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February 1943

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The following events occurred in February 1943:

February 2, 1943: The Soviet Union retakes Stalingrad as 462 day fight ends
February 13, 1943: The Corsair begins combat operations
February 20, 1943: Volcano appears in Mexico
February 24, 1943: In North Africa, the U.S. Army recovers after being defeated by Germany's Afrika Corps

February 1, 1943 (Monday) edit

  • The 442nd Infantry Regiment, whose soldiers were Nisei (Americans of Japanese ancestry), was created by order of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. "No natural citizen of the United States," said the President, "should be denied the democratic right to exercise the responsibilities of his citizenship, regardless of his ancestry." Most Nisei in the mainland United States were still kept in internment camps at the time.[1]
  • Japanese forces on Guadalcanal began the actual withdrawal phase of Operation Ke. The Americans mistakenly believed the naval activity signaled a new offensive and put up little opposition.[2]
 
Japanese-American soldiers of the 442nd Infantry

February 2, 1943 (Tuesday) edit

Uttar Pradesh state) (d. 2018)

February 3, 1943 (Wednesday) edit

 
  • The U.S. troop transport Dorchester, with 904 men on board, was torpedoed 150 miles off of the coast of Greenland by the German submarine U-233. Among the 605 people who died were the "Four Chaplains"— Methodist minister George L. Fox, Reformed Church in America minister Clark V. Poling, Roman Catholic priest John P. Washington, and Rabbi Alexander D. Goode— who helped others evacuate into lifeboats, gave up their lifejackets, and then went down with the ship. Other victims died of hypothermia in the icy waters. Another 299 were saved by the U.S. Coast Guard cutters Escanaba and Comanche. The "retriever" method of rescue was used for the first time, as swimmers from the Escanaba donned wet suits to reach those victims who were too exhausted to climb aboard rescue lifeboats.[5]
  • The German submarine U-265 was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a B-17 of No. 220 Squadron RAF.
  • The Howard Hawks-directed war film Air Force premiered in New York City.[6]
  • Born: Blythe Danner, American film, TV and stage actress, in Philadelphia

February 4, 1943 (Thursday) edit

  • With the British Eighth Army's success in its African campaign, the remaining German forces in modern-day Libya, along with their commander, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, withdrew across the border into French Tunisia, where they would be defeated in May.[7]
  • The German submarine U-187 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by British destroyers.
  • Died: Frank Calder, 65, President of the National Hockey League since its founding in 1917

February 5, 1943 (Friday) edit

  • Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini fired his Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo Ciano, who was also Mussolini's son-in-law, along with most of the other cabinet ministers. The new Foreign Minister was Mussolini himself, who also held the posts of Interior Minister, War Minister, and Air Minister.[8]
  • U.S. Army Air Forces Lt. General Frank M. Andrews was named as the new commander of all U.S. forces in Europe, taking over a command formerly held by Lt. General Eisenhower, who had also commanded U.S. forces in Europe and North Africa.[9] Lt. General Andrews would be killed in a plane crash less than three months later, on May 3, 1943.[10]
  • At a meeting between shoe manufacturers and U.S. Army generals, Lt. Col. Georges Doriot (who would pioneer the business of venture capital) persuaded General George Marshall to approve the acquisition of a more durable type of combat boot for American soldiers. At the time, the average lifespan of the existing U.S. Army boots was only 13 days.[11]
  • Born:
  • Died: W. S. Van Dyke, 53, American film director

February 6, 1943 (Saturday) edit

  • The arrest of 600 students was conducted on campuses across the Netherlands by the occupying German forces, after a fatally wounded Nazi officer said that he had been shot by students. The 600 were deported to the Herzogenbusch concentration camp near Vught. Another 1,200 were arrested and deported a few days later.[12]
  • Field Marshal Erich von Manstein flew to see Adolf Hitler seeking permission to fall back on the Eastern Front. Hitler agreed to allow German forces to withdraw to new defensive positions along the Mius River.[2]
  • Lt. General Dwight D. Eisenhower was named commander of the Allied armies in the African theater of operations (Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco), based on a decision made by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill at Casablanca. Previously, Eisenhower's command was limited to U.S. forces in North Africa.[13]
  • The Canadian corvette Louisburg was bombed and sunk off Oran, Algeria by Italian aircraft.
  • A Los Angeles court acquitted the movie star Errol Flynn of three rape charges.[14]
  • Born: Fabian (Fabiano Anthony Forte), American singer and teen idol; in Philadelphia

February 7, 1943 (Sunday) edit

  • Operation Ke was completed when the remaining 10,000 Japanese troops on the island of Guadalcanal were secretly evacuated to rescuing ships "before U.S. forces realized what had occurred".[15] The "Japanese Dunkirk" during the Guadalcanal Campaign was accomplished by deceiving U.S. intelligence into believing that the ships were arriving to bring in reinforcements for a new attack.[16]
  • German Führer Adolf Hitler brought top-ranking officials of both Germany and the Nazi Party to his headquarters to reassure them despite the devastating defeat suffered on the Russian front. One of Hitler's aides, Nicolaus von Below, would later recall that Hitler's speech was so inspiring that the officials were "obviously relieved" and came away believing that Germany could still win World War II. Records of the meeting showed that Hitler said, "Either we will be the master of Europe, or we will experience a complete liquidation and extermination," and pledged a total war against the remaining Jewish people in Germany, and the "international Jews" who, in his view, forged an alliance between capitalists and Communists.[17]
  • The American troopship USS Henry R. Mallory was torpedoed by the U-402, a German U-boat, killing 272 Americans.[18]
  • The German submarines U-609 and U-624 were both lost in the Atlantic Ocean to enemy action.
  • Born: Gareth Hunt, English television actor; in Battersea, London (d. 2007)
  • Died: Howard W. Gilmore, 40, American U.S. Navy Commander, in an act for which he posthumously received the Medal of Honor. Gilmore was in the conning tower of the submarine USS Growler when it came under attack from the Japanese gunboat Hayasaki. Wounded by gunfire, and unable to climb down the hatch, Gilmore ordered the submarine to submerge, despite the certainty that he would drown, in order for his shipmates to escape destruction.[19]

February 8, 1943 (Monday) edit

 
"An eager schoolboy gets his first experience in using War Ration Book Two. With many parents engaged in war work, children are being taught the facts of point rationing for helping out in family marketing.", 02/1943
  • After touring Germany as a guest of the Third Reich to give anti-British speeches, Indian nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose and his assistant, Abid Hasan, were given safe passage from Kiel by the German submarine U-180.[20]
  • The U.S. Territory of Hawaii, under American military authority since the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, was partially restored to civilian control by its Military Governor, Lt. General Delos Emmons, with the decree taking effect on March 10. The Territorial Legislature, absent its nine Japanese-American members, reassembled on February 17 for the first time in more than a year.[21]
  • German forces, retreating from the Soviet Union, liquidated the remaining Jews in the Byelorussian S.S.R. city of Slutsk. Commander Eduard Strauch directed his soldiers from Minsk to oversee the deportation of the remaining 4,000 Jews.[22]
  • Nazi forces in Belarus began Operation Hornung, a counterattack against Belarusan partisans.
  • The 60th Army of the Soviet Voronezh Front captured Kursk.[23]
  • U.S. Economic Stabilization Director James F. Byrnes ordered a temporary ban on the sale of shoes until Tuesday, when rationing would begin. Starting February 10 and at least through June 15, one pair of shoes could be purchased only by using "Stamp No. 17 in war ration book No. 1", which previously applied only to sugar and coffee. House slippers, ballet slippers and baby shoes were exempt from the order because their production was not affected by the limited supply of leather.[24][25]
  • Wiley B. Rutledge was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a new Justice of the United States Supreme Court by voice vote, despite the opposition of Senator William Langer of North Dakota.[26] Rutledge would serve for only six years before dying of a stroke at the age of 55 in 1949.[27]
  • Born:

February 9, 1943 (Tuesday) edit

February 10, 1943 (Wednesday) edit

 
Suggested by Vesta Stout
  • Mrs. Vesta Stoudt, an ordnance factory worker from Sterling, Illinois, and the mother of two sons who were in the U.S. Navy, wrote to President Roosevelt with her idea for what would become duct tape, which she described as "a strong cloth tape" that had a waterproof wax coating, designed to seal boxes of ammunition, but that could also be opened quickly. Stoudt had been unable to persuade her supervisors at the Green River Ordnance Plant that it would be an improvement over thin paper tape.[34] Roosevelt liked the idea and on March 26, 1943, the War Production Board would inform Mrs. Stoudt that it had approved the idea.[35]
  • The year-long Battle of Timor ended with a Japanese tactical victory, but an Allied strategic victory.
  • The Battle of Krasny Bor began in the Leningrad sector.
  • The 13th Waffen-SS Division began recruiting troops, primarily from the Bosnian Moslem community in the Nazi German-created Independent State of Croatia. The 13th was the first SS formation to employ non-Germanic men.[36]
  • A striking new development provided a new burst of political activity in British India. Mohandas Gandhi, imprisoned in British India, started hunger strike [fast] on 10 February in jail. He declared the fast would last for twenty-one days. This was his answer to the Government and specially Viceroy Lord Linlithgow which had been constantly exhorting him to condemn the violence of the people in the Quit India Movement. Gandhi not only refused to condemn the people's resort to violence but unequivocally held the Government responsible for it. It was the 'leonine violence' of the state which had provoked the people, he said. And it was against this violence of the state, which included the unwarranted detention of thousands of Congressmen, that Gandhi vowed to register his protest, in the only way open to him when in jail, by fasting.[37] The Viceroy decided that if Gandhi fasted, he would be allowed to die. But fast was to create moral support and create pressure thus as planned Gandhi's fast ceased after 21 days, he remained imprisoned until May 6, 1944.[38]

