The Second Schweinfurt Raid - The USAAF's Black Thursday, October 1943 - Animated

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The Operations Room

The Operations Room

Жыл бұрын

The Pointblank Directive is issued to allied bomber forces, and the combined bomber offensive switches its focus to destroying the German aircraft production industry. The American 8th Air Force went to Schweinfurt in August 1943, sustaining heavy losses. Now in October, the bomber boys must go back, and the Luftwaffe is ready and waiting for them.
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@etops8086
@etops8086 Жыл бұрын
My grandpa was with the 353rd FG flying the P-47 escort for this mission. He snapped a photo of one of the B-17s, with the pilot waving to him. The B-17 survived that mission and made it through the war, and through a twist of irony the pilot of that B-17 wound up moving in next door to my grandpa in 1955. They were friends until the B-17 pilot died in 1999, and his son remains good friends with my dad to this day.
@alexanderleach3365
@alexanderleach3365 Жыл бұрын
That's an amazing story. What's your grandfather's name and rank?
@neilpountney9414
@neilpountney9414 Жыл бұрын
That is an awesome story. Thanks for sharing!
@etops8086
@etops8086 Жыл бұрын
@@alexanderleach3365 ​ While I don't give names out online, he was a 1st Lieutenant for most of the war. Prior to the start of WW2 he was an instructor at the Cal Aero Academy, which was a civilian flight school that trained military pilots. When the war broke out the Cal Aero instructors were given the option to be commissioned into the AAF as fighter pilots since they were already fully trained in basic, advanced and pursuit pilot school. He started the war on the P-39 in a non-combat role, repositioning them from upstate NY to Alaska for delivery to the USSR under lend-lease, and was assigned the the 353rd in I think April 1943 after completing training on the P-47. He stayed with them until the end of the war.
@MegaMRCHURRO
@MegaMRCHURRO Жыл бұрын
@@etops8086 oh cool he trained out in Chino, CA. A lot of those hangars are still there today
@alexanderleach3365
@alexanderleach3365 Жыл бұрын
@@etops8086 Amazing.
@timmccarthy872
@timmccarthy872 Жыл бұрын
"That co-pilot, knowing he was about to die, did one of the coolest gestures I've ever seen." I'm willing to bet "cool" meant "calm" in those days instead of "proper bitchin" but it works on both levels.
@deusvult6920
@deusvult6920 Жыл бұрын
Wtf is proper bitchin
@RW77777777
@RW77777777 Жыл бұрын
you just know it was 'metal'
@chardaskie
@chardaskie Жыл бұрын
Any man who can die calm is a badass
@RCAvhstape
@RCAvhstape Жыл бұрын
I hope that guy was decorated posthumously. He chose to stay at the controls so his guys could get out and gave up his life for them.
@vcv6560
@vcv6560 Жыл бұрын
@@chardaskie Five MOH were awarded for the Ploesti mission (Aug 1, 43), two for pilots that flew their damaged aircraft into the inferno of the refinery under attack.
@LesAtlas
@LesAtlas 11 ай бұрын
My father was a young navigator on one of these B-17s. He flew on many missions, I think greater than the usual maximum. He never thought of himself as heroic. He never wanted to talk about it, but he quite obviously suffered from PTSD. Spaces with open skies freaked him out. And he'd sometimes wake in the middle of the night screaming about fires. The only time he mentioned something about the military was when I ended up with a low lottery number late in the Vietnam War and I seemed to have a good chance of being drafted. My father said that he had been told that WWII and what he went through was "the war to end all wars." In order to avoid the draft, my parents were getting ready to move our family to Canada. But they ended the draft just before I would have been called and we didn't move. Some decades later I traveled to Franconia in Germany, not too far from Schweinfurt, to work. I told my father, who said that there was nothing to see there since it was all bombed out. Later, in order to buy familiar American foods for Thanksgiving, I took my family to the US Military base at Bamberg. I had ID which I used to get me on base, but they (German Bundeswehr soldiers guard the entry) would not let my wife and daughter on base. My father was furious about that. I do not know what he said, but next time we went there my family was personally met by the base commander who showed us around. My father died about a decade ago. He must have been one of the heroes in these and other raids. Very nice video. It helped me know what my father went through.
@ghandimauler
@ghandimauler 2 ай бұрын
My maternal grandfather fought with the Scottish 16th Highland Light Infantry all across Belgium, France, the Low Countries, and into Germany. After the he got back from the Occupation (he arrived back in Scotland in 1920, no jobs, no celebrations... didn't even get formally discharged), he got a couple of jobs, saved up, put himself through textile college, and then went to Canada to work in a textile mill. Dad told me that grandad never slept in the same bed all night. He got up every 2-3 hours and moved to a different part of the house. It was because, in the trenches, if you stayed in the same place all night, you got located and killed. That he did for many years (I didn't see it when he moved in with us in about 1975) but must have got past that. Grandad knew, on some level, that our German neighbours in the 1980s had nothing to do with the Germans he fought in the trenches. That said, he did the minimal politeness required and then went to his room when they visited. The memories were still there when the accent appeared. When he had a stroke and sundowner's syndrome, at night he relived snippets of the past. He was very animate. At one point, he was having a one-sided conversation about him and his friend getting back across no-man's land from a patrol. They were hiding in a shell crater and my grandad was trying to get his friend Jock to be quiet so they didn't draw the attention of the German patrols nearby. Jock was complaining he couldn't feel one of his arms. My grandad was comforting him and shushing him up so he could get back to British lines after the Germans would pass. At one point,, grandad said 'Shh, they are close. I know you can't feel your arm. It's not their anymore. Now shush and we'll get home and get you fixed up.' That was what he was doing at 17. And after you came home - no decompression time before returning to civil society, no therapy for the horrors, no veteran's affairs to any notable degree... just 'go back to work if you can find it'. PTSD physically changes the brain (it being somewhat plastic). It is a long time demon if you don't get the help or the right help. I think my grandfather living with us from when I was born to 1988 was part of what let him continue and the fact he gave back as a 60 year Mason helping his community.
@michaelbullock4343
@michaelbullock4343 Жыл бұрын
Ray Bullock was my father [rip], and I am learning more from presentations like this than I did from my dad. “All the heroes are dead,” he once said to avoid any special claim. His crew didn’t bail out on him. Enough said.
@anonymouslyopinionated656
@anonymouslyopinionated656 2 ай бұрын
clearly the old man was a legend himself.
@benmcccool0123
@benmcccool0123 2 ай бұрын
I think your father was featured in the masters of the air miniseries.
@visassess8607
@visassess8607 Жыл бұрын
I love how you include people from Germany's side when you can. It's great hearing more than one source of information for an event. It paints a better picture
@ellists3163
@ellists3163 Ай бұрын
I would love for someone to dedicate a video series on Medal of Honor stories from the nazi and “bad guy sides” of wars. For example: people like the Von Richthofen and Otto skorzeny are good starts. I think their bravery when analyzed separate from their morals is still deserving of praise
@0x45Swims
@0x45Swims Ай бұрын
@@ellists3163doesn’t armchair historian have this for Germany?
@patrickwolff2727
@patrickwolff2727 Жыл бұрын
My uncle was a pilot in the 95th Bomb Group in this raid. I asked him about it once. I asked him what was the hardest part? He said their training kept them focused, but watching his friends die ten at a time was tough. These were young guys (20-24 years old) that played baseball together the day before, and suddenly they were gone. Those that returned had to look at all their missing comrades’ personal effects; pictures of girlfriends & wives, ball caps, gifts from home etc., and put them in their footlockers and lock them up. Those things got shipped home as simply as we ship things back to Amazon. Truly, that generation saved the world.
@lolmao500
@lolmao500 Жыл бұрын
That generation is also the generation of germans that were nazis, and the generation of russians that murdered millions in the soviet union and the generation of japanese that were psychos. Sooooooo... seems to me the 1920-1930-1940s generation was the worst generation of humans in modern history.
@g0ast
@g0ast Жыл бұрын
@pyropulse Because above all else, killing the enemy is seen as part of the job. They're not looked at as people but targets. But as a 17, 18, 19, 20 year old who had other guys just like you for months through basic training, shipping out, combat, and everything else to suddenly see that now brother of yours die suddenly, that's the stuff you remember more than anything. An enemy soldier is nobody to you, that's why you don't feel a thing when he's gasping his last breath in front of you. You knew nothing about him other than he was trying to kill you first. Your friends you're fighting with though, it's like losing a family member.
@mindeloman
@mindeloman Жыл бұрын
I read in one of Rick Atkinson books that all the personal affect of all US soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines went to one civilian ran and operated processing center but I can't where it was. The Midwest somewhere St.Louis, maybe. Anyway, they went through a KIA/missing service members personal effects to ensure nothing untoward was in them that could unsettle an already bereft family. Things like playing cards were thrown out. Any alcohol pornogtaphy and what have you. Any letters from home were scrutinized to make sure mothers did not receive tact letters from girlfriends/lovers or even worse, a wife finding letters from lovers. Obviously, any bloody items were tossed as well. The whole story of that center is pretty interesting.
