Appendix C
World War II Timeline
1939
SEPTEMBER
1 The Invasion of Poland begins at 4:30 A.M. with the German Luftwaffe attacking several targets in Poland. The United Kingdom and France demand Germany’s immediate withdrawal.
1 The United Kingdom home front is opened as the government declares general mobilization of the British army and begins evacuation plans in preparation of German air attacks.
3 The politics and diplomacy of World War II begin with frantic government responses to the attack on Poland. The United Kingdom, along with Australia and New Zealand, declare war at 11:15 A.M. France joins the war at 5:00 P.M.
3 The Second Battle of the Atlantic begins as the German navy goes into action.
4 Allied air operations in Europe begin with Royal Air Force raids on German naval targets.
7 French patrols enter Germany near Saarbrücken.
10 Canada declares war on Germany.
17 The Soviet Union invades Poland from the east, occupying the territory east of the Curzon line as well as Bialystok and Eastern Galicia.
18 Warsaw is surrounded by German troops.
25 German home front measures begin with food rationing.
27–28 Extensive bombardments of Warsaw.
28 The Polish capital, Warsaw, surrenders to the Germans.
OCTOBER
5 The Soviet Union begins talks with Finland to adjust the border between the two countries.
6 Polish resistance in the Polish September Campaign comes to an end. Finland begins mobilizing its army. Hitler speaks before the Reichstag, declaring a desire for a conference with Britain and France to restore peace.
9 Hitler issues orders to prepare for the invasion of Belgium, France, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.
10 The German navy suggests occupying Norway to Hitler.
14 The British battleship Royal Oak is sunk in Scapa Flow harbor by U-47.
19 Portions of Poland are formally inducted into Germany; the first Jewish ghetto is established at Lublin.
NOVEMBER
4 The Neutrality Acts are enacted in the United States, the “cash and carry” provisions for selling military supplies favor Britain and France.
8 An attempt to assassinate Hitler with a bomb while he makes a speech fails. In the Venlo Incident, two British intelligence agents are captured. Germans appoint Hans Frank governor general of Poland and begin accelerating the anti-Jewish programs there.
30 The Soviet Union attacks Finland starting the Winter War.
DECEMBER
13 Battle of the River Plate, British naval squadron attacks the Admiral Graf Spee.
14 The USSR is expelled from the League of Nations.
17 Admiral Graf Spee scuttled in Montevideo harbor.
18 The first Canadian troops arrive in Europe.
27 The first Indian troops arrive in France.
28 Meat rationing program begins in Britain.
1940
FEBRUARY
5 Britain and France decide to intervene in Norway to cut off the iron ore trade—in anticipation of an expected German occupation—and ostensibly to open a route to assist Finland.
The operation is scheduled to start about March 20.
9 Erich von Manstein is placed in command of German Thirty-eighth Infantry Corps, removing him from planning the French invasion.
15 Soviet army captures Summa in Finland, thereby breaking through the Mannerheim Line.
16 British destroyer Cossack forcibly removes 299 British POWs from the German transport Altmark in neutral Norwegian territorial waters.
17 Manstein presents to Hitler his plans for invading France via the Ardennes forest.
21 General Nickolaus von Falkenhorst is placed in command of the upcoming German invasion of Norway. Work begins on the construction of Auschwitz.
24 The Ardennes plan for invading the west is adopted.
MARCH
3 Soviets begin attacks on Viipuri, Finland’s second largest city.
5 Finland tells the Soviets they will agree to their terms for ending the war.
12 Finland signs a peace treaty with the Soviet Union.
16 German air raid on Scapa Flow causes first British civilian casualties.
18 Mussolini agrees with Hitler that Italy will enter the war “at an opportune moment.”
21 Paul Reynaud becomes prime minister of France following Daladier’s resignation the previous day.
28 Britain and France make a formal agreement that neither country will seek a separate peace with Germany.
30 Japan establishes a puppet regime at Nanking under Wang Jingwei.
APRIL
3 Churchill is appointed chairman of the Ministerial Defense Committee following the resignation of Lord Chatfield.
4 Hitler gives the go ahead for the invasion of Norway and Denmark.
8 Allied mining of Norwegian waters is put into action.
9 Germany invades Denmark and Norway; Denmark surrenders.
10 First Battle of Narvik, British destroyers and aircraft successfully make a surprise attack against a larger German naval force. A second attack on April 13 will also be a British success.
12 British troops occupy the Danish Faroe Islands.
14 British and French troops begin landing in Norway.
30 British and French troops begin evacuating from Norway.
MAY
5 Norwegian government in exile established in London.
10 Germany invades Belgium, France, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. Winston Churchill becomes prime minister of the United Kingdom upon the resignation of Neville Chamberlain.
11 Luxembourg occupied.
13 Dutch government in exile established in London.
14 Rotterdam is carpet bombed by the Luftwaffe. The Netherlands surrender with the exception of Zealand.
14 The creation of the Local Defence Volunteers (the Home Guard) is announced by Anthony Eden.
17 In the Netherlands the province of Zealand surrenders.
26 Operation Dynamo, the Allied evacuation from Dunkirk, begins.
28 Belgium surrenders. Germans evacuate Narvik.
JUNE
3 Last day of Operation Dynamo; 224,686 British and 121,445 French and Belgian troops have been evacuated. Germans bomb Paris.
