World War II Time Line     |   home
Nov 11, 1918 - World War One ends with German defeat.   |   Sept 14, 1930 - Germans elect Nazis making them the 2nd largest political party in Germany.   |   Jan 30, 1933 - Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany.   |   May 10, 1940 - Nazis invade France, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands; Winston Churchill becomes British Prime Minister.   |   June 22, 1941 - Germany attacks Soviet Union as Operation Barbarossa begins.   |   Dec 5, 1941 - German attack on Moscow is abandoned.   |   Dec 7, 1941 - Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor   |   Dec 8, 1941 -   States and Britain declare war on Japan.   |   Dec 11, 1941 - Germany declares war on the United States.   |   Feb 2, 1943 - Germans surrender at Stalingrad in the first big defeat of Hitler's armies.   |   May 13, 1943 - German and Italian troops surrender in North Africa   |   July 9/10, 1943 - Allies land in Sicily.   |   June 6, 1944 - D-Day landings.   |   Oct 11, 1944 - U.S. air raids against Okinawa.   |   Dec 16-27, 1944 - Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes.   |   April 30, 1945 - Adolf Hitler commits suicide.   |   May 2, 1945 - German troops in Italy surrender.   |   Aug 6, 1945 - First Atomic Bomb dropped on Hiroshima from a B-29 flown by Col. Paul Tibbets.   |   Aug 9, 1945 - Second atomic bomb dropped, on Nagasaki, Japan.   |   Sept 2, 1945 - Formal Japanese surrender ceremony on board the MISSOURI in Tokyo Bay as 1000 carrier-based planes fly overhead; President Truman declares VJ Day.
Jan 30, 1933 - Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany.



German President Paul von Hindenburg made Adolf Hitler chancellor on January 30, 1933. After World War I, Germany fell and looked for a leader to strengthen it again. Hitler had emerged after joining the Nazi Party in 1919 and taking it over in 1921. In 1932 Hitler ran against von Hindenburg and lost--but not by a wide margin. The Nazis won 230 seats in the German parliament and continued to gain influence, stifling democracy and communism by force and by making laws against them. After Hindenburg's death in 1934, Hitler proclaimed himself Der Führer of the Third Reich and continued as Germany's leader through World War II.
  
Roger L. Vance ed.  "Adolf Hitler Becomes Chancellor." The History Net,  1998: 1 page. on-line. Internet
    Jan. 7, 2001. Available:  http://www.thehistorynet.com/picture/0131.html