@smoldoggy1005
@smoldoggy1005 Жыл бұрын
Now the world is completely in hell and there’s no saving it since people are too stupid
@B0BBARKER444
@B0BBARKER444 Жыл бұрын
@pyropulse we got us an edge lord over here boys. Real tough guy
@oldhardmanjohnson6585
@oldhardmanjohnson6585 Жыл бұрын
I had a high school teacher that was miraculously spared when his ball turret was blown clear of his exploding B17. He managed to bail out of the ball and was found half stuck in a muddy field with two broken legs totally covered with his parachute. He was interred at Stalag 17 until the liberation
@ItsDatGuy969
@ItsDatGuy969 Жыл бұрын
I thought ball turret gunners weren’t able to fit inside while wearing their parachutes
@jonrivers7779
@jonrivers7779 Жыл бұрын
@@ItsDatGuy969 somebody with better knowledge might be able to correct me but it depended on the aircraft and the stage of the war. At the start of US involvement you are right and they only had the band for protection and a parachute stowed next to the radio operator. Later I believe they were given a modified inferior parachute that had a weird harness arrangement to the legs to allow it in the turret. If the turret was shot out there was a good chance the parachute would break away or break the legs of the gunner because of wind blast. @old hardman Johnson. The likelihood is that the ball turret was shattered and wind shear grabbed his parachute bulling him backwards and breaking his legs in the process. He was probably on the ground before he could register the pain
@SoftwareExpress1
@SoftwareExpress1 Жыл бұрын
I have a good friend who was a B24 gunner, bailed out over Romania, spent a month on the ground, and continued to fly. He is 99 years old now, plays cards and dances at the community center and is sharp as a tack.
@justins.966
@justins.966 Жыл бұрын
What is his name ? One of my relatives flew a P-51D
@SoftwareExpress1
@SoftwareExpress1 Жыл бұрын
@@justins.966 Joe Foto, from New Orleans. I saw him Wednesday (he eats every day at the Mandeville Community Center) and he is 96 years old.
@zoso73
@zoso73 2 ай бұрын
@@SoftwareExpress1 When you say Romania -- he participated in the Ploesti oil field raid?
@allanlindsay9414
@allanlindsay9414 Жыл бұрын
My Grandfather Karl was a Luftwaffe flak battery captain in Schweinfurt during this raid. Most of his unit had been destroyed in the Mannheim raids In September and they had been moved to Schweinfurt area to refit as they didn't expect another raid so soon after the August raid.
@hatersgonnalovethis
@hatersgonnalovethis Жыл бұрын
My neighbour in the village I grew up told me this story: the village saw some air to air combat pretty late in the war the first time as it was in southern Germany and not in range of bombing raids for a long time. However one day they had an air to air combat above their village with one american pilot shot down. The local Volkssturm and FLAK helpers spread out to find the pilot. It took them two days. They found him in his hideout after he tried to steal a chicken. They hanged him at the next tree. I asked my neighbour why they did not take him a prisoner? He was very surprised by my question and said: „because he stole, of course!“. True story.
@MrRugercat45
@MrRugercat45 Жыл бұрын
Is your grandfather still alive? He like all soldiers deserve a big thank you, for their service and sacrifice. My mother was in Slovakia during WW2 and I would like to write a book about her life. Soon there will not be anyone who remembers WW2 directly. Sad, because that generation is the finest generation.
@allanlindsay9414
@allanlindsay9414 Жыл бұрын
@@MrRugercat45 Unfortunately he has been gone quite a long time. I wish I had gotten him to talk about it more, but honestly him and many of his contemporaries just didnt want to talk about it that much.
@contrapasta2454
@contrapasta2454 Жыл бұрын
The bomber groups reforming around 2:56 was a hell of an animation.
@Tam0de
@Tam0de Жыл бұрын
I know. At first, i didn't know what i was watching, looked to me like total chaos & confusion. Seconds later, became clear to me that it was organized chaos 😁
@riproar11
@riproar11 Жыл бұрын
Seriously! It was fascinating to watch because for so many years I have always wondered how the bombers from just one base get into formation. From the book "A Higher Call" the author describes an impressive fireworks show with many colored flares while the bomber unit circled around the base until all of the forts had taken off and could join in.
@riproar11
@riproar11 Жыл бұрын
@Daniel I forgot to mention that back in 2010, at the Thunder Over Michigan air show, I experienced seeing eight B-17 bombers take off and all circle over the grandstands one by one, similar to the formations the Mighty 8th did back during WWII. Yankee Lady, Nine-O-Nine, Sentimental Journey, Liberty Belle, Thunderbird, Aluminum Overcast, Texas Raiders. Sadly, 9-o-9 and Liberty Belle are gone, but five more B-17s will be airworthy maybe by 2030. Here's a video from 2010: kzbin.info/www/bejne/nJPTkoeenp5orsU
@jeremygattman4007
@jeremygattman4007 Жыл бұрын
My Grandfather was a left waist gunner on a B-17 with the 96th Bomber group in this raid. His plane was shot down on the return trip over France. He was captured, taken to Stalg 17B and later moved to the Mauthausen concentration camp where he remained until it was liberated. The family was able to locate the exact location of his crew's crash site.
@B17FlyingFortress
@B17FlyingFortress Жыл бұрын
He was left waist gunner on B-17 42-3348 "Dottie J III".
@samadams2203
@samadams2203 Жыл бұрын
Strategic bomber crews were second only to the submarine force in casualty rates. A truly desperate role.
@animegaming4057
@animegaming4057 Жыл бұрын
I will say, we only won world war 2 due to mass bodies we could throw at the Nazi war machine. I saw quiet a few videos on Germany like “the German war machine myth” or something to the affect of “why Germany wasn’t that strong”, but they fought the world almost single handily. Took Europe, bombed Britain, sent forces to most of their Allie’s when they failed, held the world back for several years. Germany had the tactics, tech, and the brutal know how on how to use the tools given to them. They just failed due to their own corruption, racism, and being power hungry. They could have just stopped at Europe and been just like the United States of modern times. But the leaders couldn’t stop, they wanted more.
@coryhall7074
@coryhall7074 Жыл бұрын
@@animegaming4057 Sherman crews had some of the highest survival rates of US and Allied combat soldiers, with slightly fewer than 5% deaths across the entire US armored force during the war.
@animegaming4057
@animegaming4057 Жыл бұрын
@@coryhall7074 oh shizz, I had it backwards, thanks for correcting me. Correcting the comment now
@cm275
@cm275 Жыл бұрын
@@animegaming4057 Single handedly? The US was committing enormous resources to fighting Japan at the same time as the Germans.
@animegaming4057
@animegaming4057 Жыл бұрын
@@cm275 that doesn’t change any statement, what are you arguing about? The US did help win the war, doesn’t change anything about Germany fighting the world single handily? What is your argument?
@MrDadMoo
@MrDadMoo Жыл бұрын
My Grandmother was a young child in Schweinfurt when this raid occurred. Her dad worked at one of the bearing factories that was bombed. She says that she vividly remembers having to go to their shelter and coming back to realize that their apartment block, near the factory, had been leveled.
@johnhutton929
@johnhutton929 Жыл бұрын
My story bis similar to yours.
@mailbox3982
@mailbox3982 Жыл бұрын
Did her dad survive?
@MrDadMoo
@MrDadMoo Жыл бұрын
@@mailbox3982 He did! The whole family were able to take shelter. She had 2 older brothers that served in the Armed forces. One was on a U-Boat and survived the war. The other was in the Wehrmacht and was KIA at either Kursk or Stalingrad. I don't remember which.
@mailbox3982
@mailbox3982 Жыл бұрын
@@MrDadMoo Well, that's nice to hear.