10 Italy declares war on France and the United Kingdom. Norway surrenders.
11 French government decamps to Tours.
13 Paris occupied by German troops; French government moves again, this time to Bordeaux.
16 Philippe Pétain becomes premier of France upon the resignation of Reynaud’s government.
17 Sinking of liner Lancastria off St Nazaire while being used as a British troopship—Britain’s worst maritime disaster since the Anglo-Dutch wars.
18 General de Gaulle forms the Comité Français de la Libération Nationale, a French government in exile. Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania are occupied by the Soviet Union.
25 France officially surrenders to Germany at 12:35 A.M.
28 General de Gaulle recognized by British as leader of Free French.
30 Germany invades the Channel Islands.
JULY
1 Channel Islands occupied by German forces. French government moves to Vichy.
2 Hitler orders preparation of plans for invasion of Britain, code-named Operation Sea Lion.
4 Destruction of the French Fleet at Mers-el-Kebir by the Royal Navy; Vichy French government breaks off diplomatic relations with Britain in protest.
5 Romania aligns itself with the Axis.
10 Battle of Britain begins.
AUGUST
2 General de Gaulle sentenced to death in absentia by a French military court.
4 Italian forces invade and occupy British Somaliland.
17 Hitler declares a blockade of the British Isles.
19 Italians take Berbera, capital of British Somaliland.
25 First British air raid on Berlin.
SEPTEMBER
3 Operation Sea Lion set for 21 September.
10 Operation Sea Lion postponed until 24 September.
13 Italy invades Egypt.
14 Operation Sea Lion postponed until 27 September, the last day of the month with suitable tides for the invasion.
16 Selective Training and Service Act of 1940 introduces the first peacetime conscription in U.S. history.
17 Hitler postpones Operation Sea Lion until further notice.
27 The Tripartite Pact is signed by Japan, Germany, and Italy.
OCTOBER
7 Germany invades Romania to restrain the Romanian army.
12 Any German invasion of Britain postponed until Spring 1941 at the earliest.
16 Draft registration begins in the United States.
28 Italy issues ultimatum to Greece; Prime Minister Metaxas replies “So it is war” (celebrated as “Okhi!” (“No!”) Day in Greece); Italian forces invade Greece.
NOVEMBER
11 British naval forces launch attack against Italian navy at Taranto. Swordfish bombers from HMS Illustrious damage three battleships, two cruisers, and multiple auxiliary craft.
DECEMBER
8 Franco rules out Spanish entry into the war.
9 Operation Compass: British Western Desert Force begins offensive against Italian forces in North Africa.
11 Greece invades Italian-held Albania.
28 Italy requests German assistance in Albania against Greek forces.
1941
JANUARY
10 Lend-Lease is introduced into the U.S. Congress.
12 British, Australian, and New Zealand troops capture Tobruk.
19 British troops (Fourth and Fifth Indian Divisions) attack Italian-held Eritrea, reversing the tide of the East Africa Campaign.
FEBRUARY
3 Germany forcibly restores Pierre Laval to office in occupied Vichy, France.
11 Lieutenant-General Erwin Rommel arrives in Tripoli.
19 The start of the “three nights’ Blitz” over Swansea, South Wales. Over these three nights of intensive bombing, which lasted a total of thirteen hours and forty-eight minutes, Swansea town center is almost completely obliterated by the 896 high-explosive bombs employed by the Luftwaffe. A total of 397 casualties and 230 deaths are reported. The blitz ends in the early hours of February 22.
25 Mogadishu, Italian Somaliland, captured by British forces.
MARCH
4 British commandos carry out attack on oil facilities at Narvik in Norway.
11 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signs the Lend-Lease Act, allowing Britain, China, and other Allied nations to purchase military equipment and to defer payment until after the war.
25 Yugoslavia signs the Tripartite Pact.
27 Crown Prince Peter becomes Peter II of Yugoslavia and takes control of Yugoslavia after an army coup overthrows the pro-German government of the Prince Regent. Japanese spy Takeo Yoshikawa arrives in Honolulu, Hawaii, and begins to study the United States fleet at Pearl Harbor.
29 Battle of Cape Matapan—British naval forces defeat those of Italy off the Peloponnesus coast in the Mediterranean, sinking five warships. Battle started on March 27.
30 The Afrika Korps begins the German offensive in North Africa.
APRIL
6 German, Hungarian, and Italian forces invade Yugoslavia and Greece. Italian army is ousted from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, though a guerrilla war continues until Italy surrenders in September 1943.
12 Belgrade surrenders. Siege of Tobruk begins.
13 Japan and the Soviet Union sign a neutrality pact.
17 Yugoslavia surrenders; government in exile formed in London.
27 Athens occupied by German troops.
MAY
9 United Kingdom takes control of Iraq and is reinforced by the arrival of Twenty-first Indian Division at Basra. The German submarine U-110 is captured by the British Royal Navy. On board is the latest Enigma cryptography machine, which Allied cryptographers later use to break coded German messages.
10 Rudolf Hess captured in Scotland after bailing out of his plane. The United Kingdom’s House of Commons is damaged by the Luftwaffe in an air raid.
