September and WWII: Two Dates that Live in Infamy
September’s Pivotal Role in WWII: Nazi Germany Invades Poland, Japan Formally Surrenders

September 1, 1939: Nazi Germany Invades Poland
From Duetsche Welle, “Poland remembers the outbreak of World War II”:
The war started when a German battleship opened fire on a small Polish military depot on the Westerplatte peninsula in what was then the free city of Danzig on the Baltic Sea coast.
The barracks was expected to hold out for a matter of hours but the skill and bravery of the Polish troops saw them resist for a week before they surrendered. One of the Polish soldiers who fought in that first battle of the war was 94-year-old Ignacy Skowron.
“I looked out at the channel with a telescope, first right, then left, and then at the battleship which was moored in the bay. At that moment I saw a flash and the first shell hit the gate,” he recalls.
“Later the battleship sailed into the channel and began firing one shell after another, and I saw large trees being snapped in two.”
The German battleship “Schleswig-Holstein” had launched its attack on the Polish Military Transport Depot. The barracks was defended by just 182 soldiers.
Nobody expected the defenders to resist for long as they came under attack from the sea, air and land, by a force of more than 3,000. Despite overwhelming odds they managed to repel attack after attack.
“The Germans saw that this wasn’t working,” Skowron says. “They had flamethrowers and they thought if they couldn’t break through by shooting they would overcome us with flames.”
“By the sixth day, we were barely managing to survive because we were cold and hungry; we were dirty and hadn’t slept. We were struggling.”
On the seventh day the Polish commander gave the order to surrender. By that stage half of Poland had already fallen under the German invasion.
For Poles the Second World War caused enormous destruction and suffering. Around six million people were killed and its cities were left in ruins. But people here are proud of their resistance record.
“Westerplatte is the most important, the most recognizable symbol of Polish heroism and Polish resistance,” explains Professor Pawel Machcewicz, an historian and adviser to the prime minister.
“This was an isolated post with 200 Polish soldiers. Their duty was to resist for 12 hours, and they resisted for seven days against an overwhelming German army.”
On September 2, 1945, Japan formally surrendered:

[click on image to enlarge]
September 2, 1945: VJ, Victory Over Japan Day
“In the morning of 2 September 1945, more that two weeks after acceping the Allies terms, Japan formally surrendered. The ceremonies, less than half an hour long, took place on board the battleship USS Missouri, anchored with other United States’ and British ships in Tokyo Bay. It was an extensively photographed occasion, and, despite overcast weather, generated many memorable images.”
For more follow link to History.com.
By Rides a Pale Horse
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