Odd scene. German armor general discussing the battle in Kursk Oblast. . . where the Germans had quite the fight 80 years ago.
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Odd scene. German armor general discussing the battle in Kursk Oblast. . . where the Germans had quite the fight 80 years ago.
Today in World War II History—August 23, 1943: Soviets take Kharkiv, Ukraine, the fourth and final time it changes hands during World War II, and the Germans lose the Donets Basin industrial area.
From Sarah Sundin's blog.
And that was a big deal in the war, we might note.
We should also note that the Red Army took massive casualties in the Battle of Kursk and its independent subparts, and in the counteroffensive following it. While putting it oddly, an achievement of the Red Army by this point of the war was being able to sustain huge manpower and material losses and not disintegrate. On the other hand, while the Red Army has numerous fans, it was fighting in a style that simply tolerated losses at a level that anything other than a totalitarian state could not endure, something the Germans also would do, but with the Soviets taking much larger casualties.
Konstantin Konstantinovich Rokossovsky, a Polish born senior Soviet commander, had his illustration appear on the cover of Time. The painting, which we cannot put up here as it is copyright protected, featured the Soviet general looking forward with piercing blue eyes and the words "USSR" behind him. He was painted seemingly thinner than he was in real life. Rokossovsky had been arrested during the Purge but had amazing survived, and then was dragged back out of confinement when it ended and the Red Army was in need of experienced commanders, which he was, after the disaster of the Winter War. He never blamed Stalin for his confinement, but rather the NKVD, taking a politic, if toady, approach to both the horror and his ongoing servitude to the monstrosity of the USSR.
Orphaned as a child, he'd joined the Imperial Russian Army during World War One, then went over to the Reds during the Revolution. After the war, in 1949, he became the Polish Minister of Defense under Stalin's orders, showing the extent to which Communist Poland was a puppet. He was not popular with the Poles, which he knew, commenting; "In Russia, they say I'm a Pole, in Poland they call me Russian".
Rokossovsky and his wife Julia had a daughter named Ariadna. He cheated on his wife with Army doctor military doctor Galina Talanova during the war, with whom he had a second child named Nadezhda. He was fond of hunting.
He died in 1968 of prostate cancer in Moscow at age 71.
Life magazine, in contrast, had a black and white portrait of a young couple dancing the Lindy Hop.
Uruguay transferred German sailors of the battleship Graf Spee and auxiliary ship Tacoma to an internment camp at Sarandi Del Li after they violated the conditions of their internment in Montevideo boarding houses.
The Pasadena Post reported on the cast of Poppa is All touring military bases, which included Casper born and Lander raised former Miss Wyoming Helen Mowery.
Operation Tidal Wave, the low level U.S. Army Air Force bombing of Polesti with B-24s took place.
The raid involved 177 B-24s, of which 54 were lost. Oil production from Romania, Germany's largest supplier, was temporarily halted but would ultimately be restored.
Germany scored an inscription success with the raid as it was able to decipher Allied radio traffic regarding it and that the planes would fly from Libya.
The Gestapo executed a party of eleven nuns of the Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth, a Polish Roman Catholic community, at Navahrudak, Poland, which is now in Belarus. The Sisters had offered their lives in exchange for those of Polish prisoners, and were executed in defiance of their offer. They have been declared Blessed by the Catholic Church for their martyrdom.
Japan affected to grant independence to Burma, while in actuality governing it.
Race riots broke out in Harlem due to a white NYPD police officer shooting and wounding Pvt. Robert Bandy during a fight. Rumors spread that he had been killed, and the riots ensued. The riots would result in the death of six African American New Yorkers.
William D. Becker, the Mayor of St. Louis, died in a Waco glider accident. He was a passenger in the military glider, whose wings buckled in flight.
Military gliders of the era were frightenly dangerous, and I can't imagine riding on one voluntarily, let alone as part of a demonstration. Maj. William B. Robertson, President of the Robertson Aircraft Corporation, which built the gilder, also died in the crash.
Soviet pilot Lydia Litvyak, who had scored eleven areal victories against the Luftwaffe, was shot down and killed in the Battle of Kursk.
