This week in the War, 3–9 January 1944: From the diary of Helene Pitrou

Dans Paris occupe: Journal d'Helene Pitrou-----by Paule du Bouchet (Gallimard Jeunesse, 2005) [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

Dans Paris occupe: Journal d’Helene Pitrou—–by Paule du Bouchet (Gallimard Jeunesse, 2005) [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

This week in the war, the fictional French schoolgirl, Hélène Pitrou, makes another entry in her journal Dans Paris occupé. The entry is dated 5 janvier 1944.

As in her entry of a year earlier, she remarks that everyone is awaiting the Allied landing (D-Day) and anticipating that it will happen in the coming weeks.

Hélène remarks that the Germans control all of the newspapers (Les Boches contrôlent tous les journaux) which report all kinds of rubbish: that Germany is winning on all fronts, etc.

Hélène Pitrou is the creation of French writer Paule du Bouchet.

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This week in the War, 27 Dec 1943—2 Jan 1944: The New Year

Sketch by Ronald Searle: Two British prisoners in shirts, shorts and bush hats, Sime Road Camp, Singapore, 1 January 1944 [Public domain]

Sketch by Ronald Searle: Two British prisoners in shirts, shorts and bush hats, Sime Road Camp, Singapore, 1 January 1944 [Public domain]

The year just ending had seen the initiative pass to the Allies, both in Europe and in the Pacific. Japanese admiral, Yamamoto (killed when his plane was shot down) had foreseen it. But Hitler and the rest of the fanatical Nazi leadership still lived in a dream world.

The Allied victories in North Africa and Sicily had caused Italy to change sides and join the Allies. America’s phenomenal industrial might was providing masses of aircraft and armaments to Britain, China and the Soviet Union. A second front in northern France would become a reality within the next six months.

Russian factories beyond the Urals were producing war materials at a furious rate and Soviet armies had driven the Wehrmacht back to the Polish border. In the Pacific, the Japanese continued to lose territory as a result of America’s ‘island-hopping’ strategy, while the Australian and US forces had also been victorious in New Guinea. The Chinese were also enjoying the fruits of victory.

Sketch by Ronald Searle: Guards select from sick and starving British prisoners those considered suitable for heavy labour; Konyu camp, Thailand [Public domain]

Sketch by Ronald Searle: Guards select from sick and starving British prisoners those considered suitable for heavy labour; Konyu camp, Thailand [Public domain]

Although still over a year and a half away, the end of the war was in sight and could not come too soon for the millions fighting, or suffering the hardships and privations of the home front, or enduring life in any one of the thousands of prison camps.

The sketch upper left is dated 1 January 1944—New Year’s Day—and was drawn by Ronald Searle. So was the picture to the right.

Searle had trained as an artist before the war. After joining the Royal Engineers, he was shipped to the Far East and then captured by the Japanese after the fall of Singapore.

He survived the war and became well known for the drawings he had done during his years of captivity. After the war, his fame continued through his well-loved cartoons of cats, schoolgirls (The Belles of St. Trinian’s), and other aspects of British life.

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This week in the War, 20–26 December 1943: Sinking of the Scharnhorst

The Scharnhorst [Bundesarchiv, DVM 10 Bild-23-63-07/ CC-BY-SA 3.0]

The Scharnhorst [Bundesarchiv, DVM 10 Bild-23-63-07/ CC-BY-SA 3.0]

This week in the war, on 26 December 1943, the famous German battlecruiser Scharnhorst attempted to intercept an Allied convey heading through the Arctic Ocean towards Russia.

Having decoded German naval signals, the British were able to locate the Scharnhorst and she was attacked by the cruiser HMS Norfolk and followed by cruisers and destroyers throughout the afternoon. The Royal Navy’s superior radar and radar-controlled gunnery gave the British an advantage in the arctic darkness.

The British battleship HMS Duke of York arrived and scored a direct hit on the German ship which, nonetheless, escaped and headed east and directly north of North Cape.

The pursuing destroyers scored hits with torpedoes that slowed the Scharnhorst and enabled the Duke of York to catch her. The Scharnhorst’s nine 11inch guns were no match for the Duke of York’s ten 14inch guns. The cruisers HMS Jamaica and HMS Belfast finished off the Scharnhorst with torpedoes. She sank at 19:45.

Of her complement of almost 2,000 sailors, only 36 survived.

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This week in the War, 13–19 December 1943: The Battle of Arawe

The US 112th Cavalry Regiment moves through a coconut plantation in Arawe [Public domain]

The US 112th Cavalry Regiment moves through a coconut plantation in Arawe [Public domain]

This week in the war, on 15 December 1943, the US 112th Cavalry Regiment landed on the west coast of the Arawe peninsula in New Britain. The Japanese defenses were quickly overcome. Landings on the east coast of the peninsula encountered fierce opposition from Japanese fighters and bombers.

The Japanese were heavily outnumbered and their forces were defeated within a month.

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This week in the War, 6–12 December 1943: Rommel is to head ‘Fortress Europe’

Field marshal Rommel (centre) inspects a bunker on the Atlantic Wall, France [Bundesarchiv, Bild 101l-295-1596-10/ Kurth/CC-BY-SA

Field Marshal Rommel (centre) inspects a bunker on the Atlantic Wall, France [Bundesarchiv, Bild 101l-295-1596-10/ Kurth/CC-BY-SA

This week in the war, on 12 December 1943, Hitler appointed Field Marshal Erwin Rommel head of Fortress Europe—charged with strengthening Hitler’s so-called Atlantic Wall with a view to repelling any future Allied invasions.

