Author: Norm Haskett

  • NEW VATICAN HEAD IS PIUS XII

    Rome, Italy · March 2, 1939 On this date in 1939 in Vatican City, Roman Catholic Cardi­nal Eugenio Pacelli was elected pope on his sixty-third birth­day. His coro­nation took place ten days later. Pacelli took the name Pius XII. Pius’ actions during the Holo­caust are contro­ver­sial. Critics have accused him of every­thing from anti-Semi­tism to col­luding…

  • CRISIS DECREE SUSPENDS KEY CIVIL RIGHTS

    Berlin, Germany · February 28, 1933 On this date in 1933, with the Reichstag (German parliament building) still smol­dering following the fire set by 24-year-old Dutch Com­munist Marinus van der Lubbe the day before, Ger­man Chan­cellor Adolf Hitler per­suaded 87-year-old Pre­si­dent Paul von Hinden­burg to sign the Reichs­tag Fire Edict. The emer­gency decree sus­pended key…

  • REWARDS LIKELY FROM RADAR STATION RAID

    London, England · February 27, 1942 Under the cover of darkness on this date in 1942, 119 British para­troopers kicked off Opera­tion Biting when they para­chuted into Nazi-occu­pied Nor­mandy close to a German radar sta­tion in the parish (commune) of La Poterie-Cap-d’An­tifer, 12 miles north of the large French har­bor of Le Havre. A num­ber of what…

  • HITLER BECOMES GERMAN CITIZEN

    Munich, Germany · February 26, 1932 On this date in 1932 in Germany, Austrian-born Adolf Hitler was granted German citi­zen­ship. A decade earlier the state­less Austrian (Hitler had formally renounced his Austrian citizen­ship in April 1925) was the unlikely leader of a fringe Populist-nationalist move­ment, the National Socialist German Workers’ Party. In Novem­ber 1923 he…

  • FIRST FLIGHT OF NAZI MONSTER TRANSPORTER

    Berlin, Germany · February 25, 1941 The first flight of the German prototype Me 321 Gigant (“Giant”) took place on this date in 1941. The previous October Ger­man air­craft maker Messer­schmitt had been given just 14 days to sub­mit a pro­posal for a large-capa­city troop- and cargo-carrying glider. The proto­type glider’s maiden flight en­couraged Messer­schmitt to…

  • JAPANESE CAPITAL FIREBOMBED

    Tokyo, Japan · February 24, 1945 The first appearance over Japan in June 1944 of the massive 4‑engine B‑29 bomber—with its ser­vice ceiling of 33,000 ft/­9,144 m, an oper­a­tional range of over 3,200 nau­tical miles/­5,926 km, and a max­i­mum take­off weight of 133,500 lb/­60,555 kg—meant that the enemy’s Home Islands were squarely in the cross­hairs of the war’s dead­liest delivery sys­tem….

  • JAPANESE SUB SHELLS U.S. WEST COAST

    Santa Barbara, California · February 23, 1942 Japanese submarines initiated the first shore bom­bard­ments of the war with an attack on the U.S. Navy base at John­ston Island in the Paci­fic in mid-Decem­ber 1941, just days after Japa­nese carrier-based planes had de­stroyed, in their sur­prise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, one‑half of the United States’…

  • WHITE ROSE SIBLINGS PUT TO DEATH

    Munich, Germany · February 22, 1943 On this date in 1943 siblings Sophie (age 21) and Hans Scholl (24) and their friend Christoph Probst (24), mem­bers of the under­ground White Rose (Weisse Rose) resis­tance circle, were charged with sedition for writing, printing, and dis­tri­bu­ting anti-Nazi leaflets and “tried” by “Hitler’s Hanging Judge,” the noto­rious Nazi…

  • U.S. POUNDS NUREMBERG IN FOLLOW-UP RAID

    SHAEF HQ, Reims, France · February 21, 1945 On this date in 1945 U.S. fighter-bombers attacked the Berghof, Adolf Hitler’s Al­pine retreat on the Ober­salz­berg near Berchtes­gaden on the Bava­rian-Aus­trian bor­der. The Berg­hof served as an out­post of Hitler’s Ber­lin chan­cel­lery, making it an ob­vious tar­get. Fur­ther north, in a less sym­bolic move, more than…