Posted on 11/27/2013 4:28:22 AM PST by Homer_J_Simpson
At last all the puzzles had been solved. The difficulties of the American Constitution, Roosevelts health, and Stalins obduracy, the complications of a journey to Basra and the Trans-Persian railway, were all swept away by the inexorable need of a triple meeting, and the failure of every other alternative but a flight to Teheran. So we sailed off into the air from Cairo at crack of dawn on November 27 in perfect weather for the long-sought meeting-place, and arrived safely by different routes at different times.
Winston S. Churchill, Closing the Ring
#1 Paper Doll - Mills Brothers
#2 - People Will Say Were in Love - Bing Crosby, with Trudy Erwin
#3 Pistol Packin Mama - Bing Crosby, with the Andrews Sisters
#4 - Sunday Monday or Always - Bing Crosby, with the Ken Darby Singers
#5 Put Your Arms Around Me Honey - Dick Haymes, with the Song Spinners
#6 - Pistol Packin Mama - Al Dexter
#7 - I Heard You Cried Last Night - Harry James, with Helen Forrest
#8 - My Heart Tells Me - Glen Gray, with Eugenie Baird
#9 - Oh What a Beautiful Mornin Bing Crosby, with Trudy Erwin
#10 People Will Say Were in Love - Frank Sinatra, with the Bobby Tucker Singers
http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1943/nov1943/f27nov43.htm
Armored support for British bridgehead
Saturday, November 27, 1943 www.onwar.com
British Sherman tank crossing water obstacle [photo at link]
In Italy... The British 8th Army brings an armored brigade into the bridgehead on the north bank of the Sangro River to support the forces fighting there.
http://www.etherit.co.uk/month/thismonth/27.htm
November 27th, 1943 (SATURDAY)
UNITED KINGDOM:
Aircraft carrier HMS Glory launched.
Corvette HMS Amberly Castle launched.
Minesweepers HMS Liberty, Jewel and Hare laid down.
Aircraft carrier HMCS Bonaventure (ex-HMS Powerful) laid down Belfast.
Frigates HMS Narborough and Torrington launched.
FRANCE: Paris: Dr. Julius Ritter, who had been in charge of the Paris office of the Sauckel Organisation, running the Relève [a scheme whereby anybody volunteering for work in Germany ensures the release of three prisoners of war] is killed on the corner of the rue des Reservoirs by three FTP men. Shortly afterwards, files of men about to be drafted to Germany as forced labour are burnt.
GERMANY: Berlin: RAF”> RAF Lancaster bombers supported by Mosquitoes made their fourth big raid within a week against the city of Berlin last night. First German estimates are putting the number of dead from the raids at over 4,000, with 400,000 homeless.
Sir Arthur Harris, the chief of Bomber Command, says that the RAF will bomb the city until the heart of Nazi Germany stops beating. The capital is probably the most intensively bombed city anywhere, hit this year by 12,000 tons of explosive, of which 5,000 have been dropped in the past few days.
Much of administrative Berlin has been hit, including the Air Ministry, Admiralty, Hitler’s Chancellery and his train. The Führer was not in town, but dispatched fire engines to his capital from Brandenburg and Potsdam. Despite this, and the efforts of the army to create fire-breaks by blowing up buildings, fires spread rapidly.
Among several armaments factories hit was the Allkett tank factory. The greatest loss of life occurred when a bomber crashed onto a building, killing 92 people in the air-raid shelter. A Swede told journalists: “The Berlin we know has ceased to exist.” The toll on the RAF”> RAF is high, however, with 42 aircraft lost from the 450 planes involved in the raid, including 14 which crashed in Britain.
U-321 launched.
ITALY: A British tank brigade crosses the Sangro River to offer further support to British forces north of the river.
In the British Eighth Army area, V Corps prepares to attack in the Adriatic coastal sector, weather conditions at last permitting close air support. Tanks of the 4th Armoured Brigade and transport are brought across the Sangro River.
During the day and night, USAAF Twelfth Air Force fighters, light and medium bombers and aircraft of the associated RAF units of the Northwest African Tactical Air Force attack enemy positions, gun emplacements, roads, vehicles, railroad facilities, and targets of opportunity in the Lanciano-Fossacesia-Castelfrentano-Casoli area. B-25 Mitchells also bomb Porto Civitanova.
USAAF Fifteenth Air Force B-17 Flying Fortresses, with P-38 Lightning escort, bomb three targets: 51 bomb the marshalling yard at Rimini with the loss of two aircraft; 39 bomb the marshalling yard at Grizzano; and 16 bomb a railroad bridge over the Reno River 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of Bologna.
YUGOSLAVIA: USAAF Twelfth Air Force B-25 Mitchells bomb Sibenik.
EGYPT: At a meeting of the South East Asia Command (SEAC) delegation to the Cairo Conference, U.S. Lieutenant General Joseph Stilwell, Commander in Chief, U.S. China-Burma-India Theater of Operations (CBI); Chief of Staff to Chinese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek; Commander in Chief Northern Area Combat Command (NCAC); and Deputy Commander in Chief SEAC, reveals that Chiang Kai-Shek is unwilling to fulfill his commitments agreed to at Cairo and wants Stilwell to hold out for an airborne assault on Mandalay, Burma, (Operation TOREADOR) and 10,000 tons (9 072 metric tonnes) a month over the Hump.