The Atlantic Wall was a series of beach defenses, gun emplacements and bunkers that ran from northern Norway and along the coasts of Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium and France until it reached the frontier with Spain.

Rommel had not succeeded in holding on to North Africa in the face of the much stronger forces commanded by Montgomery and Eisenhower. By June 1944, the same history with  the same actors would be replaying in northern France.

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This week in the War, 29 Nov–5 Dec 1943: The Second Cairo Conference

Winston Churchill (in the uniform of his old regiment, the 4th Queen's Own Hussars) and his daughter, Sarah, in Egypt for the Second Cairo Conference, 5 December 1943 [Public domain]

Winston Churchill (in the uniform of his old regiment, the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars) and his daughter, Sarah, in Egypt for the Second Cairo Conference, 5 December 1943 [Public domain]

Following closely after the Tehran Conference, Churchill and Roosevelt met once again in Cairo, at what would be the Second Cairo Conference. It started this week in the war, on 4 December 1943.

The Turkish president, Ismet Inönü, was also there and the possibility of Turkey entering the war was the major topic of discussion. Churchill favoured immediate entry. Roosevelt was more cautious and worried that the fighting might go badly for the Turks. The Turks concurred. (They did not enter the Second World War until February 1945.)

Churchill as a subaltern in the Hussars, 1895 [Public domain]

Churchill as a subaltern in the Hussars, 1895 [Public domain]

On the drive from Cairo to the pyramids, Roosevelt told Churchill about the final decision for the choice of Commander-in-Chief for Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of northern Europe. Roosevelt said that he had decided that General Marshall would remain in the United States and that Eisenhower would command the invasion.

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This week in the War, 22–28 November 1943: The Tehran conference

The Sword of Stalingrad is presented by Churchill (on behalf of King George VI) to Joseph Stalin, who received it on behalf of the citizens of Stalingrad; Tehran Conference, November 1943 [Public domain]

The Sword of Stalingrad is presented by Churchill (on behalf of King George VI) to Joseph Stalin, who received it on behalf of the citizens of Stalingrad; Tehran Conference, November 1943 [Public domain]

This week in the war, 28 November 1943, saw the start of the Tehran conference where the ‘Big Three,’ Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin met to confer on the future conduct of the war. (Rumours—all unsubstantiated—have persisted that SS officer Otto Skorzeny was to have headed an operation to assassinate the three Allied leaders but that the operation was deemed unpractical and later called off.)

Churchill used the occasion to present the ‘Sword of Stalingrad’ (made in Sheffield) to Joseph Stalin to honour the heroic defense of Stalingrad.

Items agreed upon at the conference included the decision to try to persuade Turkey to enter the war on the Allied side, a decision to provide arms to the Yugoslavian partisans, and the decisions to launch Operation Overlord (the invasion of northern France) and Operation Dragoon (the invasion of southern France) in 1944.

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This week in the War, 15–21 November 1943: Tarawa Atoll

US marines storm Tarawa Atoll in the Gilbert Islands, November 1943 [Public domain, US Govt 1943, wiki]

US marines storm Tarawa Atoll in the Gilbert Islands, November 1943 [Public domain, US Govt 1943, wiki]

This week in the war, on 20 November 1943, more than a hundred American warships and transports approached Tawara Atoll in the Gilbert Islands.

After bombardment by the battleships USS Maryland and USS Mississippi and further bombardment by aircraft, the first wave of US marines attempted to land on Betio Island, the most heavily defended section of the atoll. The reef proved a formidable obstacle. A second wave of marines followed soon after and there was bloody fighting when they reached the beach.

The Japanese defenders had a wide range of heavy weapons, including tanks, and were well-positioned in hidden pillboxes and bunkers. American casualties were high. The Marines were to suffer over 3,000 casualties by the time their hold on Betio Island was secure. Japanese (and Korean) losses were even greater.

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In the news: Remembrance Day/Veterans Day—11 November

In Flanders Fields---John McCrae [Public domain, wikimedia commons]Wednesday 11 November 2015—Remembrance Day

Once again, we gather to remember that eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, when the guns fell silent and the Great War ended.

It is time to honour and remember the veterans of all wars and to hear the words of John McCrae’s poem In Flanders Fields recited beside cenotaphs and war memorials around the world.

Poppy in Manitoba [Photo by Edith-Mary Smith]

Poppies in Manitoba [Photo: Edith-Mary Smith]

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This week in the War, 8–14 November 1943: Remembrance Day in Oyonnax

War memorial in Oyonnax [Author: Jejecam, GNU Free Documentation License Version 1.2, Wikimedia]

War memorial in Oyonnax [Author: Jejecam, GNU Free Documentation License Version 1.2, Wikimedia]

This week in the war, on 11 November 1943, the resistance fighters of the Maquis in the Ain department of the Rhone-Alpes region of France occupied the town of Oyonnax for a few hours.

To commemorate the Armistice of 1918, they marched to the war memorial and laid a wreath of flowers in the form of the Cross of Lorraine—the symbol of Free France and the struggle for liberation from the Nazi occupiers.

The inscription on the wreath read: Les vainqueurs de demain à ceux de 14–18 (From the conquerors of tomorrow to those of 14–18).

Before leaving, the members of the Maquis joined with the townsfolk in singing the Marseillaise.

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