February 11, 1943 (Thursday) edit

  • The Soviet Union began its nuclear weapons research program, by State Defense Committee resolution signed by Josef Stalin. Physicist Igor Kurchatov was appointed as the program's director.[39]
  • U.S. Army Lieutenant General Dwight D. Eisenhower was promoted to the four-star rank for the first time.[40] Coincidentally, Nikita Khrushchev, who would lead the Soviet Union at the same time that Dwight Eisenhower was President of the U.S., was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General in the Soviet Army the next day.[41]
  • Transport 47 left Drancy internment camp for Auschwitz concentration camp with 998 Jews on board.
  • Died: Bess Houdini (stage name for Wilhelmina Rahner Weiss), 67, wife and stage assistant to magician Harry Houdini

February 12, 1943 (Friday) edit

  • In a nationwide radio address, U.S. President Roosevelt related the agreements made at the Casablanca Summit, and plans to win the war against the Axis powers. Roosevelt said, in a reference that the Cold War would prove to be true, that "the Axis propagandists are trying all of their old tricks in order ... to create the idea that if we win this war, Russia, England, China, and the United States are going to get into a cat-and-dog fight."[42]
  • The German submarine U-442 was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a Lockheed Hudson of No. 48 Squadron RAF.
  • William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield created the Nuffield Foundation, Britain's largest charitable trust, with a gift of £10 million.[14]
  • Forty Jews were shot in Tovste, Ukraine.[43]

February 13, 1943 (Saturday) edit

 
February 13, 1943: The U.S. Marines begin recruiting women

February 14, 1943 (Sunday) edit

February 15, 1943 (Monday) edit

February 16, 1943 (Tuesday) edit

  • Operation Gunnerside, a secret mission for the British Special Operations Executive (SOE), was carried out by six Norwegian paratroopers led by Joachim Ronneburg who were dropped into German-occupied Norway, near Skrykenvann.[51] The location was 30 miles from the Norsk Hydro plant at Vemork, where the Germans were creating heavy water (deuterium oxide) as part of the early stages of a nuclear weapons program. Specially trained for demolition, the six agents carried plastic explosives, a shortwave radio, and skis, which they used to meet with an advance team and then to proceed to Vemork where they would carry out their mission on February 24.[52]
  • Heinrich Himmler, the Reichsführer of the Nazi SS, ordered that there were to be no further deportations of elderly Jews from the ghetto in Theresienstadt (now Terezín in the Czech Republic), which had been officially declared as a place where "the old could live and die in peace". For the next seven months, no Jews, of any age, in Theresienstadt were taken to concentration camps.[53]
  • Italian soldiers began the two-day Domenikon massacre in Greece, executing a total of 175 male civilians.
  • The American submarine Amberjack was depth charged and sunk off Rabaul by a Japanese aircraft and ships.
  • Mildred Harnack, a 41-year-old American citizen and Milwaukee native who was convicted of espionage against Germany, was executed by guillotine at the Plötzensee Prison, on the personal orders of Adolf Hitler.[54]
  • The city of Swansea in Wales was bombed by the German Luftwaffe in the final raid of the Swansea Blitz.
  • Born: Akhteruzzaman Elias, Bengali language novelist; in Gotia, Gaibandha District, British India (now in Bangladesh) (d. 1997)
  • Died: George Washington Buckner, 87, former African-American slave who served as U.S. Minister to Liberia from 1913 to 1915.

February 17, 1943 (Wednesday) edit

  • Hitler flew to Manstein's headquarters in Zaporizhia with the intention of dismissing him over his suggestion to appoint an overall chief of staff, but soon became too engrossed in the crisis facing Army Group South when Manstein argued that it could not possibly defend the entire line. After two days of discussions an agreement was reached for Manstein to draw troops from Army Group A and launch a counterattack on his northern flank, which would result in the Third Battle of Kharkov.[55]
  • Russian pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff gave his last concert, performing in Knoxville, Tennessee, and then cancelled the remainder of his tour of American universities. Too ill to keep a February 22 date in New Orleans, Rachmaninoff, who had become an American citizen on February 1, returned to his Los Angeles home. He was diagnosed with melanoma, and the cancer had spread to his bone marrow, his liver and his lungs. Rachmaninoff would die on March 28.[56]
  • The German Wehrmacht won the Battle of Sidi Bou Zid.
  • The German submarines U-69 and U-201 were both sunk by British destroyers in the Atlantic Ocean, while U-205 was sunk in the Mediterranean by destroyer HMS Paladin.
  • Alexander Mach, the Interior Minister of the Nazi-sponsored Slovak Republic, announced that deportation of the 15,000 remaining Jews, and an additional 10,000 who had converted to Christianity, would begin in March. Deportations had been halted for two years after payment of bribes to SS official Dieter Wisliceny.[57]
  • Major League Baseball star Joe DiMaggio, whose draft eligibility was deferred because of his 3A classification, enlisted in the United States Army. One biographer would note that "unlike fellow major leaguers Bob Feller, Cecil Travis, Warren Spahn and others, he never ventured anywhere near the battlefield" and spent the war playing baseball for the Seventh Army Air Force team.[58]
  • Died:
    • Wiktor Alter, 53, Polish labor activist, was executed in the Soviet Union on false charges of spying for Germany
    • George Keogan, 52, American college basketball coach and Hall of Fame inductee died of a heart attack, two days after the Fighting Irish team's 55 to 37 win over Canisius College in Buffalo, New York to increase the team's record to 12 wins and 1 loss.[59][60]
    • William "Dinty" Colbeck, American gangster and former leader of the Egan's Rats in St. Louis, was shot to death in his car at the corner of Ninth and Destrehan streets in St. Louis.[61][62]

February 18, 1943 (Thursday) edit

 
The Sportspalast rally banner: "Totaler Krieg — kürzester Krieg" ("Total War — Briefest War")
  • In a speech at the Berlin Sportpalast and on nationwide radio, German Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels called on listeners to devote themselves to "Total War" (Der totale Krieg) against the Allied powers.[63]
  • Hans Scholl and Sophie Scholl, two students in the White Rose movement that was secretly distributing anti-Hitler literature, were captured at the University of Munich after a maintenance man saw them throwing leaflets from a campus building. After witnessing the act, Jakob Schmied detained the brother and sister, then called the Gestapo. Four days later, the Scholls, and another White Rose student, were tried, convicted and executed for treason.[64] [65]
  • Soong Mei-ling, popularly known as "Madame Chiang Kai-shek" as the wife of China's president, became the first private citizen (and only the second woman) to address the U.S. Congress. Rather than speaking to a joint session, Madame Chiang gave a prepared speech to the Senate, and then an improvised speech to the House.[66]
  • U.S. President Roosevelt approved the extension of the Lend-Lease Program for the first American financial aid to the oil rich kingdom of Saudi Arabia, after being advised that geologists had concluded that the Saudi kingdom had the largest oil fields in the world.[67]
  • Groundbreaking for the nuclear production facilities at Oak Ridge, Tennessee took place.[68]
  • Under continued demands from Nazi Germany, the Japanese Empire followed the Nazi example of confining Jewish residents to a specific area, and set up the Shanghai ghetto, with a two square mile area in the Hongkou District to house 20,000 refugees from Germany, Austria and Poland. Over the next three months, the European Jews had been relocated to Hongkou, along with Chinese people whom Japan wanted to keep under surveillance.[69]
  • Born: Graeme Garden, Scottish writer, comedian, and actor; in Aberdeen

February 19, 1943 (Friday) edit

February 20, 1943 (Saturday) edit

  • At 4:30 pm local time, the Mexican volcano Parícutin broke the surface of a cornfield owned by farmer Dionisio Pulido, and began increasing in size through ash, stone and rock. By the next morning, the volcanic mound was already 30 feet high. At the end of the week, Parícutin — named for a nearby village in the state of Michoacán — had reached 400 feet and was sending material half a mile into the sky. Within a year, after the Parícutin village was evacuated, the volcano was 1,100 feet tall and would peak at 2,000 feet.[73] After nine years and five days of smoke and lava flows, Parícutin would suddenly cease on February 25, 1952.[74]
  • The Japanese destroyer Ōshio was torpedoed off Wewak, New Guinea by American submarine Albacore and sank under tow.
  • American movie studio executives agreed to allow the Office of War Information to censor movies.
  • Born:

