DOCUMENT 53788

By downloading this document, you are agreeing to our Terms and Conditions

401st Bomb Group, Mission No. 211, 21 Feb 1945, Nurnberg, Germany. Group briefing took place at 0345 hours. Pilots were warned of obstructions and briefed on controlled take off procedures. All operational aircraft were airborne by 0751 hours. As there were no aborts, the four spares returned early as planned. All aircraft had returned safely from the mission by 1630 hours, Flying Control noting: "Good landings. Perhaps our 'magnesium flare weather' is over." The entire 8th Air Force once again concentrated on the strategic railroad marshalling yards at Nurnburg, Germany, a facility critical to German efforts to halt the advance of the Russian Army. In all, 1,219 four engine bombers attacked the target, dropping nearly 3,000 tons of high explosives. While 362 aircraft sustained battle damage, not one was lost on this mission. The 401st again put up three squadrons comprising the 94th Combat Wing "B" Group. Heavy cloud cover again made it necessary to utilize PFF (radar) bombing technique. While no visual observations were possible, the concentration of smoke markers and plotting of the PFF scope photographs indicated that a good bombing run was accomplished. No enemy aircraft appeared but flak, described as "meager and accurate", was encountered over Frankfurt and over the target area. Seven 401st ships sustained minor battle damage.

Connections

See how this entry relates to other items in the archive by exploring the connections below.

Units

Aircraft

  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Nicknames: Gambler's Choice
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 614th Bomb Squadron
A B-17 Flying Fortress of the 401st Bomb Group, airborne in spite of the flak hole ripped into its left wing. Printed caption on reverse: '56751 AC- BERLIN DAMAGE- Flak over Berlin, March 18 1945, during the more than 1300 heavy bomber attack on rail and industrial targets in the capital city of the Reich, was responsible for the torn wing tip on the US Eight AF Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. Intense anti-aircraft fire made things hot for the heavy bombers over the target. US Air Force Photo.'
  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 615th Bomb Squadron
  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Nicknames: Bottle Baby
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 613th Bomb Squadron 615th Bomb Squadron
  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Nicknames: Miss Gee Eyewanna Go Home
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 614th Bomb Squadron
  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 613th Bomb Squadron

Locations

Mission

Revisions

Date:
Contributoracbernstein1
ChangesChanges to aircraft associations
Date:
Contributoracbernstein1
ChangesCreated entry with caption, unit associations, place associations, aircraft associations and mission associations