September 1942
The following events occurred in September 1942:
[September 1], 1942 (Tuesday)
- The German 4th Panzer Army attacked the Soviet 64th Army in the southern suburbs of Stalingrad.
- German Army Group A captured the Black Sea port of Anapa.
- Shigenori Tōgō resigned as Japanese Foreign Minister.
- German submarine U-756 was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by the Canadian corvette Morden.
[September 2], 1942 (Wednesday)
- The Soviet 47th Army began nightly evacuation by sea from the Taman Peninsula.
- British Commandos conducted Operation Dryad, an overnight raid on the Casquets lighthouse in the Channel Islands.
- German submarine U-222 sank in the Baltic Sea off Pillau after colliding with U-626. 42 crew were lost; three survived.
- German submarines U-710 and U-711 were commissioned.
- Died: Tom Williams, 19, member of the Irish Republican Army
[September 3], 1942 (Thursday)
- German troops captured Pitomnik Airfield at Stalingrad.
- Following the August 16 Basilica of Begoña incident, Francisco Franco sacked Ramón Serrano Suñer as head of the Falangists and Foreign Minister and took full control of the Spanish government. Francisco Gómez-Jordana Sousa became the new Foreign Minister.
- Demonstrations and strikes were held throughout Northern Ireland and Eire the day after the execution of Tom Williams.
- German submarine U-162 was depth charged and sunk northeast of Trinidad by British warships.
- German submarine U-705 was depth charged and sunk in the Bay of Biscay by Armstrong Whitworth Whitley bombers.
- German submarine U-638 was commissioned.
- Born:
- *Michael Hui, actor, comedian, scriptwriter and director, in Panyu, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China;
- *Al Jardine, guitarist, singer, songwriter and member of The Beach Boys, in Lima, Ohio
- Died: John Mosher, 50, American short story writer and film critic for ''The New Yorker''
[September 4], 1942 (Friday)
- Soviet planes bombed Budapest for the first time.
- The Japanese ammunition ship Kashino was torpedoed and sunk in the South China Sea by American submarine USS Growler.
- Service du travail obligatoire: The Vichy French government passed a law requiring all able-bodied men age 18 to 50 and single women 21 to 35 to be subject to do any work the government deemed necessary.
- Gorazd Pavlík, Orthodox Bishop of Prague, together with two priests and lay officials, was executed by firing squad at Kobylisy Shooting Range, having taken the blame for Czech resistance fighters implicated in the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich hiding in his cathedral. This effort to spare wider Nazi retribution among his flock earned him canonization.
- Died: Zsigmond Móricz, 63, Hungarian novelist and social realist
[September 5], 1942 (Saturday)
- The Battle of Alam el Halfa ended in Allied victory.
- The Soviet 24th and 66th Armies counterattacked the XIV Panzer Corps at Stalingrad, but the offensive was called off after losing 30 of 120 tanks, mostly to the Luftwaffe.
- German submarine U-270 was commissioned.
- Born: Werner Herzog, filmmaker, in Munich, Germany
[September 6], 1942 (Sunday)
- The Germans captured the Russian port of Novorossiysk.
- As tensions in Ireland continued to run high, two policemen were shot dead in Belfast.
- Arvid and Mildred Harnack of the Red Orchestra were arrested by the Gestapo. With all its leaders now imprisoned the Red Orchestra soon collapsed.
- Died:
- *Albert Buck, 57, German Generalmajor ;
- *Günter Steinhausen, 24, German flying ace
[September 7], 1942 (Monday)
- The Battle of Milne Bay ended in Australian victory.
- The German 6th Army attacked Mamayev Kurgan, the dominant height overlooking Stalingrad.
- Cuba signed an agreement with the United States allowing a flotilla of a dozen American-crewed patrol ships to operate out of Havana under Cuban colors.
- U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave a fireside chat on inflation and the progress of the war.
- British Commandos executed Operation Branford, an overnight raid on the Channel Island of Burhou.
- Died: Cecilia Beaux, 87, American society portraitist
[September 8], 1942 (Tuesday)
- Winston Churchill reviewed the course of the war in an address to the British House of Commons.
- The U.S. government shut down gold mines to release labor for the war effort.
- The characters of Pogo the Possum and Albert the Alligator made their first appearances in the story "Albert Takes the Cake" by Walt Kelly in Animal Comics issue #1.
- Born: Želimir Žilnik, film director, in Niš, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
- Died:
- *Bede Camm, 77, English Benedictine monk and martyrologist
- *Aleksei Gan, executed for "counter-revolutionary" activities in the Soviet Union
[September 9], 1942 (Wednesday)
- The first of the two Lookout Air Raids occurred in Oregon. A Japanese Yokosuka E14Y floatplane launched from a submarine dropped two incendiary bombs with the intention of starting a forest fire. The damage done was minor, however.