15 Operation Brevity is the first, unsuccessful attempt launched to relieve the Siege of Tobruk.
20 German paratroopers attack Crete.
24 British battle cruiser Hood sunk by German battleship Bismarck. Greek government leaves Crete for Cairo.
26 In the North Atlantic, Fairey Swordfish aircraft from the British carrier Ark Royal fatally cripple the German battleship Bismarck in torpedo attack.
27 German battleship Bismarck is sunk in North Atlantic.
JUNE
1 Allies complete the withdrawal from Crete.
9 Finland initiates mobilization and puts some units under German command.
14 All German and Italian assets in the United States are frozen.
15 Operation Battleaxe attempts and fails to relieve the Siege of Tobruk.
22 Germany invades the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa.
23 Hungary and Slovakia declare war on the Soviet Union.
26 Finland declares war on the Soviet Union.
28 Albania declares war on the Soviet Union.
JULY
4 Mass murder of Polish scientists and writers committed by German troops in captured Polish city of Lwów.
5 British government rules out possibility of negotiated peace. German troops reach the Dnieper River.
12 Britain and Soviet Union sign mutual defence agreement, promising not to sign any form of separate peace agreement with Germany.
13 Montenegro starts the first popular uprising in Europe against the Axis powers.
26 In response to the Japanese occupation of French Indo-China, U.S. president Franklin D.
Roosevelt orders the seizure of all Japanese assets in the United States.
31 Under instructions from Adolf Hitler, Nazi official Hermann Göring orders SS general Reinhard Heydrich to “submit to me as soon as possible a general plan of the administrative material and financial measures necessary for carrying out the desired final solution of the Jewish question.”
AUGUST
6 American and British governments warn Japan not to invade Thailand.
9 Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill meet at Argentia, Newfoundland; the Atlantic Charter is created as a result.
SEPTEMBER
4 The USS Greer becomes the first United States ship fired upon by a German submarine in the war, even though the United States is a neutral power. Tension heightens between the two nations as a result.
6 The requirement to wear the Star of David with the word “Jew” inscribed is extended to all Jews over the age of six in German-occupied areas.
8 Siege of Leningrad—German forces begin a siege against the Soviet Union’s second-largest city, Leningrad. Stalin orders the Volga Deutsche deported to Siberia.
11 Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the United States Navy to shoot on sight if any ship or convoy is threatened.
19 Nazis take Kiev.
OCTOBER
2 Operation Typhoon—Germany begins an all-out offensive against Moscow.
8 In its invasion of the Soviet Union, Germany reaches the Sea of Azov with the capture of Mariupol.
16 Soviet Union government moves to Kuibyshev, but Stalin remains in Moscow.
17 The destroyer USS Kearney is torpedoed and damaged near Iceland, killing eleven sailors— the first American military casualties of the war.
18 General Hideki Tojo becomes the 40th prime minister of Japan.
30 Franklin Delano Roosevelt approves $1 billion in Lend-Lease aid to the Soviet Union.
31 The U.S. destroyer Reuben James is torpedoed by a German U-boat near Iceland, killing more than 100.
NOVEMBER
6 Soviet leader Joseph Stalin addresses the Soviet Union for only the second time during his three-decade rule (the first time was earlier that year on July 2). He states that even though 350,000 troops were killed in German attacks so far, the Germans have lost 4.5 million soldiers (a gross exaggeration) and that Soviet victory was near.
12 Battle of Moscow—Temperatures around Moscow drop to 12°C, and the Soviet Union launches ski troops for the first time against the freezing German forces near the city.
13 The British aircraft carrier Ark Royal is hit by German U-boat U-81.
14 HMS Ark Royal capsizes and sinks.
17 Joseph Grew, the U.S. ambassador to Japan, cables the State Department that Japan has plans to launch an attack against Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (his cable is ignored).
18 British troops launch Operation Crusader in Libya, North Africa, and at last relieve the Siege of Tobruk.
19 The Australian light cruiser Sydney and the German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran sink each other off the coast of Western Australia.
22 Britain issues an ultimatum to Finland to end war with Russia or face war with the Allies.
24 The United States grants Lend-Lease to the Free French.
26 A Japanese attack fleet of thirty-three warships and auxiliary craft, including six aircraft carriers, sails from northern Japan for the Hawaiian Islands. The Hull note ultimatum is delivered to Japan by the United States.
27 Battle of Moscow—Germans reach their closest approach to Moscow. They are subsequently stopped by cold weather and attacks by the Soviets.
DECEMBER
5 The United Kingdom declares war on Finland, Hungary, and Romania.
7 Japan launches aerial attack on Pearl Harbor and declares war on the United States and the United Kingdom. Air attacks also on Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaya, Thailand, the Philippines, and Shanghai.
8 Japan invades Malaya; the United States and the United Kingdom declare war on Japan; the Netherlands declares war on Japan.
9 China officially declares war on Japan.
10 British battleships Repulse and Prince of Wales sunk by Japanese air attack.
11 Germany and Italy declare war on the United States, United States reciprocates and declares war on Germany and Italy; U.S. forces repel a Japanese landing attempt at Wake Island.