@boombl443
@boombl443 Жыл бұрын
Oh wow . Mine was also there. Later she got bombed again in Würzburg
@tomhutchins7495
@tomhutchins7495 Жыл бұрын
It's hard to grasp the scale of the bigger picture from looking at individual raids. The daylight bomber campaign was a response to the problem of the Luftwaffe fighter force, and considered to be the only way to break its strength completely. This never fully worked because industry turned out to be more resilient than expected, but it did break it down to a handful of surviving units with limited ability to conduct operations (still individually dangerous but nothing like the force it had been in 1939-42). Bombing the aviation industry was used not just because it would reduce supply, but also because it was a target that the Luftwaffe could be relied upon to defend - as indeed is pointed out in the video, operations were halted elsewhere for this. If the fighters came up, they could be shot down, thus forcing them to fight the Americans was the best chance of crippling the pilot pool. The USAAF had a couple of big advantages in this strategy but also one huge weakness. The advantages were that they had powerful, long-ranged fighters, andones which were very capable at high altitudes. The Fw 190 in particular struggled at high altitude as its engine ran out of power (you lose power with altitude but can gain some back with specialised supercharging), and the Bf 109 was also running out of steam though it had a very clever supercharger which reduced the problems. Meanwhile the P-47 was designed as a high-altitude fighter and really came alive above 20,000', which was a big advantage in combat. Later, the P-51 would also receive a specialised high-altitude version of the Merlin engine that would give the squadrons the ability to pick their best performance altitudes depending on the missions they flew. However, the big challenge the USAAF had was its leadership, where the "bomber generals" had refused to accept that long-range fighter escort was necessary. They insisted the unescorted bombers could do the job, and refused to deliver the drop tanks with which the P-47s could have escorted bombers for the entire missions in 1943. The idea that the P-51 was the only fighter with the range to escort into Germany is just that - a lie spread by the generals to cover the fact that their intransigence was paid for in the blood of their bomber crews. The P-47 would have needed bigger fuel tanks than the P-51, but that technology existed, and while its range would always have been smaller than a more-economical P-51's, it would have been sufficient to get the job done.
@BetterRedThanDead21
@BetterRedThanDead21 Жыл бұрын
Interesting, thanks for sharing this! I totally agree
@td9302
@td9302 Жыл бұрын
Yep. The Bomber Mafia is one of the saddest and most tragic stories. The idea was great and lead to Modern Warfare but resulted in thousands of unnecessary deaths.
@fazole
@fazole Жыл бұрын
@@BetterRedThanDead21 Greg's Aurplanes investigated this in detail and agrees, if you want the evidence.
@fighter5583
@fighter5583 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. The jugs were more than a match for most of the luftwaffe due its armament and how the plane was designed; it could take punishment other fighters couldn't and keep going. Although the addition of drop tanks would have decreased maneuverability, a diving jug is something you don't want to be in front of.
@Jack-Tactical
@Jack-Tactical Жыл бұрын
@@fighter5583 You drop the tanks when you start fighting. Maneuverability wouldn’t have been an issue.
@Mr_M_History
@Mr_M_History Жыл бұрын
You have no idea how much guys like me look up to the Operations Room!
@jackmiller1561
@jackmiller1561 Жыл бұрын
Love the Chinese History videos!
@Caution2TheWind1
@Caution2TheWind1 Жыл бұрын
Forget the channel, remember the men.
@KorbinX
@KorbinX Жыл бұрын
@@Caution2TheWind1 kinda the point of their channels 🧐
@Bornst3ll3r
@Bornst3ll3r Жыл бұрын
God be a man
@cc8530
@cc8530 Жыл бұрын
@@Caution2TheWind1 wake up to yourself boxhead
@ArchonShon
@ArchonShon Жыл бұрын
The animations really give you an idea how complex these operation are.
@hongo3870
@hongo3870 Жыл бұрын
Its a real testament to the importance of training. Train, train, train.
@brianmessemer2973
@brianmessemer2973 Жыл бұрын
I was a big WW1-WW2 airplane buff as a kid. The film Memphis Belle came out when I was in elementary school. I had it on VHS and watched that film so. many. times. It almost certainly made me fall in love with Jazz, being awestruck by the incredible, indelible Harry Connick, Jr. He was just the coolest thing I'd ever seen. But it was a young and affable Sean Astin saying "Bremen!?" with a show of annoyance that covered terror in his voice. When they heard the target for their last mission, they knew their chance of survival was low. That film was (is) incredible. No CGI. No special effects, even. That take off sequence - the shots of real B-17s with engines running preparing for take-off over that tense music...is awesome. It's not some award-winning film, but for me at that tender age, wow. It really left a deep impression.
@brutusvonmanhammer
@brutusvonmanhammer Жыл бұрын
"These powdered eggs could gag a buzzard..."
@capthappy8884
@capthappy8884 Жыл бұрын
Little known fact, approximately half of the b17s in the takeoff sequence are models! They positioned them on a raised runway to line up visually with the real aircraft. Couple clever false perspective tricks, and its hard to tell to this day which is which! The miniature/model work in this movie is fantastic!
@tempest9691
@tempest9691 Жыл бұрын
Dude same! My brother and I use make our own bomber from chairs, blankets, whatever we could find and act out the movie, pretending to shoot down fighters, even imitating the flak blowing it to pieces while we did the bombing run. I’d completely forgotten about it until I saw this comment and now I can’t stop smiling.
@brianmessemer2973
@brianmessemer2973 Жыл бұрын
@@tempest9691 😊😊😊
@capthappy8884
@capthappy8884 Жыл бұрын
@@tempest9691 my brother n I used to do something similar in car trips! We had these toy m60s with 2 handed grips at the back(like the 50s in the bombers) and ammo belts that fed thru when you pulled the trigger. they also had joints for a removable tripod that fit perfectly on our half rolled down windows. Birds were enemy fighters and bumps were flack. Our regular 2 hour car rides certainly didn't feel that long!😉
@VloggingThroughHistory
@VloggingThroughHistory Жыл бұрын
Can’t wait to watch this. My wife’s grandfather was a ball turret gunner in the 379th Bomb Group.
@jashy798
@jashy798 Жыл бұрын
Can't wait to watch you watch this 🤩
@jeffblacky
@jeffblacky Жыл бұрын
My great grand uncle was a flak gunner in Berlin - 1942 to 1945 - credited with 11 kills winning the iron cross second class and flak badge and silver wound badge. Captured in 1945 and released in 1947 , moved to US in 1952
@nazmaster1
@nazmaster1 Жыл бұрын
11x10 110 kills impressive for ww2😳
@VictoryAviation
@VictoryAviation Жыл бұрын
What was the reason for his move out of Germany?
@pvt.potato1943
@pvt.potato1943 Жыл бұрын
@@VictoryAviation the post war shitshow that was Germany. You literally couldn't find a job because the places that had jobs were obliterated.
@docpossum2460
@docpossum2460 Жыл бұрын
@@VictoryAviation Might not be the same as this guy's Grandpa, but a lot of German soldiers ended up moving to the US due to either economic reasons or their lives in Germany being destroyed.
@g0ast
@g0ast Жыл бұрын
@@VictoryAviation Probably because Germany wasn't the enemy by then, it was the Soviets. And Germany was in the middle of the Cold War with East and West Germany and was pretty terrifying to be in Europe around that time. Probably better to get out of Germany, still recovering from WW2 only to be threatened with nuclear war every single day after.
@ColinStachowski
@ColinStachowski Жыл бұрын
What I love about this video: 1. That formation creation starting at 2:45 - so mesmerising! 2. Clouds! 3. That landscape moving below the planes. 4. Shockwaves from bomb explosions! 5. Flat spin animation at 19:10! 6. Photos at the end. 7. Everything else - well, well done, Sir!
@TheOperationsRoom
@TheOperationsRoom Жыл бұрын
Thanks :)
@AndyThomas_mrblitz
@AndyThomas_mrblitz Жыл бұрын
Agreed that it's an oustanding production. Operations Room for the win! I'd like to seem them go 'operational/front' level and do Operation Bagration 1944, or Dubno/Brody in 1941.
@johnedwards1685
@johnedwards1685 Жыл бұрын
My mum was at high school during the war. I asked her if she saw aeroplanes overhead, she said “oh all the time, day and night, it never stopped.” Looking at the forming up animation, our market town was right underneath the forming-up area. Airfields around our town were: Earles Colne, Rivenhall, Gosfield, Weathersfield and Andrews Field.
@ytrefugee113
@ytrefugee113 Жыл бұрын
I was in the army and based in Schweinfurt from 2003 to 2008, an interesting sight in the city is ball bearings still embedded in the exterior walls of some of the buildings from these ww2 bombings.
@wallbanger3
@wallbanger3 Жыл бұрын
I was in Hanau Germany in the Army in 78 They were still filling in Bomb craters
@ErdoganIstKeinZiegenfi...
@ErdoganIstKeinZiegenfi... Жыл бұрын
@@wallbanger3 due to the criminal nature of the indifferent bombing of civilians.
@Kurogumo
@Kurogumo Жыл бұрын
@@ErdoganIstKeinZiegenfi... That’s tough, too bad nobody cares. Maybe they shouldn’t have started a war.
@JohnyG29
@JohnyG29 Жыл бұрын
@@ErdoganIstKeinZiegenfi... If you start a total war, you have no right to moan when people fight back.
@ErdoganIstKeinZiegenfi...
@ErdoganIstKeinZiegenfi... Жыл бұрын
@@Kurogumo its a pity you dont care about war crimes. What made you that way? Did you have haunting experiences as a child that impair your moral compass?
