invasion (the Luftwaffe, as the youngest of the three services, has the highest concentration of died-in-the-wool Hitler supporters).

There are bright spots for the Germans here and there.  One silver lining for the Luftwaffe is that the RAF loses six pilots permanently - but the Germans can't know that, and they also lose valuable pilots and aircrew. A sinister Wehrmacht factor enters the battle today: artillery fire from France. The English Channel at its narrowest is roughly 20 miles (30 km) wide, and there is plenty of German artillery that can reach that far (any battleship main gun could do it, and the Germans actually have bigger guns in their on-land arsenal). Today, the first shells drop on Dover. They are from the Siegfried Battery at Audinghen, south of Cap Gris Nez, the Grosser Kurfürst battery at Cap Gris Nez, as well as various railway guns.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Daily Express headlines
The 13 August 1940 headlines are full of tales of glory.
European Air Operations: There is another mitigating factor for the Germans which gets short shrift in the historical accounts of the day. RAF No. 82 Squadron of Bomber Command mounts a disastrous raid on the Luftwaffe airfield at Aalborg West in northern Germany, sending over a dozen bombers. They fly right into a swarm of defending fighters that the RAF has no idea are based there. The Luftwaffe fighters get in the air quickly and shoot down all eleven attacking Blenheim bombers (one turns back). These losses, one of the worst RAF missions of the entire war, are never included in the day's losses during the Battle of Britain, but definitely even up the score a bit.

There also are other RAF operations all along the coast. Several airfields in northwest Europe are hit, and RAF Bomber Command mounts raids of 35 bombers against Italian aircraft factories in Turin and Milan. There also are attacks on German plants at Dessau, Bernburg and elsewhere that cause extensive damage.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-60 (Oberleutnant zur See Adalbert Schnee) torpedoes and sinks 1,787-ton Swedish wood freighter Nils Gorthon about 20 miles north of Ireland. There are 16 survivors and 5 crew perish.

Convoy OA 198 departs from Methil, Convoy 19 departs from Liverpool.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Blenheim bombers
Blenheim bombers of the type shot down over Aalborg on 13 August 1940.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Malta Governor-General Dobbie proposes to Whitehall that stocks of all strategic and non-perishable items be maintained at an 8-months reserve (six months plus two months for the time it takes convoys to make it around Africa). He emphasizes that all items must be maintained at such levels:
If the ability of this fortress to resist attack is not uniformly strong, weakness at one point will affect the whole.
Whitehall is sympathetic, and also asks for lists of items which might improve soldier morale on the island, including such things as cigarettes and books.

Malta remains a functioning RAF base which mounts missions of its own, not just defensive ones. Today, it sends nine Swordfish bombers against shipping in Augusta Harbor, Sicily. Three planes are lost.

In a sign of increasing frustration with the Italians, all Italian street names in the major cities are replaced with English names. This type of switch is a common theme on both sides throughout the war.

British Somaliland: At the Battle of Tug Argan, the Italian attacks on the hills defending the approaches to Berbera continue, with little progress. Having occupied the hills to the south of the coast road, the Italians begin to maneuver around the British blocking position to the south in an attempt to cut the British communications. The British, vastly outnumbered, can do little to prevent this.

The Royal Navy provides support for the British ground forces defending Berbera. Cruiser HMS Carlisle provides air defense, shooting down an Italian bomber, while destroyer HMS Kimberley and sloop HMS Auckland fire on El Sheikha.

US Military: The heavy cruisers USS Wichita and Quincy continue their "Show the flag" mission in South America and leave Pernambuco, Brazil for Montevideo, Uruguay.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com crashed German bomber
British soldiers inspect a gun mount from a Luftwaffe bomber downed on Adler Tag.
US Government: Having returned from his inspection of New England naval facilities aboard the USS Potomac, President Roosevelt confers with his top aides about sending destroyers to the United Kingdom. They hit upon a plan of transferring the destroyers in exchange for long-term leases on British overseas bases and various other promises. Ambassador Joseph Kennedy forwards this welcome news on to Prime Minister Winston Churchill contained in the President's telegram. Churchill, of course, has been asking for this assistance for weeks.

Commanding officer Admiral Thomas C. Hart departs from Qingdao, Shandong, China for Shanghai aboard submarine USS Porpoise.