12 The United States and the United Kingdom declare war on Romania and Bulgaria in response to those countries’ declarations of war on them. India declares war on Japan.
United States seizes French ship Normandie.
13 Hungary declares war on the United States and the United Kingdom, and they reciprocate and declare war on Hungary.
16 Japan invades Borneo.
17 Battle of Sevastopol begins.
18 Japanese troops land on Hong Kong.
19 Hitler becomes supreme commander in chief of the German army.
23 A second Japanese landing attempt on Wake Island is successful, and the American garrison surrenders after hours of fighting.
25 Hong Kong surrenders; U.K. forces retake Benghazi.
27 British commandos raid the Norwegian port of Vaagso, causing Hitler to reinforce the garrison and defenses.
28 Operation Anthropoid begins (the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich).
1942
JANUARY
1 The term “United Nations” is first officially used to describe the Allied pact.
2 Manila is captured by Japanese forces. The Japanese admiral stays in Solvec (owned by Charles Henry de Silva), Philippines.
7 Siege of the Bataan Peninsula begins.
11 Japanese troops capture Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Japan declares war on the Netherlands and invades the Netherlands East Indies.
19 Japanese forces invade Burma.
20 Nazis at the Wannsee conference in Berlin decide that the “final solution to the Jewish problem” is relocation, and later extermination.
23 The Battle of Rabaul begins.
25 Thailand declares war on the United States and United Kingdom. Japanese troops invade the Solomon Islands.
26 The first American forces arrive in Europe, landing in Northern Ireland.
31 The last organized Allied forces leave Malaya, ending the fifty-four-day battle.
FEBRUARY
11 Operation Cerberus—Flotilla of Kriegsmarine ships dash from Brest through the English Channel to northern ports; British fail to sink any of them.
15 Singapore surrenders to Japanese forces.
19 Japanese warplanes attack Darwin, Australia. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs executive order 9066, allowing the military to define areas as exclusionary zones. These zones affect the Japanese on the West Coast and Germans and Italians primarily on the East Coast.
22 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt orders General Douglas MacArthur out of the Philippines as American defense of the nation collapses.
23 Japanese submarine I-17 fires sixteen high-explosive shells toward an oil refinery near Santa Barbara, California, causing little damage.
27 Battle of the Java Sea begins; the USS Langley, the first U.S aircraft carrier, is sunk by Japanese warplanes off Java.
28 Japanese land forces invade Java.
MARCH
10 Fall of Rangoon.
17 U.S. general Douglas MacArthur arrives in Australia after abandoning his headquarters in the Philippines.
APRIL
3 Japanese forces begin an all-out assault on the U.S. and Filipino troops on the Bataan Peninsula. Bataan falls on April 9, and the Bataan Death March begins.
5 The Japanese navy attacks Colombo in Ceylon (Sri Lanka). Royal Navy Cruisers Cornwall and Dorsetshire are sunk southwest of the island.
9 The Japanese navy launches air raid on Trincomalee in Ceylon (Sri Lanka); Royal Navy aircraft carrier Hermes and Royal Australian Navy destroyer Vampire are sunk off the country’s East Coast.
18 Doolittle raid on Nagoya, Tokyo, and Yokohama.
MAY
4 The Battle of the Coral Sea starts.
5 Operation Ironclad—British forces begin the invasion of Madagascar to keep the Vichy French territory from falling to a possible Japanese invasion.
6 On Corregidor, the last American forces in the Philippines surrender to the Japanese.
8 The Battle of the Coral Sea comes to an end. This is the first time in naval history where two enemy fleets fought without seeing each other.
12 Second Battle of Kharkov—Soviet army initiates a major offensive in the eastern Ukraine.
During the battle, they will capture the city of Kharkov from the German army, only to be encircled and destroyed.
15 In the United States, a bill creating the Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) is signed into law.
27 Operation Anthropoid—Reinhard Heydrich assassinated in Prague.
JUNE
1 Mexico declares war on Germany, Italy, and Japan.
4 The Battle of Midway takes place. Reinhard Heydrich dies in Prague, assassinated by Czechoslovak paratroopers (Operation Anthropoid).
7 Japanese forces invade the Aleutian Islands. This is the first invasion of American soil in 128 years.
9 Nazis burn the Czech village of Lidice as reprisal for the killing of Reinhard Heydrich.
12 Future essayist Anne Frank receives a diary for her thirteenth birthday.
18 Manhattan Project started.
21 Afrika Korps recaptures Tobruk.
28 Operation Blue, the German plan to capture Stalingrad and the Russian oil fields in the Caucasus, begins.
JULY
1 First Battle of El Alamein begins.
3 Guadalcanal falls to the Japanese.
9 Anne Frank’s family goes into hiding in an attic above her father’s office in an Amsterdam warehouse.
18 The Germans test fly the Messerschmitt Me-262 using only its jets for the first time.
19 Battle of the Atlantic—German grand admiral Karl Dönitz orders the last U-boats to withdraw from their U.S. Atlantic coast positions in response to an effective American convoy system.
21 Japanese establish beachhead on the north coast of New Guinea in the Buna-Gona area.
Small Australian force begins rearguard action on the Kokoda Track Campaign.
