November 1941 Explained
The following events occurred in November 1941:
- A formal statement from Adolf Hitler claimed that the United States "has attacked Germany" and that Roosevelt had been placed before the "tribunal" for world judgment. Germany disputed the American account of the sinking of the Reuben James and claimed that a German submarine only attacked after American destroyers attacked German submarines first.[1]
- German troops occupied Simferopol on the Crimean peninsula.[2]
- Jews in Slovakia were required to travel in separate train compartments and send and receive letters marked with the Star of David.[3]
- The Rainbow Bridge across the Niagara River opened to traffic, connecting the United States and Canada.
- German submarine U-214 was commissioned.
- Ansel Adams took the photograph Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico.
- Born: Marina Baura, actress, in Galicia, Spain; Nigel Dempster, journalist and author, in Calcutta, British India (d. 2007); Robert Foxworth, actor, in Houston, Texas
- The Finnish conquest of East Karelia was completed when the Soviets withdrew from Kondopoga.
- The Soviet cruiser Voroshilov was bombed in harbour by the Luftwaffe at Novorossiysk and put out of action until February 1942.
- A Vichy French convoy of freighters and passenger ships was captured north of Madagascar by British cruisers.[4]
- Born: Bruce Welch, guitarist, producer and member of The Shadows, in Bognor Regis, Sussex, England
- The Germans captured Feodosia on the Crimean Peninsula.[6]
- The British battleship HMS Duke of York was commissioned.
- Fiorello H. La Guardia was re-elected to a third term as Mayor of New York City.[7]
- Viscount Halifax was pelted with eggs and tomatoes by isolationist women demonstrators in Detroit as he was leaving City Hall. Halifax was afterwards quoted as saying, "How fortunate you Americans are, in Britain we get only one egg a week and we are glad of those." The quote was actually fabricated by someone in the British Press Service, but it was widely disseminated in the media and created a burst of sympathy and goodwill towards the British and Halifax in particular.[8] [9]
- Dolph Camilli of the Brooklyn Dodgers was named the National League's Most Valuable Player.[10]
- German submarine U-509 was commissioned.
- Joseph Stalin made a radio address broadcast worldwide declaring that Hitler's "crazy plan" to draw Britain and the United States into a coalition to destroy the Soviet Union had failed. Stalin said that a coalition of the United States, Britain and the USSR was "now a reality" and expressed his hopes that a "second front" would be established "in the near future."[12]
- Between 15,000 and 18,000 Jews were taken to the Sosenki forest outside of Rovno and massacred over the next two days.[13]
- Frostbite began to appear among German troops on the Eastern Front.
- German submarine U-595 was commissioned.
- Born: Doug Sahm, musician and founder of the Sir Douglas Quintet, in San Antonio, Texas (d. 1999)
- The Soviet hospital ship Armenia was sunk by German bombers while evacuating civilians and wounded soldiers from Crimea. As many as 7,000 people were killed in the sinking, making it one of the worst maritime disasters in history.
- In an important symbolic event, Soviet troops marched in Red Square to commemorate the anniversary of the October Revolution as per the annual tradition. Soldiers taking part in the parade marched straight on to the front line.[14]
- The United States Senate voted 50 to 37 to amend the Neutrality Act to allow merchantmen to be armed and permit U.S. ships to enter combat zones.[15]
- The cargo ship MV Nottingham was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by German submarine U-74.
- Senior commanders of the Japanese Army and Navy were informed that the start of war against Britain and the United States was tentatively set for December 8 (Japanese time).[16]
- Bette Davis became the first female president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[17]
- Born: Angelo Scola, cardinal, in Malgrate, Italy
- Died: Albin Zollinger, 46, Swiss writer
- The Soviet 52nd Army counterattacked at Volkhov.
- King George VI opened a new session of British Parliament. "The developments of the past year have strengthened the resolution of my peoples and of my allies to prosecute this war against aggression until final victory," his speech from the throne began.[23]
- British Commandos executed Operation Astrakan, an overnight raid on Houlgate in France.
- The British aircraft carrier Ark Royal was torpedoed and severely damaged off Gibraltar by the German submarine U-81.
- The Soviet cruiser Chervona Ukraina was sunk at Sevastopol by German aircraft.
- U.S. Congress voted 212 to 194 to abolish combat zones, thereby allowing U.S. ships to carry goods directly to ports of belligerent countries.
- German submarine U-596 was commissioned.
- Born: Mel Stottlemyre, baseball player and coach, in Hazleton, Missouri (d. 2019)
- Despite efforts to salvage the Ark Royal, she had to be abandoned to sink some 12 hours after having been torpedoed.
- The British cargo ship Empire Defender was torpedoed and sunk south of the Galite Islands, Tunisia by Italian aircraft.
- The Alfred Hitchcock-directed romantic psychological thriller film Suspicion starring Cary Grant and Joan Fontaine was released.
- Died: Paraskev Stoyanov, 70, Bulgarian-Romanian surgeon, anarchist and professor
- The Germans renewed the drive on Moscow after a three-week lull. The Soviets were pushed back from the Volga Reservoir north of the capital but with temperatures dropping to -20 Celsius across the Eastern Front, the German advance was very slow.
