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| WWII General Open WW2 discussion |

March 17th, 2008, 01:05 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
In 1941 5,116 tons of aluminum per month ( 16% of all allocations ) went to the ammunition production for three services ( for fuses, incendiaries,tracers etc ) Milch noted to Göring that this equalled the aluminum necessary to produce 1,000 Do 217´s or 4,000 Bf 109´s.
From Luftwaffe 1933-1945 By Williamson Murray
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March 17th, 2008, 01:50 PM
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
That is interesting for sure....
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March 26th, 2008, 03:09 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
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March 26th, 2008, 03:31 PM
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Ace
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Very interesting, off-hand I could identify immediatley only 2-3 names, the others are unknown to me. It would be interesting to be able to see the citations. Thank you, Kai.
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March 27th, 2008, 12:37 PM
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Excellent link...
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April 2nd, 2008, 07:21 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Richard Perlia, Luftwaffe test pilot
Perlia, Richard — Hubschraubermuseum Bueckeburg
How old is he? 103 years?
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April 4th, 2008, 12:06 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Kenneth D. Williams - Murder Inc. - WWII POW
The Saga of Murder, Inc.
A German Propaganda Victory
by Kenneth Daniel Williams - 351st Bomb Group
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April 5th, 2008, 09:22 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Hitler had assured Dönitz on 24 September 1943 and again on 26 February 1944 that he would support any measures to accelerate production of the new U-boats, in April 1944 he suddenly granted fighter production top priority.This confusion in armaments production also contributed to delays.
Hitler, Dönitz and the Baltic Sea by Howard Grier
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April 6th, 2008, 10:57 AM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Aircraft can also be used for minesweeping. For instance, during World War II, fifteen British Vickers Wellington bombers were modified to carry a large magnetic induction loop and an electrical generator. The Directional Wireless Installation, (DWI) a cover story for the true purpose of the magnetic loop) was used successfully on May 10, 1940 to sweep a path for the escape of the Dutch Royal Family to the UK.
Minesweeper (ship - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
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April 9th, 2008, 09:24 AM
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WW2F Veteran
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
I can not find a picture of a real Ju-52 mine sweeper but here is a picture of a model. Must have been exciting when a mine went off at sea !
Google Image Result for http://www.collectorsaircraft.com/Photos/AA36902_JU.52.jpg
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April 13th, 2008, 11:37 AM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Churchill typically smoked between eight and 10 cigars per day, although he did not constantly smoke his cigars but often allowed them to burn out so that he could chew on them instead. In this manner of consumption, the cigars often became mauled and frayed. To address this problem, Churchill devised what he called a "bellybando," which was a strip of brownish paper with a little glue on one end. To prevent the cigar from becoming excessively moist and to keep it from fraying, he would wrap the bellybando around the end.
The bellybandos also made it somewhat easier for Churchill to smoke so many cigars every day, because they limited direct contact with the tobacco and, therewith, Churchill's intake of nicotine. Churchill smoked his cigars down to about the last one or two inches, and, later in life, when he spent much of his time in the country at Chartwell, his staff would save all of the ends of his cigars in order to give them to one of the gardeners at Chartwell, a Mr. Kearnes, who liked to break them up and smoke them in his pipe.
Cigar Aficionado | People Profile | Winston Churchill
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April 18th, 2008, 11:15 AM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
The V Campaign
The BBC engaged in overt propaganda with its extraordinarily successful V-For-Victory campaign. The Belgian Service started it, exhorting listeners to adopt the V-sign as a rallying emblem. Soon the whole of the European Service had joined in, and with them audiences across the Continent. Placards and posters and chalked Vs appeared everywhere. The morse code for V – three dots and a dash – was replicated by the opening bars of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. It soon became the European Service's call sign and interval sign. Across Occupied Europe people hummed and whistled the tune, and in Britain the V made its way onto badges and other items. Prime Minister Churchill made the sign his trademark.
At first the Nazis were enraged by the campaign but, in the end, recognising that they couldn't win, they adopted it as their own, putting a V on the Eiffel Tower, and renaming one of Prague's main thoroughfares Victoria Street.
BBC - The BBC Story - The BBC at War
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April 19th, 2008, 12:20 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
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April 21st, 2008, 12:49 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
AL CAPONE'S CONTRIBUTION TO THE WAR EFFORT
Soon after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Secret Service wanted to acquire an armored car for President Roosevelt. The only one available on such short notice was one that had been owned by Al Capone. Capone was in jail at the time. Source: "Washington Goes to War" by David Brinkley
World War Trivia and Cartoons - Riebel-Roque Publishing Company
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April 22nd, 2008, 06:56 PM
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In the Cooler
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Here's a fun fact some of the specialized SS Waffen Nazis actually had a form of self-heating M.R.E.! It was put to trial before being deemed too expensive and unreliable as in some of the tests the packet would explode scalding the soldier! STill fun tot hink about thoughj!