February 21, 1943 (Sunday) edit

  • In Operation Cleanslate, having secured Guadalcanal, American forces of the 43rd Infantry Division (some 10,000 men) invaded the Russell Islands, with the 103rd and 169th regiments, and members of the 11th Defense Battalion, landing on Mbanika Island, and the 3rd Marine Raider Battalion coming ashore on Pavuvu.[75] Although a fierce battle had been expected, the Japanese defenders had already been withdrawn and the islands were taken by the U.S. without a fight.[76]
  • The German submarine U-623 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a B-24 of No. 120 Squadron RAF.
  • A nationwide day of prayer was held in India for Mahatma Gandhi, whose fasting was putting his life in danger.[14]
  • Born: David Geffen, American record executive and film producer; in Brooklyn

February 22, 1943 (Monday) edit

  • The first three student members of the White Rose resistance group were executed by the Nazi government at the Stadelheim Prison near Munich. Christoph Probst, 23; Hans Scholl, 24; and his sister Sophie Scholl, 21, were all beheaded by guillotine, four days after their arrest for distributing anti-war leaflets at the University of Munich. The article in the Munich newspaper Neueste Nachrichten later that day reported that "the condemned persons shamelessly committed offenses against the armed security of the nation and the will to fight of the German people by defacing houses with slogans attacking the state, and by distributing treasonous leaflets".[64][77]
  • Alexander Belev, the Bulgarian Minister of Jewish Affairs, signed an agreement with Gestapo representative Theodor Dannecker to deliver 20,000 Bulgarian Jews to German labor camps. From the recently annexed territories of Western Thrace (Bati Trakya) and Macedonia (Makedoniya), Belev would oversee the removal of 23,000 Jews to Treblinka extermination camp and Auschwitz.[78] Arrangements would be made for another 8,555 to be deported from the Kingdom of Bulgaria, a move which was successfully resisted by the Kingdom's parliament.[79]
  • Pan American World Airways Flight 9035, flying from New York City to Lisbon, crashed while attempting to land. Twenty-five of the 39 people on board were killed, most of them on tour for the USO to entertain American troops in Europe, were killed when the Boeing 314A seaplane, nicknamed the "Yankee Clipper", went down into the Tagus River. Jane Froman was one of the fifteen seriously injured survivors.[80]
  • A riot at Featherston prisoner of war camp in New Zealand killed 48 Japanese and 1 New Zealander.
  • The German submarines U-225 and U-606 were both sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by Allied warships.
  • The Canadian corvette HMCS Weyburn sank east of Gibraltar after striking a mine.
  • Born: Eduard Limonov, Russian activist who founded the National Bolshevik Party after the fall of the Soviet Union; in Dzerzhinsk (d. 2020)
  • Died: Alfred Nossig, 78, Polish sculptor and German sympathizer suspected of supplying reports to Germany about Jewish residents of the Warsaw Ghetto, was shot to death by orders of the underground Jewish resistance group, the ZOB.[81]

February 23, 1943 (Tuesday) edit

 
The 1943 steel penny
  • The first "steel pennies" were manufactured in the United States. Because of the need for copper to be used for the war effort, the one cent piece was made of steel with a thin zinc plating to prevent rust. After being put into circulation on February 27, the new pennies were mistaken for dimes, and were not accepted in machines that had magnets to catch slugs. The unpopular coins were discontinued at the end of the year.[82]
  • The German submarine U-443 was depth charged and sunk off Algiers by British destroyers, and the U-522 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by British cutter Totland.
  • Born: Fred Biletnikoff, American NFL player and Hall of Fame inductee; in Erie, Pennsylvania
  • Died:
    • Lt. Gen. Grigory Kravchenko, 30, fighter ace and twice Hero of the Soviet Union, after his airplane was shot down and his parachute failed
    • Soviet Major General M.M. Shaimuratov (Shaimuratov, Minigali Mingazovich), 43, after being captured, tortured and blinded by German Army interrogators

February 24, 1943 (Wednesday) edit

February 25, 1943 (Thursday) edit

  • The Allies started their new strategy of "round-the-clock bombing" as USAAF planes bombed Germany in the daytime while the RAF struck at night. Over the next two days, over 2,000 sorties would strike German targets.[86]
  • The Latvian SS Volunteer Division was formed, with three infantry regiments in Latvia fighting on the side of Germany in hopes of winning back independence from the Soviet Union.[87]
  • Born: George Harrison, British musician for the The Beatles; in Liverpool (d. 2001)

February 26, 1943 (Friday) edit

February 27, 1943 (Saturday) edit

 
Pilot Nancy Harkness Love

February 28, 1943 (Sunday) edit

  • In Operation Gunnerside, the Norsk Hydro plant at Vermok in Norway, being used by the Nazi German nuclear research program, was successfully sabotaged by Norwegian SOE commandos. The team used skis to reach the plant, entered through a service tunnel, and placed timed explosive charges on the tanks of heavy water and the electrolysis chambers needed to produce the deuterium oxide liquid, and escaped. The blasts destroyed the entire inventory of the heavy water that had been produced by the Germans.[52]
  • A 1,000 bomber RAF and U.S. Army Air Force bombing raid against Saint-Nazaire dropped 4.5 million pounds of explosive and incendiary bombs on the German U-boat bases in Nazi occupied France, and killed 479 people.[93]
  • The Soviet Union won a tactical victory in the Battle of Demyansk.