@DangerClose13E
@DangerClose13E Жыл бұрын
I was stationed at Ledward Barracks in Schweinfurt from '86 to '89. 1/10th FA 3rdID I was saddened to learn that all those buildings were torn down. They housed Panzer battalions during the war. Many older residents could still remember those raids. They liked to point out nearly everything BUT the factories were hit by the bombers.
@vallewasgeddney5996
@vallewasgeddney5996 Жыл бұрын
Maybe that´s because a lot more than factories were hit that day... Regular people don´t care for factories but for war crimes!
@nuniegomez2970
@nuniegomez2970 Жыл бұрын
I was at the same barracks 72-73 2nd39th field artery
@nuniegomez2970
@nuniegomez2970 Жыл бұрын
Artillery
@ericdole1879
@ericdole1879 Жыл бұрын
I remember the front gate at ledward where they had the eagle on the wall and chiseled the swastika out of the wreath
@DangerClose13E
@DangerClose13E Жыл бұрын
@@ericdole1879 They had some type of relief sculpture over nearly every doorway usually of troops in uniform. It was interesting because in the mid 80's we adopted the "German style" kevlar helmet and the current troops matched the reliefs after that.
@AnthonyEvelyn
@AnthonyEvelyn Жыл бұрын
The Schweinfurt Regensburg raids were tough missions. So many bomber crews lost. Rest in peace to those USAAF airmen who died.
@MinecraftDog999
@MinecraftDog999 Жыл бұрын
There's a good chance that this is the operation my grandpa talks about when he describes a nightmare to me. He recalls a bomber circling around his home town two or three times before crashing down into a garden sink. There was recently a B-17 recovered in a swamp near his home town, with the bodies of the crew inside as well. Thank you for sharing the details of this operation with us viewers.
@timf2279
@timf2279 Жыл бұрын
What was his home town?
@redskinjim
@redskinjim Жыл бұрын
My neighbors who are both dead fought on different sides in WW2 Wolfgang Consen was conscripted by Germany and Peter Hauck was a American at Normandy they both ended up in Fresno and lived across the street from one another and were great friends. They had cabins in Yosemite next to each other as well and were always trying to outdo the other guy.
@myblacklab7
@myblacklab7 Жыл бұрын
War is insanity.
@pigpig252
@pigpig252 Жыл бұрын
A few years ago I read a brilliant book called Combat Crew by a B17 engineer/gunner who was a part of this raid. From his description it sounded absolutely apocalyptic to be a part of. Fantastic book, highly recommend
@NoodlesExtraMSG
@NoodlesExtraMSG 3 ай бұрын
rewatching after Masters of the Air. Thanks @TheOperationsRoom ,great work.
@perthpete7906
@perthpete7906 Жыл бұрын
Nowadays, bearings are one of the most commonly used machine parts because their rolling motion make almost all movements easier and they help reduce friction. Bearings have two key functions: They transfer motion, i.e. they support and guide components which turn relative to one another. To this day schweinfort is still a major centre for bearing production
@agentbarron3945
@agentbarron3945 Жыл бұрын
yep, the standard "skate bearing" has so many applications. pretty much any hobbiest who needs anything to move has a drawer full of them and doesnt even own a skateboard
@DaveSCameron
@DaveSCameron Жыл бұрын
SKF
@perthpete7906
@perthpete7906 Жыл бұрын
@@DaveSCameron Haibike
@DaveSCameron
@DaveSCameron Жыл бұрын
@@perthpete7906 Wunderbra ist nicht geschlossen dieses tag?
@johnnicatra570
@johnnicatra570 Жыл бұрын
Keene New Hampshire was and still may be a large maker of bearings in this country.
@SLO-Ride
@SLO-Ride Жыл бұрын
Dad was a B17 Bombardier, with the 339th BS, 96th BG, 8th AF, out of Snetterton-Heath. He flew on every major raid conducted by the 8th.
@NebulaIsTaken
@NebulaIsTaken Жыл бұрын
Missions like these make me realize the revolutionary development of precision guided weapons. Instead of 300 bombers for one building, now you can send 3 for multiple buildings.
@mikeymike9926
@mikeymike9926 Жыл бұрын
Was just thinking back then bomber divisions were of hundreds of bombers, and now it’s like 10 B-52s do everything while thousands of fighters swarm you like angry bees
@Bauhotte
@Bauhotte Жыл бұрын
The revolutionary part isn‘t the fact you need less planes, it’s about you save innocent lives with it!
@contrapasta2454
@contrapasta2454 Жыл бұрын
You could probably target individual pieces of equipment inside the factory, if you knew where they were.
@dpeasehead
@dpeasehead Жыл бұрын
@Nebula: Don't be seduced by the alleged magical surgical cleanliness of precision weapons. The world has yet to see two advanced and relatively well matched adversaries going at each other with these expensive and relatively scarce devices. I don't see any first or second tier nation giving in after absorbing a few targeted strikes.
@sandywinnnerman2156
@sandywinnnerman2156 Жыл бұрын
My dad was a bombardier on this mission as a member of the 349 Bombardment Squadron (H), 385 Bombardment Group (H). He completed his 25th mission February 24, 1944 over Rostock Germany and retired a Major in the USAFF Reserves. Thank you for this comprehensive and historic account.
@flyingfortressrc1794
@flyingfortressrc1794 Жыл бұрын
My Dad's B-17 was shot down a few days before this on the Munster raid 10/10/43. They were from the 385th BG. Great video.
@TJ24050
@TJ24050 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed with the 1st Infantry Division in Schweinfurt from 05-08. They dug a 500lb bomb up in 06 from some ladies back yard. The ball bearing factory is still there though. I remember as soon as I found out that I was going to Schweinfurt, I thought of this and the August attacks.
@daleslover2771
@daleslover2771 Жыл бұрын
I was station in Bad Kissengen ( Daley Barracks) 75 /78 as a FCO on a Hawk missile site, we would go to the firing range in Schweinfurt small arms and fire all the weapons we would buy at the Rod and Gun clubs. Had some pretty good times there.
@bigsparky8888
@bigsparky8888 Жыл бұрын
THANKS FOR SERVING!!!
@mikep4745
@mikep4745 Жыл бұрын
@@daleslover2771 I was also stationed on a Hawk Missile site not far from BK. Wildflecken in the mid 80's. Seems like we were always in the field. Sucked at the time, but now cherish the memories in hindsight.
@yrunaked4
@yrunaked4 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed in Schweinfurt 85-88 A3/7 ADA Hawk and B 6/62ADA before going back to state side. This was before I knew about this historic mission. Thanks for such a great video
@daleslover2771
@daleslover2771 Жыл бұрын
@@mikep4745 oh yea Mike when I got to the site they were moving the Self propelled launcher out, which was conventual Hawk, then went to Improve Hawk , I was in the AFU platoon, we seen in 1976 182 days in the field not including Reforgers, and main battery FTXs 77 was worst 228 in the field this was the crescendo of the Cold war, 78 well we just stayed in the field, the only way we kept track was how many months we were payed in the field... No where to go but damned we had some bodashes spade games in those tents .. 😂
@TS-ef2gv
@TS-ef2gv Ай бұрын
I was USAF in the '70s and '80s. One of my commanders started his service as an enlisted gunner on B-17s in the 8th AF, where he flew 35 combat missions over Europe. After the war he went to college, reentered the AF as a pilot, and flew additional combat missions in Korea and Vietnam. After over 400 combat missions in three wars and 37 years of service, he retired as a two star general in the 1980s, and lived until age 90. He seemed down to Earth (for a two star general, at least) when I crewed his aircraft, and that's how he was later described by people who knew him. When I think of the stories he could have told it makes me I wish I could have asked him about his experiences, particularly on B-17s in the 8th AF, but opportunities to strike up a casual conversation with a two star general while on duty did not often present themselves. 😄
@barbaros99
@barbaros99 Жыл бұрын
Brings back memories - this was the tutorial mission for 'Chuck Yaeger's Air Combat'.
@airplanes42
@airplanes42 Жыл бұрын
Which itself was an effort by his money grabbing second wife to cash in on the senile General's name.
@Tigerheart01
@Tigerheart01 Жыл бұрын
During this time, like he says, before the P-51 and other measures that make survival more possible... it was MORE dangerous to be a bomber crewman than it was a RIFELMAN in the US Army. "Chairforce" indeed... (I'm a USAF veteran).
@user-no1es1wd6x
@user-no1es1wd6x Жыл бұрын
And this raid made it clear that bombers can't defend them themselves, without heavy fighter escort.
@sethb3090
@sethb3090 Жыл бұрын
It's worth pointing out as well that Operation POINTBLANK took place before there was anyone on the ground. It was a preparation for D-Day. When the invasion was finally announced to the general army (due to secrecy, minutes before they headed out) several people are recorded as saying they're glad to finally be able to do something so it's not the airmen flying out and dying all alone.
