[soc.history] 50 Years Ago: Monday, 8 April, 1940

military@att.att.com (Bill Thacker) (04/07/90)

From: military@att.att.com (Bill Thacker)
Monday, 8 April, 1940

British destroyers engaged in Operation Wilfred mine the area south of
Narvik.  During the operation, HMS Glowworm becomes separated from the
main force and encounters a German task force.  After a gun-and-torpedo
duel with the cruiser Admiral Hipper, Glowworm rams the heavier German
ship and sinks.  The damage is extensive but not crippling, and Hipper
proceeds on to her destination, Trondheim.  (Lt. Commander Roope of the
Glowworm will be awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross after the war, when
full details of the action become known.)

Norway lodges official protests against the British minings.

Rumania detains a number of British barges on the Danube River.  The
barges are loaded with explosives, which German agencies claim are intended
to sabotage that river's narrow channel through the Carpathians (the Iron
Gate).  Britain claims the explosives are meant for scuttling Allied river
craft in case of a German invasion of Rumania.

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"Every day that the United States delays in joining the Allies will only
prolong the war and increase the effort and the sacrifice that the United
States may yet be called upon to make to save herself from the fate that now
threatens all democracies of the world." - Attorney General Conant 
of Canada