WW2 Events

  • German Anschluss with Austria

    Hitler unifies his plans to Germany, he annexes Austria, then demands the liberation of German people in the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia. Neville Chamberlain flew to Germany to attempt a settlement before war broke out.
  • Treaty of Munich

    Hitler, Chamberlain, Daladier of France and Mussolini of Italy, agreed that Hitler should have the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia. Hitler assured those at the meeting that this was the extent of his ambitions for expansion. Chamberlain retured to England with a piece of paper signed by Hitler, proclaiming "peace in our time"
  • Britain rearms and reassures Poland

    Britain had begun re-arming and a highly secret radar early warning system was installed along the east coast. Conscription was introduced and assurances were given to Poland, who was being threatened by the Fuhrer
  • Russia and Germany sign Pact?

    Hitler and Stalin signed a non-aggression pact which included secret clauses for the division of Poland
  • Hitler invades Czechoslovakia

    Despite the assurances given to Hitler in the Treaty of Munich (Sept 1938), he marched into Czechoslovakia and occupied the country
  • Hitler invades Poland

    Adolf Hitler invades Poland
  • Britain and France declare war on

    Britain and France declared war on Germany. Chamberlain broadcast the announcement that the country was at war.
  • Phoney War

    The months following Britain's declaration of war are referred as the "phoney war" because Britain saw no military action
  • Hitker invades Denmark and Norway

    Hitler invades Denmark and Norway to safeguard supply routes of Swedish ore and also to establish a Norwegian base from which to break naval blockade on Germany.
  • British rout Italians in N. Africa

    Italian forces in North Africa were routed by the British led by General Wavell
  • Blitzkreig

    Hitler launched his blitzkrieg (lightning war) against Holland and Belgium. Rotterdam was bombed almost to extinction. Both countries were occupied.
  • Chamberlain resigns

    Chamberlain resigns. Chamberlain gave Churchill his unreserved support. Ernest Bevin was made minister of Labor and recruited workers for the factories and stepped up coal production. Lord Beaverbrook, minister of Aircraft Production of fighter aircraft.
  • Dunkrik (Operation Dynamo)

    British Commander-in-chief, General Gort, had been forced to retreat to the coast at Dunkirk. The troops waited, under merciless fire, to be taken off the beaches. A call went out to all owners of sea-worthy vessels to travel to Dunkirk to take the troops off the beaches. More than 338,000 men were rescued, among them some 140,000 French who would form the nucleus of the Free French army under little known general, Charles de Gaulle
  • Italy enter war on side of Axis power

    Enters war on the side of the Axis Powers, Italy's motive for entering the war was the hope of rich pickings from the spoils of war.
  • Frances signs armistuce with Germany

    The French, Marshall Petain, signed an armistice with Germany taking France, which had been divested, out of the war and into German occupation.
  • France signs armistice with Germany

    The French, Marshall Petain, signed an armistice with Germany taking France, which had been devastated, out of the war and into German occupation.?
  • Tripartite Pact

    This pact of mutual alliance was signed by Germany, Italy and Japan.
  • Battle of Britain

    1. During July Hitler sent his Luftwaffe bombers to attack British ports. His aim was also to assess the speed and quality of response by the RAF.?
    2. During August the attacks on shipping continued but bombing raids were concentrated on RAF airfields.
    3. The Blitz – From September 7th the city of London was heavily bombed. Hitler hoped to destroy the morale of the British people.
    4. Night Bombing – With the failure of daylight bombing raids Hitler began a series of nightly bombing
  • Italy and Germany attack Yugoslavia

    German and Italian troops attacked Yugoslavia, Greece and the island of Crete. German field Marshall Erwin Rommel led the axis powers back to North Africa.
  • Hitler attacks Russia – Operation Barbarossa

    Hitler sent 3 million soldiers and 3,500 tanks into Russia. The Russians were taken by surprise as they had signed a treaty with Germany in 1939. Stalin immediately signed a mutual assistance treaty with Britain and launched an Eastern front battle that would claim 20 million casualties. The USA, which had been supplying arms to Britain under a ‘Lend-Lease’ agreement, offered similar aid to USSR.
  • Pearl Harbor

    The Japanese, who were already waging war against the Chinese, attacked the US pacific fleet at Pearl Harbour, Hawaii, as a preliminary to taking British, French and Dutch colonies in South East Asia.
  • Britain and US declare war on Japan

    Britain and the United States declared war on Japan.
  • Japanese take Singapore

    The Japanese captured Singapore from the British, taking some 60,000 prisoners
  • Battle of Midway