22 The systematic deportation of Jews from the Warsaw ghetto begins.
27 First Battle of El Alamein ends.
AUGUST
7 Operation Watchtower begins the Battle of Guadalcanal as American forces invade Gavutu, Guadalcanal, Tulagi, and Tanambogo in the Solomon Islands.
8 In Washington, D.C., six German would-be saboteurs are executed (two others were cooperative and received life imprisonment instead).
13 General Bernard Montgomery is appointed commander of British Eighth Army in North Africa.
19 Operation Jubilee, a raid by British and Canadian forces on Dieppe, France, ends in disaster.
22 Brazil declares war on the Axis countries.
26 Battle of Milne Bay begins: Japanese forces launch full-scale assault on Australian base near the eastern tip of New Guinea.
30 Luxembourg is formally annexed to the German Reich.
SEPTEMBER
1 Stalingrad is now completely encircled by German forces.
3 Australian and U.S. forces defeat Japanese forces at Milne Bay, the first outright defeat for Japanese land forces during the Pacific War. An attempt by the Germans to liquidate the Jewish ghetto in Lakhva leads to an uprising.
12 RMS Laconia, carrying civilians, Allied soldiers, and Italian POWs is torpedoed off the coast of West Africa and sinks.
OCTOBER
3 First successful launch of A4-rocket from Test Stand VII at Peenemünde, Germany. The rocket flies 147 kilometers wide and reaches a height of 84.5 kilometers and is therefore the first man-made object reaching space.
11 Battle of Cape Esperance—U.S. Navy ships intercept and defeat a Japanese fleet on their way to reinforce troops on Guadalcanal.
14 A German U-boat sinks the U.S. ferry Caribou, killing 137.
18 Hitler issues Commando Order, ordering all captured commandos to be executed immediately.
23 Second Battle of El Alamein begins with massive Allied bombardment of German positions.
NOVEMBER
1 Operation Supercharge, the Allied breakout at El Alamein, begins.
3 Second Battle of El Alamein ends; German forces under Erwin Rommel are forced to retreat during the night.
8 Operation Torch—Allied invasion of Vichy-controlled Morocco and Algeria begins as French Resistance coup in Algiers, in which 400 French civil resistants neutralize the Vichyist Nineteenth Army Corps and Vichy leaders (Juin, Darlan, etc.), helping the Allies to take Algiers, and from there the whole of French North Africa.
10 In violation of a 1940 armistice, Germany invades Vichy France following Admiral François Darlan’s agreement to an armistice with the Allies in North Africa.
12 Battle of Guadalcanal begins between Japanese and American forces.
13 British Eighth Army recaptures Tobruk. In the Battle of Guadalcanal aviators from the USS Enterprise sink the Japanese battleship Hiei.
15 Battle of Guadalcanal ends. Although the U.S. Navy suffered heavy losses, it was able to retain control of Guadalcanal.
19 Battle of Stalingrad—Soviet Union forces under General Georgy Zhukov launch the Operation Uranus counterattacks at Stalingrad, turning the tide of the battle in the USSR’s favor.
22 Battle of Stalingrad—The situation for the German attackers seems desperate, and General Friedrich Paulus sends Adolf Hitler a telegram saying that the German Sixth Army is surrounded.
23 German U-boat sinks SS Ben Lomond off the coast of Brazil. One crewman, Chinese second steward Poon Lim, is separated from the others and spends 130 days adrift until he is rescued April 3, 1943.
27 At Toulon, the French navy scuttles its ships and submarines to keep them out of German hands.
DECEMBER
2 Below the bleachers of Stagg Field at the University of Chicago, a team led by Enrico Fermi initiates the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction (a coded message, “The Italian navigator has landed in the new world,” was then sent to President Franklin D. Roosevelt).
1943
JANUARY
14 Casablanca Conference of Allied leaders begins.
15 Japanese are driven off Guadalcanal.
18 Soviet officials announce they have broken the Wehrmacht’s siege of Leningrad. The Jews in the Warsaw ghetto rise up for the first time.
23 Allies capture Tripoli, Libya.
27 Fifty bombers mount the first all-American air raid against Germany.
31 Large parts of the German Sixth Army at Stalingrad, including Field Marshal Paulus, surrender.
FEBRUARY
1 Vidkun Quisling is appointed prime minister of Norway by the Nazi occupiers.
2 In Russia, the Battle of Stalingrad comes to an end with the surrender of the German Sixth Army.
8 Battle of Guadalcanal—United States forces defeat Japanese troops.
11 General Eisenhower is selected to command the Allied armies in Europe.
14 Rostov-na-Donu, Russia, is liberated by the Red Army. Battle of the Kasserine Pass—German general Erwin Rommel and his Afrika Korps attack Allied defenses in Tunisia; it is the United States’ first major battle defeat of the war.
16 Soviet Union reconquers Kharkov but is later driven out in the Third Battle of Kharkov.
MARCH
2 Battle of the Bismarck Sea—United States and Australian forces sink Japanese convoy ships.
8 American forces are attacked by Japanese troops on Hill 700 in Bougainville in a battle that will last five days.
13 On Bougainville, Japanese troops end their assault on American forces at Hill 700. German forces liquidate the Jewish ghetto in Kraków.
