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September 7th, 1943

UNITED KINGDOM

USAAF OPERATIONS IN THE EUROPEAN THEATER OF OPERATIONS (Eighth Air Force):

* VIII Air Support Command flies Mission 52: In France, marshalling yards at Lille and St Pol are targeted but confusion at the rendezvous point causes one group and half of another to abort the mission; St Pol is hit by 81 B-26B Marauders at 0854-0858 hours; they claim 0-0-1 Luftwaffe aircraft

* VIII Bomber Command flies Mission 92 in 3 forces: 
(1) 105 B-17 Flying Fortresses bomb Evere Airfield at Brussels, Belgium, at 0849-0852 hours; 
(2) 3 B-24s bomb Alkmaar Airfield at Bergen, the Netherlands, at 0857 hours and 19 hit a convoy off Texel Island; and 
(3) 147 B-17s are dispatched to attack V-weapon site at Watton, France, but weather is a problem and 3 groups abort the mission but 58 hit the target at 0820-0854. Strikes 1 and 2 are escorted by 178 P-47 Thunderbolt that claim 3-0-2 Luftwaffe aircraft; a P-47 is lost. (Jack McKillop)

Escort carrier HMS Nabob commissioned.

Frigate HMS Essington commissioned. (Dave Shirlaw)

FRANCE: The number of people certified mad in 1938 has dwindled to 18,000. Alcohol restrictions were credited for some of the fall.

Corsica: Civilians stage an armed uprising against Italian troops on the island, and occupy Ajaccio.

GERMANY: U-871 launched.

U-803 commissioned. (Dave Shirlaw)

U.S.S.R:  The German 17. Armee begins the evacuation of the Kuban bridgehead across the Strait of Kerch to the Crimea. The Soviet Army captures Baturin, east of Konotop, and Zvenkov in the Kharkov sector.  The Germans begin evacuations at Stalino.

ITALY:  The British 8th Army tries to trap the German rearguard in the toe of the Italian boot. Commandos and infantry land at Pizzo on Calabria's northern coast, but the Germans sidestep them. Montgomery's army has advanced only 60 miles (97 kilometres) in five days.  (Jack McKillop)
     U.S. Brigadier General Maxwell D. Taylor begins a spy mission to see whether a surprise parachute drop by the 82d Airborne Division can capture Rome. Posing as a downed Allied airman, Taylor -- the 82d's artillery commander -- goes to Rome and finds it's crawling with Germans. After meeting with Italian Prime Minister Field Marshal Pietro Badoglio, Taylor realizes the 82d would be cut to pieces. He sends a secret signal to cancel the drop. Taylor then escapes.  (Jack McKillop)
     In the air, USAAF XII Bomber Command B-17s bomb 2 satellite airfields at Foggia while B-25s and B-26s hit road and rail bridges at Saptri and Trebisacce and roads at Lauria. A-20s of the Northwest African Tactical Bomber Force support British landing on 7/8 September near Pizzo in an unsuccessful attempt to cut off enemy retreat up west coast of the Italian toe. Medium and light bombers, in an afternoon raids, bomb Crotone airfield and roadblock and gun batteries north of Catanzaro. (Jack McKillop)


Sardinia: USAAF P-40s hit the landing ground at Pabillonis and barges off Portoscuso. (Jack McKillop)

NEW GUINEA: The airstrip at Nadzab is made serviceable for use by Allied aircraft.

USAAF OPERATIONS IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC AREA (Fifth Air Force): In New Guinea, B-24s and B-26s bomb the Lae area and B-25s bomb and strafe nearby targets on the road to Markham; P-38 Lightnings successfully turn back enemy bombing attack on Morobe; and C-47 Skytrains begin flying the Australian 7 Division to Nadzab. A-20s hit Gasmata Island area off New Britain Island.

A B-24 crashes on take-off at Port Moresby, New Guinea, hitting 5 trucks carrying men of the Australian 2/33rd Battalion;15 are killed instantly, 44 die of their injuries and 92 are injured but survive. (Jack McKillop)

USAAF OPERATIONS IN THE CHINA-BURMA-INDIA THEATER OF OPERATIONS 

* Tenth Air Force: In Burma, B-25 Mitchells attack Gokteik Viaduct causing minor damage. (Jack McKillop)

USAAF OPERATIONS IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC AREA (Thirteenth Air Force): In the Solomon Islands, 2 B-25s bomb a barge depot and supply area east of Ringa Cove on New Georgia Island. (Jack McKillop)

ELLICE ISLANDS: Ten IJN "Betty" bombers (, Navy Type 1 Attack Bombers) from Tarawa Atoll drop 20 bombs on the new 5,000 foot (1,524 meter) runway on Nanumea Island. (Jack McKillop)

TERRITORY OF HAWAII: Pearl Harbor: The ICPOA becomes a joint organisation, JICPOA, when the head of the US Army's 64th Topographic Company, Colonel Joseph J. Twitty, takes command and brings his topographic company with him. Twitty speaks Japanese and is the liaison between the US Army and ICPOA. (Mike Yared)(184 and 187)

CANADA: Frigate HMCS Springhill launched Esquimalt, British Columbia.

Minesweeper HMS Courier (ex-HMCS Arnprior) laid down Toronto, Ontario. (Dave Shirlaw)

U.S.A.: HQ US Army Air Forces decides to transfer Lieutenant General Lewis H Brereton, Commanding General Ninth Air Force, and his HQ staff from Africa to the United Kingdom and to reform the Ninth Air Force as a tactical air force in the European Theater of Operations by absorbing the VIII Air Support Command. (Jack McKillop)

A fire in the decrepit, old Gulf Hotel in Houston, Texas, kills 54 people. (Jack McKillop)

Destroyer escort USS Earl V Johnson laid down. Submarine USS Darter commissioned. (Dave Shirlaw)

ATLANTIC OCEAN: U-596 sank SS Hamideh.

U-402 shot down RAF Wellington aircraft, Squadron 172/D. Another two Wellingtons were also involved in the attack, one of them had to crash land.

U-669 sunk in the Bay of Biscay northwest of Cape Ortegal, Spain, in position 43.36N, 10.13W, by depth charges from a Canadian aircraft (RCAF-Sqn. 407). (Dave Shirlaw)

 

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