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February 1945 in Montana

February 1945

February 4 – A waste paper drive in Missoula yielded 50,000 pounds.

February 11 – President Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met at Yalta and signed an agreement splitting Europe into occupation zones.

February 12 – Four children, aged 6 months, 3, 4, and 13 died in a fire on the Fort Belknap Reservation. The mother and other children survived.

February 13 – Budapest was occupied by the Soviets.

February 16 – U.S. carrier planes attacked Iwo Jima with napalm. American paratroopers landed on Corregidor.

February 18 – The Third Army breached the Siegfried line.

February 19 – U.S. Marines landed on Iwo Jima. Fred T. Daylis was appointed the acting principal of Billings Senior High.

February 21 – A B-24 from the Spokane Air Base crashed 35 miles southwest of Philipsburg en route to Great Falls. The pilot and copilot died but one crew member parachuted to safety. Donald Ruhl threw himself on a grenade on Iwo Jima, saving 2 other men. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.

February 23 – U.S. Marine Louis Charlo helped raise the first American flag on top of Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima.

February 25 – A house fire killed a man in Great Falls.

Read more about February 1945 in Montana

January 1945 in Montana

March 1945 in Montana (coming soon)

Montana History Calendar 1942

Montana History Calendar 1941

Montana History Calendar 1930s

Montana's Home Front During World War II
Montana’s Home Front During World War II

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December 1944 in Montana

December 5 – The Army Corps of Engineers took over jurisdiction of  surplus military airfields at Glasgow, Lewistown, and Cut Bank.

December 15 – The U.S. Sixth Army invaded Mindoro. A train wreck at Gold Creek killed one man and burned up a freight car full of  cigarettes.

December 16 – A German offensive began in the Ardennes Forest.

December 22 – The U.S. 101st Airborne held Bastogne against repeated German attacks.

December 23 – Fire destroyed the McBee Motor Company garage in Billings with $100,000 damage. A man died of a heart attack while helping move belongings from an apartment adjacent to the fire.

December 24 – The Charlo butter and cheese factory was destroyed by fire with $25,000 damage.

December 26 – The Fourth Armored Division relieved the 101st Airborne at Bastogne.

December 27 – Governor Sam Ford was sworn into his second term.

December 28 – The Bachelor Officer’s Quarters at Gore Field was gutted by fire.

December 31 – Longtime Missoula mailman Louis Brutto retired after 40 years on the job. Beginning in 1918, he had walked an estimated 100,000 miles delivering the mail.

Read more about December 1944 in Montana

November 1944 in Montana

January 1945 in Montana

Montana History Calendar 1942

Montana History Calendar 1941

Montana History Calendar 1930s

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