References edit

  1. ^ Muller, Eric L. Free to Die for Their Country: The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters in World War II (University of Chicago Press, 2003) p.41; Ng, Wendy L. Japanese American Internment During World War II: A History and Reference Guide (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002) p.56
  2. ^ a b Davidson, Edward; Manning, Dale (1999). Chronology of World War Two. London: Cassell & Co. p. 143. ISBN 0-304-35309-4.
  3. ^ Zaloga, Steven J. (2013). Sicily 1943: The Debut of Allied Joint Operations. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-78096-126-2.
  4. ^ "Siege Finished at Stalingrad", Milwaukee Journal, February 3, 1943, p1
  5. ^ Malcolm Francis Willoughby, The U.S. Coast Guard in World War II (Ayer Publishing, 1980) p104
  6. ^ Hanson, Patricia King, ed. (1999). American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films, 1941–1950. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 40. ISBN 0-520-21521-4.
  7. ^ Fiona Reynoldson, Key Battles of World War II (Capstone Classroom, 2001) p35
  8. ^ "Mussolini Drops Ciano From Cabinet", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 6, 1943, p1
  9. ^ "Andrews Named U.S. Commander for Europe", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 6, 1943, p1
  10. ^ Spencer Tucker, U.S. Leadership in Wartime: Clashes, Controversy, and Compromise (ABC-CLIO, 2009) pp 583–584
  11. ^ Spencer E. Ante, Creative Capital: Georges Doriot and the Birth of Venture Capital (Harvard Business Press, 2008) pp 95–96; Shelby L. Stanton, U.S. Army Uniforms of World War II (Stackpole Books, 1995) p242
  12. ^ Mark Klempner, The Heart Has Reasons: Holocaust Rescuers And Their Stories of Courage (Pilgrim Press, 2006) pp 73–74
  13. ^ "Baton Is Given to Eisenhower", Milwaukee Journal, February 7, 1943, p1
  14. ^ a b c Mercer, Derrik, ed. (1989). Chronicle of the 20th Century. London: Chronicle Communications Ltd. p. 579. ISBN 978-0-582-03919-3.
  15. ^ "Guadalcanal (August 1942 – February 1943)", in Ground Warfare: An International Encyclopedia Stanley Sandler, ed. (ABC-CLIO, 2002) p344
  16. ^ Gerhard L. Weinberg, A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II (Cambridge University Press, 2005) p344
  17. ^ Robert Gellately, Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe (Random House Digital, 2009) pp 525–526
  18. ^ Bernard Ireland, Battle of the Atlantic (Naval Institute Press, 2003) p122
  19. ^ "Submarine Hero— Howard Walter Gilmore" 2012-10-16 at the Wayback Machine, by Edward Whitman, www.navy.mil
  20. ^ Sugata Bose, His Majesty's Opponent: Subhas Chandra Bose and India's Struggle against Empire (Harvard University Press, 2012) p232
  21. ^ Greg Robinson, A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America (Columbia University Press, 2010) p231
  22. ^ Yitzhak Arad, The Holocaust in the Soviet Union (University of Nebraska Press, 2009) p324
  23. ^ "War Diary for Monday, 8 February 1943". Stone & Stone Second World War Books. Retrieved February 1, 2016.
  24. ^ "Shoes Put on Ration Basis", Milwaukee Journal, February 8, 1943, p1
  25. ^ John Bush Jones, All-Out for Victory!: Magazine Advertising and the World War II Home Front (University Press of New England, 2009) p211
  26. ^ "Naming of Rutledge Approved by Senate", Bakersfield (CA) Californian, February 8, 1943, p2
  27. ^ "Wiley Blount Rutledge", in Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary, Timothy L. Hall, ed. (Infobase Publishing, 2001) p332
  28. ^ "Valerie Thomas | Biography, Mathematician, Invention, & Facts | Britannica".
  29. ^ Nathan Miller, War at Sea: A Naval History of World War II (Oxford University Press, 1997) p290
  30. ^ Clark, George B. Battle History of the United States Marine Corps, 1775–1945 (McFarland, 2010) p.160.
  31. ^ Mooney, James L., ed. Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Volume 7: T-V, (Government Printing Office, 1976) p.50; DerbySulzers.com
  32. ^ Le 9 février 1943, Klaus Barbie passe à l’action ("On February 9, 1943, Klaus Barbie Takes Action"), Le Progrès, February 13, 2011 (in French)
  33. ^ "48 Hour Week in 12 Cities!", Chicago Daily Tribune, February 10, 1943, p1
  34. ^ "Couldn't Keep Her Idea Down", Chicago Sunday Tribune, October 24, 1943, p1
  35. ^ "The Woman Who Invented Duct Tape", KilmerHouse.com (Johnson & Johnson website)
  36. ^ Jozo Tomasevich, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration (Stanford University Press, 2002) p497
  37. ^ India's Struggle for Independence, Bipin Chandra, Mridula Mukherjee, K N Panikkar, Aditya Mukherjee, Sucheta Mahajan. (Penguin India)
  38. ^ Antony Copley, Gandhi: Against the Tide (Oxford University Press, 1996) p92
  39. ^ "The Khariton Version", by Yuli Khariton and Yuri Smirnov, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (May 1993) p24
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  43. ^ "Tluste/Tovste, Ukraine - Event Timeline".
  44. ^ "Bushati, Maliq Bey", in Historical Dictionary of Albania, Robert Elsie, ed. (Scarecrow Press, 2010) pp 62–63
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  46. ^ J. D. Conway, Monterey: Presidio, Pueblo, and Port (Arcadia Publishing, 2003) p127
  47. ^ "Corsair: Old Hose-Nose becomes a TV star", by Gordon Baxter, Flying magazine (June 1977) p50
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  49. ^ Maria del Carmen Tapia, Inside Opus Dei: The True, Unfinished Story (Continuum International, 1998) p304
  50. ^ "Uruguay (1911–present)", University of Central Arkansas
  51. ^ Robert Reynard, Secret Code Breaker II: A Cryptanalyst's Handbook (Smith & Daniel, 1997) p30
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  53. ^ Nicholas Stargardt, Witnesses of War: Children's Lives Under the Nazis (Random House Digital, 2006)
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  58. ^ David Jones, Joe DiMaggio: A Biography (Greenwood Publishing, 2004)
  59. ^ "Dynamic Irish Basketeers Peak, Too Much Power for Canisius". Buffalo (NY) News. February 17, 1943.
  60. ^ "Notre Dame Coach, George Keogan, Dies; Veteran Baseketball Mentor Suffers Fatal Heart Attack While Reading Paper". The Milwaukee Journal. Associated Press. February 18, 1943.
  61. ^ "'DINTY' COLBECK SHOT TO DEATH— Former Gang Leader Slain in Automobile". St. Louis Globe-Democrat. February 18, 1943.
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february, 1943, 1943, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, following, events, occurred, february, 1943, soviet, union, retakes, stalingrad, fight, ends, february, 1943, corsair, begins, combat, operations. 1943 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt February 1943 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 The following events occurred in February 1943 February 2 1943 The Soviet Union retakes Stalingrad as 462 day fight ends February 13 1943 The Corsair begins combat operations February 20 1943 Volcano appears in Mexico February 24 1943 In North Africa the U S Army recovers after being defeated by Germany s Afrika Corps Contents 1 February 1 1943 Monday 2 February 2 1943 Tuesday 3 February 3 1943 Wednesday 4 February 4 1943 Thursday 5 February 5 1943 Friday 6 February 6 1943 Saturday 7 February 7 1943 Sunday 8 February 8 1943 Monday 9 February 9 1943 Tuesday 10 February 10 1943 Wednesday 11 February 11 1943 Thursday 12 February 12 1943 Friday 13 February 13 1943 Saturday 14 February 14 1943 Sunday 15 February 15 1943 Monday 16 February 16 1943 Tuesday 17 February 17 1943 Wednesday 18 February 18 1943 Thursday 19 February 19 1943 Friday 20 February 20 1943 Saturday 21 February 21 1943 Sunday 22 February 22 1943 Monday 23 February 23 1943 Tuesday 24 February 24 1943 Wednesday 25 February 25 1943 Thursday 26 February 26 1943 Friday 27 February 27 1943 Saturday 28 February 28 1943 Sunday 29 ReferencesFebruary 1 1943 Monday editThe 442nd Infantry Regiment whose soldiers were Nisei Americans of Japanese ancestry was created by order of U S President Franklin D Roosevelt No natural citizen of the United States said the President should be denied the democratic right to exercise the responsibilities of his citizenship regardless of his ancestry Most Nisei in the mainland United States were still kept in internment camps at the time 1 Japanese forces on Guadalcanal began the actual withdrawal phase of Operation Ke The Americans mistakenly believed the naval activity signaled a new offensive and put up little opposition 2 nbsp Japanese American soldiers of the 442nd Infantry Vittorio Ambrosio replaced Ugo Cavallero as supreme commander of Italian forces 3 The American destroyer De Haven was bombed and sunk east of Savo Island by Japanese aircraft February 2 1943 Tuesday editThe Soviet Union announced that the 163 day Battle of Stalingrad had ended after the last of the German Sixth Army forces surrendered 4 Born Akhtar Raza Khan Muslim scholar and Grand Mufti of India in Bareilly United Provinces British India now Uttar Pradesh state d 2018 Died Sir Rao Ganga Singh 62 British Indian General the only non white member of the Imperial War Cabinet constituted by Britain during World War One and the penultimate Maharaja of BikanerFebruary 3 1943 Wednesday edit nbsp The U S troop transport Dorchester with 904 men on board was torpedoed 150 miles off of the coast of Greenland by the German submarine U 233 Among the 605 people who died were the Four Chaplains Methodist minister George L Fox Reformed Church in America minister Clark V Poling Roman Catholic priest John P Washington and Rabbi Alexander D Goode who helped others evacuate into lifeboats gave up their lifejackets and then went down with the ship Other victims died of hypothermia in the icy waters Another 299 were saved by the U S Coast Guard cutters Escanaba and Comanche The retriever method of rescue was used for the first time as swimmers from the Escanaba donned wet suits to reach those victims who were too exhausted to climb aboard rescue lifeboats 5 The German submarine U 265 was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a B 17 of No 220 Squadron RAF The Howard Hawks directed war film Air Force premiered in New York City 6 Born Blythe Danner American film TV and stage actress in PhiladelphiaFebruary 4 1943 Thursday editWith