October 1941

Month of 1941
1941
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The following events occurred in October 1941:

October 1, 1941 (Wednesday)

October 2, 1941 (Thursday)

  • The Battle of Moscow began.
  • Adolf Hitler issued a message to the German troops on the Eastern Front declaring, "Today begins the last great, decisive battle of this year."[3]
  • 2,146 Jews were shot dead in the Lithuanian town of Žagarė.[1]
  • Paul Collette, the man who tried to assassinate Pierre Laval in August, was sentenced to death. The following day Philippe Pétain commuted the sentence to life imprisonment.[4]
  • German submarines U-377 and U-590 were commissioned.
  • The Western film Honky Tonk starring Clark Gable and Lana Turner premiered at the Capitol Theatre in New York City.[5]

October 3, 1941 (Friday)

  • Hitler made a public speech at the Berlin Sportpalast, his first since the German invasion of the Soviet Union began. Hitler declared that Russia was "to a great extent" already destroyed and that Germany had the capability to "beat all possible enemies" no matter "how many billions they are going to spend," a remark that appeared to be directed at the United States.[6]
  • The Fadden government resigned in Australia after being defeated on a budget vote.[4]
  • The film noir The Maltese Falcon starring Humphrey Bogart and Mary Astor premiered in New York City.
  • Born: Chubby Checker, singer and songwriter, in Spring Gully, South Carolina;[citation needed] Nicolae Șerban Tanașoca, Romanian historian and philologist (d. 2017).[7]

October 4, 1941 (Saturday)

October 5, 1941 (Sunday)

October 6, 1941 (Monday)

October 7, 1941 (Tuesday)

October 8, 1941 (Wednesday)

  • The Battle of Changsha ended in Chinese victory.
  • The Siege of Odessa (1941) began.
  • The Germans captured Mariupol on the Sea of Azov[1] and Oryol southwest of Moscow.[13]
  • U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent Stalin a short message stating that he was "confident that ways will be found to provide the material and supplies necessary to fight Hitler on all fronts, including your own. I want particularly to take this occasion to express my great confidence that your armies will ultimately prevail over Hitler and to assure you of our great determination to be of every possible material assistance."[14]
  • Near Hokitika, New Zealand, farmer Stanley Graham went on a shooting rampage after a dispute with a neighbour and killed seven people, including four police officers who were called in after the initial argument. The biggest manhunt in New Zealand history commenced.
  • German submarines U-507 and U-657 were commissioned.
  • Born: Jesse Jackson, civil rights activist and politician, in Greenville, South Carolina
  • Died: Gus Kahn, 54, American lyricist; Valentine O'Hara, 66, Irish author

October 9, 1941 (Thursday)

  • President Roosevelt asked Congress for immediate authority to arm American merchant ships. "We will not let Hitler prescribe the waters of the world which our ships may travel," the president said. "The American flag is not going to be driven from the seas either by his submarines, his airplanes or his threats."[15]
  • The Vichy Supreme Court indicted Léon Blum, Édouard Daladier, Guy La Chambre, Maurice Gamelin and Robert Jacomet for treason against their duties to the state during the years leading up to France's defeat in 1940. The defendants would go on trial beginning in February 1942 in proceedings that would be known as the Riom Trial.[16]
  • Ricardo Adolfo de la Guardia Arango became President of Panama.
  • German submarines U-334 and U-591 were commissioned.
  • Born: Trent Lott, politician, in Grenada, Mississippi
  • Died: Helen Morgan, 41, American singer and actress

October 10, 1941 (Friday)

October 11, 1941 (Saturday)

  • President Roosevelt wrote to Winston Churchill requesting a gentleman's agreement to share information on atomic research. Churchill would write back in December accepting the request.[18]
  • The Soviet government announced the evacuation from Moscow of all women and children not engaged in war work.[1]
  • German submarine U-209 was commissioned.
  • Born: Lester Bowie, jazz trumpet player and composer, in Frederick, Maryland (d. 1999)
  • Died: Edward Mark Best, 41 or 42, New Zealand police officer (mortally wounded by Stanley Graham on October 8);[19] Charles Treat, 81, American major general

October 12, 1941 (Sunday)

October 13, 1941 (Monday)