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April 23rd, 2008, 06:01 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
On 12th jan 1943 ( During the Stalingrad siege ) as Göring celebrated his 50th Birthday he decided to invest 2 million Reichs Marks to Karinhalle´s enlargement.
From a document on Göring´s life by Jörg Müllner ( 2006 )
It´s good to request total war from the people when you yourself do the opposite...
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April 24th, 2008, 12:27 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
"Irving Berlin's World War II musical This Is the Army toured Great Britain just as Prime Minister Winston Churchill was reading war dispatches by the brilliant Oxford don Isaiah Berlin [head of the Special Survey Section of the British Embassy in Washington].
"Churchill asked for a meeting. A communications snafu sent the luncheon invitation to the wrong 'I. Berlin,' and Irving showed up at Number 10. The PM addressed him as Professor and grilled him about the progress of the war.
"Bewildered, the composer answered in monosyllables, until a frustrated Churchill gave up and turned to the guest on his left. Later, he commented: 'Berlin's like most bureaucrats. Wonderful on paper, but disappointing when you meet them face to face.'"
Anecdotage.Com - Thousands of true funny stories about famous people. Anecdotes from Gates to Yeats
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April 24th, 2008, 05:37 PM
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Ace
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kai-Petri
On 12th jan 1943 ( During the Stalingrad siege ) as Göring celebrated his 50th Birthday he decided to invest 2 million Reichs Marks to Karinhalle´s enlargement.
It´s good to request total war from the people when you yourself do the opposite...
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Wrong time to invest in real estate as well. 
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April 26th, 2008, 02:13 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Airwar over Denmark by Søren C. Flensted. Air War over Denmark
Approximately 1025 flyers from Great Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Holland, Norway and Poland and 135 American flyers have rested or now rest in Denmark, the first body being found washed ashore on 17/11-1939.
Most of the Americans were brought out of the country in April / May 1948 and transferred to Belgium and later to the United States.
The first German aircraft to come down in Denmark was on 7/10 1939, and on 8/10 1939 the first German flyers were picked up by a Danish ship.
The first German flyer to be washed ashore in Denmark was on 26/11 1938.
Approximately 9700 German military personnel today rest in Denmark of which approximately 7300 died during the last six month of the war. Only a minority of which were from the German Luftwaffe.
Most of the deceased Luftwaffe personnel died due to training accidents and only very few due to actual air combat.
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May 5th, 2008, 09:58 PM
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Kenraali 
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Re: Lesser known details of WW2 part four
Colin 'Hoppy' Hodgkinson, 1920 - 1996
Famous Hodkinsons and Hodgkinsons
In the summer of 1938 Hodgkinson spent an idyllic holiday riding with the French Cavalry School at Saumur, in the Loire, before being accepted for pilot training as a midshipman in the Fleet Air Arm. After training aboard the aircraft carrier Courageous, he had gone solo and completed 20 hours in a Tiger Moth biplane trainer when he collided with another aircraft. At the time, accompanied by his instructor, Hodgkinson was practicing blind flying on instruments with a hood over his head. The Tiger crashed from 800ft at Gravesend, killing the instructor and so grievously injuring Hodgkinson that his legs were amputated.
Inspired by the example of the legless fighter ace Douglas Bader, became an accomplished fighter pilot in the RAF. Although he called himself "the poor man's Bader" Hodgkinson had no cause to cast himself as an understudy. Such was his courage that he succeeded despite bouts of claustrophobia and an admitted fear of flying and combat. He also had a horror of being forced to ditch in the Channel and stuffed his hollow legs with ping-pong balls, hoping that they would help to keep him afloat. Once, at 30,000 ft, he took violent evasive action before realising that what he had taken to be a clatter of gunfire was the noise of ping-pong balls exploding at that altitude.
In November, during a high altitude weather reconnaissance his oxygen supply failed, and he crashed into a French field. Badly mangled and minus one of his tin legs he was rescued from the blazing Spitfire by two farm workers. He was reunited with them in 1983, when they presented him with a part of his aircraft's propeller.
After 10 months Flt-Lt Hodgkinson was repatriated, being deemed of no further use to his country. Yet such was his irrepressible spirit, that after being mended again by McIndoe, he resumed flying, ending the war with a ferry unit at Filton, Bristol.
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