the British Eighth Army s success in its African campaign the remaining German forces in modern day Libya along with their commander Field Marshal Erwin Rommel withdrew across the border into French Tunisia where they would be defeated in May 7 The German submarine U 187 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by British destroyers Died Frank Calder 65 President of the National Hockey League since its founding in 1917February 5 1943 Friday editItalian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini fired his Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano who was also Mussolini s son in law along with most of the other cabinet ministers The new Foreign Minister was Mussolini himself who also held the posts of Interior Minister War Minister and Air Minister 8 U S Army Air Forces Lt General Frank M Andrews was named as the new commander of all U S forces in Europe taking over a command formerly held by Lt General Eisenhower who had also commanded U S forces in Europe and North Africa 9 Lt General Andrews would be killed in a plane crash less than three months later on May 3 1943 10 At a meeting between shoe manufacturers and U S Army generals Lt Col Georges Doriot who would pioneer the business of venture capital persuaded General George Marshall to approve the acquisition of a more durable type of combat boot for American soldiers At the time the average lifespan of the existing U S Army boots was only 13 days 11 Born Nolan Bushnell American video game pioneer in Clearfield Utah Michael Mann American film director writer and producer in Chicago Craig Morton American NFL quarterback in Flint Michigan Died W S Van Dyke 53 American film directorFebruary 6 1943 Saturday editThe arrest of 600 students was conducted on campuses across the Netherlands by the occupying German forces after a fatally wounded Nazi officer said that he had been shot by students The 600 were deported to the Herzogenbusch concentration camp near Vught Another 1 200 were arrested and deported a few days later 12 Field Marshal Erich von Manstein flew to see Adolf Hitler seeking permission to fall back on the Eastern Front Hitler agreed to allow German forces to withdraw to new defensive positions along the Mius River 2 Lt General Dwight D Eisenhower was named commander of the Allied armies in the African theater of operations Tunisia Algeria and Morocco based on a decision made by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill at Casablanca Previously Eisenhower s command was limited to U S forces in North Africa 13 The Canadian corvette Louisburg was bombed and sunk off Oran Algeria by Italian aircraft A Los Angeles court acquitted the movie star Errol Flynn of three rape charges 14 Born Fabian Fabiano Anthony Forte American singer and teen idol in PhiladelphiaFebruary 7 1943 Sunday editOperation Ke was completed when the remaining 10 000 Japanese troops on the island of Guadalcanal were secretly evacuated to rescuing ships before U S forces realized what had occurred 15 The Japanese Dunkirk during the Guadalcanal Campaign was accomplished by deceiving U S intelligence into believing that the ships were arriving to bring in reinforcements for a new attack 16 German Fuhrer Adolf Hitler brought top ranking officials of both Germany and the Nazi Party to his headquarters to reassure them despite the devastating defeat suffered on the Russian front One of Hitler s aides Nicolaus von Below would later recall that Hitler s speech was so inspiring that the officials were obviously relieved and came away believing that Germany could still win World War II Records of the meeting showed that Hitler said Either we will be the master of Europe or we will experience a complete liquidation and extermination and pledged a total war against the remaining Jewish people in Germany and the international Jews who in his view forged an alliance between capitalists and Communists 17 The American troopship USS Henry R Mallory was torpedoed by the U 402 a German U boat killing 272 Americans 18 The German submarines U 609 and U 624 were both lost in the Atlantic Ocean to enemy action Born Gareth Hunt English television actor in Battersea London d 2007 Died Howard W Gilmore 40 American U S Navy Commander in an act for which he posthumously received the Medal of Honor Gilmore was in the conning tower of the submarine USS Growler when it came under attack from the Japanese gunboat Hayasaki Wounded by gunfire and unable to climb down the hatch Gilmore ordered the submarine to submerge despite the certainty that he would drown in order for his shipmates to escape destruction 19 February 8 1943 Monday edit nbsp An eager schoolboy gets his first experience in using War Ration Book Two With many parents engaged in war work children are being taught the facts of point rationing for helping out in family marketing 02 1943 After touring Germany as a guest of the Third Reich to give anti British speeches Indian nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose and his assistant Abid Hasan were given safe passage from Kiel by the German submarine U 180 20 The U S Territory of Hawaii under American military authority since the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor was partially restored to civilian control by its Military Governor Lt General Delos Emmons with the decree taking effect on March 10 The Territorial Legislature absent its nine Japanese American members reassembled on February 17 for the first time in more than a year 21 German forces retreating from the Soviet Union liquidated the remaining Jews in the Byelorussian S S R city of Slutsk Commander Eduard Strauch directed his soldiers from Minsk to oversee the deportation of the remaining 4 000 Jews 22 Nazi forces in Belarus began Operation Hornung a counterattack against Belarusan partisans The 60th Army of the Soviet Voronezh Front captured Kursk 23 U S Economic Stabilization Director James F Byrnes ordered a temporary ban on the sale of shoes until Tuesday when rationing would begin Starting February 10 and at least through June 15 one pair of shoes could be purchased only by using Stamp No 17 in war ration book No 1 which previously applied only to sugar and coffee House slippers ballet slippers and baby shoes were exempt from the order because their production was not affected by the limited supply of leather 24 25 Wiley B Rutledge was confirmed by the U S Senate as a new Justice of the United States Supreme Court by voice vote despite the opposition of Senator William Langer of North Dakota 26 Rutledge would serve for only six years before dying of a stroke at the age of 55 in 1949 27 Born Creed Bratton stage name for William Charles Schneider American actor and musician in Los Angeles Valerie Thomas American scientist and inventor in Baltimore 28 February 9 1943 Tuesday edit Tokyo Express no longer has a terminus on Guadalcanal was the nine word message sent by U S Army Major General Alexander Patch to U S Navy Admiral William Halsey Jr as the strategic South Pacific island was recaptured from Japan 29 During the six month fight the Japanese lost 24 000 killed while the U S sustained 1 653 deaths 30 With 1 481 people aboard 1 283 troops and 198 crew the Japanese Imperial Navy ship Tatsuta Maru an ocean liner converted to military use was torpedoed and sunk east of Mikura jima by the American submarine USS Tarpon 31 The Rue Sainte Catherine Roundup took place in the Jewish section of the French city of Lyon as Klaus Barbie directed the Gestapo s arrest of 86 Jews for deportation to the Drancy internment camp 32 Of the 86 arrested only six survived to return home U S President Roosevelt issued an Executive Order establishing a minimum war time work week of 48 hours in 32 American cities that had shortages of employees However employees would still receive time and a half for more than 40 hours work in a week Larger cities affected were Baltimore Buffalo Detroit Las Vegas Portland Oregon San Diego Seattle and Washington D C but the order also applied to places like Manitowoc Wisconsin Pascagoula Mississippi and Somerville New Jersey 33 Born Joe Pesci American film actor known for Raging Bull Goodfellas and My Cousin Vinny in Newark New Jersey Joseph E Stiglitz American economist 2001 Nobel Prize in Economics laureate in Gary IndianaFebruary 10 1943 Wednesday edit nbsp Suggested by Vesta Stout Mrs Vesta Stoudt an ordnance factory worker from Sterling Illinois and the mother of two sons who were in the U S Navy wrote to President Roosevelt with her idea for what would become duct tape which she described as a strong cloth tape that had a waterproof wax coating designed to seal boxes of ammunition but that could also be opened quickly Stoudt had been unable to persuade her supervisors at the Green River Ordnance Plant that it would be an improvement over thin paper tape 34 Roosevelt liked the idea and on March 26 1943 the War Production Board would inform Mrs Stoudt that it had approved the idea 35 The year long Battle of Timor ended with a Japanese tactical victory but an Allied strategic victory The Battle of Krasny Bor began in the Leningrad sector The 13th Waffen SS Division began recruiting troops primarily from the Bosnian Moslem community in the Nazi German created Independent State of Croatia The 13th was the first SS formation to employ non Germanic men 36 A striking new development provided a new burst of political activity in British India Mohandas Gandhi imprisoned in British India started hunger strike fast on 10 February in jail He declared the fast would last for twenty one days This was his answer to the Government and specially Viceroy Lord Linlithgow which had been constantly exhorting him to condemn the violence of the people in the Quit India Movement Gandhi not only refused to condemn the people s resort to violence but unequivocally held the Government responsible for it It was the leonine violence of the state which had provoked the people he said And it was against this violence of the state which included the unwarranted detention of thousands of Congressmen that Gandhi vowed to register his protest in the only way open to him when in jail by fasting 37 The Viceroy decided that if Gandhi fasted he would be allowed to die But fast was to create moral support