22 The entire population of Khatyn in Belarus is burnt alive by the German occupation forces.
26 Battle of Komandorski Islands—U.S. Navy forces intercept Japanese attempting to reinforce a garrison at Kiska in the Aleutian Islands.
APRIL
7 Bolivia declares war on Germany, Japan, and Italy.
13 Radio Berlin announces the discovery by Wehrmacht of mass graves of Poles killed by Soviets in the Khatyn massacre.
MAY
7 Tunis captured by British First Army.
9 German and Italian forces in Tunisia announce surrender to British.
11 American troops invade Attu in the Aleutian Islands in an attempt to expel occupying Japanese forces.
12 Trident Conference begins in Washington, D.C., with Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill taking part.
13 German Afrika Korps and Italian troops in North Africa surrender to Allied forces.
16 The Warsaw ghetto uprising ends.
24 Admiral Karl Dönitz orders the majority of U-Boats to withdraw from the Atlantic; Josef Mengele becomes chief medical officer in Auschwitz.
JUNE
22 U.S. Army Forty-fifth Infantry Division lands in North Africa prior to training at Arzew, French Morocco, while serving in World War II.
JULY
5 Battle of Kursk begins. An Allied invasion fleet sails to Sicily.
6 Americans and Japanese fight the Battle of Kula Gulf off Kolombangara.
10 The invasion of Sicily by the U.S. Army Forty-fifth Infantry Division marks the beginning of the Allied incursion into Axis-controlled Europe.
12 The Wehrmacht and the Red Army fight the Battle of Prokhorovka.
19 Rome is bombed by the Allies for the first time in the war.
22 Deportations of Jews from the Warsaw ghetto begins. The extermination camp Treblinka is opened.
24 Operation Gomorrah—British and Canadian planes begin bombing Hamburg by night, those of the Americans by day. By the end of the operation in November, 9,000 tons of explosives will have killed more than 30,000 people and destroyed 280,000 buildings.
25 In Italy the Gran Consiglio del Fascismo retires its consent to Mussolini; Mussolini is arrested, and the power is given to Maresciallo d’Italia Gen. Pietro Badoglio.
28 The British bombing of Hamburg causes a firestorm that kills 42,000 German civilians.
AUGUST
6 Americans and Japanese fight the Battle of Vella Gulf off Kolombangara.
17 The U.S. Seventh Army under General George S. Patton arrives in Messina, Italy, followed several hours later by the British Eighth Army under Field Marshal Bernard L. Montgomery, thus completing the Allied conquest of Sicily.
23 The Battle of Kursk ends with a heavy defeat for the German forces.
29 Germany dissolves the Danish government after it refuses to deal with a wave of strikes and disturbances to the satisfaction of the German authorities.
SEPTEMBER
3 Mainland Italy is invaded by Allied forces under Bernard L. Montgomery, for the first time in the war.
5 The 503rd Parachute Regiment under American general Douglas MacArthur lands and occupies Nadzab, just east of the port city of Lae in northeastern Papua New Guinea.
8 General Dwight D. Eisenhower publicly announces the surrender of Italy to the Allies. U.S.
Air Force bombs Frascati, the German general headquarters for the Mediterranean zone.
9 Iran declares war on Germany under pressure of Allied forces who have occupied the country. Salerno landings in Italy.
23 Italian Social Republic founded in German-occupied parts of Northern Italy.
OCTOBER
6 Americans and Japanese fight the Naval Battle of Vella Lavella.
13 The new government of Italy sides with the Allies and declares war on Germany.
18 Chiang Kai-shek takes the oath of office as president of China.
22 RAF delivers a highly destructive air strike on the German industrial and population center of Kassel.
NOVEMBER
1 Operation Goodtime—United States Marines land on Bougainville in the Solomon Islands.
2 Battle of Empress Augusta Bay—American and Japanese ships fight off Bougainville. British troops in Italy reach the Garigliano River.
6 The Red Army recaptures Kiev.
15 Allied Expeditionary Force for the invasion of Europe is officially formed. German SS leader Heinrich Himmler orders Gypsies and “part-Gypsies” to be put “on the same level as Jews and placed in concentration camps.”
16 After flying from Britain, 160 American bombers strike a hydroelectric power facility and heavy water factory in German-controlled Vemork, Norway; Japanese submarine sinks surfaced U.S. submarine Corvina near Truk.
18 Royal Air Force planes bomb Berlin, causing only light damage and killing 131. The RAF lose nine aircraft and fifty-three aviators.
20 Battle of Tarawa—U.S. Marines begin landing on Tarawa and Makin atolls in the Gilbert Islands and take heavy fire from Japanese shore guns.
22 Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Chiang Kai-shek meet in Cairo, Egypt, to discuss ways to defeat Japan.
25 Battle of Cape St. George—Americans and Japanese navies battle between Buka and New Ireland.
27 The Cairo Declaration is released.
28 Tehran Conference—Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin meet in Tehran to discuss war strategy (on November 30 they established an agreement concerning a planned June 1944 invasion of Europe codenamed Operation Overlord).
DECEMBER
4 Bolivia declares war on all Axis powers; in Yugoslavia, resistance leader Marshal Tito proclaims a provisional democratic Yugoslav government in exile.