@Michael-yu2yk
@Michael-yu2yk Жыл бұрын
Don't you sit in a chair if you're flying a plane?
@rachaelsdaddontdrink
@rachaelsdaddontdrink Жыл бұрын
Ah the days when Air Force EM's were actually in combat; instead of just being assigned to "combat zones"...
@td9302
@td9302 Жыл бұрын
The P47 was capable enough but the Bomber Mafia "Chair force 1" insisted that the bombers would be fine without escort. They weren't. However that idea of bombers deciding a war lead to the development of the B2 Spirit which is responsible for many precision bomb in the last few decades. Crazy how things work out?
@timf2279
@timf2279 Жыл бұрын
Another fantastic video, well done Sir. The 1942/43 years were just horrendous for the air crews. 25 completed missions was an impossible goal for those Valiant crews. I can't even imagine the stress day after day and on the way to the target. Sadly almost all of our WW I I veterans are gone however not forgotten.
@TheOperationsRoom
@TheOperationsRoom Жыл бұрын
Many thanks!
@adambane1719
@adambane1719 Жыл бұрын
They were nothing short of WAR CRIMES !!! Mostly bombing civilian targets with incendiaries.
@Nickname-hier-einfuegen
@Nickname-hier-einfuegen Жыл бұрын
Also pretty horrendous for the civilians they killed.
@timf2279
@timf2279 Жыл бұрын
@@Nickname-hier-einfuegen Sorry not really an issue from my perspective.
@Nickname-hier-einfuegen
@Nickname-hier-einfuegen Жыл бұрын
@@timf2279 Not surprising, considering the American war crimes to this day.
@novacolonel5287
@novacolonel5287 Жыл бұрын
My dad was 9 years old when Hamburg was bombed - like many children, he was sent off to the countryside, but returned two days after the bombing, finding the city full of corpses and burned ruins, and many of his school friends dead. Still, of course, it was necessary. Never glorify war, it brings misery and horror to everyone involved. It's nice pictures and animations to be watched on a map, but it is hell in reality.
@hello-rq8kf
@hello-rq8kf Жыл бұрын
rest in piss germswine
@brigadist1585
@brigadist1585 2 ай бұрын
40000 Tote in einer Nacht. Necessary? Schade,dass es ihren Vater nicht getroffen hat. Sie wären der Welt erspart geblieben...
@brigadist1585
@brigadist1585 2 ай бұрын
40000 Tote in einer Nacht. Necessary? Wie amoralisch kann man sein?
@1977Yakko
@1977Yakko Жыл бұрын
One of my Great Uncle's was a gunner on a B-17. He NEVER talked about it. I'm not sure when exactly he served or how many missions he did but given his silence, I can only imagine the hell he went through up there.
@seanodwyer4322
@seanodwyer4322 Жыл бұрын
dan- what ahh interested in is the 2,000 airmen who were beaten too hell in 1944-1945 when they parachuted down too greatter Germany when their bombers or fighter planes were shot down - ahh never read/ hear anything about them . As a survivor of gang off 25 savage male boot attackers ahh know how they must have felt been kicked and beaten too death
@myrealname8767
@myrealname8767 Жыл бұрын
My relative was a ball turret gunner and was KIA at only 19 years old. 4 out of the 9 crew members survived when he was shot down and the rest of the crew got put in POW camps. I contacted the surviving crew member’s families a couple of months ago and they all pretty much said the same thing. That their fathers rarely ever talked about what they saw or did. One of the family members I spoke to said that their dad couldn’t help but cry when he spoke about it.
@alexwilliamson1486
@alexwilliamson1486 Жыл бұрын
In all my years I’ve never seen a better description and diagram of 8th AF ops in WW2…superb! 🙏🏻
@BostonHarborLight
@BostonHarborLight Жыл бұрын
The Greatest Generation. May they RIP and never be forgotten.
@surrealengineering7884
@surrealengineering7884 Жыл бұрын
Very well made video! thank you. My great uncle fought in this raid, he flew a BF109 and later was credited with shooting down bombers over Stuttgart. He was never shot down and only grounded in 1945 when their division ran out of fuel. War sucks.
@wolfganggugelweith8760
@wolfganggugelweith8760 Жыл бұрын
Bravo! 💪✌️👍😎🐺
@surrealengineering7884
@surrealengineering7884 Жыл бұрын
@@wolfganggugelweith8760 Can't help it, i'm proud of him. As i said war sucks and i'm pissed off that our great ancestors of Germany, UK, USA, Poland, France etc... had to kill each other over some dickhole who wanted total power of europe with total war. But! Over Stuttgart they where trying to stop a warcrime from happening. Same goes for every other city the allies purposefully bombed civilian areas in. As i've heard, this is why they where so motivated and lead suicidal charges againsed the bombers. The pilots knew these bombs could as easily hit their own homes with their families in them. In total, more people died by these bombing raids on german civilians than in Hiroshima and Nagasaki comnbined. My great grandfather among them inside the bakery of Calw, we still have his pocket watch, it works to this day. I'm not here to seek revenge or to conduct similar pointless backwards thinking. I also don't want to play down german warcrimes and the holocaust. Just wanted to share a story and what i think about it :)
@4thamendment237
@4thamendment237 Жыл бұрын
@@surrealengineering7884 yes, war sucks. It sucks even more for the loser. If Germany didn't like these bombing raids it should have thought twice about initiating and then setting the example of how brutal war can be. What did Germany expect would happen? Live by the sword and what, then can't die by the sword? Don't poke the bear when you don't know if the cage is locked.
@4thamendment237
@4thamendment237 Жыл бұрын
Let's not leave Japan out of it. If you don't want your people turned into smoke and charcoal briquettes on Hiroshima Barbecue Day, don't pull pranks like that Pearl Harbor stunt.
@jakisator7333
@jakisator7333 Жыл бұрын
@@4thamendment237 so you think warcrimes are justified fighting for a just cause?
@TheModelGuy
@TheModelGuy Жыл бұрын
Very nicely done. An air battle is something very difficult to picture, let alone do a visual for. The book "Black Thursday" by Martin Caidin is what got me hooked on aviation. It's a must read for sure. One thing that should be noted here is that after this disastrous raid, the USAAF stopped all bombing missions into Germany for the remainder of 1943. They hit softer targets in occupied France while building the bomber force back up and waiting on the P-51 to enter service.
@angelonunez8555
@angelonunez8555 Жыл бұрын
No, they still hit targets in Germany, just not as far into Germany.
@viniciusdasilvavinicius7263
@viniciusdasilvavinicius7263 3 ай бұрын
Apple TV - Masters of the Air Series - Episode 3 - Regensburg Mission
@gavin-cy
@gavin-cy 3 ай бұрын
Actually is the next ep
@MoritzvonSchweinitz
@MoritzvonSchweinitz Жыл бұрын
It's shocking how the air war has changed in modern times, compared to these brute force stategies.
@leerzeichn93
@leerzeichn93 Жыл бұрын
To be fair the whole world was in pure war mode at that time. Every single effort was put on war production. Yes, modern aircrafts are 100 times more complex now, but with some industrial shift I can see us pumping out modern aircrafts too in record time. Long time wars are mostly won with production
@jasonthorpe7746
@jasonthorpe7746 Жыл бұрын
My grandad was a B-17 tail gunner during the war and I'm pretty sure he flew during this raid. I unfortunately never got to talk with him about his experience since he died when I was pretty young but the war stories he told my mom are truly harrowing. We still have his old bomber jacket, I keep a shadowbox with all his insignia, ribbons, medals and patches in my room. We actually have his "Lucky Bastard Club" Certificate which were informal certificates given out to guys who survived a full tour of duty (25 sorties which was extended to 35 missions later in the war) and just to put it into perspective the average life expectancy of a bomber crewman was 15 missions and for tail gunners like my grandad it was 8.
@thomasstewart4183
@thomasstewart4183 Жыл бұрын
Wów
@sirmixcomps
@sirmixcomps Жыл бұрын
Cool Story Bro
@myrealname8767
@myrealname8767 Жыл бұрын
My relative was a ball turret gunner, but was KIA on December 31st of 1944. He was 19 years old and in a crew of nine, only four survived. The surviving crew got thrown in POW camps and nearly died there but fortunately survived the war.
@thelostone6981
@thelostone6981 Жыл бұрын
Just remember that some combat vets don’t like talking about their experiences. My grandfather was a radio man on B17s and he never wanted to talk about it. I regret asking him often because it was later, after he died,did I learn that he spent time in Spokane taking care of a horse after his tour because he had PTSD from his experiences. But I’m glad you honor him and have his insignia.
@MagiconIce
@MagiconIce Жыл бұрын
Couldn't you ask the US Airforce, in what missions your grandad flew, a kind of ancestor research? They surely got archives, where they keep such information and it surely is not classified or anything? Then you would've confirmation, if he was part of that raid or not.