and create pressure thus as planned Gandhi s fast ceased after 21 days he remained imprisoned until May 6 1944 38 February 11 1943 Thursday editThe Soviet Union began its nuclear weapons research program by State Defense Committee resolution signed by Josef Stalin Physicist Igor Kurchatov was appointed as the program s director 39 U S Army Lieutenant General Dwight D Eisenhower was promoted to the four star rank for the first time 40 Coincidentally Nikita Khrushchev who would lead the Soviet Union at the same time that Dwight Eisenhower was President of the U S was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General in the Soviet Army the next day 41 Transport 47 left Drancy internment camp for Auschwitz concentration camp with 998 Jews on board Died Bess Houdini stage name for Wilhelmina Rahner Weiss 67 wife and stage assistant to magician Harry HoudiniFebruary 12 1943 Friday editIn a nationwide radio address U S President Roosevelt related the agreements made at the Casablanca Summit and plans to win the war against the Axis powers Roosevelt said in a reference that the Cold War would prove to be true that the Axis propagandists are trying all of their old tricks in order to create the idea that if we win this war Russia England China and the United States are going to get into a cat and dog fight 42 The German submarine U 442 was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a Lockheed Hudson of No 48 Squadron RAF William Morris 1st Viscount Nuffield created the Nuffield Foundation Britain s largest charitable trust with a gift of 10 million 14 Forty Jews were shot in Tovste Ukraine 43 February 13 1943 Saturday editThe Axis forces won a tactical victory in the Battle of Krasny Bor Maliq Bushati was appointed as the Prime Minister of Albania by the Italian occupying authorities He would be replaced after only three months after the war he would be executed for collaborating with the Axis 44 nbsp February 13 1943 The U S Marines begin recruiting women The creation of the new United States Marine Corps Women s Reserve was announced along with goals to recruit 1 000 officers and 18 000 enlisted women 45 The Del Monte Pre Flight School was opened at Monterey California to train aviation cadets During the eleven months of the college level school s existence the former Hotel Del Monte luxury resort served as a military camp 46 The former hotel grounds now house the Naval Postgraduate School The Vought F4U Corsair was first used in combat with the fast single engine fighters being used by the U S Navy and U S Marine Corps to fly missions from Guadalcanal The Corsair planes flew 64 051 combat missions and shot down 2 139 enemy aircraft during the remaining two and a half years of World War II 47 The German submarine U 620 was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a Consolidated PBY Catalina of No 202 Squadron RAF I Had the Craziest Dream by Harry James and His Orchestra hit 1 on the Billboard singles chart February 14 1943 Sunday editThe Battle of the Kasserine Pass began as German General Erwin Rommel and his Afrika Korps launched a surprise offensive against Allied defenses in Tunisia giving the United States Army their first major battle defeat of the war the loss of six battalions of the U S Second Corps 48 The Battle of Sidi Bou Zid began in Tunisia The Priestly Society of the Holy Cross was founded by Father Josemaria Escriva later canonized as a Saint in the Roman Catholic Church and a founder of Opus Dei 49 Born Maceo Parker American saxophonist in Kinston North Carolina Died David Hilbert 81 leading German mathematician known for Hilbert s basis theorem Hilbert space and many other contributions February 15 1943 Monday editThe Battle of Demyansk began on the Eastern Front Uruguay was returned to democracy as the nation s Congress convened for the first time since President Alfredo Baldomir had replaced the legislature with a Council of State 50 The German submarine U 529 was sunk by a B 24 of No 120 Squadron RAF February 16 1943 Tuesday editOperation Gunnerside a secret mission for the British Special Operations Executive SOE was carried out by six Norwegian paratroopers led by Joachim Ronneburg who were dropped into German occupied Norway near Skrykenvann 51 The location was 30 miles from the Norsk Hydro plant at Vemork where the Germans were creating heavy water deuterium oxide as part of the early stages of a nuclear weapons program Specially trained for demolition the six agents carried plastic explosives a shortwave radio and skis which they used to meet with an advance team and then to proceed to Vemork where they would carry out their mission on February 24 52 Heinrich Himmler the Reichsfuhrer of the Nazi SS ordered that there were to be no further deportations of elderly Jews from the ghetto in Theresienstadt now Terezin in the Czech Republic which had been officially declared as a place where the old could live and die in peace For the next seven months no Jews of any age in Theresienstadt were taken to concentration camps 53 Italian soldiers began the two day Domenikon massacre in Greece executing a total of 175 male civilians The American submarine Amberjack was depth charged and sunk off Rabaul by a Japanese aircraft and ships Mildred Harnack a 41 year old American citizen and Milwaukee native who was convicted of espionage against Germany was executed by guillotine at the Plotzensee Prison on the personal orders of Adolf Hitler 54 The city of Swansea in Wales was bombed by the German Luftwaffe in the final raid of the Swansea Blitz Born Akhteruzzaman Elias Bengali language novelist in Gotia Gaibandha District British India now in Bangladesh d 1997 Died George Washington Buckner 87 former African American slave who served as U S Minister to Liberia from 1913 to 1915 February 17 1943 Wednesday editHitler flew to Manstein s headquarters in Zaporizhia with the intention of dismissing him over his suggestion to appoint an overall chief of staff but soon became too engrossed in the crisis facing Army Group South when Manstein argued that it could not possibly defend the entire line After two days of discussions an agreement was reached for Manstein to draw troops from Army Group A and launch a counterattack on his northern flank which would result in the Third Battle of Kharkov 55 Russian pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff gave his last concert performing in Knoxville Tennessee and then cancelled the remainder of his tour of American universities Too ill to keep a February 22 date in New Orleans Rachmaninoff who had become an American citizen on February 1 returned to his Los Angeles home He was diagnosed with melanoma and the cancer had spread to his bone marrow his liver and his lungs Rachmaninoff would die on March 28 56 The German Wehrmacht won the Battle of Sidi Bou Zid The German submarines U 69 and U 201 were both sunk by British destroyers in the Atlantic Ocean while U 205 was sunk in the Mediterranean by destroyer HMS Paladin Alexander Mach the Interior Minister of the Nazi sponsored Slovak Republic announced that deportation of the 15 000 remaining Jews and an additional 10 000 who had converted to Christianity would begin in March Deportations had been halted for two years after payment of bribes to SS official Dieter Wisliceny 57 Major League Baseball star Joe DiMaggio whose draft eligibility was deferred because of his 3A classification enlisted in the United States Army One biographer would note that unlike fellow major leaguers Bob Feller Cecil Travis Warren Spahn and others he never ventured anywhere near the battlefield and spent the war playing baseball for the Seventh Army Air Force team 58 Died Wiktor Alter 53 Polish labor activist was executed in the Soviet Union on false charges of spying for Germany George Keogan 52 American college basketball coach and Hall of Fame inductee died of a heart attack two days after the Fighting Irish team s 55 to 37 win over Canisius College in Buffalo New York to increase the team s record to 12 wins and 1 loss 59 60 William Dinty Colbeck American gangster and former leader of the Egan s Rats in St Louis was shot to death in his car at the corner of Ninth and Destrehan streets in St Louis 61 62 February 18 1943 Thursday edit nbsp The Sportspalast rally banner Totaler Krieg kurzester Krieg Total War Briefest War In a speech at the Berlin Sportpalast and on nationwide radio German Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels called on listeners to devote themselves to Total War Der totale Krieg against the Allied powers 63 Hans Scholl and Sophie Scholl two students in the White Rose movement that was secretly distributing anti Hitler literature were captured at the University of Munich after a maintenance man saw them throwing leaflets from a campus building After witnessing the act Jakob Schmied detained the brother and sister then called the Gestapo Four days later the Scholls and another White Rose student were tried convicted and executed for treason 64 65 Soong Mei ling popularly known as Madame Chiang Kai shek as the wife of China s president became the first private citizen and only the second woman to address the U S Congress Rather than speaking to a joint session Madame Chiang gave a prepared speech to the Senate and then an improvised speech to the House 66 U S President Roosevelt approved the extension of the Lend Lease Program for the first American financial aid to the oil rich kingdom of Saudi Arabia after being advised that geologists had concluded that the Saudi kingdom had the largest oil fields in the world 67 Groundbreaking for the nuclear production facilities at Oak Ridge Tennessee took place 68 Under continued demands from Nazi Germany the Japanese Empire followed the Nazi example of confining Jewish residents to a specific area and set up the Shanghai ghetto with a two square mile area in the Hongkou District to house 20 000 refugees from Germany Austria and Poland Over the next three months the European Jews had been relocated to Hongkou along with Chinese people whom Japan wanted to keep under surveillance 69 Born Graeme Garden Scottish writer comedian and actor in AberdeenFebruary 19 1943 Friday editFreeman Gosden and Charles Correll broadcast the final episode of their popular