October 1942
The following events occurred in October 1942:
[October 1], 1942 (Thursday)
- The Battle of Rzhev, Summer 1942 ended in Soviet operational failure.
- Australian commandos executed the Raid on Mubo in New Guinea, killing up to 50 Japanese.
- The Japanese transport ship Lisbon Maru was sunk by the American submarine USS Grouper. It was later learned that Lisbon Maru was carrying 1,800 British prisoners of war from Hong Kong; 800 died in the sinking.
- The Bell P-59 Airacomet had its first flight.
- German submarine U-642 was commissioned.
- The monopoly trade company DEGRIGES was founded by Nazi Germany in Greece, to control the resources of the country.
- The British Army - formed the new unit, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers.
- The first Little Golden Books, a popular series of children's books, were published in the United States.
- Born: Günter Wallraff, writer and undercover journalist, in Burscheid, Germany
- Died: Ants Piip, 58, 7th Prime Minister of Estonia
[October 2], 1942 (Friday)
- The British light cruiser Curacoa sank north of Ireland after an accidental collision with the troop transport Queen Mary. It was one of the Royal Navy's worst accidental losses of the war.
- British forces captured Antsirabe in Madagascar.
- The Stabilization Act was enacted in the United States.
- Former French Prime Minister Édouard Herriot was arrested for allegedly plotting against the Vichy government.
- German submarine U-512 was bombed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean off Cayenne by an American Douglas B-18 Bolo bomber.
- Born: Asha Parekh, actress, director and producer, in Bombay, British India
[October 3], 1942 (Saturday)
- German Army Group A captured Elkhotovo in Kirovsky District.
- The V2 rocket became the first man-made object to be launched into space.
- U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered a freeze on wages, rents and farm prices.
- A small British force carried out Operation Basalt, a raid on the German-occupied Channel Island of Sark.
- The U.S. Office for Emergency Management created the Office of Economic Stabilization with James F. Byrnes as Director.
- The Hollywood Canteen opened in Hollywood, California. The club was operated and staffed completely by volunteers from the entertainment industry and everything in it was free of charge for Allied servicemen and women in uniform.
- German submarines U-229 and U-731 were commissioned.
- Born: Earl Hindman, actor, in Bisbee, Arizona
- Died: Milan Kalabić, 55 or 56, Serbian military officer
[October 4], 1942 (Sunday)
- The German XIV Panzer Corps attacked the Stalingrad Tractor Factory.
- Hermann Göring made a speech in the Berlin Sportpalast to mark the end of the harvest season. He announced that Germany's food situation "will continue to get better since we now possess huge stretches of fertile land."
- Born: Bernice Johnson Reagon, singer, composer, scholar and social activist, in Dougherty County, Georgia
[October 5], 1942 (Monday)
- Operation Wunderland ended in German success.
- German submarines U-582 and U-619 were depth charged and sunk southwest of Iceland by an American Catalina and a British Lockheed Hudson, respectively.
- German submarine U-336 was sunk in the Denmark Strait by a Lockheed Hudson of No. 269 Squadron RAF.
- German submarine U-359 was commissioned.
- The St. Louis Cardinals defeated the New York Yankees 4-2 to win the World Series four games to one.
- Died: Dorothea Klumpke, 81, American astronomer
[October 6], 1942 (Tuesday)
- The second Actions along the Matanikau began around the Matanikau River on Guadalcanal.
- German Army Group A took the oil city of Malgobek.
- Reichskommissar for Norway Josef Terboven declared a state of emergency in and around Trondheim because of recent acts of sabotage. Execution of 34 Norwegians would follow until the state of emergency was lifted six days later.
- Japanese submarine I-22 was depth charged and sunk in the Coral Sea by an American Catalina aircraft.
- A law was passed in Nazi-occupied Belgium equivalent to the one passed in Vichy France on September 4, obligating able-bodied citizens to do work for the government if ordered to.
- Born:
- *Britt Ekland, actress and singer, in Stockholm, Sweden;
- *Fred Travalena, comedian and impressionist, in the Bronx, New York
- Died: Siegmund Glücksmann, 58, German-Jewish socialist politician
[October 7], 1942 (Wednesday)
- As part of Operation Alfa, Italian forces heavily bombed and shelled the Croatian town of Prozor to drive out the communist Partisans there.
- The Soviet 62nd Army withdrew from the Orlovka gully in Stalingrad but fighting continued to rage around the tractor factory, Red October factory and sports stadium.
- The anti-Nazi Home Army carried out Operation Wieniec overnight, targeting rail infrastructure near Warsaw.
- German submarines U-272 and U-469 were commissioned.
- The play The Eve of St. Mark by Maxwell Anderson premiered at the Cort Theatre on Broadway.