@JeepWranglerIslander
@JeepWranglerIslander Жыл бұрын
The number of bombers required to achieve 10% damage is astounding, and highlights how far modern weapons have truly changed air combat. Today a two ship of B-1s fully loaded with GBU-31s could complete the Schweinfurt Raid alone, destroying every target building completely, and still have a couple of bombs left over.
@chardaskie
@chardaskie Жыл бұрын
Horrifying
@Swagpapii
@Swagpapii Жыл бұрын
@@chardaskie I think you misunderstand, what he is saying is that today precision modern weapons have made massive costly air raids like this obsolete. You can gain the same result with much less loss of human life on either side now.
@chardaskie
@chardaskie Жыл бұрын
@@Swagpapii Nope still horrifying but yes at least we don't bomb civvies anymore. Just ask Obama
@RCAvhstape
@RCAvhstape Жыл бұрын
@@chardaskie Damn right. And that's the point.
@agentbarron3945
@agentbarron3945 Жыл бұрын
@@Swagpapii and the even less horrifying part, is all those weapons are incredibly precise. they will hit what its targeted at, unless something goes really wrong there wont be a stray bomb landing in a residential neighborhood because one crewmember got mad at the enemy or because he was too late to press the button
@coolboyeagle9281
@coolboyeagle9281 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was in the mighty eighth. This was one of his stories where he was in a b24 and almost crashed into a b17 After takeoff because of the poor weather
@lukycharms9970
@lukycharms9970 Жыл бұрын
I love this channel. Everything from the demonstrations to the shifts from one perspective to another. It’s some of the best views you can really get. I just finished reading Masters of the Air and this goes along so well with the section on this raid.
@bobjenkins9208
@bobjenkins9208 Жыл бұрын
Wow you did a great job with this, ive heard about this raid plenty times, you actually capture the intensity, i actually felt like i was there, struggling to get home, thanks for amazing video, as usual.
@garygenerous8982
@garygenerous8982 Жыл бұрын
I’ve spent a lot of time researching this raid over the years and it always breaks my heart to think about what those boys went through. But I have to say you guys did an absolutely amazing job detailing this extremely complex and far flung mission.
@TheOperationsRoom
@TheOperationsRoom Жыл бұрын
Thanks and well said
@ShirleyZhang-bt4dj
@ShirleyZhang-bt4dj Жыл бұрын
We can never repay these guys for what they did.
@FINSuojeluskunta
@FINSuojeluskunta Жыл бұрын
If you think these guys had it hard, try being the guys on the ground getting bombed.
@garygenerous8982
@garygenerous8982 Жыл бұрын
@@FINSuojeluskunta based on your comment you obviously have issues with the bombing raids but I can’t tell if it’s because you are a naive idealist who thinks war can be “clean”, an even more naive idealist who thinks no cause is ever important enough to be fought for, or just upset because your team lost.
@justandy333
@justandy333 Жыл бұрын
A very good explanation of the events that day. I cannot even begin to imagine the terror each and every one of those bomber crewmen were experiencing, not just on this raid but virtually every time they embarked on a raid. Thankyou for making all the documentaries you share with us, so we can remember the terrible sacrifices made by the young men of their generation for the freedom we enjoy today.
@tedbaxter5234
@tedbaxter5234 Жыл бұрын
A great, informative animation production of the raid - never seen better! Thank you for the time and effort to produce this!
@samnieves8158
@samnieves8158 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this episode. This was my favorite episode from the World at War documentary, and seeing it from a logistics/strategic manner paints a completely different perspective. Well done lad.
@Sputnikexe
@Sputnikexe Жыл бұрын
Love to see the production quality constantly improving! Great video!
@TheOperationsRoom
@TheOperationsRoom Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much!
@historyelemental7800
@historyelemental7800 Жыл бұрын
>Goes on a mission everyone knows is going to face heavy opposition. >Doesn't remember his parachute > Lives anyway
@TheGecko213
@TheGecko213 Жыл бұрын
Not carrying the Parachute was his good Omen .
@wazza33racer
@wazza33racer Жыл бұрын
No droptanks on the P-47's was a serious mistake, the "Jug" as it was called could easily handle the extra weight, being also capable of handling 3000lb of external load on its wings. Drop tanks are not expensive or technically challenging, it just takes someone to use their noodle, and make sure they get fitted.
@cecielhelder5923
@cecielhelder5923 Жыл бұрын
This was political. They were trying to proof the point to the British that the bombers could get through. Even during the day, without escorts. Churchill wanted the Americans to stop precision bombing during the day and join the RAF at night doing area bombing. When it was clear that unescorted daytime bombing resulted in 20-30% attrition rates, USAAF restricted raids to ranges that allowed for escorts and got serious about drop tanks. Schweinfurt was a very expensive lesson and reality check for the USAAF in 1943. They were literally learning on the job. Much to the chagrin of RAF Bomber Command. They had figured out unescorted daytime raids were suicidal in 1940. They had 50+% loss rates forcing them to bomb at night. They only did occasionally bomb during the day doing precision low level raids over occupied territory with fast, medium bombers like the A20 Havoc/Boston and Mosquito aircraft.
@deplorable_bitter_clinger7482
@deplorable_bitter_clinger7482 Жыл бұрын
@@cecielhelder5923 - Absolutely agree with both of you. Thank you for pointing this out. This is covered very well on the channel "Greg's Airplanes and Automobiles" in his video titled "P-47 Thunderbolt Pt. 6 Range, Deceit and Treachery" kzbin.info/www/bejne/l3SvkmNtbdtpb80 By mid 1944 with drop tanks, P-47 Thunderbolts could cover 80% of Germany. Also the change over to Mustangs was not all at once. The last 8th Air Force group to convert to the Mustang (besides the famous 56th which kept their P-47s and had the most air to air kills) was in December 1944. The fact that the P-47s were turned into such effective ground attack machines is a testament to the rugged design of an aircraft that was originally a high altitude fighter.
@alantoon5708
@alantoon5708 2 ай бұрын
The P-47's at the time had provision to carry a 75 gallon P-39/P-40 type drop tank under the belly. The 108 British paper drop tank (as well as its' metal equivalent) had been approved but were not available at the time. It was not until January/February 1944 that the in theatre P-47's were equipped with wing pylons and plumbing to carry drop tanks. Higher capacity drop tanks (150 gallons) later were used, and the -25 and later had increased internal fuel. There were never enough P-38's in the 8th to make a difference and those suffered from numerous technical issues. The "Big Week" missions of late February 1944 only were possible after the P-47's had wing pylons installed. There were only three P-51 groups operational for most of the Big Week, so the P-47 carried most of the escort burden.
@JUNKERS488
@JUNKERS488 Жыл бұрын
Thank You for remembering these brave men and telling their story.
@Kastev30
@Kastev30 Жыл бұрын
It still amazes to this day how combat operations were so much larger back in WW2. You had to coordinate hundreds of fighters and bombers that had no advanced bombing computers and therefore you had to just drop as much as possible to score a hit, as opposed to today when you get a fraction of that due to the sheer power of modern jets and how accurate munitions have become. You no longer need 300 bombers to complete a mission; hell, nowadays it's possible to complete some objectives without a single pilot due to UAV's or cruise missiles. Though at the same time that bombers and fighters have become modernized, so too have defenses against them. I don't know what's more terrifying: Being a single bomber in a 300 bomber formation that has to deal with dozens of enemy fighters & flak or trying to evade large concentrations of S-300 SAM's and LRAAM's from fighters that can hit you from a hundred miles away. It's sad that the Greatest Generation in all of human history, those who fought in WW2, have nearly all passed away from age. Even the youngest WW2 pilots & soldiers are in their 90s now and it's likely that in the next 10 years we'll see the last of them die. But, it's not all sad, as they'll finally get to join their brothers who fought and died alongside them all those years ago and hopefully share a beer in the afterlife.
@oof6205
@oof6205 Жыл бұрын
The thing that amazes me the most is hundreds upon hundreds of fighters trying to organize with no way to communicate, sometimes while in blind conditions. I'd be worried about crashing into someone if I'd have to turn around and return to base
@soccerguy2433
@soccerguy2433 Жыл бұрын
idk... Air operations are still big these days The Gulf War began with an extensive aerial bombing campaign on 16 January 1991. For 42 consecutive days and nights, the coalition forces subjected Iraq to one of the most intensive air bombardments in military history. The coalition flew over 100,000 sorties, dropping 88,500 tonnes of bombs,[128] which widely destroyed military and civilian infrastructure.[129] The air campaign was commanded by USAF Lieutenant General Chuck Horner, who briefly served as US Central Command's Commander-in-Chief - Forward while General Schwarzkopf was still in the US. On the eve of Operation Desert Storm, the Coalition of the Gulf War numbered 2,430 fixed-wing aircraft in the Kuwaiti Theater of Operations (KTO), almost three-fourths of which belonged to the United States Armed Forces. When the ground assault began on 24 February, that number had increased to over 2,780. Representing a relatively high tooth-to-tail ratio, approximately 60 percent of Coalition aircraft were "shooters" or combat aircraft.[10] The United States Air Force deployed over 1,300 aircraft during the course of the campaign, followed by the United States Navy with over 400 aircraft and the United States Marine Corps with approximately 240. Collectively, the other Coalition partners accounted for over 600 aircraft.
