November 1939 Explained
The following events occurred in November 1939:
- U.S. Congress amended the Neutrality Act of 1937, repealing the embargo on arms to belligerents but placing sales on a cash and carry basis to avoid a repeat of the situation after World War I when Britain and France ran into difficulty with making their war debt payments to the United States.[3]
- The German-controlled American freighter City of Flint entered port in Haugesund despite being ordered by its Norwegian escort, the minelayer Olav Tryggvason, not to. The German captain later told interrogators he was just following orders from his government and did not know why he was instructed to dock in Haugesund, but it was probably to get instructions from the vice consul on how and when to proceed to Germany. Norway decided to seize the freighter and return its command to the Americans, and at 23:30 a boarding party stormed the ship and removed the German prize crew.[4] The Germans were interned for violating international law, which forbade a ship from entering a neutral port without sufficient cause.[5]
- The John Ford-directed historical film Drums Along the Mohawk starring Claudette Colbert and Henry Fonda was released.
- The British propaganda film The Lion Has Wings, rushed through production after the outbreak of war, was released to cinemas in the United Kingdom.
- The American Neutrality Law came into force, forbidding American ships and citizens from entering clearly defined war zones.[6]
- The City of Flint sailed to Bergen with U.S. control finally restored.
- German submarine U-44 was commissioned.
- Born: Michael Meacher, politician, in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, England (d. 2015)
- Died: Percy Douglas, 63, British naval officer
183 professors of Jagiellonian University in Kraków were arrested by the Nazis. 168 of them were sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp.[8]
- 13 minutes after Hitler concluded a speech at the Bürgerbräukeller in Munich on the 16th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch, a time bomb exploded near the speaking platform that killed 8 people. Carpenter Johann Georg Elser was arrested with incriminating documents at the Swiss border and brought back to Munich for interrogation. His attempt to assassinate Hitler would have succeeded if the Führer's annual speech had not begun 30 minutes earlier than it did in previous years.[11]
- Born: Elizabeth Dawn, actress, in Leeds, England (d. 2017); Laila Kinnunen, singer, in Vantaa, Finland (d. 2000); Meg Wynn Owen, actress, in Wales (d. 2022)
up to 600 Jews massacred by the German police in Ostrów Mazowiecka in German-occupied Poland.
- Although Britain did not hold an official Armistice Day ceremony at the Whitehall Cenotaph this year, wreaths were laid on behalf of the King and Queen and people still came to leave flowers. There was no official two minutes' silence at 11 a.m. either, but Britons publicly observed it anyway.[16]
- Queen Elizabeth made a broadcast to the women of the British Empire reminding them that in the war "we, no less than men, have real and vital work to do."[17]
- Died: Jan Opletal, 24, Czech student (died of gunshot wound sustained during the October 28 demonstrations in Prague)
- German authorities began the deportation of Jews from Polish territories annexed by Germany to the General Government.[18]
- France said that the Belgian and Dutch offer of mediation required Germany to repair "the injustices which force has imposed on Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland" before peace could be discussed. George VI wrote a reply explaining that the "essential conditions upon which we are determined that an honorable peace must be secured have already been plainly stated", but if the Queen of the Netherlands was "able to communicate to me any proposals from Germany of such a character as to afford real prospect" of achieving Britain's aims he would "give them my most earnest consideration."[19]
- Died: Norman Bethune, 49, Canadian physician and humanitarian
- British soil was bombed by the Germans for the first time during World War II, in the Shetland Islands. No casualties were inflicted.[20]
- The Finnish delegation in Moscow refused to accede to Soviet demands and broke off negotiations.[21]
- The Union of Armed Struggle was created from an earlier Polish resistance movement, the Service for Poland's Victory.
- was sunk by a mine in the Thames Estuary, the first British destroyer lost to enemy action in the war.
- Born: Bob Tutupoly, Indonesian singer (d. 2022)
- Died: Lois Weber, 60, American actress
- The Battle of South Guangxi began.
