486th Bomb Group
GroupIWM, Roger Freeman Collection
The 486th Bomb Group flew both B-24s and B-17s, swapping from the former aircraft to the latter in late July 1944 after 49 missions. In total the Group flew 292 missions during the war and remarkably the 834th Bomb Squadron lost no aircraft or personnel on its first 100 missions. The Group bombed strategic sites in Germany and in northern France before D-Day, and after 6 June 1944, the Group undertook a greater number of missions in direct support of ground forces in France, Holland and on the Rhine.
Commanding Officers
- Military/Civilian/Mascot: Military
- Nationality: American
- Unit: 486th Bomb Group
- Highest Rank: Colonel
- Role/Job: Commanding Officer
Connections
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Unit stations
Station | Location | Date |
---|---|---|
Based |
Sudbury | 7 May 1944 - 21 April 1945 |
Encompassing
People
Aircraft
Mission
Revisions
See the article and mission details (1944-1945) of the 486th Bombardment Group called, "Prologue: THE STORIES BEHIND THE NUMBERS," by John C. Albanese, bombardier, 833rd, at the official website of the 486th Bomb. Group: https://486th.org/Mssn/Prologue.htm
The site's official address is: https://486th.org/#
Freeman Collection photo/s and various publications. Importance is that the photo of a Square O B-17 is rare and illustrates that the Group, even for a short time retained the B-24 tail marking.
Drawn from the records of the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force, Savannah, Georgia / Paul Andrews, Project Bits and Pieces, 8th Air Force Roll of Honor database / The Mighty Eighth. A History of the Units, Men and Machines of the US 8th Air Force.' by Roger A. Freeman (1989). 'Air Force Combat Units of World War II' compiled by the Department of the US Air Force, edited by Maurice Maurer (1983). / Units in the UK from ETOUSA Station List, as transcribed by Lt. Col. Philip Grinton (US Army, Retired) and extracted by IWM; air division data from L.D. Underwood, based on the 8th Air Force Strength Report of 6th August 1944, as published in 'The 8th Air Force Yearbook' by Lt. Col. John H Woolnough (1980)