Hitler ordered his commanders to withdraw and take defense positions at Kursk, following up on his July 13 order to end the offensive. Von Manstein and others urged Hitler to continue on, but he overruled them. At this point in the battle, the Germans had lost 252 tanks and sustained 64,000 casualties, whereas the Soviets had lost over 2,000 and had sustained 320,000 casualties, so Von Manstein's arguments were not without merit.
It would soon prove to be the case that the Red Army had not been as damaged as Von Manstein believed, but a person can ponder what carrying on in Operation Citadel would have meant, keeping in mind that there was no reversing German fortunes, only delaying them, at this point.
We've dealt with Von Manstein's post-war fate a bit here:
We didn't note in that entry that when he died, he was buried with full military honors.
The Krasnodara Trial, the first war crimes trial, concluded in the Soviet Union with all 20 Soviet citizens, collaborators with the Germans, convicted and 18 of them to receive the death penalty.
The Polish Uderzeniowe Bataliony Kadrowe (Striking Cadre Battalions, UBK), attacked East Prussian villages in the area of Johannisburg (Pisz) in retaliation for German atrocities in Bezirk Bialystok. Oddly, Pisz is now in Poland and Bezirk Bialystok in Belarus.
The U.S. offensive at Munda Point in New Georgia concluded with limited tactical success. This was in part because the US troops and their leadership were green, which was recognized by the U.S. and resulted in reorganization of the command structure. On the same day, the Japanese launched a counteroffensive, which would prove to be costly and unsuccessful.
Today in World War II History—July 13, 1943: Battle of Kolombangara: in the Solomon Islands, US & New Zealand ships sink Japanese light cruiser Jintsu, but fail to prevent reinforcement of Kolombangara.
We covered what Sarah Sundin notes here yesterday, as this was a nocturnal battle, but this entry noted above is correct.
What Sundin also notes, and what is a more significant event, is that Hitler ordered a halt to Operation Citadel due to Operation Husky in order to redeploy troops from the Kursk offensive to Sicily.
That actually occured the evening of July 12, when Hitler summoned Kluge and Manstein to is Rastenburg headquarters. Kluge, aware of a coming Soviet counteroffensive, was relieved to receive the order, fearing what that would mean, but Manstein opposed it given that his troops had spent a week of hard fighting and, he believed, were on the verge of breaking through. Manstein argued, "On no account should we let go of the enemy until the mobile reserves he [has] committed [and is] completely beaten."
Manstein may have been overestimating the extent of Red Army losses, but the Red Army had sustained huge losses, including massive losses the day prior. At any rate, Hitler relented to the extent that he agreed to allow the offensive to temporarily continue in the south. However, on this day, the 13th, he ordered Manstein's reserve, the XXIV Panzer Corps, to move south to support the 1st Panzer Army, removing from Manstein the forces he actually needed to continue.
Therefore, it was the American, Canadian, and British armies that brought about the end of Operation Citadel, and one day after a German tactical victory in that offensive that had resulted in huge Soviet losses.
Could Citadel have achieved its objectives? That's much more difficult to say. The Germans and the Soviets were still fighting at Prokhorovka, although the Germans had arrested the Red Army attack the day prior, with large losses being sustained by the Soviets in a battle that is still so murky that partisan historians, professional and amateur, declare victory for each side. Model, however, had completely committed his reserves and the Soviets, while sustaining huge casualties, had not yet broken. Given this, it seems unlikely that the Germans would have reduced the Kursk salient, but they would have taken enormous losses attempting to do so.
This provides one of the uncomfortable facts about the Germans during the Second World War, that being that quite frankly Hitler's estimation of the battlefield situation was often better than that of his generals. People like to repeat the "Hitler is the best general we've got" quote that some Allied commander said during the war, but in terms of tactical decisions, he was often better at calculating them than generals in his army were. The decision to call off Citadel was probably correct, Manstein notwithstanding, as the Germans had committed very good armored forces with large amounts of armor and had not broken through. Ignoring Husky early on stood a very good chance of resulting in a rapid Allied victory in Sicily which could possibly have taken an already teetering Italy out of the war.
The American League won the All Star Game.