German Government: Admiral Erich Raeder meets with Hitler and his top cronies about Operation Sea Lion. The heady days of July are gone when he proposed a landing on a broad front all along the southern coast of England. Now, he proposes a much smaller invasion front due to the true state of the Kriegsmarine.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Canberra Australia air crash
Wreckage of the fatal Canberra, Australia crash, 13 August 1940.
Australia: A plane crash near Canberra in "ideal flying conditions" takes the lives of ten people, including three Cabinet Ministers, the Chief of the General Staff, and several other government officials. The losses include:
  • Brigadier Geoffrey Austin Street, Minister for the Army and Repatriation;
  • James Valentine Fairbairn, Minister for Air and Civil Aviation;
  • Sir Henry Somer Gullett, Vice-President of the Executive Council and Minister in charge of Scientific and Industrial Research;
  • General Sir Cyril Brudenell Bingham White, Chief of the General Staff;
  • Lieutenant Colonel Francis Thornthwaite, Staff Officer to General White.
The effects are felt within the government of Robert Menzies. The crash, which received little notice outside of Australia due to the war events of the day, is well-remembered in Australia and there are memorials at the crash location. One theory of the crash is that the pilot was unqualified and handled the throttles in such a way as to create a stall, a known problem with Hudson bombers on landing approach.

Albania: The uprising against the Italian occupation government continues, with unverified reports of hundreds of Italian deaths.

Vichy France: Trials for war guilt open in secret session at Riom, France.

The government bans secret societies such as the Freemasons.

The government also attempts to reassure the public that it will not pass any (more) laws directed against Jews.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Dornier Pauline Revere
Miss Pauline Revere, a 19-year-old from Rockford, Ill., a college sophomore, rides her horse into Times Square, N.Y on Aug. 13, 1940, to protest proposed conscription. The name sounds a bit too perfect for the occasion, but that is what is reported by news sources (AP Photo).
American Homefront: Conscription remains a hot topic, with fierce partisans on both sides. There is a large anti-war movement with many college students fiercely opposed to the draft.

Future History: The graves of the crew of one of the Dornier Do 17 bombers shot down in the first raid of the morning, the one without fighter escorts, were dug in a Whitstable, Kent churchyard. The two men were buried in a standard plot, but then the crew of another bomber downed a few days later was buried directly above them in the same plot. When German war graves were transferred to a military cemetery at Staffordshire in 1962, the graves of the crew of the first bomber, buried deeper down than the later crew, were not noticed. Finally, in 2012, historians uncovered the error, and the graves were transferred. The two crewmen were Oberleutnant Horst von der Groeben and Oberleutnant Gerhard Muller, who had bailed out but whose parachutes failed to open. The plane wound up in pieces on the mudflats.

13 August 1940 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Dornier Do-17 bomber crash
The crashed Dornier of Oberleutnant Horst von der Groeben and Oberleutnant Gerhard Muller on 13 August 1940.
August 1940

August 1, 1940: Two RN Subs Lost
August 2, 1940: Operation Hurry
August 3, 1940: Italians Attack British Somaliland
August 4, 1940: Dueling Legends in the US
August 5, 1940: First Plan for Barbarossa
August 6, 1940: Wipe Out The RAF
August 7, 1940: Burning Oil Plants
August 8, 1940: True Start of Battle of Britain
August 9, 1940: Aufbau Ost
August 10, 1940: Romania Clamps Down On Jews
August 11, 1940: Huge Aerial Losses
August 12, 1940: Attacks on Radar
August 13, 1940: Adler Tag
August 14, 1940: Sir Henry's Mission
August 15, 1940: Luftwaffe's Black Thursday
August 16, 1940: Wolfpack Time
August 17, 1940: Blockade of Britain
August 18, 1940: The Hardest Day
August 19, 1940: Enter The Zero
August 20, 1940: So Much Owed By So Many
August 21, 1940: Anglo Saxon Incident
August 22, 1940: Hellfire Corner
August 23, 1940: Seaplanes Attack
August 24, 1940: Slippery Slope
August 25, 1940: RAF Bombs Berlin
August 26, 1940: Troops Moved for Barbarossa
August 27, 1940: Air Base in Iceland
August 28, 1940: Call Me Meyer
August 29, 1940: Schepke's Big Day
August 30, 1940: RAF's Bad Day
August 31, 1940: Texel Disaster

2020