- The German heavy cruiser was renamed Lützow, both to confuse enemy intelligence and to avoid the potential damage to national pride that would occur if a ship bearing the name of the country were to be sunk in action.[23]
- A funeral held in Prague for Jan Opletal turned into another spontaneous anti-Nazi demonstration.[24]
- Mayor of Long Beach, California Louis F. Edwards was assassinated by a police officer who had lost his bid for president of the local Patrolmen's Benevolent Association to a candidate Edwards supported.[25]
- Born: Yaphet Kotto, actor, in New York City (d. 2021)
- Al Capone was released from federal custody after serving seven-and-a-half years of his eleven-year sentence for tax evasion. Capone was suffering heavily from paresis and upon release he immediately went to a Baltimore hospital for treatment.[26]
- Born: Michael Billington, author and theatre critic, in Leamington Spa, England
- Died: Pierce Butler, 73, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
- The Dutch liner Simon Bolivar set off two mines and sank 20 miles off Harwich, England. 86 lives were lost out of the approximately 400 on board. The British accused the Germans of laying the mines in violation of Article VIII of the 1907 Hague Conventions, which forbade using mines in circumstances likely to endanger commercial shipping.[28] [29] [30] [31]
- The Nazis closed all the technical schools in the former Czechoslovakia.
- Born: Margaret Atwood, novelist, poet and environmental activist, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Amanda Lear, French model, actress and singer, in either Saigon or Hong Kong; Brenda Vaccaro, actress, in Brooklyn, New York
- An official German communique announced that barricades had been erected around the Warsaw Ghetto and that Jewish districts would be placed under strict control.[32]
- Baseball star Joe DiMaggio married actress Dorothy Arnold in North Beach, San Francisco.[33]
- The British government declared a blockade of German exports in reprisal for numerous incidents at sea such as the sinking of the and the Simon Bolivar. "I may remind the House that in the last war, as a measure of justified reprisal for submarine attacks on merchant ships, exports of German origin or ownership were made subject to seizure on the high seas", Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain explained in the House of Commons. "The many violations of international law and the ruthless brutality of German methods have decided us to follow a similar course now, and an Order-in-Council will shortly be issued giving effect to this decision."
- The British destroyer struck a mine outside Harwich and sank with the loss of 30 crew.
- Antanas Merkys became Prime Minister of Lithuania.
- was commissioned.
- Died: Émile Paul Amable Guépratte, 83, French admiral
The Soviet Union conducted a false flag operation by shelling the Russian village of Mainila near the Finnish border and blaming the attack on Finland.
Notes and References
- November 2, 1939 . The Netherlands Declares State of Martial Law . . Ithaca, New York . 1 .
- Book: Lerski, Jerzy Han . Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945 . 1996 . Greenwood Publishing . 171 . 9780313260070 .
- Web site: Chronology 1939 . 2002 . indiana.edu . November 7, 2015 .
- Book: Haarr, Geirr H. . 2013 . The Gathering Storm: The Naval War in Northern Europe September 1939 – April 1940 . Seaforth Publishing . 339–341 . 9781848321403 .
- News: November 5, 1939 . New Troubles Face Flint; May Become Orphan . Chicago Daily Tribune. 4 .
- Book: Rohwer, Jürgen . 2005 . Chronology of the War at Sea, 1939–1945 . London . Chatham Publishing . 7, 9 . 9781591141198 .
- Book: Sobek, David . 2013 . The Causes of War . John Wiley & Sons . 9780745655468 .
- Book: Zimmerman, Joshua D. . 2015 . The Polish Underground and the Jews, 1939–1945 . Cambridge University Press . 48 . 9781107014268 .
- News: November 14, 1939 . Reich Rejects Offer Of Mediation From Belgium and Holland . . 1 .
- Book: Wardzyńska, Maria. 2009. Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion. pl. Warszawa. IPN. 211.
- Web site: One Man Against Tyranny . Dash . Mike . August 18, 2011 . . November 7, 2015 .
- Book: Smalley, Edward . 2015 . The British Expeditionary Force, 1939-40 . Palgrave Macmillan . 9781137494214 .
- Book: Felton, Mark . 2014 . Guarding Hitler: The Secret World of the Fuhrer . Pen & Sword Books . 9781473838383 .
- News: November 11, 1939 . Rules Students Can't Be Forces to Salute Flag . Chicago Daily Tribune. 8 .