@Kastev30
@Kastev30 Жыл бұрын
@@soccerguy2433 Yeah but we're talking about in ONE battle. It's literally impossible nowadays to have 400-500 planes in the air at once, as there's no real need in the first place. I don't think even if we combined all our current aircraft carriers and managed to launch their full complements all at once it still wouldn't reach WW2 levels. Like just in this video, there were 300 bombers, 50-ish American fighters, and well over a hundred German fighters. That's just pure chaos
@thebusstop
@thebusstop Жыл бұрын
Truly sad that they're leaving us now. We need them now more than ever. But It's time another generation take upon themselves to be courageous in the face of horrific odds against them.
@Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
@Bullet-Tooth-Tony- Жыл бұрын
@@Kastev30 Yeah the Battle of Britain involved 4,513 air craft. We'll never see large scale air engagements like this ever again.
@B17FlyingFortress
@B17FlyingFortress Жыл бұрын
Very nice video! One of the losses on this mission was also "Lady Astrid". A B-17 of the 379th Bomb Group. Piloted by Lt. Alden C. Johnson. He and 5 other of his crew were killed. The rest became POW.
@bobjosephs8376
@bobjosephs8376 8 ай бұрын
My father Captain Robert Josephs was a replacement crew for those lost on the Schweinfurt raid. He flew for the 305th bomb group and the 366th bomb squadron. Among the American units who paid the heaviest price was the 305th Bomb Group, losing 13 planes over 130 men, 36 which were killed with the rest wounded or POW's. He said those who survived were traumatized and depressed and told the new guys not to make any plans because they would all soon be dead. He flew 30 missions from late 1943 till D Day and about half were unescorted into Germany. He was supposed to be in his junior year in college instead he was fighting for his life.
@tommcdaniel2208
@tommcdaniel2208 Жыл бұрын
I can't say enough good things about this presentation. It is the clearest and most informative I've ever seen of an operation like this. Have been following ETA/USAAF operations since the sixties since my dad was a bombardier and later an instructor on the Norden. So, it runs in the family and I have an emotional involvement in what you've presented.. Ironically I ended up in the Army dealing with counter insurrection and recon. Maybe that was as easier job as I never saw 50% losses on a sustained basis. I'm subscribing. Many thanks for the quality of this presentation.
@josephvalvano829
@josephvalvano829 Жыл бұрын
Martin Caiden wrote a book aptly entitled, "Black Thursday" about this horrible day the 8th AF endured, a great read.
@FaithfulObjectivist
@FaithfulObjectivist Жыл бұрын
Amazing story. Thanks for the precise and detailed presentation.
@eddiekulp1241
@eddiekulp1241 Жыл бұрын
My dad was a radio operator on a C 47 after the D day invasion. Said carrying mostly gasoline for Pattons tanks
@19wongs4
@19wongs4 Жыл бұрын
It's honestly shocking how this resembles 18th Century Infantry and cavalry... In order to defend against cavalry you form boxes, and in order to break them you use artillery then cavalry to mop them up when they break... Just like how in this case the ME-110 were the artillery (rockets) which broke their formation just to be hunted by the lighter fighters.
@johnhutton929
@johnhutton929 Жыл бұрын
My German grandmother survived the raid of schwienfurt. My mom would later be born there and later meet my dad who got stationed there after the war. So one could say me and my siblings Were born due to ww2. My German grandfather helped design bearing tooling machines for SKF. He retired from SKF and I have the knife he was given.
@a.w.1906
@a.w.1906 Жыл бұрын
Wow. Thats a Story worth telling it. So many of us would not exist without WW2. My Granddad came from Blankenburg Harz. War brought him to Warstein (here is a brewery with the same Name). Here he met my Grandma. He survived the Eastern Front (later he became an Alcoholican because of his awful experiences there and died from liver cancer in 1975. I barely remember him ) After War they married , settled in Warstein, build a small House and in 1950 my Dad was born. He met my Mom (born also in 1950 and the only one who eventually would have existed without war, but perhaps some Years earlier, because my Granddad came back from France as prisoner of war in 1948) in 1966, and they fell in love immediately. They married in April 1968 and in July 1968 I was born in the same Town (yes, my Dad was a fast one 😉and I was a 3 Months Child 😂) So, my Existence is only caused by this terrible war. My Mother in Law was born in 1935, came from Silesia and had to flee from the incoming Russian Troops in February 1945 to the West of Germany. Her small Family ( ->Mother, Grandmother and younger Brother. Father / Grandfather and older Brother never returned from Russia) went to a little village in the Sauerland. In 1957 she met my Father in Law , who came from Warstein, in a pub in this village. They married, also built a House in Warstein and had two daughters. The younger one, my Wife, is born 1969. So, my Wife also only exists because of WW2. Fate wants it, that in 1989 a 21 Year old stupid young man and a 20 Year old and a bit shy but beautiful young Women met and fell in Love, married in 1997, became parents of a daughter in 1999, built a small House in 2001 in the same Town like their parents and live there to this day. And of course, without WW2, our daughter would neither exist. The Fate of hundreds of Million People would have gone differently without this war. Millions, who died in War and didn't have to and Millions who live today and wouldn't live without it. I think it's very sad and fascinating at the same time.
@abcdefghij8128
@abcdefghij8128 Жыл бұрын
Besatzungsbastard
@thomasparker1789
@thomasparker1789 Жыл бұрын
My mother and Grandmother also survived this raid. She was 9 years old and had to search laundry rooms in several apartment buildings to find my grandma, all while the air raid sirens were going off. They got in a bomb shelter as the bombs were falling. Their neighborhood was one that was destroyed. As an adult she worked as a teacher at the American base in Wűrzburg where she met my father. In the States she worked as a nurse for over 40 years.
@thomasparker1789
@thomasparker1789 Жыл бұрын
Cool about SKF btw; as a kid I had several of their bearings on my bookshelf
@giulianiraymond330
@giulianiraymond330 Жыл бұрын
Pity they did, like all this damned generation of nazi pigs.
@zacharylovelady9265
@zacharylovelady9265 Жыл бұрын
This channel is unbelievably amazing! I don't know how or where he obtains such detailed information
@rangergreen1776
@rangergreen1776 Жыл бұрын
Just finished reading about this battle this afternoon. What a coincidence! Loved the video. Thank you.
@paulceglinski3087
@paulceglinski3087 Жыл бұрын
What an amazing video! Kudos for the hard work. Now, I'm going to have to go through your playlist. Cheers.
@wgolyoko
@wgolyoko Жыл бұрын
Incredible work you've put into this one, great video.
@TheOperationsRoom
@TheOperationsRoom Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@ninianstorm6494
@ninianstorm6494 Жыл бұрын
@@TheOperationsRoom aware USA can give everyone medicare+lower inflation so wages regain value but need to punish all those whom want to stay in Syria like Schiff/pelosi? they constant print money to occupy iraq-syria oil gold george bush 14 years ago said he wants ukraine in nato foreshadow nuland f word 2014 coup kzbin.info/www/bejne/pIW0ZHdnlpKdaJI wesley clark foreshadow reveal 2000 to 2012 all rig for kill iraq to syria kzbin.info/www/bejne/lZ7Ve4V-rMeJfZo
@Jake-rs9nq
@Jake-rs9nq Жыл бұрын
For reference of just how bloody this was: this raid saw more allied KIAs than all the Normandy beaches save Omaha.
@geordie1032
@geordie1032 Жыл бұрын
Another excellent video by 'The Operations Room'. Thank you. Great work.
@justinschnepp5419
@justinschnepp5419 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed in schwinfurt in the mid 2000's, went medal detecting in some woods on base and found spent .50 cal casings dated 1942, can only imagine they were from the raid.
