August 30th, 1942 (SUNDAY)
FRANCE: Paris: The Reich plenipotentiary for the allocation of Labour, Fritz Sauckel, decrees that all men and women in German occupied lands are liable for forced labour.
LUXEMBOURG: Luxembourg is incorporated into the German Reich as the district of Gau Mosselleland. Gustav Simon, the German appointed civil administrator of Luxembourg, orders the call up of Luxembourgers in the classes of 1920-1924 resulting in a General Strike in Wiltz and Ettelbruck. The strike quickly spreads across the Duchy and Simon declares Martial Law. Industrial workers return to work under threat of execution, 25 leaders are executed, and high school students participating in the strike are deported to Germany for a year.
GERMANY: British PoW officers at OFLAG VIB pull off OPERATION OLYMPIA today, otherwise known as the "Warburg Wire Job". 53 PoWs set up noisy diversions around the camp while 41 others rush the wires with homebuilt ladders and escape. Thirty PoWs make it over the wire, and of those 17 get away from the immediate area. In all three make it home. Most of those recaptured are RAF are so are sent to the Luftwaffe PoW system. (Marc James Small)
U-547 laid down.
U.S.S.R.: Over 800 German troops are killed and 13 tanks destroyed by the 154th (naval) Brigade under the command of Colonel A. I. Malchevskiy, on the Stalingrad front. (Russell Folsom) (215 Chap. 3)
Black Sea Fleet and Azov Flotilla: Submarine "Sch-208" - mined and sunk, close to Zmeinii Is. (Sergey Anisimov)(69)
EGYPT: At 2300 hours local, the Germans launch attacks along the whole El Alamein front using the German 21st Panzer Division, the 90th Light Africa Division, the 3d Reconnaissance Unit and two Italian armoured divisions. The main attack, aimed at Alexandria, is against the British XIII Corps on the south while conducting two unsuccessful diversionary thrusts against XXX Corps.
LIBYA: US Army Middle East Air Force B-24 Liberators bomb docks and jetties in Tobruk harbour.
BURMA: Myitkyina, northernmost Japanese supply depot and airfield in Burma, from which fighters could hit Dinjan, India (terminus of the Assam-Burma Ferry), is bombed for the first time by 8 China-based B-25 Mitchells of the China Air Task Force.
NEW GUINEA: On the Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea, troops of the Australian 53d Battalion near Abuati are ordered to withdraw to Alola after being unable to get behind the Japanese troops. At 1500 hours local, the 39th Battalion is ordered to withdraw to Eora Creek, about 2 miles (3,2 kilometres) south of Alola. The officer commanding 39th Battalion, Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Key, was later captured by the Japanese, interrogated and murdered. In Milne Bay, Australian troops continue patrolling and find several Australian dead with their hands tied behind them, arms broken by gunshot wounds and bayoneted. Australian reinforcements dig in on Brigade Hill near Efogi village. (William L. Howard)
BISMARCK ARCHIPELAGO: USAAF B-17 Flying Fortresses of the Allied Air Forces attack shipping in Saint George's Channel between New Ireland and New Britain Islands.