NBC Blue Network radio program the original Amos n Andy In the original format the two white comedians voiced African American dialect not only for the title characters but for most of the other roles as well The new version would debut in the fall with a live audience and Gosden and Correll joined by a cast of African American supporting actors 70 Third Battle of Kharkov Field Marshal Erich von Manstein launched a counterstrike using the German II SS Panzer Corps under SS Gruppenfuhrer Paul Hausser attached to Army Group South in Ukraine 71 The German submarine U 268 was sunk in the Bay of Biscay by a Vickers Wellington of No 172 Squadron RAF while the U 562 was sunk northeast of Benghazi Libya by a Vickers Wellington of No 38 Squadron RAF in conjunction with British destroyers Hursley and Isis The first flight nurse recruits for the United States Army Nurse Corps were certified after completing their training at Bowman Field in Louisville Kentucky The job of a flight nurse was to render aid to wounded soldiers being transported by the Air Evacuation Units of the U S Army Air Force 72 Born Tim Hunt British biochemist 2001 Nobel Prize laureate in Neston Cheshire Homer Hickam American author of Rocket Boys adapted to film with the anagram October Sky and retired NASA engineer in Coalwood West Virginia Lou Christie stage name for Lugee Sacco American singer known for the hit song Lightnin Strikes in Glenwillard PennsylvaniaFebruary 20 1943 Saturday editAt 4 30 pm local time the Mexican volcano Paricutin broke the surface of a cornfield owned by farmer Dionisio Pulido and began increasing in size through ash stone and rock By the next morning the volcanic mound was already 30 feet high At the end of the week Paricutin named for a nearby village in the state of Michoacan had reached 400 feet and was sending material half a mile into the sky Within a year after the Paricutin village was evacuated the volcano was 1 100 feet tall and would peak at 2 000 feet 73 After nine years and five days of smoke and lava flows Paricutin would suddenly cease on February 25 1952 74 The Japanese destroyer Ōshio was torpedoed off Wewak New Guinea by American submarine Albacore and sank under tow American movie studio executives agreed to allow the Office of War Information to censor movies Born Mike Leigh British film director in Welwyn Garden City Hertfordshire Antonio Inoki Japanese professional wrestler as Kanji Inoki in Yokohama d 2022 February 21 1943 Sunday editIn Operation Cleanslate having secured Guadalcanal American forces of the 43rd Infantry Division some 10 000 men invaded the Russell Islands with the 103rd and 169th regiments and members of the 11th Defense Battalion landing on Mbanika Island and the 3rd Marine Raider Battalion coming ashore on Pavuvu 75 Although a fierce battle had been expected the Japanese defenders had already been withdrawn and the islands were taken by the U S without a fight 76 The German submarine U 623 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by a B 24 of No 120 Squadron RAF A nationwide day of prayer was held in India for Mahatma Gandhi whose fasting was putting his life in danger 14 Born David Geffen American record executive and film producer in BrooklynFebruary 22 1943 Monday editThe first three student members of the White Rose resistance group were executed by the Nazi government at the Stadelheim Prison near Munich Christoph Probst 23 Hans Scholl 24 and his sister Sophie Scholl 21 were all beheaded by guillotine four days after their arrest for distributing anti war leaflets at the University of Munich The article in the Munich newspaper Neueste Nachrichten later that day reported that the condemned persons shamelessly committed offenses against the armed security of the nation and the will to fight of the German people by defacing houses with slogans attacking the state and by distributing treasonous leaflets 64 77 Alexander Belev the Bulgarian Minister of Jewish Affairs signed an agreement with Gestapo representative Theodor Dannecker to deliver 20 000 Bulgarian Jews to German labor camps From the recently annexed territories of Western Thrace Bati Trakya and Macedonia Makedoniya Belev would oversee the removal of 23 000 Jews to Treblinka extermination camp and Auschwitz 78 Arrangements would be made for another 8 555 to be deported from the Kingdom of Bulgaria a move which was successfully resisted by the Kingdom s parliament 79 Pan American World Airways Flight 9035 flying from New York City to Lisbon crashed while attempting to land Twenty five of the 39 people on board were killed most of them on tour for the USO to entertain American troops in Europe were killed when the Boeing 314A seaplane nicknamed the Yankee Clipper went down into the Tagus River Jane Froman was one of the fifteen seriously injured survivors 80 A riot at Featherston prisoner of war camp in New Zealand killed 48 Japanese and 1 New Zealander The German submarines U 225 and U 606 were both sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by Allied warships The Canadian corvette HMCS Weyburn sank east of Gibraltar after striking a mine Born Eduard Limonov Russian activist who founded the National Bolshevik Party after the fall of the Soviet Union in Dzerzhinsk d 2020 Died Alfred Nossig 78 Polish sculptor and German sympathizer suspected of supplying reports to Germany about Jewish residents of the Warsaw Ghetto was shot to death by orders of the underground Jewish resistance group the ZOB 81 February 23 1943 Tuesday edit nbsp The 1943 steel penny The first steel pennies were manufactured in the United States Because of the need for copper to be used for the war effort the one cent piece was made of steel with a thin zinc plating to prevent rust After being put into circulation on February 27 the new pennies were mistaken for dimes and were not accepted in machines that had magnets to catch slugs The unpopular coins were discontinued at the end of the year 82 The German submarine U 443 was depth charged and sunk off Algiers by British destroyers and the U 522 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by British cutter Totland Born Fred Biletnikoff American NFL player and Hall of Fame inductee in Erie Pennsylvania Died Lt Gen Grigory Kravchenko 30 fighter ace and twice Hero of the Soviet Union after his airplane was shot down and his parachute failed Soviet Major General M M Shaimuratov Shaimuratov Minigali Mingazovich 43 after being captured tortured and blinded by German Army interrogatorsFebruary 24 1943 Wednesday editGermany s Afrika Corps retreated from the United States Army s Second Corps ending the Battle of Kasserine Pass An early morning fire at a girl s orphanage in the city of Cavan in Ireland killed 35 girls between the ages of 4 and 14 and an 87 year old caretaker 83 A subsequent inquiry absolved the Poor Clares of blame The new British submarine HMS Vandal disappeared during sea trials along with its crew of 37 only four days after it had been commissioned After departing Lochranza on the Scottish Isle of Arran the Vandal submerged and never resurfaced 84 The submarine would remain missing for more than half a century until its rediscovery on June 26 1994 85 The German submarine U 649 sank in the Baltic Sea after a collision with U 232 February 25 1943 Thursday editThe Allies started their new strategy of round the clock bombing as USAAF planes bombed Germany in the daytime while the RAF struck at night Over the next two days over 2 000 sorties would strike German targets 86 The Latvian SS Volunteer Division was formed with three infantry regiments in Latvia fighting on the side of Germany in hopes of winning back independence from the Soviet Union 87 Born George Harrison British musician for the The Beatles in Liverpool d 2001 February 26 1943 Friday editThe Zigeunerlager a section of the Auschwitz concentration camp that was intended to segregate Gypsy families from other minorities marked for extermination received its first group of deportees In three successive actions the 5 100 residents were murdered beginning with the elimination of 1 700 on March 22 88 Germany successfully completed Operation Hornung in the Byelorussian SSR now Belarus and launched Operation Ochsenkopf a new offensive in Tunisia Born Bill Duke American actor and director in Poughkeepsie New York Darcus Howe British civil rights activist as Leighton Rhett Radford Howe in Moruga Trinidad d 2017 Died Nazi SS Obergruppenfuhrer Theodor Eicke 50 after being shot down over KharkovFebruary 27 1943 Saturday editAn explosion and carbon monoxide poisoning killed 74 of the 77 men working inside the Smith Mine 3 near Bearcreek Montana 89 The Fabrikaktion took place in Berlin and other large cities as orders went out to arrest the remaining Jews in Germany 90 91 nbsp Pilot Nancy Harkness Love Nancy Harkness Love one of 29 pilots in the Women s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron became the first woman to be certified to fly a P 51 Mustang pursuit plane and would later be the first woman cleared to fly several other military aircraft 92 The British submarine Tigris was lost in the Mediterranean Sea probably sunk by the German submarine chaser Uj 2210 British Commandos carried out Operation Huckaback an overnight raid on Herm in the Channel Islands The raid found no German forces on the island Born Moshe Cotel American composer and pianist in Baltimore d 2008 Morten Lauridsen American composer in Colfax WashingtonFebruary 28 1943 Sunday editIn Operation Gunnerside the Norsk Hydro plant at Vermok in Norway being used by the Nazi German nuclear research program was successfully sabotaged by Norwegian SOE commandos The team used skis to reach the plant entered through a service tunnel and placed timed explosive charges on the tanks of heavy water and the electrolysis chambers needed to produce the deuterium oxide liquid and escaped The blasts destroyed the entire inventory of the heavy water that had been produced by the Germans 52 A 1 000 bomber RAF and U S Army Air Force bombing raid against Saint Nazaire dropped 4 5 million pounds of explosive and incendiary bombs on the German U boat bases in Nazi occupied France and killed 479 people 93 The Soviet Union won a tactical victory in the Battle of Demyansk References