Luz Long, age 30, 1936 Olympic medalist, died of wounds sustained in fighting in the Germany Army in Sicily. His death came in a British hospital. Long had been friends with Jesse Owens and was, prior to entering the German army, a lawyer.
He held the rank of Obergefreiter in the Heer, which is a rank that's somewhat difficult to correlate to American and British enlisted rank structures. It's roughly equivalent to the World War Two US rank of Corporal or the British Rank of Lance Corporal, which would effectively be the first NCO in a squad to command other enlisted men.
White Rose figures University of Munich student Alexander Schmorell, age 25, and Professor Karl Huber, age 49, executed by guillotine for distributing anti-Nazi literature. Wilhelm Geyer, Manfred Eickemeyer, Josef Soehngen and Harald Dohrn were acquitted of the most serious charges and convicted for the less serious crime of failing to report treason, benefitting from the absence of the chief judge and that Judge Schwingenschlögl, the most lenient, was presiding. Soehngen received a six-month sentence, with credit for time served, while the rest were ordered to pay court costs, a truly lucky break for them.
The escort carrier USS Casablanca was commissioned.
It was day two for the Battle of Kursk. The Germans suffered substantial tank losses due to IL-2 action.
Ground forces highly valued the work of aviation on the battlefield. In a number of instances enemy attacks were thwarted thanks to our air operations. Thus on 7 July enemy tank attacks were disrupted in the Kashara region (13th Army). Here our assault aircraft delivered three powerful attacks in groups of 20–30, which resulted in the destruction and disabling of 34 tanks. The enemy was forced to halt further attacks and to withdraw the remnants of his force north of Kashara.
Glantz and Orenstein 1999, p. 260.
I'd be skeptical of the number claimed in that entry, but the problem faced is an obvious one. Indeed, the Germans were attacking a salient that was defended in depth, and their air force wasn't what it had once been. The tactical problem is similar to that which is faced by Ukraine today.
The Wehrmacht's 9th Army, commanded by Walter Model, made only small gains on the Central Front. Hoth's 4th Panzer Army nearly broke through Voronezh Front defenses around Syrtzevo but Soviet armored counterattacks prevented this from occurring.
The Australians bombed Mubo, New Guinea and captured Observation Hill thereafter.
The Finns passed out captured Russian arms to civilians for home defense.
Jóhannes Gunnarsson, SMM was consecrated as the Catholic Bishop of Hólar, Iceland in Washington, D.C. He had been appointed to be head of the Catholic Church in Iceland the prior February. He occupied the position until 1967, when he resigned as he was facing ill health.
Born in Reykjavik, he had been a Catholic Priest since 1924 and was the first Icelandic Catholic Bishop since Jón Arason, who was beheaded with his two sons by King Christian III in 1550.
Christianity had come to Iceland in the form of the Latin Rite with Irish monks, who inhabited the island prior to Scandinavian conquest, and then with Irish slaves held there, although it seems some early missionary activity may have occured well before the Althing adopted it for the island in 1000. It remained a Catholic country until King Christian III of Denmark and Norway forced it on those countries following a civil war in Denmark. A civil war over the issue occured in Iceland, where Catholic opposition to Lutheranism was put down by royalist forces. Catholicism was outlawed after that and the formerly Catholic island became a Lutheran one, with those refusing to convert forced into exile. Oddly, Latin remained the language of the Church of Iceland, however, until 1686.
The Catholic Church reappeared officially in 1855. The Church has grown quite a bit in recent years, but remains small. The Lutheran Church on the island had been in the very conservative branch until after World War Two, when it went over to the liberal branch thereafter.
Women in Oregon applied social pressure to war work:
Rudolph Foster, age 70, Chief Clerk of the White House Executive Offices since 1897, passed away.
*This was mistakenly run as the July 6 series of events for 1943. Nope, this all happened on July 7.
Shrouded and myth and legend, not all of it true, the Battle of Kursk, the largest armored battle in history. . . so far. . . began when the Germans launched an attack on the city with 20 infantry divisions and 3,000 tanks. The attack was part of the German summer offensive, Operation Citadel.