SOLOMON ISLANDS: At 1400 hours local, 18 "Zeke" fighters (Mitsubishi A6M, Navy Type 0 Carrier Fighters) of the HIJMS Shokaku and HIJMS Zuikaku air groups, temporarily land based at Rabaul on New Britain Island, attack Allied targets. The "Zekes" outmanoeuvre 8 Marine Fighting Squadron Two Hundred Twenty Three (VMF-223) F4F Wildcats and attack the high speed transport USS Colhoun (APD-2, ex DD-85) wrecking the ship's boats and the after davits and starting a diesel fire from the boat wreckage. The "Zekes" are then intercepted by USAAF P-400 Airacobras of the 67th Fighter Squadron, later joined by the VMF-223 Wildcats; the Americans shoot down 5 "Zekes" while losing 4 P-400s. Three F4Fs are written off when they land on Henderson Field, Guadalcanal leaving a total of 5 Wildcats to defend the island. After this action, the USAAF's P-400s are limited to medium-level interceptions and ground-attack missions. The evaluation of the P-400 by the Commander, Air South Pacific was, "No good at altitude and disheartening to the brave men who fly them." The 67th Fighter Squadron's historian put it this way: "We can't manoeuvre and dogfight with the Zero -- what good are we? Our enlisted men are risking their lives every day trying to get the planes patched up -- for what? We're just eating up food -- and there's not enough to go around anyway, and using up valuable gasoline -- and the gas supply is getting lower every day. Hell, we can't fight. When the Japs come we're told to 'go on reconnaissance.' What good are we?" The Japanese will give them the nickname of "Long Nosed Planes".
At 1517 hours, 18 "Betty" bombers (, Navy Type 1 Attack Bombers) make an unopposed attack on USS Calhoun scoring a succession of hits on the starboard side which brought down the foremast, blew two 20 mm guns and one 4-inch (101.6 mm) gun off the ship, and damage the engineering spaces. Two more direct hits kill all the men in the after deck house. Tank lighters from Guadalcanal rescued the crew, and Calhoun sinks at 09.24 S, 160.01 E with the loss of 51 men and 18 wounded.
Despite the loss of the converted 4 stacker, the day is a success. The victory of the morning is another morale boost to the flyers of the Cactus AF and a late afternoon arrival of Col. Wallace and the balance of MAG 23 boosts the 5 remaining original compliment by 31 aircraft.
Shortly after 1500 hours, shortly before the "Betty" bomber attack, the first sizable aerial reinforcements arrive at Henderson Field on Guadalcanal in the form of 19 F4F-4 Wildcats of VMF-224 and 12 SBD-3 Dauntlesses of Marine Scout Bombing Squadron Two Hundred Thirty One (VMSB-231).
At days end, the Cactus Air Force on Guadalcanal consisted of 86 pilots and 64 aircraft (including 3 USAAF P-400s and 10 USN SBDs).
The carrier USS SARATOGA is damaged by a Japanese submarine.
Japanese submarine HIJMS I-19 launches a "Glen" seaplane (Yokosuka E14Y1, Navy Type 0 Small Reconnaissance Seaplane) to reconnoitre Santa Cruz Island.
TERRITORY OF ALASKA: ALEUTIAN ISLANDS: The USN lands 4,500 US troops to occupy Kuluk Bay, Adak Island, amidst a terrific storm and they start building a runway; this airfield, later named Davis AAFld. Adak Island is located about 219 nautical miles (405 kilometres) east of Japanese-held Kiska Island.
Five USAAF 11th Air Force B-24 Liberators photograph Kiska Island but do not bomb due to overcast, and then fly patrol and photo reconnaissance over Amchitka and Tanaga Islands. P-38 Lightnings fly patrol between Great Sitkin and Little Tanaga Islands.
AUSTRALIA: General Douglas MacArthur, Commander of the Southwest Pacific Area, sends a message to Washington stating ".... as I have previously reported am not yet convinced of the efficiency of Australian units (at Milne Bay, Papua New Guinea and do not attempt to forecast results." (John Nicholas)
U.S.A.: In baseball, New York Giants' manager and right fielder Mel Ott collects his 2,500th hit during a 5-5 tie in the second game of a doubleheader with the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field, Chicago. Ott retires from playing after the 1947 season with 2,876 hits but continues managing the Giants through the 1948 season.
Destroyers USS Cony and Converse launched.
ATLANTIC OCEAN:
U-162 sinks SS Star of
Oregon.
U-564 sinks SS Vardaas.
U-66 sinks SS Sir Huon and SS
West Lashaway. U-596 loses
a man overboard [Fähnrich zur See Wolfgang Aldag].