- German submarine U-583 sank in the Baltic Sea with no survivors after a collision with U-153.
- German submarines U-173 and U-459 were commissioned.
- The German 11th Army captured Kerch on the far eastern end of the Crimean Peninsula.
- German submarine U-433 was depth charged and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea south of Málaga by the British corvette HMS Marigold.
- Died: Miina Härma, 77, Estonian composer
- The British Eighth Army began Operation Crusader, once again trying to lift the Siege of Tobruk.
- Operation Flipper ended in British failure.
- Mexico broke off diplomatic relations with Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania.[24]
- German submarine U-704 was commissioned.
- A stage adaptation of the Sally Benson semi-autobiographical story collection Junior Miss opened at the Lyceum Theatre on Broadway.[25]
- Born: David Hemmings, actor, in Guildford, Surrey, England (d. 2003)
- Died: Émile Nelligan, 61, Canadian poet; Walther Nernst, 77, German physicist and Nobel laureate; Chris Watson, 74, 3rd Prime Minister of Australia
- The Battle of Rostov began on the Eastern Front.
- General Alan Cunningham ordered the British 70th Division to break out of its encirclement at Tobruk, which it managed to do after a hard day's fighting.[28]
- Born: Juliet Mills, actress, in London, England
- In the Battle of Moscow, the Germans captured Klin.
- The 2nd New Zealand Division captured Fort Capuzzo.
- The German auxiliary cruiser Atlantis was shelled and sunk off Ascension Island by the heavy cruiser HMS Devonshire.
- British Commandos carried out Operation Sunstar, an overnight raid on Houlgate, France.
- German submarines U-215 and U-438 were commissioned.
- Born: Jacques Laperrière, ice hockey player and coach, in Béarn, Quebec, Canada
- Died: Werner Mölders, 28, German fighter ace (plane crash); Kurt Koffka, 55, German psychologist
- The British battleship HMS Barham was torpedoed and sunk off Alexandria by German submarine U-331 with the loss of more than 800 crew.
- The 17th Panzer Division reached Kashira.
- The 7th Indian Brigade repulsed an attack by the German 5th Panzer Regiment at Sidi Omar, Libya. Meanwhile, Australian and New Zealand troops linked up at El Duda.
- The Anti-Comintern Pact was renewed, with Finland, Romania, Bulgaria, Denmark, Nanjing China, Slovakia, and Croatia joining as new signatories.[29]
- Jerónimo Méndez became acting President of Chile upon the death of Pedro Aguirre Cerda.
- The first mass shooting of the Ninth Fort massacres took place near Kaunas, Lithuania.
- German submarine U-510 was commissioned.
- The Germans withdrew from Sidi Rezegh, allowing the British 7th Armoured Division to retake the town.
- Chūichi Nagumo's aircraft carrier strike force headed for Pearl Harbor with the understanding that should "negotiations with the United States reach a successful conclusion, the task force will immediately put about and return to the homeland."[30]
- Cordell Hull offered a counter-proposal to the Japanese demands, requiring Japan to recognize Chiang Kai-shek, withdraw from both China and French Indochina and to agree to a multinational non-aggression pact. The Japanese asked for two weeks to study the proposals.
- Neil Ritchie replaced Alan Cunningham as commander of the British Eighth Army.
- Lebanon was proclaimed independent by Georges Catroux, the Chief of Free French forces in the Levant. Allied countries would recognize this independence, although in practice Lebanon was still governed under French authority.[31] [32]
- German submarine U-174 was commissioned.
- Born: G. Alan Marlatt, psychologist, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (d. 2011)
- The Siege of Tobruk ended in Allied victory when the besieged garrison was relieved by the British 8th Army.
- The 15th Panzer Division captured Sidi Azeiz, Libya and took 700 prisoners.
- The Battle of Rostov ended in Soviet victory.
- American Admiral Husband E. Kimmel and Lieutenant General Walter Short were sent warning messages advising that negotiations with Japan had reached a stalemate and that Japan might take hostile action at any moment. The Philippines, the Kra Peninsula and Borneo were listed as among the potential sites of a Japanese attack, but Hawaii was not.[33]
- The Australian sloop Parramatta was torpedoed and sunk off Tobruk by German submarine U-559.
- German submarine U-598 was commissioned.
- The Japanese news agency Dōmei Tsushin said that "there is little hope of bridging the gap between the opinions of Japan and the United States."
- Born: Eddie Rabbitt, singer and songwriter, in Brooklyn, New York (d. 1998)
- Gerd von Rundstedt approved a German retreat to the Mius River following the defeat at Rostov.
- Axis forces attacked again at Sidi Rezegh, battering the New Zealand 24th and 26th Battalions as the Germans launched a new drive on Tobruk.
- The first day of the Rumbula massacre occurred near Riga, Latvia. A total of about 25,000 Jews were killed on this day and December 8.