- Adolf Hitler removed Wilhelm List from command of Army Group A and took over command himself.
[September 10], 1942 (Thursday)
- German forces of the 29th Motorized Division broke through to the Volga River on the southern side of Stalingrad. The Soviet 62nd Army was hit along the frontline, with its forces defending just 2 km from the heart of the city.
- The RAF dropped 100,000 bombs on Düsseldorf in less than an hour.
- The Italian hospital ship Arno was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean by British aircraft.
- German submarine U-639 was commissioned.
- Died: Walter Zellot, 21, German fighter ace
[September 11], 1942 (Friday)
- An Anglo-Norwegian raiding party began Operation Musketoon, an attack on the German-held Glomfjord power plant in Norway.
- The Canadian corvette HMCS Charlottetown was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence by the German submarine U-517.
- The Japanese destroyer Yayoi was bombed and sunk off Vakuta Island by U.S. and British aircraft.
- Born: John Greig, footballer, in Edinburgh, Scotland
- Died: Rolf Mützelburg, 29, German U-boat commander
[September 12], 1942 (Saturday)
- The Battle of Edson's Ridge began on Guadalcanal.
- The British troopship RMS Laconia was torpedoed and sunk off the coast of West Africa by the German submarine U-156. U-boats were then dispatched to the area to pick up survivors.
- The destruction of the German garrison in Lenin occurred in the region of Pinsk.
- German submarine U-88 was depth charged and sunk off Spitsbergen by the British destroyer Faulknor.
- British Commandos began Operation Aquatint, a raid on the coast of occupied France.
- German submarines U-228 and U-450 were commissioned.
- Miss Texas Jo-Carroll Dennison was crowned Miss America 1942.
- " Kalamazoo" by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra hit #1 on the Billboard singles charts.
- Born: Charles L. Grant, author, in Newark, New Jersey
[September 13], 1942 (Sunday)
- The Wehrmacht began a massive ground assault to try to take the city of Stalingrad, marking the beginning of the house-to-house fighting that most characterized the battle.
- The Allies launched Operation Agreement, a series of ground and amphibious operations carried out by British, Rhodesian and New Zealand forces against Axis-held Tobruk.
- Operation Aquatint ended in British defeat.
- Born: Hissène Habré, seventh President of Chad, in Faya-Largeau, Chad ; Ahmet Necdet Sezer, 10th President of Turkey, in Afyonkarahisar, Turkey
[September 14], 1942 (Monday)
- The Battle of Edson's Ridge ended in Allied victory.
- Operation Agreement ended in Allied failure. The light cruiser Coventry was bombed and damaged by Junkers Ju 87 aircraft and had to be scuttled, while the destroyer Sikh was shelled and sunk off Tobruk by coastal artillery. The destroyer HMS Zulu was bombed by Macchi C.200 of the Regia Aeronautica and sank the next day.
- The Canadian destroyer Ottawa of convoy ON 127 was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by German submarine U-91.
- Chinese forces recaptured Wuyi from the Japanese.
- The New York Yankees clinched the American League pennant with an 8–3 win over the Cleveland Indians.
- Born: Bernard MacLaverty, author, in Belfast, Northern Ireland
- Died: E. S. Gosney, 86, American philanthropist and eugenicist
[September 15], 1942 (Tuesday)
- Near Guadalcanal the Japanese submarine I-19 fired one of the most effective torpedo salvos of the war, mortally damaging the American aircraft carrier USS Wasp and destroyer O'Brien as well as damaging the battleship North Carolina. The destroyer Lansdowne was dispatched to rescue 447 crew of the Wasp and then scuttled the carrier.
- German submarine U-261 was depth charged and sunk west of the Shetland Islands by an Armstrong Whitworth Whitley.
- British submarine Talisman went missing in the Mediterranean, possibly lost to a naval mine off Sicily.
- Born: Wen Jiabao, 6th Premier of China, in Tianjin, China
[September 16], 1942 (Wednesday)
- German Army Group B penetrated the northwest suburbs of Stalingrad.
- Laconia incident: A controversial event occurred when a USAAF B-24 Liberator attacked the U-156 while survivors rescued from the September 12 RMS Laconia sinking stood on the foredeck. The U-156 was forced to dive and abandon the survivors. Karl Dönitz shortly thereafter issued the Laconia Order, forbidding any such rescue work in the future.
- The National Liberation Movement, an Albanian resistance organization, was founded in Pezë.
- German submarine U-457 was sunk northeast of the North Cape by depth charges from the British destroyer Impulsive.
- German submarine U-528 was commissioned.