 This Day in . . .
This Day in . . .
303rd Bomb Group (H) History
February 4th
   
February 4, 1943
303rd BG (H) Combat Mission No. 14 
 Target: Industrial Targets NW of Osnabruck, Germany 
 Crews Dispatched: 13 
 Crews Lost: Capt. Cole - 3 KIA, 6 POW, 1 WIA/POW/DOW 
 Crew Members Lost or Wounded: 1 WIA 
 Length of Mission: 5 hours plus 
 Bomb Load: 10 x 500 lbs M43 
 Bombing Altitude: 19,000 ft 
 Ammo Fired: 20,991 rounds 
 Enemy Aircraft Claims: 8 Destroyed, 1 Probable, 2 Damaged 
 View Mission Report
February 4, 1943
8th AF: Lieutenant General Frank M. Andrews, USAAF, assumes command of the European Theater of Operations, US Army. (Also see Western Mediterranean below.) VIII Bomber Command Mission 33: 65 B-17s of the 1st Bombardment Wing and 21 B-24s of the 2nd Bombardment Wing are dispatched against the Hamm, Germany marshalling yards. The B-24s turn back before hitting the Dutch coast when the temperature drops below the lowest limit of the thermometers (-40 degrees C). Heavy clouds cover Hamm so three of four B-17 groups (39 B-17s) attack the marshalling yard, port area and industries in Emden, Germany between 1200 and 1215 hours local dropping 92.25 tons of bombs. We claim 25 enemy fighters destroyed, 8 probably destroyed and 6 damaged; 5 B-17s are lost; human casualties are 17 WIA and 50 MIA. Bombers are opposed for the first time by Ju 88 and Me 110 twin-engine fighters. The 4th Fighter Group dispatches 21 Spitfire Mk Vs on uneventful fighter patrols and an air-sea rescue search.  
February 4, 1944
303rd BG (H) Combat Mission No. 104 
 Target: City area, Frankfurt, Germany (PFF Bombing) 
 Crews Dispatched: 38 
 Crew Members Lost or Wounded: 3 crewmen experienced frostbite 
 Length of Mission: 7 hours, 15 minutes 
 Bomb Load: 21 & 42 65 lb M47A1 Incendiaries 
 Bombing Altitudes: A Group, 25,000 ft; B Group, 24,000 ft 
 Ammo Fired: 5,620 rounds 
 View Mission Report
February 4, 1944
STRATEGIC OPERATIONS 8th AF: Mission 208: 589 B-17s and 159 B-24s are dispatched to attack industry and railroad yards at Frankfurt/Main, Germany; 346 B-17s and 27 B-24s hit the target; due to weather and navigational problems, 122 B-17s hit Giessen, 51 B-17s hit Wiesbaden, 17 B-24s hit the Trier area, 15 B-24s hit the Arloff area, 2 B-24s hit the Russelheim area, 1 B-24 hits Grafenhausen, 1 B-24 hits Darmstadt, 1 B-17 and 1 B-24 hit Koblenz and 26 B-24s and 23 B-17s hit unknown targets; they claim 4-0-1 Luftwaffe aircraft; 18 B-17s and 2 B-24s are lost, 2 B-17s and 1 B-24 are damaged beyond repair and 359 aircraft are damaged; casualties are 7 KIA, 20 WIA and 203 MIA. Escort is provided by 56 P-38s, 537 Eighth and Ninth Air Force P-47s and 44 Ninth Air Force P-51s; they claim 8-0-4 Luftwaffe aircraft; 1 P-38 is lost, 1 P-47 is damaged beyond repair and 5 P-38s and 4 P-47s are damaged; casualties are 1 MIA. Mission 209: 7 of 7 B-17s drop 319 bundles of leaflets on Lorient, Tours, Nantes, Raismes, Lille and Cambrai, France and Antwerp, Belgium at 2102-2132 hours without loss.  
February 4, 1945
STRATEGIC OPERATIONS 8th AF: Mission 819: 7 of 9 B-24s drop leaflets in the Netherlands and Germany during the night.  
February 4, 1945
Yalta Conference begins with Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin. 
8th AF history extracted from Jack McKillop's USAAF Combat Chronology
 
 February 3
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 February 5
        
        
February 5 
  