- Born:
- *Ronald Baecker, computer scientist, in Kenosha, Wisconsin;
- *Joy Behar, comedian, actress and television personality, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York
[October 8], 1942 (Thursday)
- A Nazi radio announcement stated that officers and men captured in the Dieppe raid had been manacled in retaliation for the alleged tying of prisoners during the Sark raid. The British War Office replied that German prisoners of war captured at Dieppe had not had their hands tied and if the Germans did not immediately unshackle their prisoners, then German POWs in Canada would be put in chains starting October 10.
- The Italians entered Prozor.
- German submarine U-179 was depth charged and sunk off Cape Town by the British destroyer HMS Active.
- German submarine U-643 was commissioned.
- The war film Flying Tigers starring John Wayne, John Carroll and Anna Lee was released.
- Died: Effie Ellsler, 87, American actress
[October 9], 1942 (Friday)
- The second Actions along the Matanikau ended in American victory.
- The Statute of Westminster Adoption Act was passed in Australia.
- Mob boss Roger Touhy and six others escaped from Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill, Illinois. Touhy and his gang would be caught a month later and he would be sentenced to an additional 199 years in prison for the escape.
[October 10], 1942 (Saturday)
- The Sinyavino Offensive ended indecisively.
- The British troopship Orcades was torpedoed and sunk near Cape Town by German submarine U-172. 1,022 were rescued but 45 perished.
- Battle of Bowmanville: A revolt in the Bowmanville POW camp in Ontario, Canada broke out. 400 prisoners barricaded themselves in a hall in protest of the intended shackling of 126 prisoners as reprisal for the chaining of Canadian soldiers captured at Dieppe.
- German submarine U-386 was commissioned.
- Died: Vojo Kushi, 24, Albanian and Yugoslav partisan fighter
[October 11], 1942 (Sunday)
- The Battle of Cape Esperance began off Cape Esperance, Guadalcanal. Japanese destroyer Fubuki and cruiser Furutaka were sunk by American ships of Task Force 64.
- World heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis told reporters, "My fighting days are over."
- Born: Amitabh Bachchan, film actor, in Allahabad, British India
[October 12], 1942 (Monday)
- The Battle of Cape Esperance ended in American victory. The American destroyer USS Duncan sank from damage inflicted by the Furutaka, but the Japanese destroyers Murakumo and Natsugumo were bombed and sunk by U.S. aircraft from Henderson Field.
- German submarine U-597 was depth charged and sunk southwest of Iceland by a Consolidated B-24 Liberator of the Royal Air Force.
- President Roosevelt gave a fireside chat on the topic of the home front.
- The so-called Battle of Bowmanville ended when the barricaded prisoners were subdued.
- Born: Daliah Lavi, actress, singer and model, in Shavei Tzion, Mandatory Palestine
- Died: Aritomo Gotō, 54, Japanese admiral
[October 13], 1942 (Tuesday)
- The Japanese battleships Kongō and Haruna bombarded U.S. Marine positions on Guadalcanal for 90 minutes, causing heavy damage.
- Japanese submarine I-30 struck a mine near Singapore and sank.
- Born:
- *Rutanya Alda, actress, in Riga, Latvia;
- *Jerry Jones, businessman and owner of the Dallas Cowboys football team, in Inglewood, California
[October 14], 1942 (Wednesday)
- The Germans began another assault on the Stalingrad Tractor Factory.
- The Chetniks massacred over 500 Croats and Muslims and burned numerous villages around Prozor in the process, in the belief that they were harboring and aiding the communist Partisans.
- The Ukrainian Insurgent Army was activated.
- In one of the most significant sinkings in Canadian waters during the war, passenger ferry SS Caribou was torpedoed and sunk in the Cabot Strait by German submarine U-69. 137 of the 252 on board perished.
- German auxiliary cruiser Komet was torpedoed and sunk in the English Channel by a British motor torpedo boat.
- Soviet submarine Shch-213 struck a mine and sank in the Black Sea.
- German submarine U-530 was commissioned.
- Born: Evelio Javier, politician, lawyer and civil servant, in Hamtic, Antique, Philippines
[October 15], 1942 (Thursday)
- The Japanese heavy cruisers Chokai and Kinugasa bombarded Guadalcanal to cover the movement of Japanese ships.
- The American destroyer USS Meridith was sunk by Japanese aircraft off Guadalcanal.
- German submarine U-661 was sunk in the North Atlantic by depth charges from the British destroyer Viscount.
- German submarines U-644 and U-760 were commissioned.
- The Thornton Wilder play The Skin of Our Teeth premiered at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut.
- Died: Marie Tempest, 78, English singer and actress