March 1944

Month of 1944
1944
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The following events occurred in March 1944:

March 1, 1944 (Wednesday)

March 2, 1944 (Thursday)

March 3, 1944 (Friday)

  • Joseph Stalin rejected British proposals to negotiate over the Polish-Soviet border.[6]
  • A night attack by the Japanese garrison on Los Negros was repulsed by the Americans.[5]
  • The Order of Nakhimov and Order of Ushakov military decorations were established in the Soviet Union.
  • On the Anzio’s beachhead, the 3rd Infantry Division repelled a German counter-attack in the locality of Ponte Rotto.
  • In Rome, a protest of women, demanding the release of their husbands detained in a German station, ended tragically. Teresa Gullace, seven months pregnant, was killed by a German soldier while she tried to pass a sandwich to her husband. The story was later reenacted in a famous episode of Rome open city.[7]

March 4, 1944 (Saturday)

  • The second Narva Offensive ended in another German defensive victory.
  • Former Vichy French Interior Minister Pierre Pucheu went on trial on Algiers.[8]
  • China and Afghanistan signed a treaty of friendship.[8]
  • German submarine U-472 was sunk in the Barents Sea by Fairey Swordfish of 816 Naval Air Squadron.
  • The Philadelphia Phillies baseball team announced a uniform change for the coming season: the addition of a new sleeve patch depicting a blue jay perching atop the familiar "Phillies" lettering. The logo was the winning entry in a contest that received over 5,000 entries with a $100 war bond offered as a prize. Fans were confused because the Phillies did not actually officially change their name to Blue Jays, but this alternate nickname would never really catch on anyway and the blue jay sleeve patch was dropped in 1946.[9]
  • "Bésame Mucho" by Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra hit #1 on the Billboard singles charts.
  • Born: Harvey Postlethwaite, aerodynamicist and engineer, in Barnet, England (d. 1999); Bobby Womack, singer and songwriter, in Cleveland, Ohio (d. 2014)
  • Died: Louis Buchalter, 47, Jewish-American mobster (executed by electric chair)

March 5, 1944 (Sunday)

March 6, 1944 (Monday)

  • American heavy bombers mounted the first-ever, full-scale daylight raid on Berlin.[11]
  • Soviet forces took Volochysk.[10]
  • Finland rejected a Soviet peace offer, objecting to the Soviet condition that all German troops in the country be interned and the 1940 borders be restored.[10]
  • German submarine U-744 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by Allied warships.
  • German submarine U-973 was depth charged and sunk in the Arctic Ocean by Fairey Swordfish of 816 Naval Air Squadron.
  • Born: Kiri Te Kanawa, soprano, in Gisborne, New Zealand; Mary Wilson, singer and founding member of the Supremes, in Greenville, Mississippi (d. 2021)

March 7, 1944 (Tuesday)

March 8, 1944 (Wednesday)

March 9, 1944 (Thursday)

  • The U.S. 5th Marine Regiment took Talasea in New Britain unopposed.[14]
  • American destroyer escort Leopold was torpedoed and heavily damaged in the North Atlantic by German submarine U-255. The 28 survivors of the 191 crew were rescued and Leopold was abandoned to sink the next day.

March 10, 1944 (Friday)

March 11, 1944 (Saturday)

  • British forces took Buthidaung in Burma.[8]
  • German military officer Eberhard von Breitenbuch took a concealed pistol to a military briefing with Hitler at the Berghof with the intention of assassinating him. However, SS guards barred Breitenbuch from the room where Hitler met with higher-ranking officers and so the assassination attempt never went forward.[15]
  • Pierre Pucheu was sentenced to death.[8]
  • In Paris, police discovered casually, in the house of Dr. Marcel Petiot, the remains of at least ten bodies and a large amount of clothing. The doctor, who had killed and robbed dozens of people under the cover of his Resistance activity, managed to escape.
  • In Padua, the Church of the Eremitani was half-destroyed by an American bombing. The Ovetari chapel was razed to the ground and its frescoes, work by Andrea Mantegna, were forever lost.[16]
  • German submarines U-380 and U-410 were bombed and sunk at Toulon in an American air raid.
  • Born: Graham Lyle, musician and producer, in Bellshill, Scotland; Don Maclean, actor and comedian, in Birmingham, England
  • Died: Irvin S. Cobb, 67, American author and humorist

March 12, 1944 (Sunday)

March 13, 1944 (Monday)

  • The Soviet 28th Army captured Kherson.[19]
  • Italy and the Soviet Union restored diplomatic relations with one another.[8]
  • German submarine U-575 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by Allied ships and aircraft.
  • Japanese cruiser Tatsuta was torpedoed and sunk off Hachijō-jima by the American submarine Sand Lance.
  • Died: Lev Shestakov, 38, Russian fighter ace (missing in action on the Eastern Front)

March 14, 1944 (Tuesday)

March 15, 1944 (Wednesday)

