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March 11th, 1941 (TUESDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM:

RAF Bomber Command: The Handley-Page Halifax bomber makes its operational debut in a raid on Le Havre.
This mission was flown by six Halifax Mk Is of No. 35 Squadron based at Linton-on-Ouse, Yorkshire, England. The squadron had  received its first Halifax Mk I on 23 November 1940.

Heavy raids hit Birmingham, Manchester and Salford during the night.

Old Trafford football ground, home of Manchester United, suffer two direct hits from German bombs. The main stand is nearly demolished and the United Road terrace damaged and the pitch scorched.

Corvette HMS Pennywort laid down.

Destroyer HMS Offa launched.

YUGOSLAVIA: Belgrade: Demonstrators hold a protest rally against growing Axis influence.

ALBANIA: Further Italian attacks on Monastery Hill result in nothing but additional casualties. (Mike Yaklich)

LIBYA: An armoured and a machine-gun regiment of the German 5th Light Division completes disembarking at Tripoli today. The tank regiment is composed of two battalions and has 150 tanks; more than half the tanks had 50 mm or 75 mm guns. The machine-gun regiment has two fully motorized battalion; one anti-tank battalion was equipped with 50 mm guns and the other with dual-purpose 88 mm guns.  
     Meanwhile, General Erwin Rommel, Commander of the Afrika Korps, has flown back to Germany for further orders and has been told that when the 15th Panzer Division arrives in Libya at the end of May, he is to recapture Benghazi.  

GULF OF SIAM: France cedes two areas of Laos and part of Cambodia to Thailand. Both (and the only parts of Laos) lying on the right bank of the Mekong river. The first is Saiburi Province (northwester Laos), the second is part of Pakse Province (southern Laos).

Japan is given full use of Saigon airport and a monopoly of the colony's entire rice production.

(Peter E. Beal)

CANADA: Submarine HMS Severn departed Halifax for anti-U-boat patrol off Freetown.

Minesweeper HMCS Miramichi laid down North Vancouver, British Columbia.

U.S.A.: Washington: President Roosevelt this afternoon signed into law the Lend-Lease Bill, Public Law 11, 77th Congress, which in effect makes the United States a partner of Britain in the war.

The bill passed both the House of Representatives and the Senate with large majorities. It seeks, as its congressional sponsors put it, to give "legislative form to the policy of making this country an Arsenal for the Democracies and seeks to carry out President Roosevelt's pledge to send these countries in ever-increasing numbers, ships, aeroplanes, tanks and guns." The bill empowers the President to lease to Britain munitions owned and paid for by the US government.

Debate on the bill was fierce, and its isolationist opponents in the Senate filibustered against it. On 6 March, however, Senator Walter George, the influential chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, made a powerful speech in favour of its passage, arguing that "the collapse of the British Empire would mean chaos in this world." Two days later the bill was finally passed by the Senate - by 60 votes to 31.

Immediately after the bill was signed the US Army and Navy approved the export of the first material to be released under the terms of the act. Though what is involved is being kept secret for military reasons, it is believed that the first shipments will include 24 motor torpedo boats already ordered to British design which have been held up by the US attorney-general and will help to defend Britain against invasion.

Most of the material released today will go to Britain. Some will go to Greece, and some to China. The president's assistant, Laughlin Currie, has been sent to determine what the Chinese need.

A few hours after the vote the president sent Congress a request for $7,000 million for munitions. The New York Times predicted that if American convoys are needed to deliver the products from the arsenal to the democracies, they will be sent.

The House of Representatives had passed House Resolution 1776, which would eventually become known as the Lend-Lease Act, in February and the Senate passed their version of the bill on 8 March. The two bills had differences requiring a committee of House and Senate members to resolve them and the new bill was passed by both houses today. The bill was rushed to the White House and President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed it into law at 1550 hours. This new act changes the "cash and carry" provisions of the Neutrality Act of 1939 to permit transfer of munitions to Allies. The initial aid package worth roughly US$7 billion (US$85.4 billion in year 2002 dollars) but by the time the aid ended in 1946, the U.S. funnelled US$50.6 billion (US$617 billion in year 2002 dollars) worth of Lend-Lease aid to 44 countries, the majority of which went to the U.K. and the U.S.S.R.  
 

ATLANTIC OCEAN: Scharnhorst and Gneisenau refuel from tankers Ermland and Uckermark. Conference held on board Gneisenau with the Captains of both battleships and the tankers. (Navy News)
 

At 1546, the unescorted SS Memnon was hit by one torpedo from U-106 about 200 miles west of Cape Blanco, French West Africa and sank by the stern 15 minutes later following a second hit at 1547 hours. Three crewmembers and two passengers (RAF personnel) were lost. The master and 21 survivors landed at Yoff near Dakar on 21 March and were detained by the Vichy French authorities, were later released and went to Bathurst. The remaining survivors landed at Bathurst on 24 March, one of these lifeboats with 24 survivors had been found by the German battleship Gneisenau, which took three passengers and one gunner as prisoners on board.

Steam trawler Frodi was attacked by U-74 with gunfire about 192 miles SE of Westman Islands, Iceland. The vessel was heavily damaged by gunfire but made it back to Iceland.

 

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