June 4 1940 The Dunkirk evacuation was completed. British aircraft losses during the operation totaled 180. Nine British and six French ships were sunk or severly damaged. When the last boat had left, the British had left behind 11,000 machine guns, 1,200 artillary peices, 1,50 antiaircraft and antitank rifles, and 75,000 vehicles. Churchill, in Britians bleakest hour told the house of commons; “We shal not flag or fail. We shalfight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing ground, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender.”
1941 A pro-Allied government was restored in Iraq. The former kaiser, Wilhelm II, died at Doorn in Nazi-occupied Holland, where he had lived in exile since Germany’s loss in World War I. (The kaiser always despised Hitler as an uncouth politician, but he finally congratulated Hitler in a telegram after the fall of France. One of the kaiser’s sons, known as “Auwi”, was an Ss general during world war II, as a dedicated Nazi.
1942 Hitler visited Field Marshal Mannerheim in Finland. Heydrich died of wounds inflicted by the Czech partisan assassination team near Prague. A counterattack was launched by the British in Libya.
4-6 the battle of midway……you’ll read about it tomorrow or the next day.
1943 3rd Japan seized all shipping on the upper Yangtze in Hupei Province. Waters off Halifax, Nova Scotia, were minned by a German submarine. The field was discovered immediately, but only after the 2,000 ton Panamanian cargo dhip Halma was sunk.
1944 The U.S. Fifth Army entered Rome.While the Germans fought some rear-guard actions, the city was spared the devastation of combat. By nightfall, Allied units were converginging on Rome from all sectyors. Germans withdrawing northward from Rome were hit steadily by Allied aircraft. Rome’s population greeted the Allies enthusiastically after a lengthy period in which the Germans defended southern Italy with incredible determination to delay the inevitable capture of the first Axis capital to fall. Hitler ordered the Italian capital evacuated, according to Radio Berlin, to avoid putting the city " under the peril of destruction." With eth exception of the rail yards bombed by the Allies, Rome escapted the war reletively unscathed. Because of bad weather, Eisenhower ordered a 24 hour postponement of D-Day until June 6th An American antisubmarine force captured a German submarine (U-505) 150 miles off the coast of Rio de Oro (Spanish Sahara), Africa. It was the first enemy ship captured by a U.S. naval boarding party since 1814. The submarine surfaced when attacked, but the crew abadoned it when it started to sink. American seamenboarded and salvaged it, and the submarine was towed to the U.S.
1945 U.S. Marines landed on the Oroku Peninsula on Okinawa. About half the Naha airfield was cleared.