October 14, 1941 (Tuesday)

  • Ordnungspolizei Chief Kurt Daluege signed the first order for the deportation of Berlin's Jews to the occupied territories of the east.[21]
  • The United States and Argentina signed a trade agreement lowering duties on many imports to Argentina from the United States. The Americans were eager to get the deal signed in order to keep Argentina out of the economic sphere of the Axis.[4][22]
  • Italian Defence Chief Ugo Cavallero ordered that plans be completed for the occupation of Malta and that special units be trained to participate in the operation.[23]
  • SS-Obergruppenführer and Waffen-SS General Paul Hausser was wounded in action on the Eastern Front and lost the sight in his right eye. He would subsequently wear a black eyepatch that would become his trademark.[24][25]
  • Army Group Centre commander Fedor von Bock announces the Vyazma Encirclement was over.

October 15, 1941 (Wednesday)

  • The Soviets withdrew from Odessa at night.[2]
  • The Germans reached Mozhaysk, west of Moscow.[1]
  • Most of the Soviet government evacuated Moscow, although Stalin remained in the capital.[1]
  • German authorities announced that any Jews found outside of ghetto walls in Poland would be executed on sight.[26]
  • The first Canadian built Fort ship, the Fort St. James, launched for use by Britain.
  • German submarine U-88 was commissioned.
  • The comic book characters Archie Andrews, Betty Cooper and Jughead Jones all made their first appearances in Pep Comics issue #22 (cover date December).[27]

October 16, 1941 (Thursday)

  • The Siege of Odessa ended in Pyrrhic Axis victory.
  • The Jewish population of Lubny and neighbouring towns were ordered to report for relocation. The 1,900 Jews who obeyed the order were taken to an antitank trench outside the town and shot.[28]
  • The British corvette HMS Gladiolus was lost while escorting convoy SC 48. The cause of its loss is unknown.
  • Due to pressure from the Germans, Philippe Pétain announced that he had condemned Blum, Daladier and Gamelin to life imprisonment, long before their trial could even begin. Pétain justified the action under Constitutional Act No. 7 dated January 27, 1941, even though it was illegal to apply it retroactively.[16]
  • German submarines U-160, U-592 and U-703 were commissioned.
  • Born: Tim McCarver, baseball player and sportscaster, in Memphis, Tennessee (d. 2023)
  • Died: Sergei Efron, 48, Russian poet and military officer (executed); Harold Fowler McCormick, 69, American businessman

October 17, 1941 (Friday)

October 18, 1941 (Saturday)

October 19, 1941 (Sunday)

  • Joseph Stalin proclaimed a state of siege in the capital and issued an Order of the Day that "Moscow will be defended to the last."[13]
  • German forces captured Mozhaysk.[2]
  • German submarine U-204 was depth charged and sunk by British warships in the Strait of Gibraltar.
  • Died: Hector Cowan, 78, American football player and coach

October 20, 1941 (Monday)

  • German forces captured Borodino, 60 miles from Moscow.[30]
  • Mass murderer Stanley Graham was mortally wounded in a shootout with police near his farm. He died of his wounds the next morning.
  • German submarine U-508 was commissioned.
  • Born: Anneke Wills, actress, in Berkshire, England

October 21, 1941 (Tuesday)

October 22, 1941 (Wednesday)

October 23, 1941 (Thursday)

  • The German government banned the emigration of Jews.[12]
  • The British destroyer HMS Cossack was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean by the German submarine U-563. The Cossack tried to return to Gibraltar for repairs but would sink in bad weather four days later.[34]
  • The first of the two Mesovouno massacres was carried out by the Wehrmacht in the Greek village of Mesovouno.
  • German submarine U-593 was commissioned.
  • The Walt Disney animated film Dumbo premiered at the Broadway Theatre in New York City.

October 24, 1941 (Friday)

  • The Germans captured Kharkov and Belgorod.[12]
  • The three-day Odessa massacre ended with some 25,000 to 34,000 Jews and 15,000 Romani murdered.
  • The British cargo ships Alhama, Ariosto and Carsbreck were sunk 300 nautical miles west of Gibraltar by the German submarine U-564.