The battle would go on for nearly two months. Seemingly like a lot of big battles in the middle of World War Two which the Axis lost, it is considered by some a turning point in the war.
In real terms, it is not impossible, although it is unlikely, that those alive today shall see a yet greater armored battle.
The battle is important for numerous reasons, not the least of which was that it is stunning to think that at this stage of the war the Germans would be capable of launching such a massive effort on the Eastern Font, and yet they were. Indeed, that was part of the point, as the Germans hoped that a successful operation would bolster the wavering attitudes of Germany's allies, which were known to be considering pulling out of the war.
Operation Citadel itself, in spite of its massive scale, had surprisingly limited objectives, and perhaps is reflective of a growing sense of realism, somewhat, in some German quarters. The Germans did not hope for a breakthrough, but mostly to disrupt the Red Army's plans for the summer and to take large numbers of Soviet POWs, which in turn it would have employed as slave labor.
While this battle shall of course feature in the next month or so, in reality the turning point of the war had already come. The Germans had already lost the Battle of Stalingrad, North Africa, and the Battle of the Atlantic, all within the prior several months. This battle was an enormous effort, but the Germans were not capable of reversing the tide of the war at this point.
The Battle of Kula Gulf off Kolombangara in the Solomon Islands. between the U.S. and Japanese navies, commenced as the US Navy deployed to disrupt the landing of Japanese reinforcements. The battle was a nighttime battle, and the Japanese succeeded in landing 1600 troops at Vila and 90 tons of supplies, to the loss of four ships. The US lost a light cruiser.
A B-17 dropped four inert bombs on Boise, Idaho, which it mistook for its practice target. The event is memorialized by a park in Boise today.
Betty Grable married bandleader Harry James.
The Italian island of Pantelleria was unconditionally surrendered to the Allies at 11:40 am local time.
It was an historic surrender in that no boots were on the ground. It was made solely in the face of an ongoing, and heavy, areal campaign, which is somewhat deceptive. At this point in time the U.S. Army Air Force was of the mind that it could win the war without an invasion of Europe, which was obviously incorrect, and something like this tended to emphasize that mistaken view.
The surrender was significant in that it provided a staging area for the invasion of Sicily.
The island is closer to North Africa than it is to Sicily, but it can be regarded as midpoint. The fact that it would call it quits is significant in and of itself, as it pretty clearly telegraphed that Italy was done.
On the same day the press reported that the Germans were planning a massive offensive in the East. They in fact were, but not in the location noted.
The RAF bombed Düsseldorf and Münster in its heaviest attack up to that time. The U.S. 8th Air Force made a daylight raid on Wilhelmshaven and Cuxhave with 225 airplanes, losing 85 of them in a record loss ration at the time.
This emphasized the British point that daylight raids, which the U.S. favored as they were in favor of "precision bombing", and justifiably concerned about the immorality of nighttime targeting, were doomed due to heavy losses, in spite of having just agreed to the same in the Pointblank Directive. On the other hand, this emphasized also the American view that the British fighter command was completely unhelpful in its refusal to do anything to extend the range of fighter escorts and make them suitable for long range penetration.
Indeed, it's worth noting that the Supermarine Spitfire and the P51 Mustang shared the same Rolls Royce Merlin engine. Had the RAF fighter command been less narrow-minded, the Spitfire, not the Mustang, would likely be remembered as the premier escort fighter of World War Two, and the P51 would have faded by late 1943 into obscurity.
U.S. coal miners went on strike again, with the support of their union President John L. Lewis.
Super patriotism at work. . . not.
Roosevelt would halt the strike, temporarily, by threatening to draft the miners.
In the popular imagination World War Two was free of labor strife, but in reality, it wasn't.
The German submarine U-417 was sunk in the North Atlantic by a B-17 of No. 206 Squadron RAF, the Japanese submarine I-24 was sunk off Shemya, Alaska by the U.S. Navy subchaser Larchmont, the Australian corvette HMAS Wallaroo sank off Fremantle after a collision with the American Liberty ship Henry Gilbert Costin.
The technicolor musical Coney Island was released. It was nominated, but did not win, an Academy Award for best musical score in 1944.