The following events occurred in August 1942:
August 1, 1942 (Saturday)
- The Germans cut the railway line linking Stalingrad to Krasnodar.
- 1942âÂÂ1944 musicians' strike: The American Federation of Musicians went on strike against the major U.S. recording companies because of disagreements over royalty payments.
- Andrey Yeryomenko met with Joseph Stalin at the Kremlin and accepted command of one of Stalingrad's southern fronts.
- German submarines U-226 and U-448 were commissioned.
- Born:
- Jerry Garcia, singer, songwriter and guitarist for the Grateful Dead, in San Francisco, California (d. 1995);
- Giancarlo Giannini, actor and dubber, in La Spezia, Italy
- Brianda Domecq, writer and environmentalist, in New York, USA.
- The German 4th Panzer Army captured Kotelnikovo.
- After spending most of the day studying maps of Stalingrad and the surrounding area, Andrey Yeryomenko had a second conference with Stalin. Yeryomenko protested that two Russian fronts in the same area meant that trying to co-ordinate Stalingrad's defence with another commander would be "utterly confusing, if not tragically impossible," and asked to command the Stalingrad Front in the north rather than the Southeastern Front. Stalin firmly said that everything would be left as it was already outlined.
- A man named José Gallardo DÃÂaz was found unconscious and dying on a road near a swimming hole in Commerce, California. He was rushed to the hospital but died shortly after. 17 Mexican-American youths were soon arrested in a case that came to be known as the Sleepy Lagoon murder.
- Born:
- Isabel Allende, writer, in Lima, Peru
August 5, 1942 (Wednesday)
August 6, 1942 (Thursday)
- German forces on the Eastern Front captured Tikhoretsk and Armavir.
- Dzyatlava massacre: During the liquidation of the ZdziÃÂcioÃ
 Ghetto several thousand Jews were murdered at the local Jewish cemetery.
- For aiding an escaped German prisoner of war, Detroit restaurant owner Max Stephan became the first American sentenced to execution for treason since the Whiskey Rebellion in 1794.
- The British submarine HMS Thorn went missing off southern Crete, probably sunk by the Italian torpedo boat Pegaso.
- The Germans lost three submarines in one day. U-210 was rammed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by the Canadian destroyer Assiniboine, U-612 sank off Gotenhafen, Germany after colliding with U-444, and U-578 went missing in the Bay of Biscay. Her fate remains unknown.
- German submarine U-634 was commissioned.
- Born: Evelyn Hamann, actress, in Hamburg, Germany (d. 2007)
- The Guadalcanal Campaign and the Battle of Tulagi and GavutuâÂÂTanambogo began. Allied forces consisting mostly of U.S. Marines made amphibious landings in the southern Solomon Islands in the first major offensive by the Allies against Japan.
- The German 6th Army crossed the Don at Kalach.
- Winston Churchill visited the British troops at El Alamein.
- Alfonso López Pumarejo became the 16th President of Colombia.
- Born:
- Tobin Bell, actor, in Queens, New York City;
- Garrison Keillor, author and radio personality, in Anoka, Minnesota
- Sir Richard Sykes, British microbiologist, chair of the Vaccine Taskforce, in Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England
- Caetano Veloso, Brazilian musician, in Santo Amaro, Bahia
- Died:
- William Gott, 44, British Army officer (plane shot down in North Africa);
- Janusz Korczak, 63 or 64, Polish-Jewish educator, children's author and pediatrician (killed at Treblinka)
August 8, 1942 (Saturday)
- Pierre Laval reached an agreement with the Germans that 150,000 French workers would go to Germany in exchange for 50,000 French prisoners of war.
- The British aircraft carrier HMS Eagle was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-73 during Operation Pedestal.
- Sixty-one people died in riots in New Delhi.
