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syscom3
Pacific Historian
1 October 1942
EASTERN FRONT: Bitter fighting continues within and near Stalingrad throughout October, German Heeresgruppe B making limited progress against determined resistance. Soviet Army efforts to relieve the besieged city, which is under severe air and artillery bombardment, prove futile. The drives of German Heresgrupe A are virtually halted by Soviet resistance and the Soviet Army contains attacks toward the Grozny oil fields. In the northwest sector of this front, fierce battles occur in the Novorossisk- Tuapse area along the Black Sea coast. The German offensive is steadily losing momentum because of fuel shortage, heavy losses in manpower, difficult terrain, and firm opposition.
Heavy actions against Russian aircraft in the morning found several pilots of JG 3 increasing their scores. Uffz. Gruber of 2./JG 3 claimed three Soviet planes while Lt. Friedrich Lorentzen of 1./JG 3 and Lt. Kurt Roisch from the Stab I./JG 3 each claimed two Russians downed before 0700 hours. By 1000 hours in the morning planes from JG 54 joined the fight and several Russian warplanes fell to German guns including a pair for Uffz. Kurt Stöber of 7./JG 54.
Major Gordon Gollob, Kommodore of JG 77, was transferred to the Stab of Jagdfliegerführer 3 on the Channel front. Hptm. Joachim Müncheberg received command of JG 77, soon to be battling in Sicily and Tunisia. Hptm. Dietrich Hrabak of II./JG 54 was promoted to major and took over command of JG 52 in the southern region.
The German government formally annexes northern Slovenia into the German Reich and declares all of the inhabitants of the region as German citizens.
GERMANY: During the night of 1/2 October, RAF Bomber Command initiates three small raids in difficult weather conditions and without Pathfinders:
(1) 62 of 78 Lancasters dispatched to bomb Wismar hit the target with the loss of two aircraft:
(2) 23 of 27 Halifaxes bomb Flensburg with the loss of 12 aircraft; and
(3) 20 of 25 Stirlings bomb Lubeck with the loss of three aircraft.
MEDITERRANEAN: US Army, Middle East Air Force B-24 Liberators bomb shipping in Pylos Bay, Greece, claiming two direct hits and several near misses on a large vessel; other B-24s dispatched to bomb a convoy at sea fail to find the target.
NORTH AFRICA: The British Eighth Army forces the Axis from positions in region of El Alamein.
Lt. Erich Schöfböck of 7./JG 27 downed his first enemy aircraft when he shot down a RAF Spitfire.
NORTH AMERICA: A Douglas (Model DC-2-243) C-39, msn 2081, USAAF s/n 38-524, crashes near Coamo, Puerto Rico at 0930 hours local killing all 22 aboard. The aircraft made a wide descending turn with engines running roughly and crashed into a hill.
Fuel oil is now rationed in most areas of the United States.
The first American turbojet aircraft, the Bell Model 27 XP-59A-BE Airacomet, msn 27-1, USAAF s/n 42-108784, makes its first flight at Muroc Army Air Base, Muroc, California. The flight was made with the landing gear in the down position and at 25 feet (7,62 meters) off the ground. Three more flights were made today in this aircraft.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt ends two-week trip to war plants across U.S.
WESTERN FRONT: Hptm. Helmut Lent, Gruppenkommandeur of II./NJG 2, was appointed Gruppenkommandeur of IV./NJG 1. The night-fighters of 4./NJG 2 were redesignated as 10./NJG 1. 3./NJG 1 was redesignated 1./NJG 5.
EASTERN FRONT: Bitter fighting continues within and near Stalingrad throughout October, German Heeresgruppe B making limited progress against determined resistance. Soviet Army efforts to relieve the besieged city, which is under severe air and artillery bombardment, prove futile. The drives of German Heresgrupe A are virtually halted by Soviet resistance and the Soviet Army contains attacks toward the Grozny oil fields. In the northwest sector of this front, fierce battles occur in the Novorossisk- Tuapse area along the Black Sea coast. The German offensive is steadily losing momentum because of fuel shortage, heavy losses in manpower, difficult terrain, and firm opposition.
Heavy actions against Russian aircraft in the morning found several pilots of JG 3 increasing their scores. Uffz. Gruber of 2./JG 3 claimed three Soviet planes while Lt. Friedrich Lorentzen of 1./JG 3 and Lt. Kurt Roisch from the Stab I./JG 3 each claimed two Russians downed before 0700 hours. By 1000 hours in the morning planes from JG 54 joined the fight and several Russian warplanes fell to German guns including a pair for Uffz. Kurt Stöber of 7./JG 54.
Major Gordon Gollob, Kommodore of JG 77, was transferred to the Stab of Jagdfliegerführer 3 on the Channel front. Hptm. Joachim Müncheberg received command of JG 77, soon to be battling in Sicily and Tunisia. Hptm. Dietrich Hrabak of II./JG 54 was promoted to major and took over command of JG 52 in the southern region.
The German government formally annexes northern Slovenia into the German Reich and declares all of the inhabitants of the region as German citizens.
GERMANY: During the night of 1/2 October, RAF Bomber Command initiates three small raids in difficult weather conditions and without Pathfinders:
(1) 62 of 78 Lancasters dispatched to bomb Wismar hit the target with the loss of two aircraft:
(2) 23 of 27 Halifaxes bomb Flensburg with the loss of 12 aircraft; and
(3) 20 of 25 Stirlings bomb Lubeck with the loss of three aircraft.
MEDITERRANEAN: US Army, Middle East Air Force B-24 Liberators bomb shipping in Pylos Bay, Greece, claiming two direct hits and several near misses on a large vessel; other B-24s dispatched to bomb a convoy at sea fail to find the target.
NORTH AFRICA: The British Eighth Army forces the Axis from positions in region of El Alamein.
Lt. Erich Schöfböck of 7./JG 27 downed his first enemy aircraft when he shot down a RAF Spitfire.
NORTH AMERICA: A Douglas (Model DC-2-243) C-39, msn 2081, USAAF s/n 38-524, crashes near Coamo, Puerto Rico at 0930 hours local killing all 22 aboard. The aircraft made a wide descending turn with engines running roughly and crashed into a hill.
Fuel oil is now rationed in most areas of the United States.
The first American turbojet aircraft, the Bell Model 27 XP-59A-BE Airacomet, msn 27-1, USAAF s/n 42-108784, makes its first flight at Muroc Army Air Base, Muroc, California. The flight was made with the landing gear in the down position and at 25 feet (7,62 meters) off the ground. Three more flights were made today in this aircraft.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt ends two-week trip to war plants across U.S.
WESTERN FRONT: Hptm. Helmut Lent, Gruppenkommandeur of II./NJG 2, was appointed Gruppenkommandeur of IV./NJG 1. The night-fighters of 4./NJG 2 were redesignated as 10./NJG 1. 3./NJG 1 was redesignated 1./NJG 5.
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