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#1
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Keep them coming Art.
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Subject: Flying into unsustianable losses. Again and again.
From: (Jim McCartan) Date: 7/25/03 11:47 AM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: Keep them coming Art. More More I sure will. The truth will out. Arthur Kramer Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#3
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![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Some target had to be hit no matter what the loses. The heavily defended RR Bridges were a case in point. Here are two of hundreds of examples where in spite of heavy losses these targets were hot over and over again without let-up. The idea that the USAAC would not attack where losses could be unsustainable was only propaganda for the nice folks at home worrying about their sons in battle. Unfortunately some "historians" bought the idea hook line and sinker contrubuting to distortion of the facts. Two Bad Days Over the Deadly RR Bridges Railroad bridges were brutally defended. Knock out a RR bridge and you have cut transport for possibly hundreds of miles . And while repairing track took only a few hours. rebulding a RR bridge over a river or chasm might take weeks. We had some of our heaviest losses over these bridges. On the 13th of February 1945 we attacked the RR Bridge at Euskirchen. We lost two aircraft over the target. We lost Yeager and his crew and Williams (one chute seen to open) and his crew. The very next day we hit the Engers RR bridge and we lost 5 aircraft over the target. Brennen,Holms, Jones, Nelson and Meppen and crews were lost but three chutes were seen you open. Two bridges,two days, seven crews lost. A lot of empty bunks at the 344th. And the war was almost over. What a time to die. Death Over Paris On preparation for D-Day the 344th was hitting bridges and rail lines leading to Omaha Beach. A critical target was the Paris RR bridge which allowed vast amounts of train traffic to move west toward Omaha. We hit the Paris RR bridge on the morning 28 May, 1944. The defenses were brutal and out of the 56 B-26's that went out that day, 5 were were shot down over the target with a loss of 31 aircrew. We lost 4 from the 495th squadron including the crews of Seale, Woodrum, Peterson and Shewel. The fifth loss was Reynolds crew of the 497th squadron. 5 out of 56. No survivors. There were a lot of empty bunks that night. It was a bad day over Paris. Unsustainable losses cannot be sustained. |
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