24 U.S. general Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe.
1944
JANUARY
4 The Battle of Monte Cassino begins.
14 The Soviet troops start the offensive at Leningrad and Novgorod.
15 The Twenty-seventh Polish Home Army Infantry Division recreated, marking the start of Operation Tempest.
17 British forces in Italy cross the Garigliano River.
18 Siege of Leningrad ends.
20 The Royal Air Force drops 2,300 tons of bombs on Berlin; The U.S. Army Thirty-sixth Infantry Division in Italy attempts to cross the Rapido River.
22 Operation Shingle—Allied assault on Anzio, Italy, begins. The U.S. Army Forty-fifth Infantry Division stand their ground at Anzio for four months.
27 The two-year Siege of Leningrad is lifted.
29 The Battle of Cisterna takes place.
30 U.S. troops invade Majuro, Marshall Islands.
31 American forces land on Kwajalein Atoll and other islands in the Japanese-held Marshalls.
FEBRUARY
3 U.S. troops capture the Marshall Islands.
8 The plan for the invasion of France, Operation Overlord, is confirmed.
14 Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force established in Britain. Anti-Japanese revolt on Java.
15 Battle of Monte Cassino—Monte Cassino’s monastery is destroyed by Allied bombing.
17 Battle of Eniwetok Atoll begins. It will end in an American victory on February 22.
20 “Big Week” begins with American bomber raids on German aircraft manufacturing centers.
28–29 Battle of Los Negros and Operation Brewer—Admiralty Islands are invaded by U.S. forces.
MARCH
15 Battle of Monte Cassino—Allied aircraft bomb German-held town and stage an assault.
17 German forces in Ribnita kill almost 400 prisoners, Soviet citizens, and antifascist Romanians.
18 German forces occupy Hungary.
23 Italian Resistance attacks Nazis marching in via Rasella in Rome; thirty-three Nazis are killed.
24 In retaliation, the Fosse Ardeatine massacre occurs; 335 Italians are killed, including 75 Jews and over 200 members of the Italian Resistance from various groups.
APRIL
14 Odessa is liberated by Soviet forces.
MAY
8 D-Day for Operation Overlord set for June 5.
9 The German army evacuates Sevastopol.
12 Soviet troops finalize the liberation of Crimea.
18 Battle of Monte Cassino ends with an Allied victory; Polish troops hoist their red and white flag on the ruins. Deportation of Crimean Tatars by the Soviet Union government.
JUNE
2 The provisional French government is established.
4 Operation Overlord postponed twenty-four hours due to high seas; American, English, and French troops enter Rome.
5 Rome falls to the Allies. It is the first capital of an Axis nation to fall; more than 1,000 British bombers drop 5,000 tons of bombs on German gun batteries on the Normandy coast in preparation for D-Day.
6 Battle of Normandy—Operation Overlord, code named D-Day, commences with the landing of 155,000 Allied troops on the beaches of Normandy in France. The allied soldiers quickly break through the Atlantic Wall and push inland in the largest amphibious military operation in history.
7 Bayeux liberated by British troops.
9 Stalin launches an offensive against Finland with the intent of defeating Finland before pushing for Berlin.
10 In the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre in France, 642 men, women, and children are killed.
13 Germany launches a V1 Flying Bomb attack on England.
15 Battle of Saipan—United States invades the island of Saipan.
21 Allied offensive in Burma.
22 Operation Bagration—Soviet forces attack to clear the Germans from Belarus, which results in the destruction of the German Army Group Center, possibly the greatest defeat of the Wehrmacht during WWII. In the Burma Campaign, the Battle of Kohima ends in a British victory.
25 The Battle of Tali-Ihantala—Finnish and Soviet troops begin the largest battle ever to be fought in the Nordic countries.