BURMA: USAAF Tenth Air Force B-24 Liberators, with P-38 Lightning escort, and B-25 Mitchells, covered by P-51 Mustangs, strike the locomotive repair shops at Insein; Japanese interceptors attack fiercely, shooting down six fighters and the B-24s; U.S. airplanes claim 19 Japanese fighters downed.
During the night of 27/28 November, seven RAF”> RAF (B-24) Liberators bomb the port area t Rangoon.
CHINA: Four USAAF”> USAAF Fourteenth Air Force B-25 Mitchells on sea sweeps attack docks and warehouses at the port of Swatow and hit a convoy of nine vessels heading south toward Amoy sinking a transport and damaging a torpedo boat.
NEW GUINEA: In Northeast New Guinea, USAAF Fifth Air Force medium bombers bomb the airfield at Boram Aerodrome and the town and harbor at Wewak, claiming 15 airplanes and 12 barges destroyed. Medium bombers also bomb the town of Finschhafen.
SOLOMON ISLANDS: On Bougainville, five USAAF Thirteenth Air Force B-25 Mitchells, with fighter escort, bomb Queen Carola Harbor and 19 B-24 Liberators bomb Bonis Airfield on the northern tip of the island. A few B-25s and RNZAF (PV-1) Venturas attack the areas at the mouth of the Mobiai River and Mutupina Point while 20+ B-24s, with fighter support, attack the airfield on Buka Island north of Bougainville.
GILBERT ISLANDS: On Tarawa Atoll, the 2d Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, clears the Japanese from Buariki Island. The small islet of Naa, at the northern tip, remains to be explored.
MARSHALL ISLANDS: Eight USAAF Seventh Air Force B-24 Liberators from the Phoenix and Ellice Islands bomb Mili Atoll.
PACIFIC OCEAN: From Glen Boren’s diary:
Our four planes returned this A.M. It rained most of the afternoon and we landed our last 8 planes in the rain. Just after landing out last aircraft, a betty flew over and dropped a flare, but it was raining too much for him to see us. The fleet fired at him by radar but who knows? Torpedo defence sounded as a flight of 40 bombers were reported by Radar, 90 miles away. They never came closer than Tarawa, 74 miles away.
CANADA:
Frigates HMCS Kokanee and Runnymede launched at Esquimalt, British Columbia and Montreal, Province of Quebec respectively.
Frigates HMCS Stormont and Outremont commissioned.
U.S.A.:
The USN places an order for two prototype Grumman (Model G-58) XF8F-1 Bearcats.
The one and only Martin (Model 170) XPB2M-1R Mars flying boat transport is delivered to the USN’s Transport Squadron Eight (VR-8) at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland. On 30 November, this aircraft carries a 13,000 pound (5 897 kilogram) cargo load on a 4,375 mile (7 041 kilometer) nonstop flight from NAS Patuxent River to Natal, Brazil.
Destroyer escorts USS Gary and Merrill commissioned.
Destroyer USS Callaghan commissioned.
Escort carrier USS Kalinin Bay (CVE-68) commissioned at Astoria, Oregon.
The USN now has 32 escort aircraft carriers in commission.
Destroyer escort USS Eugene E Elmore laid down.
Destroyer escorts USS Chaffee, Holder and William T Powell launched.
Frigate USS Grand Forks launched.
ATLANTIC OCEAN: U-238 rescued two pilots from a Wellington aircraft (172 Sqn RAF), which was shot down by U-764.
On the other hand, Im sad to see how as far back as 1943, how much weight the opinion of the press carried in important strategic and political decisions like Patton's future. Ive always wondered why journalists who are scribes for a newspaper are treated like they have some kind of special expertise whose opinions should carry so much weight. Their expertise is in writing and reporting what they see. That doesnt make them experts about what they see.
Here, it looks like the journalists decision to drop it may have saved Pattons skin. I know Eisenhower was very politically sensitive which generally served him well as Allied Commander. It would be a tough role having to maintain coordination of a multi-nation war effort while not allowing the opinions of others to dictate your decisions about whats best for America and the American troops.
A few articles on Shell shock. One article today says 90% returned to jobs but doesn’t present the cure. None of us know how we would act after so many days. As always there was a range of causes and symptoms and cures:
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/FWWmental.htm Interesting note here is that it was originally thought to be an effect of exploding shells, thus the name. Symptoms of officers and enlisted were different. electrotherapy was one treatment. quite a variety of symptoms.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combat_stress_reaction
interesting contrast between ww1 and ww2. Interesting contrast if the various countries. 90% treated near the front, returned but on 40% of moved to rear.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/FWWshellshock.htm
Bursting shells create a vacuum and allow air into the brain was original theory. WWI generals discounted this. Patten would have been old school thought on this from his interest in history?
http://pb.rcpsych.org/content/24/6/225.full
Shell shock had a major influence on development of psychiatry and psychology. Again officers and enlisted had different problems.
Real Eggs for Christmas.
Now everything is available, we don’t know what being without is like.
Patton was a mentor to Ike. Taught him a lot about being a general and commanding. Patton is said to be the reason Ike visited the troops and stayed as close to the front as he could.
Dear classmates,
I am not sure if you are aware of this, but archive.org offers countless hours of original recordings of contemporary news broadcasts of the events covered by this course.
Here is a link to the reports from 1943:
https://archive.org/details/WWII_News_1943
There are similar archives from 1932-1945
Thanks. I saved the link. The next broadcast looks like an Ed Murrow piece on Dec. 3.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.