@BhutanBluePoppy
@BhutanBluePoppy Жыл бұрын
According to some old notes on a photo of my dad’s bombardment group, my dad may have flown this operation. He was 8th USAAF, 447th Bombardment Group, Lt George Bowling’s crew, 708th out of Rattlesden base in Suffolk. My dad flew mostly B17s & B24s & at one point was forced to ditch over occupied France. Watching the story of the bomber that had to limp home, I noted the route home was over France. I have always wondered what the circumstances were : now I’m wondering if it could have been on the return trip from this mission 👍
@OneAdam12Adam
@OneAdam12Adam Жыл бұрын
My dad was in the 493rd Bombardments Group of the Eighth Air Force. I should have paid more attention while he was alive as he told his stories. He was stationed out of Debach, England
@yankeetown3739
@yankeetown3739 Жыл бұрын
Great job again as usual. I was stationed in Schweinfurt with the Is Army in the early 90’s. Older German lady was my landlord and had burn scars on her arm from this bombing. Her friend was killed. War sucks…
@adambane1719
@adambane1719 Жыл бұрын
Yeah war sucks ! When America goes home only will the world finally know PEACE !
@mcfearless9924
@mcfearless9924 Жыл бұрын
Dang - I can't get the image out my head of that pilot waving to his comrade moments before immanent death! That will stay with me.
@notmyrealname1437
@notmyrealname1437 Жыл бұрын
One of my much older coworkers in the late 1970s was a navigator on many bombing missions over Germany and lost many of his fellow airmen. My wife's uncle also flew these missions and was shot down over Germany and taken P.O.W. He gave a talk of his experience to his church before he passed away. It was recorded and is one of my treasured possessions.
@lekebbles1392
@lekebbles1392 Жыл бұрын
This channel is so incredible, can't thank you all enough for the effort and knowledge you give us.
@TheOperationsRoom
@TheOperationsRoom Жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!
@yaboishrub3916
@yaboishrub3916 Жыл бұрын
It's been 8 months sence this video was made but everytime I watch/rewatch your videos it really shows just how significant of a war ww2 was.
@dqniel_btw5116
@dqniel_btw5116 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video! You've earned a new sub. I am from Schweinfurt and it's very interesting to see a detailed video about what happened here in WW2. Your animations are on point and the quality of the video is impressive. Keep up those wonderful videos!
@fishyc150
@fishyc150 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather flew RAF pathfinder/ target marking at sweinfurt. All his planes of his unit came back unscathed. It wasn't till after the war he learnt that those coming after him got heavily mauled.
@AnthonyEvelyn
@AnthonyEvelyn Жыл бұрын
Did he fly Mosquitos? My Grand Uncle was ground crew for a Pathfinder Mosquito squadron.
@fishyc150
@fishyc150 Жыл бұрын
@@AnthonyEvelyn i dont know sorry. When I say "fly" he was the navigator. Richard rath got the DFC when with 10 sqn before becoming a Nav instructor then joining pathfinder in 42 or 43. All just blurred memories now 😔
@AnthonyEvelyn
@AnthonyEvelyn Жыл бұрын
@@fishyc150 God bless him.🙏🏾
@TheGecko213
@TheGecko213 Жыл бұрын
@@AnthonyEvelyn Yes, Pathfinders were mosquito squadrons who were the stealth aircraft of those times. They flew very fast and low and carried minimum armament to keep them light and fast and returned without Germans even seeing them on their radar.
@SmedleyDouwright
@SmedleyDouwright 3 ай бұрын
People think of the P-47 as a "beast" at ground attack, but it was a "beast" at high altitude dogfighting because its turbocharger gave it relatively more power than the German fighters in the thin air.
@FloozieOne
@FloozieOne Жыл бұрын
That was absolutely fascinating. Thank you for that peek into history. You have a new subscriber.
@RoaroftheTiger
@RoaroftheTiger Жыл бұрын
An old Mentor was in a B-24 during WW II. He once told me about being on a mission, where They "accidentialy" bombed a Ball Bearing factory ... in Switzerland.
@babaksanaee1460
@babaksanaee1460 Жыл бұрын
These videos are so great I take the time to cast them to my TV and properly watch them from the couch.
@frogstamper
@frogstamper Жыл бұрын
As the years go by, and there are less and less WW2 veterans still with us to tell their stories, it's even more important we continue to remember the massive sacrifices this generation made for all of us today. Thank you for a brilliant and insightful video.
@flyback_driver
@flyback_driver 9 ай бұрын
12:20 man's a true gangster. Kept the aircraft afloat and stayed in the most attacked portion of the formation to protect his fellow aircraft. Knowing his death is soon he sees the disparity in another pilots eyes and makes one last gesture to save him by waving. Hopefully, allowing that other pilot to not have nightmares about his demise.
@FBT9356
@FBT9356 11 ай бұрын
My Uncle was a tail gunner on those raids and the oil fields of Ploesti in Romania his Bomber Jacket he wore is on display at The Mighty 8th museum in Savannah Ga. What brave young men we had then !
@Rusty_Gold85
@Rusty_Gold85 Жыл бұрын
Thats like a whole regiment of soldiers lost . Awesome work "operations Room " that was brilliant
@chrisbingley
@chrisbingley Жыл бұрын
The USAF refused to fly at night, believing that flying in darkness was unsafe. The RAF refused to fly during the day, believing that it made it easier for the Germans to shoot down the bombers. Whilst armchair strategists can argue over who was correct. What it ultimately led to was round the clock bombing of Germany's industrial centres. A factor that is often overlooked.
@bullhead900
@bullhead900 Жыл бұрын
If I may say so, I believe that the daylight bombing was done for more accuracy at the target.
@kellyshistory306
@kellyshistory306 Жыл бұрын
Not quite. The 8th actually did experiment with night bombing. The 422nd Bombardment Squadron joined the RAF on several area bombing night raids in the Autumn of 1943 as a trial run, and the 8th was modifying all their bombers to be night flying capable because they wanted to try flying part of their raids under the cover of darkness (so raids were timed to to start really early in the morning so the bombers flew to the target under darkness, or raids timed to be very late in the day so the bombers flew back to England in darkness). Had the long-range fighter escort problem not been solved, the 8th would likely have joined the RAF in their night bombing raids. Contrary to popular belief, the 8th Air Force was fine with Bombing German cities, and in fact regularly did so throughout 1943 as "last resort" targets which are clearly described as city centers in bomber reports. But the arrival of long range escorts in late 1943 and early 1944 when combined with the difficulties in modify the whole force for night bombing basically put an end to the possibility of American nighttime bombing. Microfilm reel B5053 from the Air Force Historical Research Agency in Maxwell Alabama contains a 400 page file on the American night bombing experiment.
@TheGecko213
@TheGecko213 Жыл бұрын
@@bullhead900 The British were very accurate at night time bombing. Every Bomber raid had two or three ""Pathfinders "" bombers who flew ahead of the group with their best Navigators and dropped multiple flares on the target which pinpointed the targets for the following bombers.
@normannokes9513
@normannokes9513 7 ай бұрын
The USAF period of training for navigators did not equip to operate at night. About 5 months against RAF 12 months plus. USAF aircraft functioned as a group whereas Raf navigators operated independently.
@darkstar-28
@darkstar-28 Жыл бұрын
11:43 Goddamnit, that scene just sent me chills. By how you described, it was like being there seeing all those B-17 trying to fill up the formation while being shot down one by one. Truly terrifying.
@AaronoutmyCobb
@AaronoutmyCobb Жыл бұрын
Absolutely brilliant story telling from a tactical, personal, and emotional perspectives!
@IamtheAlienator
@IamtheAlienator 7 ай бұрын
I first watched the Iwo Jima video and now this animation. Great job, lots of work must have gone into this video. Greetings from Germany.
@knaako9847
@knaako9847 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this documentary. I wasn’t aware how many airplanes of the allies got lost on such an air ride task. Please do more videos like this! 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
@johngrevas8819
@johngrevas8819 Жыл бұрын
Please watch the 1984 NBC Documentary, All The Fine Young Men. You can find it on KZbin.
@MagnificentGermanywithDarion
@MagnificentGermanywithDarion Жыл бұрын
Very well put together video of the selfless sacrifice that these men had endured. I was stationed in Schweinfurt from 88-89 5/41 FA and had learned of this history while living there.I visit Schweinfurt often these days and now I have been on the hunt for the historical sites on both sides. Thank You for again a well out together video of history.
@christopherthompson3387
@christopherthompson3387 Жыл бұрын
1983-85 I was in the US Army A 5/41 FA out of Ft Knox, KY. I never left the States, but a bunch of my friends went to Germany (or, Korea). I was at Ft Sill, OK for a while. Seeing all that history in Germany must have been cool.
@Merennulli
@Merennulli 5 ай бұрын
I was too young to really know him when he died, but one of my grandfathers was part of one of the B-17 crews in 1943. I know he was a gunner, but I don't know which position. It amazes me seeing just how insane the logistics of these missions were. What little I know of his service is from a local article about his service and it doesn't even begin to show all this. Thanks for giving us a better understanding of what happened. As I get older, I really feel the loss of information about my family and what they went through and I'm glad you're highlighting these things for us.
@Zargabaath
@Zargabaath Жыл бұрын
These videos are really some of the best on KZbin. Keep up the good work!
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