26 Cherbourg liberated by American troops.
JULY
3 Minsk is liberated by Soviet forces.
9 Caen is liberated by the Allies.
18 Infamous “death ride of the armored divisions” as British Thirteenth Corps repulsed by heavy German counterattack.
19 The entire government of Japan resigns; Emperor Hirohito asks General Kuniaka Koiso to form a new government.
24 Majdanek concentration camp is liberated by Soviet forces.
AUGUST
1 Warsaw uprising by the Polish Home Army commences.
4 Florence liberated by the Allies.
10 Guam liberated by American troops.
15 Operation Dragoon begins with amphibious Allied landings in southern France.
19 French Resistance begins uprising in Paris.
20 Operation Jassy-Kishinev begins in former Bessarabia.
23 Romania surrenders.
25 Paris is liberated; de Gaulle and Free French parade triumphantly down the Champs-Élysées.
29 The Slovak national uprising breaks out.
SEPTEMBER
2 Allied troops enter Belgium.
3 Brussels liberated by British Second Army while Lyon is liberated by French and American troops.
4 Antwerp liberated by British Eleventh Armored Division.
6 Ghent and Liège liberated by British troops.
8 Ostend liberated by Canadian troops. Russians invade Bulgaria.
9 De Gaulle forms provisional government in France. Bulgaria makes peace with the USSR, then declares war on Germany.
10 Luxembourg liberated by U.S. First Army.
11 First Allied troops enter Germany.
17 Operation Market Garden, the attempted liberation of Arnhem, begins.
19 Nancy liberated by U.S. First Army. Armistice is signed between the Soviet Union and Finland.
25 British troops pull out of Arnhem with failure of Operation Market Garden. Over 6,000 paratroopers are captured.
30 German garrison in Calais surrenders to Canadian troops.
OCTOBER
1 Soviet troops enter Yugoslavia.
2 Germans finally succeed in putting down Warsaw uprising by Polish Home Army.
4 German troops withdrawn from Greece; Allied troops enter Greece.
5 Canadian troops cross the border into the Netherlands.
6 Soviet and Czechoslovak troops enter northeastern Slovakia.
14 Athens liberated by Allies.
20 Allies invade Philippines. The Red Army and Yugoslav partisans under the command of Josip Broz Tito liberate Belgrade.
21 Aachen occupied by U.S. First Army; it is the first German city to be captured.
23 Battle of Leyte Gulf begins; largest sea battle in history.
25 Russians invade Norway.
NOVEMBER
2 Canadian troops take Zeebrugge in Belgium; Belgium now entirely liberated.
4 Remaining Axis forces in Greece surrender.
24 Strasbourg liberated by French troops.
29 Albania liberated by Allies.
DECEMBER
16 The Battle of the Bulge—German forces begin an attempt to break through Allied lines in the Ardennes region.
1945
JANUARY
14–27 Operation Blackcock—Roer Triangle is cleared by the Second British Army.
16 U.S. First and Third Armies link up following Battle of the Bulge.
17 Warsaw liberated by Red Army troops.
27 The Battle of the Bulge officially ends. Auschwitz concentration camp is liberated by Soviet troops.
FEBRUARY
2 Ecuador declares war on Germany.
4 Yalta Conference of Allied leaders begins. Belgium now cleared of all German forces.
8 Paraguay declares war on Germany.
12 Peru declares war on Germany.
13–14 Dresden firebombed by Allied air forces; large parts of city destroyed.
14 Uruguay declares war on Germany.
14 Bombing of Prague—a mistake during the bombing of Dresden.
19 U.S. Marines invade Iwo Jima.
23 U.S. forces raise the American flag at Mt. Suribachi on Iwo Jima.
25 Turkey declares war on Germany.
28 U.S. Army captures Manila, capital of the Philippines.
MARCH
9 United States firebombs Japan.
20 Mandalay liberated by Indian Nineteenth Infantry Division.
22–23 U.S. and British forces cross the Rhine.
28 Argentina declares war on Germany.
29 The Red Army enters Austria.
30 Russian forces liberate Danzig.
APRIL
1 U.S. troops invade Okinawa.
4 Ohrdruf death camp is liberated by the Allies.
4 Georgian uprising of Texel starts.
10 Buchenwald concentration camp liberated.
12 President Roosevelt dies suddenly. Harry Truman becomes president of the United States.
13 Vienna liberated by Russian troops.
15 Bergen-Belsen concentration camp is liberated. Arnhem is liberated.
21 Russian forces begin assault on Berlin.
25 Elbe Day—first contact between Soviet and American troops at the Elbe River, near Tor-gau in Germany.
28 Mussolini captured and executed by Italian partisans.
29 Dachau concentration camp is liberated by the U.S. Seventh Army.
30 Hitler commits suicide in his bunker in Berlin.
MAY
2 Trieste is captured by New Zealand troops and Yugoslavian partisans.
2 Berlin falls to Soviet troops.
3 Rangoon liberated.
5 Prague uprising begins.
5 Mauthausen concentration camp is liberated.
5 German troops in the Netherlands officially surrender.
5 Denmark liberated by Allied troops.
7 Germany surrenders unconditionally to the Allies.
8 Cease-fire takes effect at one minute past midnight. V-E Day in Britain.
8 German troops in Prague surrender.
9 Red Army enters Prague.
9 German garrison in Channel Islands agrees to surrender.
11 German Army Group Center in Czechoslovakia surrenders.
16 British troops complete liberation of Channel Islands.
20 Georgian uprising of Texel ends, ending hostilities in Europe.
JUNE
20 Schiermonnikoog, a Dutch Island, is the last part of Europe Allied troops reach.
JULY
6 Norway declares war on Japan.
16 U.S. conducts the Trinity test, the first test of a nuclear weapon.
17 Potsdam Conference begins; Allies determine future of Germany.
24 Truman informs Stalin that the United States has nuclear weapons (Stalin is already aware, via espionage).
AUGUST
6 The first nuclear weapon ever used in war, “Little Boy,” is dropped on Hiroshima by the Enola Gay.
8 Soviet Union declares war on Japan; the invasion of Manchuria begins about an hour later.
9 A second atomic bomb, “Fat Man,” is dropped by Bockscar on Nagasaki. Soviet troops enter China and Korea.
15 Emperor Hirohito issues a radio broadcast announcing Japan’s unconditional surrender; V-J Day declared in the United Kingdom.
16 Emperor Hirohito issues an Imperial Rescript ordering Japanese forces to cease fire.
30 Royal Navy forces under Rear-Admiral Cecil Harcourt liberate Hong Kong.
SEPTEMBER
2 Japan signs the articles of surrender on the deck of the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.