DOCUMENT 53814

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

401st Bomb Group, Mission No. 199, 22 Jan 1945, Sterkrade, Germany. The Group was briefed at 0630, but starting times were delayed several times and the runway was changed to those set out above. Very icy conditions. Following takeoff, Lt. R. M. Deen, pilot of No. 43-38125, radioed that he had lost one engine and a second had a runaway propeller. At 1150 hours, Flying Control was notified that Lt. Deen's ship had crashed near Saltby, Lincolnshire, with a full load of gas and bombs. Amazingly, while the ship was a mass of twisted metal, it did not explode and burn, and while three crew members were seriously injured, all survived. The other operational aircraft had all returned by 1640 hours. The 401st furnished two squadrons to the 94th Combat Wing "A" Group on this mission. The Lead Squadron was able to bomb visually, with excellent results. The Low Squadron unfortunately encountered a cloud as it was making its bomb run and was forced to bomb by Gee-H (radio beams), with visual help from the bombardier. Its results were scattered, but some bombs hit the assigned area. The formation encountered moderate to intense flak in the target area, causing damage to 20 aircraft, one of them major. The crews suffered no injuries or casualties.

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: Shade Ruff #2
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 614th Bomb Squadron
  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Nicknames: Heavenly Body
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 612th Bomb Squadron
  • Aircraft Type: B-17 Flying Fortress
  • Nicknames: Mary Makers
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 615th 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
  • Unit: 401st Bomb Group 612th Bomb Squadron

Locations

Mission

Revisions

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