    The USA defeated the Japanese navy at the Battle of Midway. Following this victory, the US navy was able to push the Japanese back.
  • Allies in N. Africa

    General Alexander was given a hand-written directive from Churchill ordering that his main directive was to be the destruction of the German-Italian army commanded by Field-Marshall Rommell together with all its supplies and establishments in Egypt and Libya. As soon as sufficient material had been built up, Alexander handed the campaign over to General Montgomery.
  • Battle of Stalingrad

    The Russians won their first victory against Germany at the Battle of Stalingrad.
  • Allies push into N. Africa

    British and American forces under the command of General Dwight Eisenhower landed in the NW of Africa and assumed control of French Morocco and Algeria. They gradually closed in on the Germans.
  • Allies meet at Tehran

    Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill met to co-ordinate plans for a simultaneous squeeze on Germany. They also discussed post war settlements. Churchill mistrusted Stalin; Roosevelt anxious to show that the West would not stand against Russia, went along with Stalin’s wishes for a second front in France and no diversions further east. Churchill was over-ruled and the fate of post-war Eastern Europe was thus decided.
  • Battle of El Alamein

    Montgomery attacked the German-Italian army in North Africa with a massive bombardment followed by an armoured attack. He then proceeded to chase the routed enemy some 1500 miles across the desert.
  • Allies invade Sicily

    British and US forces invaded Sicily
  • Allies take Sicily

    The allied troops had won the island of Sicily.
  • Axis surrender N Africa

    The British and American forces managed to defeat the Axis forces in North Africa
  • Italy surrenders

    Mussolini had been thrown out of office and the new government of Italy surrendered to the British and the USA. They then agreed to join the allies. The Germans took control of the Italian army, freed Mussolini from imprisonment and set him up as head of a puppet government in Northern Italy. This blocked any further allied advance through Italy.
  • Leningrad relieved

    The siege of Leningrad was lifted by the Soviet army.
  • Rome liberated

    Although Italy had surrendered in September, it was only now that the allies were able to liberate Rome from the Germans.
  • Japanese evicted from Burma

    British forces under General Slim, with help from guerrilla-fighting Chindits led by Orde Wingate, evicted the Japanese from Burma.
  • Battle of the Bulge

    Germany launched its final defensive through the Ardennes region of Belgium. However, they were beaten back by the allies.
  • D-Day

    The allies launched an attack on Germany’s forces in Normandy, Western France. Thousands of transports carried an invasion army under the supreme command of general Eisenhower to the Normandy beaches. The Germans who had been fed false information about a landing near Calais, rushed troops to the area but were unable to prevent the allies from forming a solid bridgehead. For the allies it was essential to first capture a port.
  • V2 Flying Bombs

    The first V2 flying bombs killed three people in London
  • Allies cross the Rhine

    The Allies crossed the Rhine while Soviet forces were approaching Berlin from the East.
  • Death of Roosevelt

    President Roosevelt died. He was succeeded by President Truman.
  • Russians reach Berlin

    The Russians reached Berlin shortly before the US forces.
  • Mussolini captured and executed

    Italian partisans captured Mussolini and executed him.
  • Hitler commits suicide

    The German leader, Adolf Hitler committed suicide in his bombproof shelter together with his mistress, Eva Braun, who he had, at the last minute, made his wife.
  • German forces surrender

    German forces in Italy surrendered to the Allies.
  • German forces surrender

  • Donitz offers unconditional surrender

    Hitler’s successor, Admiral Donitz, offerred an unconditional surrender to the allies.
  • V.E. day

    Victory in Europe was celebrated.
  • Churchill loses election

    Winston Churchill lost the election to Clement Atlee’s Labour Party. The Labour party promised sweeping social reforms including nationalisation of the coal and railway industries and the creation of a welfare state. The Labour party gained 393 seats to the Conservatives 213.
  • Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima

    The Japanese generals refused to surrender. The US dropped an atomic bomb on the island of Hiroshima.
  • Russia declares war on Japan

    Russia declared war on Japan and invaded Japanese-ruled Manchuria.
  • Atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki

    The US dropped an atomic bomb on the island of Nagasaki as the Japanese had not surrendered following Hiroshima.
  • Japanese surrender

    The Japanese unconditionally surrendered to the allies ending the second world war.
  • MacArthur accepts Japan’s surrender

    US General, Douglas MacArthur, accepted Japan’s surrender thus formally ending the second world war.
  • Paris liberated

    The French capital of Paris was liberated from the Germans.