  • During the Battle of Monte Cassino the Allies dropped 992 tons of bombs on Monte Cassino Monastery and fired 195,000 rounds of artillery. British, Indian and New Zealand forces tried to storm the building but were unable to dislodge the Germans.[10]
  • German submarine U-653 was depth charged and sunk in the North Atlantic by British sloops Starling and Wild Goose.
  • British submarine Stonehenge was lost in the Indian Ocean on or around this date, presumably to a naval mine.
  • State Anthem of the Soviet Union replaced The Internationale as the new anthem of the Soviet Union.
  • Born: A. K. Faezul Huq, politician, lawyer and columnist, in Calcutta, British India (d. 2007)

March 16, 1944 (Thursday)

March 17, 1944 (Friday)

March 18, 1944 (Saturday)

  • As part of the Battle of Narva, the Soviets began the third Narva Offensive.
  • The Soviets took Zhmerynka.[10]
  • German soldiers began a two-day massacre of almost 400 prisoners, Soviet citizens and anti-fascists in the Romanian city of Rîbnița.[25]
  • Hungarian head of state Miklós Horthy came to the Schloss Klessheim south of Salzburg at Hitler's invitation. Horthy was forced to accept a new government and allow German troops onto Hungarian soil.[10]
  • In Italy, the stratovolcano Mount Vesuvius began erupting for the first time since 1929.[26][27][28]
  • On the Modena Apennines, the 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring bombed the villages of Monchio, Susano and Costrignano, around Montefiorino, and slaughtered their whole population. The victims were 129, all civilians, and included women, old men and children. The carnage was aimed to repress the partisan activity in the zone.
  • Aimo Koivunen and his men were attacked by the Russian Soviets during a rest, after this Aimo went on an insane methamphetamine adventure alone in the snowy lands of Murmansk Oblast, Russia.
  • Died: Noël Édouard, vicomte de Curières de Castelnau, 92, French World War I general

March 19, 1944 (Sunday)

March 20, 1944 (Monday)

March 21, 1944 (Tuesday)

March 22, 1944 (Wednesday)

  • The Red Army took Pervomaisk.[10]
  • Döme Sztójay replaced Miklós Kállay as Prime Minister of Hungary.
  • Authorities in German-controlled Hungary promulgated anti-Jewish legislation and ordered all Jewish businesses to close. Hundreds were sent to the Kistarcsa internment camp for political prisoners northeast of Budapest.[35]
  • The U.S. Office of Strategic Services began Operation Ginny II, once again intending to blow up railway tunnels in Italy to cut German lines of communication. The mission failed when the OSS team once again landed in the wrong place and were captured by the Germans two days later.
  • Volcanic stones of all sizes from Mount Vesuvius began raining down from the sky, forcing the evacuation of airmen of 340th Bombardment Group stationed at an airfield a few miles from the volcano. Once Vesuvius subsided they returned to base and found that about 80 of their B-25 bombers had been destroyed by hot ash.[27][28]
  • Institution of the CIL (Corpo Italiano di Liberazione, Italian Liberation Corps), that gathers the units of the Italian Army fighting beside the Allies.
  • Massacre of Montaldo (near Tolentino): 33 partisans, almost all in their twenties, were shot by the Germans; only one of the victims miraculously survived the execution. The next day, the commander of the young ones, Achille Barilatti, followed their fate.[36]
  • Died: Pierre Brossolette, 40, French journalist, politician and Resistance fighter (committed suicide while in Gestapo custody)

March 23, 1944 (Thursday)

March 24, 1944 (Friday)

March 25, 1944 (Saturday)

March 26, 1944 (Sunday)

  • The Battle of Sangshak ended in tactical Japanese victory but strategic British victory, since the British were able to hold off the Japanese long enough to send reinforcements to Kohima.
  • American submarine Tullibee sank north of Palau due to a torpedo malfunction. Only 1 of the 60 crew survived.
  • The fifteen members of the captured OSS team in Operation Ginny II were summarily executed by German forces under Hitler's Commando Order at the command of General Anton Dostler. After the war Dostler would be executed as a war criminal.
  • Born:

March 27, 1944 (Monday)

March 28, 1944 (Tuesday)

March 29, 1944 (Wednesday)

March 30, 1944 (Thursday)

  • The United States Navy began Operation Desecrate One, in which aircraft carriers launched attacks against Japanese bases on and around Palau. 36 Japanese ships were sunk or damaged in the attacks.
  • The RAF suffered its worst loss of the war in a raid on Nuremberg. 96 of 795 aircraft were shot down, and cloud over the city meant that only a small proportion of the force hit their target.[42]
  • Hitler sacked Erich von Manstein and Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist from their command posts on the Eastern Front and replaced them with Walter Model and Ferdinand Schörner.[42]
  • The British destroyer Laforey was torpedoed and sunk north of Palermo, Sicily by German submarine U-223, which was then depth charged and sunk by four British destroyers.
  • Born: Maurizio Vandelli, Italian singer, leader of the group Equipe 84, in Modena.

March 31, 1944 (Friday)

References

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