October 25, 1941 (Saturday)

  • The German drive on Moscow was almost completely halted due to bad weather.[35]
  • Riga Ghetto was established.[35]
  • President Roosevelt released a formal statement condemning reprisal executions carried out by the Nazis in occupied Europe. "The practice of executing scores of innocent hostages in reprisal for isolated attacks on Germans in countries temporarily under the Nazi heel revolts a world already inured to suffering brutality," the statement read.[36]
  • The British minelayer Latona was bombed and sunk by the Luftwaffe off Tobruk.
  • German submarines U-117, U-171 and U-437 were commissioned.
  • Born: Helen Reddy, singer and actress, in Melbourne, Australia (d. 2020); Anne Tyler, writer and literary critic, in Hennepin County, Minnesota
  • Died: Robert Delaunay, 56, French artist (cancer)

October 26, 1941 (Sunday)

October 27, 1941 (Monday)

  • Erich von Manstein's 11th Army broke into the Crimean Peninsula.[12]
  • The Germans captured Plavsk.[38]
  • President Roosevelt made an address on Navy Day declaring that "America has been attacked," referring to the Kearny incident ten days earlier. "I say that we do not propose to take this lying down. Our determination not to take it lying down has been expressed in the orders to the American Navy to shoot on sight. Those orders stand." The president also said that "when we have helped to end the curse of Hitlerism we shall help to establish a new peace which will give to decent people everywhere a better chance to live and prosper in security and in freedom and in faith. Each day that passes we are producing and providing more and more arms for the men who are fighting on actual battle-fronts. That is our primary task."[39]
  • Palestinian leader Amin al-Husseini arrived in Rome for talks with Fascist leaders.[1]
  • The British submarine HMS Tetrarch sent its last communication before being lost in the Mediterranean Sea, probably to a naval mine.
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald's unfinished novel The Last Tycoon was posthumously published by Charles Scribner's Sons.[40]
  • The movie The Big Store starring the Marx Brothers, went on general release.
  • Born: Gerd Brantenberg, author, teacher and feminist writer, in Oslo, Norway

October 28, 1941 (Tuesday)

October 29, 1941 (Wednesday)

October 30, 1941 (Thursday)

October 31, 1941 (Friday)

  • While escorting Allied convoy HX 156 in the North Atlantic, the American destroyer USS Reuben James was sunk by the German submarine U-552 with the loss of 115 of 159 crew.
  • Nazi Germany announced heavy taxation increases for tobacco, spirits and champagne effective Monday. State Secretary of the Finance Ministry Fritz Reinhardt claimed that the primary aim of the new taxes was to reduce consumption.[43]
  • Born: Sally Kirkland, actress, in New York City
  • Died: Herwarth Walden, 62, German artist and art expert

References

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  2. ^ a b c d e Kirchubel, Robert (2013). Operation Barbarossa: The German Invasion of Soviet Russia. Botley, Oxfordshire: Osprey Publishing. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-78200-408-0.
  3. ^ "Hitler's Order of the Day to the German Troops on the Eastern Front". ibiblio. Retrieved December 31, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c Chronology and Index of the Second World War, 1938–1945. Research Publications. 1990. pp. 81–82. ISBN 978-0-88736-568-3.
  5. ^ "The Broadway Parade". Film Daily. New York: Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc.: 2 September 29, 1941.
  6. ^ "Hitler Slaps at U. S., Claims Reds Beaten". Brooklyn Eagle. Brooklyn. October 3, 1941. p. 1.
  7. ^ Mondiru, Adi (10 April 2017). "Nicolae-Șerban Tanașoca, In Memoriam" (in Romanian). Agenția de presă RADOR.
  8. ^ GE Aviation, "Blast From the Past: The Story of GE's First Jet Engine" April 11, 2018. https://blog.geaviation.com/technology/fight-or-flight-the-startling-start-of-whittles-first-jet-engine/
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  14. ^ "Letter from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Premier Joseph Stalin". ibiblio. October 8, 1941. Retrieved December 31, 2015.
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  27. ^ a b c Martin, Robert Stanley (May 31, 2015). "Comics By the Date: January 1940 to December 1941". The Hooded Utilitarian. Archived from the original on December 4, 2015. Retrieved December 31, 2015.
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