edit Muller Eric L Free to Die for Their Country The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters in World War II University of Chicago Press 2003 p 41 Ng Wendy L Japanese American Internment During World War II A History and Reference Guide Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 p 56 a b Davidson Edward Manning Dale 1999 Chronology of World War Two London Cassell amp Co p 143 ISBN 0 304 35309 4 Zaloga Steven J 2013 Sicily 1943 The Debut of Allied Joint Operations Oxford Osprey Publishing p 12 ISBN 978 1 78096 126 2 Siege Finished at Stalingrad Milwaukee Journal February 3 1943 p1 Malcolm Francis Willoughby The U S Coast Guard in World War II Ayer Publishing 1980 p104 Hanson Patricia King ed 1999 American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Feature Films 1941 1950 Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 40 ISBN 0 520 21521 4 Fiona Reynoldson Key Battles of World War II Capstone Classroom 2001 p35 Mussolini Drops Ciano From Cabinet Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 6 1943 p1 Andrews Named U S Commander for Europe Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 6 1943 p1 Spencer Tucker U S Leadership in Wartime Clashes Controversy and Compromise ABC CLIO 2009 pp 583 584 Spencer E Ante Creative Capital Georges Doriot and the Birth of Venture Capital Harvard Business Press 2008 pp 95 96 Shelby L Stanton U S Army Uniforms of World War II Stackpole Books 1995 p242 Mark Klempner The Heart Has Reasons Holocaust Rescuers And Their Stories of Courage Pilgrim Press 2006 pp 73 74 Baton Is Given to Eisenhower Milwaukee Journal February 7 1943 p1 a b c Mercer Derrik ed 1989 Chronicle of the 20th Century London Chronicle Communications Ltd p 579 ISBN 978 0 582 03919 3 Guadalcanal August 1942 February 1943 in Ground Warfare An International Encyclopedia Stanley Sandler ed ABC CLIO 2002 p344 Gerhard L Weinberg A World at Arms A Global History of World War II Cambridge University Press 2005 p344 Robert Gellately Lenin Stalin and Hitler The Age of Social Catastrophe Random House Digital 2009 pp 525 526 Bernard Ireland Battle of the Atlantic Naval Institute Press 2003 p122 Submarine Hero Howard Walter Gilmore Archived 2012 10 16 at the Wayback Machine by Edward Whitman www navy mil Sugata Bose His Majesty s Opponent Subhas Chandra Bose and India s Struggle against Empire Harvard University Press 2012 p232 Greg Robinson A Tragedy of Democracy Japanese Confinement in North America Columbia University Press 2010 p231 Yitzhak Arad The Holocaust in the Soviet Union University of Nebraska Press 2009 p324 War Diary for Monday 8 February 1943 Stone amp Stone Second World War Books Retrieved February 1 2016 Shoes Put on Ration Basis Milwaukee Journal February 8 1943 p1 John Bush Jones All Out for Victory Magazine Advertising and the World War II Home Front University Press of New England 2009 p211 Naming of Rutledge Approved by Senate Bakersfield CA Californian February 8 1943 p2 Wiley Blount Rutledge in Supreme Court Justices A Biographical Dictionary Timothy L Hall ed Infobase Publishing 2001 p332 Valerie Thomas Biography Mathematician Invention amp Facts Britannica Nathan Miller War at Sea A Naval History of World War II Oxford University Press 1997 p290 Clark George B Battle History of the United States Marine Corps 1775 1945 McFarland 2010 p 160 Mooney James L ed Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Volume 7 T V Government Printing Office 1976 p 50 DerbySulzers com Le 9 fevrier 1943 Klaus Barbie passe a l action On February 9 1943 Klaus Barbie Takes Action Le Progres February 13 2011 in French 48 Hour Week in 12 Cities Chicago Daily Tribune February 10 1943 p1 Couldn t Keep Her Idea Down Chicago Sunday Tribune October 24 1943 p1 The Woman Who Invented Duct Tape KilmerHouse com Johnson amp Johnson website Jozo Tomasevich War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford University Press 2002 p497 India s Struggle for Independence Bipin Chandra Mridula Mukherjee K N Panikkar Aditya Mukherjee Sucheta Mahajan Penguin India Antony Copley Gandhi Against the Tide Oxford University Press 1996 p92 The Khariton Version by Yuli Khariton and Yuri Smirnov Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists May 1993 p24 Dwight David Eisenhower Chronology Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library amp Museum William Taubman Khrushchev The Man and His Era W W Norton amp Company 2004 ALLIES TO STRIKE BLOW AT HEART OF JAPAN PRESIDENT PROMISES Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 13 1943 p1 Tluste Tovste Ukraine Event Timeline Bushati Maliq Bey in Historical Dictionary of Albania Robert Elsie ed Scarecrow Press 2010 pp 62 63 Edwin H Simmons The United States Marines A History Naval Institute Press 2003 p189 J D Conway Monterey Presidio Pueblo and Port Arcadia Publishing 2003 p127 Corsair Old Hose Nose becomes a TV star by Gordon Baxter Flying magazine June 1977 p50 John Whiteclay Chambers II ed The Oxford Companion to American Military History Oxford University Press 2000 p506 Maria del Carmen Tapia Inside Opus Dei The True Unfinished Story Continuum International 1998 p304 Uruguay 1911 present University of Central Arkansas Robert Reynard Secret Code Breaker II A Cryptanalyst s Handbook Smith amp Daniel 1997 p30 a b William Stevenson A Man Called Intrepid Globe Pequot 2000 p425 Nicholas Stargardt Witnesses of War Children s Lives Under the Nazis Random House Digital 2006 Harnack Mildred Fish in Germany and the Americas ABC CLIO 2005 p485 Griess Thomas E ed 2002 The Second World War Europe and the Mediterranean Square One Publishers pp 139 140 ISBN 978 0 7570 0160 4 Robert Cunningham Sergei Rachmaninoff A Bio Bibliography Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 p6 David Wallace Exiles in Hollywood Hal Leonard Corporation 2006 pp 146 147 David Cymet History vs Apologetics The Holocaust the Third Reich and the Catholic Church Lexington Books 2012 pp 328 329 David Jones Joe DiMaggio A Biography Greenwood Publishing 2004 Dynamic Irish Basketeers Peak Too Much Power for Canisius Buffalo NY News February 17 1943 Notre Dame Coach George Keogan Dies Veteran Baseketball Mentor Suffers Fatal Heart Attack While Reading Paper The Milwaukee Journal Associated Press February 18 1943 DINTY COLBECK SHOT TO DEATH Former Gang Leader Slain in Automobile St Louis Globe Democrat February 18 1943 The John Gotti of St Louis The Rise and Fall of Dinty Colbeck Nation Rise Up and Let the Storm Break Loose Goebbels speech transcript German Propaganda Archive Calvin College Hein A M Klemann and Sergei Kudryashov Occupied Economies An Economic History of Nazi Occupied Europe 1939 1945 Berg 2011 p9 a b Inge Scholl The White Rose Munich 1942 1943 Wesleyan University Press 2011 Rene Spitz Hfg Ulm The View Behind the Foreground Edition Axel Menges 2002 p42 Wittenstein George J M D Memories of the White Rose Part 2 The Leaflets 1979 K Scott Wong Americans First Chinese Americans and the Second World War Harvard University Press 2005 p96 Daniel Yergin The Prize The Epic Quest for Oil Money amp Power Simon and Schuster 2008 p379 F G Gosling The Manhattan Project Making the Atomic Bomb Government Printing Office 1999 p22 David S Wyman and Charles H Rosenzveig The World Reacts to the Holocaust Johns Hopkins University Press Sep 30 1996 p567 Amos n Andy in Encyclopedia of Radio Christopher H Sterling ed Taylor amp Francis 2003 p128 Hayward J 1998 Stopped at Stalingrad The Luftwaffe and Hitler s Defeat in the East 1942 1943 pp 130 131 Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1146 1 Barbara Brooks Tomblin G I Nightingales The Army Nurse Corps in World War II University Press of Kentucky 2003 p62 Dennis Fradin and Judith Fradin Witness to Disaster Volcanoes National Geographic Books 2007 pp 7 10 The Years Between the Wars by Alfred Newton Richards in The National Academy of Sciences The First Hundred Years 1863 1963 National Academies 1978 p507 Gordon Rottman US Marine Corps Pacific Theater of Operations 1941 43 Osprey Publishing 2004 p79 Chuck Thompson 25 Best World War II Sites Pacific Theater ASDavis Media Group 2002 p3 Wittenstein George J M D Memories of the White Rose Part 4 Trial and Aftermath 1979 Jack Fischel The Holocaust Greenwood Publishing Group 1998 p69 Bulgaria Holocaust in in Antisemitism A Historical Encyclopedia Of Prejudice And Persecution Richard S Levy ed ABC CLIO 2005 p90 Froman Jane in Dictionary of Missouri Biography University of Missouri Press 1999 pp 322 323 PlaneCrashInfo com Barbara Engelking and Jacek Leociak The Warsaw Ghetto A Guide to the Perished City Yale University Press 2009 p828 David W Lange The Complete Guide To Lincoln Cents Zyrus Press 2005 pp 21 22 35 Orphans Die in Fire Charleston WV Daily Mail February 24 1943 p1 The Cavan Fire Scannal RTE One Television The Loss of HM Submarine Vandal P64 off the Isle of Arran in 1943 ClydeMaritime co UK Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland Events occurring on Thursday February 25 1943 WW2 Timelines 2011 Retrieved February 20 2016 Nigel Thomas Germany s Eastern Front Allies Baltic Forces Osprey Publishing 2002 p21 Shlomo Venezia Inside the Gas Chambers Eight Months in the Sonderkommando of Auschwitz Polity 2009 p 176 177 Molly Searl Montana Disasters Fires Floods and Other Catastrophes Pruett Publishing 2001 p56 Feb 27 1943 Mine explosion kills 74 in Montana This Day in History History com Blast Traps 75 In Montana Mine Sheboygan WI Press February 27 1943 p1 David Bankier and Israel Gutman Nazi Europe and the Final Solution Berghahn Books 2009 pp 95 96 Wolf Gruner Jewish Forced Labor Under the Nazis Economic Needs and Racial Aims 1938 1944 Cambridge University Press 2006 p27 Sarah Byrn Rickman Nancy Love and the WASP Ferry Pilots of World War II University of North Texas Press 2008 p112 Randolph Bradham Hitler s U Boat Fortresses Greenwood Publishing 2003 p53 Bernard Wasserstein Barbarism and Civilization A History of Europe in Our Time Oxford University Press 2007 pp 392 393 RAF Looses a Torrent of Bombs on St Nazaire The Milwaukee Journal March 1 1943 p1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title February 1943 amp oldid 1214872000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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