The following events occurred in August 1944:
August 2, 1944 (Wednesday)
- The Germans launched 316 V-1 flying bombs at London, the highest single-day total yet. Over 100 reached the capital, hitting Tower Bridge and doing great damage to the armament factories on the outskirts.
- The primary stage of the LublinâÂÂBrest Offensive concluded with Soviet objectives met.
- Turkey broke off diplomatic relations with Nazi Germany.
- The American destroyer escort Fiske was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by German submarine U-804.
- SS authorities in Auschwitz-Birkenau murdered the last residents (just under 3,000) of the so-called Gypsy family camp.
- Born: Jim Capaldi, drummer, singer, songwriter and co-founder of the rock band Traffic, in Evesham, England (d. 2005)
- Died: Kakuji Kakuta, 53, Japanese admiral (probable suicide on Tinian)
August 3, 1944 (Thursday)
- German forces retreated from Florence after blowing up the city's medieval bridges overnight to effectively cut the city in two. Only the Ponte Vecchio was spared.
- Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim became 6th President of Finland after Risto Ryti resigned.
- German submarine U-671 was sunk by British warships in the English Channel.
- The Japanese destroyer Matsu was shelled and sunk northwest of Chichijima by American warships.
- In Amsterdam, the family of Anne Frank was discovered, seized and deported by the Nazis.
- Born:
- Jonas Falk, actor, in ÃÂrgryte, Sweden (d. 2010)
- Richard Belzer, stand-up comedian and actor, in Bridgeport, Connecticut (d. 2023)
- William Frankfather, actor, in Kermit, Texas (d. 1998)
- Orhan Gencebay, musician, in Samsun, Turkey
- Died: Krzysztof Kamil BaczyÃ
Âski, 23, Polish poet and Home Army soldier (killed in action)
August 5, 1944 (Saturday)
- The Cowra breakout occurred when over 1,100 Japanese prisoners of war attempted to escape from a POW camp near Cowra in New South Wales, Australia. Four Australian soldiers and 231 Japanese were killed, but hundreds managed to escape although they would all be recaptured within ten days.
- The four-day Wola massacre began when German troops and collaborationist forces started systematically killing between 40,000 and 50,000 people in the Wola district of Warsaw during the Uprising.
- More than 300 Jewish refugees perished when the Turkish motor schooner Mefküre was sunk in the Black Sea by shellfire from the Soviet submarine Shch-215.
- "Swinging on a Star" by Bing Crosby went to #1 on the Billboard singles charts.
August 9, 1944 (Wednesday)
- The Osovets Offensive officially ended with the completion of Soviet objectives.
- Canadian and Polish troops began Operation Tractable, the final offensive of the Battle of Normandy.
- The Fort Lawton Riot began at Fort Lawton in Seattle. An Italian prisoner of war was killed during a violent conflict between American soldiers and Italian POWs.
- German submarine U-618 was sunk in the Bay of Biscay by British ships and aircraft.
- In the Pacific, the Battle of Biak ended in Allied victory.
- During the Battle of the Falaise Pocket, the First Canadian Army captured the ruined town of Falaise itself.
- VIII Corps of the Third United States Army took Saint-Malo when the German-held fortress there surrendered after enduring two weeks of bombing and shelling.
- Two Soviet infantry battalions under Georgy Gubkin and Pavel Yurgin reached part of the River Scheshule. Some of them were sent to raise the Red Flag on the other bank, with Sergeant Alexander Belov doing the actual raising; the Soviets had now crossed into East Prussia and thus Germany proper.
- The Battle for Paris began. Resistance fighters in the capital became confident enough to begin making sniper attacks on nervous German troops.
- Operation Bagration ended in a Soviet victory.
- The battle for Hill 262 began during the final stages of the Normandy Campaign.
- The American "wolfpack" submarine attack on Japanese convoy Hi-71 in the South China Sea continued for a second day. Troopship Teia Maru (formerly the French ocean liner Aramis) was torpedoed and sunk by Rasher and Redfish, the landing craft depot ship Tamatsu Maru was sunk by Spadefish with the loss of some 4,890 lives, and fleet oiler Hayasui was torpedoed and sunk by Bluefish.
- German submarines U-123 and U-466 were scuttled at Lorient and Toulon, respectively.
- A referendum was held in Australia asking whether the public approved of an alteration to the Constitution granting the federal government additional power to legislate on a wide variety of matters for a period of five years. 54% voted against the proposal.
- Private Nikolay Alekseevich Ignatiev (Russian: "ÃÂóýðÃÂÃÂõò ÃÂøúþûðù ÃÂûõúÃÂõõòøÃÂ") was awarded the medal "For Courage" (ÃÂð þÃÂòðóÃÂ/Za Otvagu) for his actions on the last day of Operation Bagration
- Born: Bodil Malmsten, poet and novelist, in Bjärme, Sweden (d. 2016)
- Died: Günther von Kluge, 61, German field marshal (suicide); Henry Wood, 75, English conductor
- Germany enacted full mobilization. Theaters were closed, holidays were cancelled and military leave was halted.
- Liberation of Paris: Forces of Free France were the first of the Allies to enter Paris, in the evening.
- The First Canadian Army captured Bernay and crossed the Risle River at Nassandres.
- Constantin SÃÂnÃÂtescu became the new prime minister of Romania.
- The American submarine USS Harder was depth charged and sunk in Dasol Bay by Japanese warships.
- German submarine U-354 was depth charged and sunk in the Barents Sea by British warships.
- German submarine U-445 was depth charged and sunk in the Bay of Biscay by the frigate HMS Louis.
- At Buchères in France, men of the 51st SS-Brigade massacred 68 civilians (half of them women) aged from 6 months to above seventy years.
- The Harvard Mark I electro-mechanical computer, developed and built by IBM, was formally presented to Harvard University.
- Born: Christine Chubbuck, news reporter, in Hudson, Ohio (d. 1974); Gregory Jarvis, engineer and astronaut who died in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, in Detroit (d. 1986)
- The Battle of Toulon ended in Allied victory.
- Charles de Gaulle headed a liberation parade in Paris, laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and ceremonially relighting the eternal flame at the Arc de Triomphe, then marching along the Champs-ÃÂlysées to attend a service at Notre Dame to give thanks for the liberation of the city. Sniper fire rang out during the parade, which de Gaulle ignored.
- Japanese destroyer Samidare, having run aground on Velasco Reef off Palau on August 19, was torpedoed and broken in two by the American submarine Batfish.
- Rüsselsheim massacre: Six American airmen were lynched and killed by townspeople of Rüsselsheim am Main.
- Born: Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester, in Hadley Common, England
- Died: Adam von Trott zu Solz, 35, German lawyer, diplomat and central figure in the 20 July plot (hanged by the Nazis)
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