US NAVY
PACIFIC—Japanese forces land on Bali, N.E.I.
Battle of
Badoeng Strait begins as Allied naval force (Rear Admiral Karel W.F.M.
Doorman, RNN) of three cruisers and accompanying destroyers attacks retiring
Japanese Bali occupation force (Rear Admiral Kubo Kyuji) in Badoeng Strait.
Destroyer Stewart (DD-224) is damaged by gunfire of destroyers Oshio and
Asashio, 07°18'S, 112°46'E. Dutch destroyer Piet Hien is sunk; 30
of her survivors find motor whaleboat jettisoned by destroyer John D. Ford (DD-228)
and proceed unaided to Java. Dutch light cruisers Java and Tromp are
damaged by Japanese gunfire. Japanese destroyers Ushio and Michisio are
damaged by Allied gunfire.
Japanese
carrier striking force (Vice Admiral Nagumo Chuichi) attacks Darwin, Australia;
189 planes from carriers Akagi, Kaga, Hiryu and Soryu bomb
shipping, airfields, and shore installations; carrier bombers sink destroyer Peary(DD
226), 12°30'S, 130°50'E, U.S. Army Transport Miegs and U.S. freighter Mauna
Loa (on board the latter all hands--37 man crew and seven
passengers--survive); and damage seaplane tender (destroyer) William B.
Preston(AVD-7). U.S. freighter Portmar is damaged and beached (one
of her 34 man crew is killed; two of the 300 embarked soldiers perish as well;
12 men are injured); freighter Admiral Halstead (carrying drummed
gasoline) is damaged as well (she suffers no casualties). In related actions,
U.S. freighter Florence D, under charter to the Army and carrying a
cargo of ammunition, rescues eight man PBY (VP 22) crew (Lieutenant Thomas H.
Moorer) off north coast of Australia, near Darwin, and later comes under attack
by Japanese carrier aircraft that bomb and sink the ship (one man of Moorer's
crew and three of the 37 man ship's complement are killed in action);
Australian minesweeper HMAS Warrnambol and mission boat St. Francis rescue
the survivors. Japanese carrier planes also bomb and sink Philippine motorship Don
Isidro (chartered by the U.S. Army to run supplies to Corregidor) off
northwest coast of Bathurst Island, 11°00'S, 130°00'E; 11 of the 67 man crew
and one of the 16 embarked soldiers are killed. HMAS Warrnambol rescues
the surviving crew and passengers. Japanese naval land attack planes (Kanoya
and 1st Kokutais) bomb airfield at Darwin.
Submarine S-37
(SS-142) is damaged by grounding off the northeast corner of Lembogan
Island, Lombok Strait, N.E.I., but continues on patrol.
Aviation
Chief Machinist's Mate Harold F. Dixon (Naval Aviation Pilot) and his two man
crew (VT 6), whose plane ditched due to fuel exhaustion on 16 January, reach
Danger Islands, 10°48'S, 165°49'E, having spent 34 days at sea in their rubber
boat. They have subsisted on occasional fish speared with a pocket knife, two
birds, and rain water. While the straight-line distance traveled measures 450
miles, the estimated track is approximately 1,200 miles. Dixon is awarded the
Navy Cross for heroism, leadership, and resourcefulness.
ATLANTIC—Destroyer Dallas (DD-199) rescues 46
survivors from Brazilian tanker Olinda, sunk the day before by German
submarine U-432.
Unarmed
U.S. tanker Pan Massachusetts is torpedoed and sunk by German submarine U-128
about 20 miles off Cape Canaveral, Florida, 28°27'N, 80°08'W; Coast Guard lighthouse tender Forward (WAGL-160) and
British tanker Elizabeth Massey rescue 18 survivors from the 38 man
crew.
U.S.
freighter Lake Osweya is torpedoed and sunk by German submarine U-96 in
the North Atlantic, 43°14'N,54°45'W. Although U-96 sees three lifeboats
pull away from the ship, no survivors from the 30 man merchant
complement
or the seven man Armed Guard are ever found.
CARIBBEAN—Transport William P. Biddle (AP-15)
arrives at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and disembarks the 9th Defense Battalion.
US ARMY AIR FORCE
FIFTH AF—Operating out of Malang, Madioen, and Jogjakarta, A‑24’s,
with P‑40 escort, and B‑17’s attack vessel landing troops on Bali. The attacks,
carried out during the afternoon of 19 Feb and throughout the morning of 20
Feb, cause considerable damage to vessels but fail to halt the landings. P‑40’s
shoot down or turn back several bombers weeping W over Java. Japanese airplane
attack Darwin, bombing vessels loaded with troops destined for defense of
Koepang on Timor Island. 10 P‑40’s sent to Darwin to escort the convoy are
almost entirely wiped out by the attack.
SEVENTH AF—VII AF Bomber Command is activated.
US ARMY
BADOENG STRAIT—Combined
Allied naval force undeRear Admiral Doorman, Royal Netherlands Navy, attacks
enemy vessel off Bali, night 19–20. Although considerable damage is believed to
have been done to enemy, Dutch DD Piet Hein is sunk and other Allied
vessels are damaged.
AUSTRALIA—Darwin undergoes destructive attack by Japanese
planes from carriers in Banda Sea and ground base at Kendari. Most of the
shipping in the harbor, including USS Peary (DD), is destroyed. Virtually
all the aircraft crowded on the airfield are demolished. This is the greatest
single Japanese air effort since attack on Pearl Harbor.
BURMA—Indian 17th Division continues to defend Bilin River line
throughout day but is ordered to fall back after dark. Mandalay receives its
first enemy air attack.
US MARINE CORPS
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