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March 1941

Month of 1941 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The following events occurred in March 1941:

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March 1, 1941 (Saturday)

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March 2, 1941 (Sunday)

March 3, 1941 (Monday)

  • Turkey canceled its non-aggression pact with Bulgaria after only two weeks.[1]
  • An earthquake in the Greek city of Larissa left 10,000 homeless.[5]
  • U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an order freezing all Bulgarian assets in the United States.[6]
  • A famous image of a weeping Frenchman (Jérôme Barzotti (fr)) was published in this week's issue of Life magazine. The photograph is a still from film footage shot in Marseille during a procession of French regimental flags on their way to Africa to preserve them from surrender.[7][8]
  • German submarine U-125 was commissioned.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co.

March 4, 1941 (Tuesday)

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March 5, 1941 (Wednesday)

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March 6, 1941 (Thursday)

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March 7, 1941 (Friday)

  • Operation Lustre: The first British soldiers from North Africa arrived in Greece.[13]
  • German submarine U-47 went missing west of Ireland. The sub's fate remains unknown.
  • Died: Günther Prien, 33, German U-boat ace (went missing aboard U-47)

March 8, 1941 (Saturday)

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March 9, 1941 (Sunday)

March 10, 1941 (Monday)

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March 11, 1941 (Tuesday)

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March 12, 1941 (Wednesday)

March 13, 1941 (Thursday)

March 14, 1941 (Friday)

March 15, 1941 (Saturday)

March 16, 1941 (Sunday)

March 17, 1941 (Monday)

March 18, 1941 (Tuesday)

March 19, 1941 (Wednesday)

March 20, 1941 (Thursday)

March 21, 1941 (Friday)

March 22, 1941 (Saturday)

  • British troops overran the Italians in Babille Pass.[1]
  • Vichy French President Philippe Pétain signed a bill to construct a trans-Saharan railway, which was to be built by prisoners of war and Jews.[34]
  • German submarines U-126 and U-202 were commissioned.

March 23, 1941 (Sunday)

  • The German submarine U-551 was depth charged and sunk in the North Atlantic by the British anti-submarine trawler HMT Visenda.
  • Born: Jim Trelease, educator and author, in Orange, New Jersey (d. 2022)
  • Died: Tadeusz Tański, 49, Polish automobile designer (murdered at Auschwitz concentration camp)

March 24, 1941 (Monday)

March 25, 1941 (Tuesday)

March 26, 1941 (Wednesday)

March 27, 1941 (Thursday)

  • The Yugoslav coup d'état occurred. Dušan Simović and other Serb nationalist officers in the Royal Yugoslav Air Force overthrew Yugoslavia's pro-Axis government and intended to back out of the Tripartite Pact. When Hitler learned of the coup he issued Directive No. 25 ordering an invasion of Yugoslavia.[16]
  • The Battle of Cape Matapan began off the southwest coast of Greece.
  • Ion Antonescu signed an anti-Jewish law providing for the segregation of Romania's Jews and expropriation of their urban property.[38]
  • Aboard the presidential yacht USS Potomac, President Roosevelt signed the $7 billion wartime appropriation bill.[39]
  • German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop met his Japanese counterpart Yōsuke Matsuoka in Berlin.[40]
  • Japanese spy Takeo Yoshikawa arrived in Pearl Harbor. Yoshikawa noticed that battleships were berthed in pairs and that the in-shore ship was protected from torpedo attacks by the outboard one.[41]
  • German submarine U-563 was commissioned.

March 28, 1941 (Friday)

March 29, 1941 (Saturday)

March 30, 1941 (Sunday)

  • Hitler held a conference with his generals in which he said that the upcoming war with Russia would be a race war in which communist commissars and Jews would be exterminated by SS Einsatzgruppen following behind the advancing armies. Hitler expected the Soviet Union to be defeated in a matter of weeks and declared, "We have only to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down."[44]
  • The British liner Umona was torpedoed and sunk off Freetown, Sierra Leone by the German submarine U-124.
  • Born: Wasim Sajjad, President of Pakistan, in Jalandhar, Punjab, British India; Graeme Edge, English musician (The Moody Blues), in Rocester, Staffordshire (d. 2021)

March 31, 1941 (Monday)

References

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