THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion

This topic is about
Chastise
ARCHIVED READS
>
2023 - August - Allied Air Ops during 1943
message 1:
by
'Aussie Rick', Moderator
(new)
-
rated it 3 stars
Jul 28, 2023 05:00PM

reply
|
flag





Sam

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/..."
Nice choice Tom!




I hope you enjoy the book as much as I did. Keep us all posted Jonny.

[bookcover:Chastise: The Dambusters ..."
fast & great.



In continental Europe the destruction of Hamburg is regarded as a defining moment in the Second World War. It happened eighteen months before Dresden, at a time when much of Germany was still confident of final victory. It was a far greater shock to the system than Dresden was, unleashing almost a million refugees across a nation that had still not quite accepted the consequences of bombing. Those refugees brought with them tales of unimaginable horror: fires hot enough to melt glass, a firestorm strong enough to uproot trees and hurl them into the flames, and rumours of 200,000 people killed within a few days and nights (although, in fact, the total was more like 45,000).


That's good to hear as I am sure you will enjoy Max Hastings book.

Very interesting post Jonny!

one Stirling collided with a Ju88 night fighter as he dived to avoid a searchlight. Geoff Turner and his 75 Squadron crew managed to limp home, but the night fighter was almost certainly finished. It turned on its back and fell headlong towards Hamburg, to be recorded later as a ‘probable’ victory to the British crew.


That's a hard way to gain a scalp!



Yes, I think it may be hard to beat James Holland's account.

"As for sailors, it was one of his favourite sayings that the three things one should never take on a boat were an umbrella, a wheelbarrow and a naval officer."

"Churchill recognised that such a figure had important uses. Horace Walpole wrote in the mid-eighteenth century: 'No great country was ever saved by good men, because good men will not go to the lengths that may be necessary'."
Sir Arthur Harris:
https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/v...



Looks good Marc, although I only have one specific title under my belt (guess who it'll be compared with?) Along of course with the relevant chapter from the venerable The Mighty Eighth: A History of the Units, Men and Machines of the US 8th Air Force.
'Aussie Rick' wrote: ""Chastise: The Dambusters Story 1943" - Another quote from the book in regard to 'Bomber' Harris:
"Churchill recognised that such a figure had important uses. Horace Walpole wrote in the mid-eight..."
Interesting couple of posts Rick, fairly accurate, I'd think, but telling at the same time. Mighty Max always did have an axe to find with the Bomber Barons....

Looks good Marc, although I only have one specific title under ..."
Yes, I've been mentally comparing it to Middlebrook's tome as well, and so far I feel it stands up pretty well. Different style and not as much of the oral history aspect. Seems to be a good book for someone who is already versed in the 8th AF and/or the air war over Europe as it doesn't go into lots of the background and technical information so many others seem to. As for Freeman, I read that one over 40 years ago so my memory is just a bit fuzzy there.

"It was Wallis's additional good fortune that Bufton and Elworthy - a thirty-one-year-old New Zealander of outstanding abilities who eventually became head of the RAF - were original thinkers, open to new ideas in a fashion that Harris was not. They grasped the terrific theatrical impact that the dams' destruction would make, surely greater than that of yet another assault on German cities. Churchill once said grumpily, 'I'm sick of these raids on Cologne,' to which Sir Arthur Harris riposte - 'So are the people of Cologne!' - was not wholly convincing."


By 1.30 a.m., the fires already extended from the Berliner Tor on the edge of the city centre to the Hammer Park in the east, and from the banks of the river as far north as the Wandsbeker Chaussee. In half an hour the RAF had created a single fire that had engulfed several square miles of the city. Had it been left to itself it would probably not have spread further. A feature of firestorms is that, because all the winds blow inwards to feed the flames, there is little spread from the main centre. But the fire was not left to itself. The RAF continued bombing for almost half an hour after the firestorm had taken hold, dropping incendiaries across the entire eastern quarter of the city. Large parts of Eilbek, Barmbek and Wandsbek were badly hit, and soon the fire service was receiving reports that the flames had spread as far as the main railway station to the west, and the suburb of Horn to the east.


The centre of this burning hell was in Borgfelde, around the point where Ausschläger Weg crosses the Mittel Kanal. This was where the Lotze Engineering Works was situated, which the British War Office suspected of producing underwater mines for the Wehrmacht. However, the Nienstadt timber yard lay on the other side of the canal, and it is possible that the intense heat given off by huge stacks of burning wood acted as the first catalyst to the firestorm.
For four and a half hours this unassuming corner of the city was the eye of the hurricane – the centre of a city-wide furnace that was burning at temperatures of over 1000°C. By dawn there was little left to burn. In many areas the house façades were all that was left standing, like blackened empty shells above the glowing rubble. Everything else – floors, ceilings, furniture, the stuff of people’s everyday lives – had been consumed. In some buildings the fires would continue to burn for a long time, particularly those in which the occupants had stocked up early on coke and coal for the winter, but in most cases it was gradually burning itself out. As it ran out of fuel, the raging heat diminished, and the wind died down.


It is impossible to say with any accuracy how many people died that night. At the time rumours put the death-toll at a hundred thousand, and for once the figure was not entirely far-fetched. Because of the chaos that reigned in the aftermath of the catastrophe, German officials were never able to say for certain which deaths had occurred during which air raid, but the official number for the series of attacks that week was eventually calculated at 42,600,58 of whom the vast majority died during the firestorm of 27/28 July.
Terrifying as that total is, it is a miracle that the final figure was not higher. A quarter of the population of Hamburg lived within the bombed area – 427,637 people, according to official figures – and their numbers had been swelled by the influx of people made homeless by the first heavy attack. Yet more than 90 per cent of the population escaped with their lives. Many of these people lived beyond the edges of the firestorm, but even in Hammerbrook and Hamm the number who survived still outweighed the number who died.