- German submarine U-206 was lost in the Bay of Biscay on or around this date, probably to a naval mine.
- The romantic comedy film Two-Faced Woman starring Greta Garbo (in her final role) and Melvyn Douglas was released.
- Died: Esmond Romilly, 23, British socialist (shot down over the North Sea)
Notes and References
- News: November 2, 1941 . U. S. 'Attacked Germany,' Says Hitler; Charges We Fired First in Sea War . . Brooklyn . 1.
- Book: Matthäus, Jürgen . 2013 . Jewish Responses to Persecution: Volume IV, 1941-1942 . Lanham, Maryland . AltaMira Press . 528 . 9780759122598 .
- Web site: Was war am 01. November 1941 . What happened on 1 November 1941? . chroniknet . de . December 31, 2015.
- Book: Davidson . Edward . Manning . Dale . 1999 . Chronology of World War Two . London . Cassell & Co. . 85–88 . 0-304-35309-4 .
- Web site: 1941 . World War II Database . December 31, 2015 .
- Web site: 1941 . MusicAndHistory . December 31, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120828144212/http://www.musicandhistory.com/music-and-history-by-the-year/202-1941.html . August 28, 2012 .
- November 5, 1941 . N.Y. Re-elects LaGuardia . . Stanford, California . 1 .
- November 5, 1941 . Lord Halifax Pelted with Eggs, Tomatoes . . Perth . 1 .
- Book: Roberts, Andrew . The Holy Fox: The Life of Lord Halifax . April 2014 . Head of Zeus . 9781781856963 .
- News: Holmes . Tommy . November 4, 1941 . Vote Camilli League's Most Valuable Player . . Brooklyn . 13 .
- Book: 2015 . Tucker . Spencer C. . Pearl Harbor: The Essential Reference Guide . ABC-CLIO, LLC . 244 . 9781440837197 .
- News: November 6, 1941 . Stalin Urges U. S., Britain to Open 2d Fighting Front . . Brooklyn . 1 .
- Book: Arad, Yitzhak . 2009 . The Holocaust in the Soviet Union . University of Nebraska Press . 164 . 9780803222700 .
- Web site: Soviet Troops March Through Red Square . World War II Today . December 31, 2015 .
- Book: Doenecke, Justus D. . 1990 . In Danger Undaunted: The Anti-Interventionist Movement of 1940–1941 as Revealed in the Papers of the America First Committee . Stanford University Press . 44 . 9780817988418 .
- Book: Mawdsley, Evan . 2011 . December 1941: Twelve Days that Began a World War . registration . Yale University Press . 15 . 9780300154450 .
- News: November 7, 1941 . Bette Davis First Actress to Head Academy Group . . Brooklyn . 3 .
- Book: Kirchubel, Robert . 2013 . Operation Barbarossa: The German Invasion of Soviet Russia . Botley, Oxfordshire . Osprey Publishing . 11 . 9781782004080 .
- Book: Record, Jeffrey . 2011 . A War It Was Always Going to Lose: Why Japan Attacked America in 1941 . Potomac Books . 91 . 9781597975346 .
- Web site: Speech by Prime Minister Churchill at the Mansion House Regarding Involvement un a US-Japanese War by the British . . December 31, 2015 .
- Web site: Franklin D. Roosevelt's Armistice Day Address . . December 31, 2015 .
- Book: 1999 . Joe DiMaggio: An American Icon . The New York Daily News . 80 . 9781582610375 .
- Web site: The King's Speech . November 12, 1941 . . December 31, 2015 .
- Book: 1990 . Chronology and Index of the Second World War, 1938-1945 . Research Publications . 88 . 9780887365683 .
- Web site: Junior Miss . . December 31, 2015 .
- News: November 20, 1941 . British Army Changes . . Sydney . 10 .
- Book: Tucker, Spencer C. . 2010 . A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East . ABC-CLIO, LLC . 1937 . 9781851096725 .
- Book: Ford, Ken . 2010 . Operation Crusader 1941: Rommel in Retreat . Osprey Publishing . 10 . 9781846035005 .
- Book: Tomasevich, Jozo . 2001 . War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941-1945 . Stanford University Press . 272 . 9780804779241 .
- Web site: Japanese task force leaves for Pearl Harbor . . . December 31, 2015 .
- Book: Malaspina, Ann . 2009 . Lebanon . Chelsea House Publishing . 49–50 . 9781438105796 .
- Book: Salamey, Imad . 2014 . The Government and Politics of Lebanon . London and New York . Routledge . 29 . 9781135011338 .
- Book: 2003 . Merriam . Ray . WWII Journal #2: Pearl Harbor . Merriam Press . 44 . 9781576381540 .
- Book: Zetterling . Niklas . Frankson . Anders . 2013 . The Drive on Moscow, 1941 . Casemate . 9781480406629 .
- Web site: Football: Pushing Aside Games for a World War . Wallace . William N. . December 7, 1991 . . December 31, 2015 .
- News: November 29, 1941 . Smith Is Awarded Heisman Trophy . . Brooklyn . 9 .