Yesterday      Tomorrow

December 12th, 1944 (TUESDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: During the night of 12/13 December, the USAAF Eighth Air Force flies Mission  749: seven B-24 Liberators and four B-17 Flying Fortresses drop leaflets over  France, the Netherlands and Germany.

NORTH SEA: In the Barents Sea Norwegian Corvette KNoM Tunsberg Castle (ex-HMS Shrewsbury Castle) (K 374) mined off Båtsfjord, Norway. Five crewmembers are lost.

BELGIUM: A German A4 (V-2) rockets lands in Antwerp at Hoboken  in Lage Weg at 0748 hours; 44 people are injured.

FRANCE: In the U.S. Seventh Army area, XV Corps  is virtually halted by Maginot fortifications in the Hottviller-Bitche area, but  Combat Command A, 12th Armored Division, reaches Bettviller, its objective. VI  Corps commits the 14th Armored Division between the 103d and 79th Infantry  Divisions. The 79th Infantry Division enters Soufflenheim as the Germans pull  back toward the West Wall and it begins clearing Seltz.

In the French First Army area, General  Jean-Joseph Lattre de Tassignym commander of the First Army, alters the plan of  action, calling for the capture of Colmar and Cernay but deferring the drive to  the Rhine River at Brisach unless circumstances are favorable. II Corps is to  make the main effort through Colmar to Rouffach, where it will link up with I  Corps coming from Cernay. I Corps is so spent that it suspends offensive until  15 December.

GERMANY: Düren falls to the US 1st Army. German forces withdraw across the Roer river.

In the U.S. First Army's VII Corps  area, the 104th Infantry Division takes Pier in a two-pronged assault and forces  the Germans to withdraw across the Roer River. Elements of the 60th Infantry  Regiment, 9th Infantry Division, drive into Mariaweiler. Hoven is cleared of the  Germans. Combat Command R, 3d Armored Division, and the 60th Infantry Regiment  finish clearing most of the region west of the Roer River northwest and west of  Düren during the day. The 39th Infantry Regiment, 9th Infantry Division, begins clearing Derichsweiler

In the U.S. Third  Army's XX Corps area, the situation in the Dillingen bridgehead improves. The  357th Infantry Division, 90th Infantry Division, mops up bypassed resistance  within its sector and the 359th and 358th Infantry Regiments establish contact,  opening the corridor through a fortified belt through which tanks are moved to  the 357th. A vehicular ferry is put into operation. An effective smoke screen  permits delivery of tanks and tank destroyers to the bridgehead. Limited  progress is made in the Saarlautern bridgehead by the 95th Infantry Division.  The combat efficiency of both the 90th and 95th Infantry Divisions has been  lowered sharply because of insufficient reinforcements and exhaustion. In the  XII Corps area, the 35th Infantry Division begins an attack across the lilies  early in morning: the 1st Battalion, 134th Infantry Regiment, crosses and begins  to clear Habkirchen, gaining a weak hold there; the 320th Infantry Regiment,  assisted by tanks, clears Bliesbruck, France, on the near side of the river,  in preparation for a crossing.

The 328th Infantry Regiment, 26th Infantry  Division, gets forward elements across the German border and its relief is begun  by the 87th Infantry Division, during the night of 12/13 December.

The USAAF Eighth Air Force Flies Mission 748:  895 bombers and 928 fighters are dispatched to make an H2X attack on Merseburg  and visual attacks on rail targets; four bombers and seven P-51 Mustangs are  lost: 458 B-17 Flying Fortresses bomb a marshalling yard (M/Y) at Darmstadt; 347  B-17s hit the I.G. Farben synthetic oil plant at Merseberg with the loss of two  aircraft;

275 B-24 Liberators bomb a M/Y at Hanau with the loss of three and 87  others bomb a M/Y at Aschaffenburg; and 47 other aircraft hit targets of  opportunity.

Ninety USAAF Ninth Air Force  B-26 Marauders and A-20 Havocs strike the defended villages of Gemund,  Harperscheid, Hellenthal, Schleiden, Schoneseiffen, and Wollseifen, and the  towns of Dorsel, Mayen, and Wiesbaden. Fighters fly armed reconnaissance and  strafing and bombing missions in western Germany and support the U.S. 83d  Infantry Division in the Strass-Gey area, cover the U.S. VII Corps in the Duren  area and support the U.S. XII and XX Corps in the Habkirchen and Bliesbruck  areas (the 35th Infantry Division assault across the Blies River) and  Saarlautern-Dillengen.

USAAF Fifteenth  Air Force attack four cities: 51 bomb the I.G. Farben South synthetic oil plant  at Blechhammer and five others hit targets of opportunity.

During the day, 140 RAF Bomber Command  Lancasters are dispatched on a G-H raid to the Ruhrstahl steelworks at Witten;  136 bomb the target. German fighters intercept the force in the target area and  eight Lancasters are lost.

It was the town's first major raid of the war. The  steelworks are not hit and bombs fell all over the town, destroying 126 houses  and five industrial premises.