- Al Milnar of the Cleveland Indians and Tommy Bridges of the Detroit Tigers had one of the most epic pitchers' duels in baseball history. With the game locked in a scoreless tie in the top of the ninth inning, Milnar lost a no-hitter with two out when Doc Cramer singled to right field. Both pitchers maintained their shutouts until the fifteenth inning when the game was finally called in a 0âÂÂ0 tie.
- Died: Sabina Spielrein, 56, Russian physician and psychoanalyst (murdered by an SS death squad)
- The Kriegsmarine began Operation Wunderland with the objective of entering the Kara Sea and destroying as many Russian vessels as possible.
- The Russians evacuated Maykop.
- Axis positions in Egypt were bombed by American warplanes for the first time.
- In Bilbao, Spain, a mass was held at the Basilica of Begoña to commemorate members of the Begoña Regiment who died in the Civil War. After the service there was some shouting between the Falangist and Carlist factions, and during the ensuing scuffle a Falangist threw two hand grenades and wounded 30 people.
- 900 Japanese troops landed at Taivu Point on Guadalcanal, while another 500 landed at Kokumbona. These landings were the first run of what the U.S. Marines nicknamed the Tokyo Express.
- In Stalingrad Oblast, Soviet forces withdrew southwest of Kletskaya while the Germans renewed their offensive northeast of Kotelnikovo.
- Hitler issued Directive No. 46, Instructions for Intensified Action Against Banditry in the East.
- Born: Judith Keppel, ã1,000,000 winner on the UK edition of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? in Wolverhampton, Staffordshire, England; Wu Ma, filmmaker, in Tianjin, China (d. 2014)
- The Battle of the Tenaru was fought on Guadalcanal, resulting in Allied victory.
- German infantry companies of LI Army Corps crossed the Don in inflatable boats and quickly established a bridgehead near the village of Luchinsky.
- Chinese forces recaptured Yingtan.
- Brazil declared war on Germany and Italy after the sinking of several Brazilian ships.
- The German 16th Panzer Division began crossing the Don as soon as the bridgehead was ready.
- The American destroyer USS Blue was torpedoed and crippled at Ironbottom Sound during the Battle of Guadalcanal by the Japanese destroyer Kawakaze. She was scuttled the next day after salvage attempts failed.
- Chinese forces captured Yujiang.
- German submarine U-654 was depth charged and sunk in the Caribbean by an American Douglas B-18 Bolo bomber.
- The American destroyer USS Ingraham sank off the coast of Nova Scotia after colliding in heavy fog with the oil tanker Chemung.
- German submarines U-227 and U-449 were commissioned.
- Died: Michel Fokine, 62, Russian choreographer and dancer
- Japanese destroyer Asagiri was sunk en route to Guadalcanal by American SBD Dauntless dive bombers.
- German submarine U-94 was sunk off Haiti by depth charges from an American PBY Catalina flying boat and ramming by the Canadian corvette Oakville.
- A German fighter-bomber flying at 20,000 feet dropped a 500lb bomb into the centre of the English city of Bristol, killing 45 and wounding 56 people.
- 1942 SuÃ
Â-nada Typhoon, a violence 935 to 942 hectopascal level, violence wind and tidal wave hit around SuÃ
Â-nada, Yatsushiro Sea, Ariake Sea, southwestern Honshu and Kyushu Island, Japan. According to Japanese government official document figures, killing 1,158 persons, injures 1,438 persons.
- Born: José Eduardo dos Santos, President of Angola, in Luanda, Angola (d. 2022)
- British destroyer Eridge was permanently disabled off El Daba, Egypt by an Italian torpedo boat.
- The German Tiger I tank made its battlefield debut southeast of Leningrad.
- Japanese submarine Ro-33 was depth charged and sunk near Port Moresby by the Australian destroyer Arunta.
- The Red Cross announced that Japan had refused free passage of ships carrying food, medicine and other necessities for American prisoners of war.
- German submarine U-385 was commissioned.
- Died: Charles Urban, 75, American-born British film producer and distributor
References