December 1941


The following events occurred in December 1941:

[December 1], 1941 (Monday)

[December 2], 1941 (Tuesday)

[December 3], 1941 (Wednesday)

  • Erwin Rommel's assault toward the garrisons at Bardia, Sallum and Halfaya Pass was repulsed by the Allies.
  • The Japanese carrier fleet tasked with the Pearl Harbor attack began approaching the Hawaiian Islands with increased speed.
  • U.S. secretary of state Cordell Hull gave a press conference expressing a pessimistic view of U.S.–Japan relations, saying that the months of discussions to this point had never reached a stage where actual negotiations toward a peaceful settlement could take place.
  • China Radio International was founded.
  • The first issue of the Chicago Sun was published.
  • Died: Christian Sinding, 85, Norwegian composer

[December 4], 1941 (Thursday)

[December 5], 1941 (Friday)

  • Britain declared war on Finland, Hungary and Romania.
  • Japan responded to Roosevelt's inquiry of December 2 by saying that foreign reports of the number of Japanese troops in French Indochina were exaggerated and the troop concentrations were in full accord with the agreement between Tokyo and Vichy.
  • U.S. War Secretary Henry L. Stimson said during a press conference that those responsible for the previous day's leaking of American war plans were "wanting in loyalty and patriotism." Stimson also offered a statement asking, "What would you think of an American general staff which in the present condition of the world did not investigate and study every conceivable type of emergency which may confront this country and every possible method of meeting that emergency?" The White House made no other comment on the matter and it would quickly be forgotten about after the events of December 7.
  • German submarine U-175 was commissioned.
  • The Soviet Red Army launched a massive counter-offensive against the German Forces during the Battle of Moscow which effectively put Operation Typhoon to an end.

[December 6], 1941 (Saturday)

  • U.S. president Roosevelt wrote a personal appeal to Emperor Hirohito to avoid war between the United States and Japan. "Developments are occurring in the Pacific area which threaten to deprive each of our Nations and all humanity of the beneficial influence of the long peace between our two countries." the president wrote. "Those developments contain tragic possibilities ... I address myself to Your Majesty at this moment in the fervent hope that Your Majesty may, as I am doing, give thought in this definite emergency to ways of dispelling the dark clouds. I am confident that both of us, for the sake of the peoples not only of our own great countries but for the sake of humanity in neighboring territories, have a sacred duty to restore traditional amity and prevent further death and destruction in the world."
  • Finnish II Corps and Group "O" captured Medvezhyegorsk.
  • The British submarine struck a mine and sank in the Ionian Sea off Cephalonia.
  • SS Greenland hit a mine and was sunk in the North Sea near Lowestoft with the loss of nine men. Born:
  • * Vittorio Mezzogiorno, actor, in Cercola, Italy
  • * Bruce Nauman, artist, in Fort Wayne, Indiana
  • * Richard Speck, mass murderer, in Kirkwood, Illinois

[December 7], 1941 (Sunday)

[December 8], 1941 (Monday)

[December 9], 1941 (Tuesday)

[December 10], 1941 (Wednesday)

[December 11], 1941 (Thursday)

[December 12], 1941 (Friday)

[December 13], 1941 (Saturday)

  • The Battle of Cape Bon was fought off Cape Bon, Tunisia. The Italian cruisers Alberico da Barbiano and Alberto di Giussano were sunk and the Allies took no losses in return.
  • The Battle of Jitra ended in Japanese victory.
  • New Zealand and Indian troops attacked the Gazala Line in Libya but were halted by German tanks.
  • Hungary declared war on the United States.
  • Great Britain, New Zealand and South Africa declared war on Bulgaria.
  • Honduras declared war on Germany and Italy.
  • The Niihau incident ended with the death of Shigenori Nishikaichi in a struggle with people on the island and the suicide of one of his confederates, Yoshio Harada. The incident may have influenced the U.S. government's decision to intern Japanese Americans during the war, out of a belief that American citizens of Japanese ancestry might aid Japan.
  • Between 4,000 and 6,000 people were killed in Huaraz, Peru when a glacier partially collapsed into a nearby lake and triggered a moraine landslide.
  • Born: John Davidson, singer, actor and television host, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

[December 14], 1941 (Sunday)

[December 15], 1941 (Monday)

[December 16], 1941 (Tuesday)

[December 17], 1941 (Wednesday)

[December 18], 1941 (Thursday)

[December 19], 1941 (Friday)

[December 20], 1941 (Saturday)

[December 21], 1941 (Sunday)

[December 22], 1941 (Monday)

[December 23], 1941 (Tuesday)

[December 24], 1941 (Wednesday)

  • Japanese troops captured Kuching, Sarawak.
  • The third Battle of Changsha began.
  • The shelling of Johnston and Palmyra ended inconclusively.
  • Haiti declared war on Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania.
  • The American steamer was torpedoed off Point Fermin, California by Japanese submarine and beached at Fort MacArthur.
  • The Japanese destroyer was torpedoed and sunk off Kuching, Borneo by the Dutch submarine.
  • The British corvette was torpedoed and sunk west of Alexandria by German submarine.
  • The British submarine was lost, probably to a naval mine in the Bay of Biscay.
  • German submarine was commissioned.Born: John Levene, actor, in Salisbury, England

[December 25], 1941 (Thursday)

[December 26], 1941 (Friday)

[December 27], 1941 (Saturday)

[December 28], 1941 (Sunday)

  • Lieutenant-general Thomas Jacomb Hutton assumed command of Burma Army.
  • The British cargo ship Volo was torpedoed and sunk off the coast of Egypt by German submarine U-75. The destroyer HMS Kipling chased the U-boat down and sank U-75 with depth charges.
  • 70-year-old Warden James Brooks Jackson of the Pulaski County, Arkansas Sheriff's Office, serving as superintendent of the Pulaski County Prison Farm, was shot and killed by the assistant warden, who believed Jackson was about to fire him. The assistant warden would be convicted of voluntary manslaughter and receive a two-year prison sentence. In 1999, Jackson's grandson, architect Brooks Jackson, would submit a successful bid for the design of the Arkansas Fallen Firefighters Memorial in memory of his grandfather.

[December 29], 1941 (Monday)

[December 30], 1941 (Tuesday)

[December 31], 1941 (Wednesday)