During the  night of 12/13 December, 540 RAF Bomber Command aircraft, 349 Lancasters, 163  Halifaxes and 28 Mosquitos, are dispatched to bomb Essen; 529 bomb the city with  the loss of six Lancasters. This is the last heavy night raid by Bomber Command  on Essen. During the post-war interrogations of Albert Speer, the German  Armaments Minister, he is asked which forms of attack are most effective in  weakening the German war effort. After referring to the effectiveness of  daylight raids and to some of the Oboe Mosquito attacks, Speer paid a compliment  to the accuracy of this raid on Essen: "The last night attack upon the Krupp  works, which was carried out by a large number of four-engined bombers, caused  surprise on account of the accuracy of the bomb pattern. We assumed that this  attack was the first large-scale operation based on Oboe or some other new  navigational system." In another raid, 49 Mosquitos bomb Osnabruck

AUSTRIA:  Two USAAF Fifteenth Air Force bombers attack the Main marshalling yard at Graz  while a third aircraft bombs the city of Gattersford.

CZECHOSLOVAKIA: USAAF Fifteenth Air Force bombers attack four  cities: 11 hit a synthetic oil facility at Ostrava Moravaska and two each bomb  marshalling yard at Libeau and the cities of Puchov and Troppau.

ITALY: British troops attack Faenza. In the U.S. Fifth Army's British XIII Corps area, the  Germans, counterattacking at dawn, temporarily force back the outpost of the  Indian 19th Brigade on MT Cerere. The 6th Armoured Division begins the second  phase of its offensive, during the night of 12/13 December, employing the 61st  Brigade, which gets elements into Tossignano, where they come under heavy  pressure.

In the British Eighth Army's  Canadian I Corps area, the 5th Armoured and 1st Divisions advance from the Fosso  Vecchio River to the Naviglio Canal, which runs from Faenza to the sea, and  attack across it during the night of 12/13 December. The 1st Division gains a  bridgehead north of Bagnacavallo, but the 5th Armoured Division is forced back  to the Fosso Vecchio River.

GREECE: The Greek Communists ask for a cease fire.

CHINA: USAAF Fourteenth Air Force P-40s,  P-51 Mustangs, and P-38 Lightnings on armed reconnaissance attack many targets  of opportunity including town areas, road and rail traffic, and supplies at or  near Sinantien, Paoching, Hengyang, Changsha, Kweilin, Nan Tan, Hochih, and  Szeenhsien. Several fighter-bombers drop napalm on Yangtong Airfield.

THAILAND: USAAF Fourteenth Air Force fighter-bombers attack  targets of opportunity at Chiengmai.

BURMA: In the Allied Land Forces South East Asia (ALFSEA) area, the British XV Corps  begins an offensive (Operation ROMULUS) to clear the Arakan coastal sector and  gain air and naval bases from which to support future operations. While the  Indian 25th Division pushes southward along the Mayu Peninsula toward Akyab, the  West African 82d Division begins clearing the Kalapanzin Valley in the  Buthidaung area and the West African 81st Division attacks in the Kaladan Valley  in the vicinity of Kyauktaw.

Eleven USAAF  Tenth Air Force B-25 Mitchells bomb several storage areas north of Lashio while  20+ P-47 Thunderbolts knock out bridges at Namyao and Inailong, Burma, and  Kunlong, China, and damage others at Ho-hko, Burma and Hinlong, and Kunlong,  China. Over 40 fighter-bombers hit Japanese headquarters, trucks, town areas,  troop concentrations, and supplies at Sedo, Pale, Chaunggyi, Tada-u, Hsenwi,  Shwebo, and Thabyetha.

Six USAAF  Fourteenth Air Force B-25 Mitchells bomb Kutkai damaging three warehouses and  two other buildings. Fighter-bombers on armed reconnaissance attack many targets  of opportunity including town areas, road and rail raffic, and supplies at or  near Wan Pa-Hsa.

VOLCANO ISLANDS:  Twenty four Saipan-based USAAF Seventh Air Force B-24 Liberators bomb Iwo Jima.  Individual B-24s from Saipan and Guam fly five snooper strikes against Iwo Jima  during the night of 12/13 December.

COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES: In the  U.S. Sixth Army's X Corps area on Leyte, the 32d Infantry Division straightens  their lines south of Limon and during the night of 12/13 December and shells  Japanese positions ahead of it on Highway 2 as far south as Lonoy. XXIV Corps  chases off a Japanese vessel sighted near Linao at dawn. The 77th Infantry  Division consolidates positions just north of Ormoc while amassing supplies and  artillery.

USAAF Far East Air Forces B-24  Liberators, with fighter cover, bomb Bacolod Airstrip on Negros Island while  B-25 Mitchells hit San Roque Airfield on Mindanao Island.

General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander of  the Allied Forces in the Southwest Pacific Area, presents Major Richard I. Bong  with the Medal of Honor he was awarded "for conspicuous gallantry and  intrepidity in action above and beyond the call of duty in the Southwest Pacific  area from 10 October to 15 November 1944" at Tacloban Field, Leyte.

EAST INDIES: In the Netherlands East Indies, USAAF Far East Air  Forces B-24 Liberators bomb Kendari Airfield on Celebes Island. In the  Ambon-Ceram-Boeroe Islands area, B-25 Mitchells hit three airfields and attack  barges.

NEW GUINEA: In Dutch New  Guinea, USAAF Far East Air Forces A-20 Havocs hit the airfield on Jefman Island  a small island off the coast.

CANADA: Minelayer HMCS Whitethroat commissioned.

 

Top of Page

Yesterday             Tomorrow

Home