"When Gibson was nominated for a second DSO, Cochrane - who appears previously to have met him only once or twice - queried the award, suggesting that a third DFC would be more appropriate. Harris sharply overruled him: 'Any Captain who completes 172 sorties in an outstanding manner is worth two DSOs, if not a VC. Bar to DSO approved'."
Guy Gibson:
https://vcgca.org/our-people/profile/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_Gibson


Good book, and I've written up a short review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Now, it's on to my next book for the group read:


"Behind all this clutter was the loneliest place in Bomber Command - the aircraft's rear turret, in which only a small man might feel remotely comfortable, and which only a brave one cared to occupy at all: there was no room for a rear-gunner to wear his parachute. If the plane was hit, unless he jumped fast - and some 'hit the silk' without waiting to check whether the pilot might keep flying - he was unlikely to get out at all."
The Lancaster Bomber:
https://www.forces.net/heritage/aviat...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_La...

"Behind all this clutter was the loneliest place in Bomber Command - the aircraft's rear turret, in which only..."
It took guts.

"Behind all this clutter was the loneliest place in Bomber Command - the aircraft's rear turret, in which only..."
I can only second that... to be sat there waiting to be the first target for German interceptors can't have been conducive to a peaceful watch. Just how brave?
Wallace McIntosh, a rear gunner with 207 Squadron, saw a Lancaster ‘blazing like hell’ a thousand yards away as a German fighter came in repeatedly to attack it. As the plane fell out of the sky he saw five parachutes open, but the Lancaster’s rear gunner, obviously trapped inside the plane, carried on firing till the end. ‘I have never seen such bravery,’ McIntosh recalls. ‘The poor bugger was still sitting there firing away and the fighter went back in to have another blast at him, with the gunner still defiant, and the Lancaster blew up.’One of the Lancs that drifted out of the Window coverage on the first raid on Hamburg.


"This was the Gruppe's first contact with the American "furniture vans" since it had left Russia in early February and [...] the radio was filled with the pilots' "ooohs and aahs."
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...


"It was a significant scandal of the bomber offensive, for which Avro shared responsibility with the RAF, that parachute escape from a stricken Lancaster was exceptionally difficult because of its inadequate emergency hatches. Bomber Command's Operational Section repeatedly highlighted this issue: whereas half the fliers aboard doomed USAAF bombers survived, only one in five of the RAF's did so, and just 15 per cent of Lancaster crews. Yet nothing was done."
Lancaster Safety Equipment:
https://masterbombercraig.wordpress.c...

"Ken Brown landed safely at 0533, followed by Bill Townsend last, at 0615, after a troubled passage home in which he had to shut down an engine. As he approached Scampton he found that hot oil from the front guns had smeared the windscreen so badly that he was obliged to peer out of his side window to judge the approach. O-Orange bumped repeatedly before finally settling clumsily to earth. As its weary pilot climbed down from the cockpit, a gruff, unfamiliar voice demanded to be told how the trip had gone. Townsend irritably told the questioner to wait until debriefing, Sir Arthur Harris was unamused."


That is just wrong-headed and callous. Blame lies squarely with leadership.

"It was a significant scandal of the bom..."
That's disgraceful.

Not saying that the hatches weren't a contributory factor, and in the past I've enjoyed the Hastings axe as much as anyone, but if you're pinned to the floor of a crippled plane in an uncontrollable spin then the hatch size is the least of your problems.

‘A Wing and a Prayer: The "Bloody 100th" Bomb Group of the U.S. Eighth Air Force in Action Over Europe in World War II’
and have to say it’s one of the best Second World War memoirs I’ve read with an absolutely amazing insight into life on the aerial front lines and at home on the ground. I cannot recommend it highly enough to read.

It's not something that he makes entirely clear, but I got the impression it was a size and location issue.

https://www.maxhastings.com/2019/09/0...

"On 9 June 1943, police chiefs in the areas affected by the Möhne collapse compiled a preliminary report on its consequences. Almost six thousand cattle and 625 pigs had perished; over four thousand hectares of agricultural land had been flooded, sludge-caked and rendered uncultivable; almost a hundred factories had been more or less seriously damaged, thirty-three slightly so; forty-six road and rail bridges had been wrecked or damaged; bathetically, the report included the destruction of thirty-three clusters of beehives. The final death toll was estimated at 1,294, or possibly as high as 1,579 - several hundred people were still missing. Over a thousand houses had been destroyed or badly damaged, in addition to vastly more that were swamped, their inhabitant' possessions ruined. When, a week after Chastise on the night of 23 May, Force raided Dortmund, 650 people died, and the work of the firefighters was grievously impeded by lack of water, caused by the draining of the Möhne."
Operation Chastise:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operati...


Books mentioned in this topic
The Luftwaffe over Germany: Defense of the Reich (other topics)Bomber Pilot: A Memoir of World War II (other topics)
Serenade to the Big Bird (other topics)
The Luftwaffe over Germany: Defense of the Reich (other topics)
The Luftwaffe over Germany: Defense of the Reich (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Philip Ardery (other topics)Bert Stiles (other topics)
Martin Caidin (other topics)
Martin Caidin (other topics)
Bert Stiles (other topics)
More...