- November 11, 1939 . Hitler Attends Funeral of Bomb Victims . . Brooklyn . 1 .
- Book: Charman, Terry . 2009 . Outbreak 1939: The World Goes to War . Virgin Books . 9780753536681 .
- Web site: The Queen Behind The King's Speech . Creeden . Molly . February 4, 2011 . . November 7, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151120001817/http://www.vogue.com/873979/the-queen-behind-the-kings-speech/ . November 20, 2015 . dead .
- Book: Garbarini, Alexandra . 2011 . Jewish Responses to Persecution. II, 1938–1940 . Lanham, Maryland . AltaMira Press . 552–553 . 9780759120396 .
- News: November 13, 1939 . Up to Berlin to Make Peace Bid, Britain Asserts . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1–2 .
- Web site: British Military Aviation in 1939 . Royal Air Force Museum . November 7, 2015 .
- Web site: 1939 . MusicAndHistory . November 7, 2015 . dead . https://archive.today/20140605024431/http://musicandhistory.com/music-and-history-by-the-year/200-1939.html . June 5, 2014 .
- Web site: Friday, November 14, 2014 . . November 7, 2015 .
- Book: Williamson, Gordon . 2003 . German Pocket Battleships 1939-45 . Oxford . Osprey Publishing . 16 . 9781841765013 .
- Web site: Jan Opletal: Dying for democracy during the Occupation . Private Prague Guide . November 7, 2015 .
- News: November 15, 1939 . Long Beach Mayor Slain, Guard Wounded by Cop . . 1 .
- Web site: Al Capone . . November 7, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150706031909/https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/history/famous-cases/al-capone . July 6, 2015 .
- November 17, 1939 . Nazis Slay 9 Students in Czech Riots . . Brooklyn . 1 .
- News: November 19, 1939 . Liner Sunk By Mine; 140 Lost . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- News: November 22, 1939 . Sea Harvest Must Be Reaped . . Canberra . 1 .
- Web site: The Avalon Project – Laws of War: Laying of Automatic Submarine Contact Mines (Hague VIII); October 18, 1907 . . November 7, 2015 .
- Web site: German Mine-Laying (British Retaliation) . November 21, 1939 . . November 7, 2015 .
- News: Schultz . Sigrid . Sigrid Schultz . November 20, 1939 . Build Barricade Around Warsaw Jewish Quarter . Chicago Daily Tribune. 3 .
- Book: Cramer, Richard Ben . 2000 . Joe DiMaggio: The Hero's Life . New York . Touchstone . 144–145 . 9780684865478 .
- Web site: Comics By the Date: March 1906 to December 1939 . Martin . Robert Stanley . May 24, 2015 . The Hooded Utilitarian . November 7, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151120041835/http://www.hoodedutilitarian.com/2015/05/comics-by-the-date-march-1906-to-december-1939/ . November 20, 2015 .
- Web site: 1939 Timeline . World War II Database . November 7, 2015 .
- Collins, Sandra. "Tokyo/Helsinki 1940." Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement. Ed. John E. Findling and Kimberley D. Pelle. Greenwood Publishing, 2004. p. 121. .
- News: November 28, 1939 . Finns to Russia: We'll Move Back Army If You Do . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- Web site: Magna Carta: Muse and Mentor . . November 7, 2015 .
- Web site: Hawkeyes Revisited: Nile Kinnick . December 24, 2012 . Neal Rozendaal . November 7, 2015 .
- Book: Blair, Casey . 2000 . Hitler's U-Boat War: The Hunters, 1939–1942 . Modern Library . 117 . 9780679640325 .
- Book: Paczkowski, Andrzej . 1998 . Spring Will Be Ours: Poland and the Poles from Occupation to Freedom . University Park, Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania State University Press . 43 . 9780271047539 .
- Web site: U-boats to Bring England to Heel . The Daily Chronicles of World War II . November 7, 2015 .
- News: Fulton . William . November 30, 1939 . Kuhn Convicted on All Counts; Faces 30 Years . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- Book: Trotter, William . William R. Trotter . 1991 . A Frozen Hell: The Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1939–1940 . Chapel Hill, North Carolina . Algonquin Books . 272 . 9781565122499 .