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Bombing of Vienna in World War II

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For World War II bombings of the nearby Wiener Neustadt area, seeBombing of Wiener Neustadt in World War II.
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Bombing of Vienna
Part ofWorld War II

Vienna after the bombings
Date4 September 1942 - 16 April 1945
Location
Vienna, Nazi Germany
Belligerents
United StatesUnited States
Soviet UnionSoviet Union
United KingdomUnited Kingdom
Nazi GermanyGermany

The city ofVienna inAustria was bombed 52 times duringWorld War II,[citation needed] and 37,000 residences of the city were lost,[citation needed] 20% of the city's housing stock. Only 41 civilian vehicles survived the raids, and more than 3,000 bomb craters were counted.[citation needed]

History

[edit]

After a loneSoviet air raid conducted on 4 September 1942,[1] Vienna was reached by western Allied bombers in 1944, when theAllied invasion of Italy allowed them to establish an air base atFoggia. After theNormandy invasion, the greater part of the German Air Force (Luftwaffe) was transferred to the West.[citation needed] The rmainingLuftwaffe shot down one tenth of 550 bombers in June 1944.[citation needed]

The air defences of Vienna were aided by a ring ofanti-aircraft batteries set up around the city and three pairs ofFlak towers. These were large anti-aircraft gun blockhouses built in the city. The increasing lack of fuel by autumn 1944 caused artillery on the ground to be the only defence against air raids. It typically took some 5,000 small-calibre and 3,400 large-calibre shells to bring down one bomber. During the day, one out of 125 planes was shot down on average. During the night, that dropped to only one out of 145. However, roughly one third of the bombers and escorts suffered heavy damage. Some Vienna factories were moved to bomb-proof sites such as caves (e.g. theSeegrotte nearHinterbrühl) or hidden in other ways. The military industry boosted its production,[specify] also by use offorced labour ofconcentration camp inmates andPOWs. Bypasses for traffic junctions had been established before the bombings, and traffic did not come to a halt until the very last days of the war.

By early 1945 Vienna had already faced 1,800 bombs.[citation needed] In February and March 1945, 80,000 tons of bombs were dropped by American and British aircraft, which destroyed more than 12,000 buildings and left 270,000 people homeless.[citation needed]

List of raids

[edit]
Chronology[2]
DateTarget/Topic
September 4, 1942First air raid on Vienna during World War IIPetlyakov Pe-8 bombers flew a 3,200-kilometre (2,000 mi) round trip also reachingBudapest,Königsberg andBreslau[1]
March 17, 1944FloridsdorfThe first American air raid on Vienna targeted the Floridsdorf refinery and mined theDanube.[citation needed]
June 16, 1944Floridsdorf B-17s bombed the Florisdorf [sic] oil refinery[3] On this date the 464 BG bombed an oil-blending plant at Vienna.
June 16, 1944Kagran B-17s bombed the Kragan [sic] oil refinery[4]
June 16, 1944Lobau B-24s bombed the Lobau oil refinery.
June 16, 1944Schwechat B-24s bombed the oil refinery at Schwechat in Vienna (Schwechat became a separate city in 1954).
June 16, 1944Winterhafen B-24s bombed the Winterhafen oil depot. An underground storage installation was just west of Mainz.[1]
June 26, 1944Floridsdorf The Floridsdorf oil refinery and marshalling yard were bombed.
June 26, 1944Korneuburg The 461 BG bombed "a refinery in the open country near the small town of Korneuburg".[5]
June 26, 1944Lobau
June 16, 1944Schwechat TheHeinkel firm'sHeinkel-Süd Schwechat aircraft factory, and Schwechat oil refinery were bombed.
June 16, 1944Winterhafen Winterhafen oil refinery bombed.
July 8, 1944Floridsdorf The464[2]Archived 2009-03-16 at theWayback Machine and465th Bombardment Groups earnedDistinguished Unit Citations.[6]: 48 
July 8, 1944Floridsdorf &Zwolfaxing The 464 BG[7] and465 BG earnedDistinguished Unit Citations,[6] as theHeinkel-Süd plant in Floridsdorf was hit, destroying the third prototype of theHe 177B four engined bomber, and possibly damaging the incomplete fourth prototype He 177B airframe.[8]
July 16, 1944[specify]The 32 BS bombed a Vienna oil refinery.
August 21, 1944[specify] The 484 BG received its second DUC for bombing an underground oil storage installation at Vienna.[3]Archived 2009-03-16 at theWayback Machine
August 22, 1944Korneuburg B-24s bombed the oil refinery at Korneuburg. The 485 BG bombed the "Korneuburg [sic] Oil Storage".
August 22, 1944Lobau B-24s bombed the oil refinery at Lobau. The 461 BG bombed the underground oil storage at the refinery.
August 23, 1944Vösendorf 472 B-24s and B-17s supported by P-51s and P-38s bombed the South industrial area of Vienna, including theVösendorf oil refinery.
September 10, 1944[specify] 344 B-17s and B-24s bomb 5 ordnance depots and the SE industrial area in Vienna and 2 oil refineries in the area.
September 10, 1944Schwechat The 32 BS bombed the Schwechat oil refinery.
October 7, 1944LobauThe Lobau oil refinery was bombed. On this date, the741st Bombardment Squadron flew over Vienna to hit an oil refinery.[9]: 162 
October 7, 1944Schwechat
October 7, 1944Winterhafen The 485 BG bombed the "Winterhafen Oil Storage".
October 11, 1944Floridsdorf
October 13, 1944Floridsdorf The 463 BG bombed the Floridsdorf oil refinery. Eighteen B-17s were sent on this mission and two were lost.
October 17, 1944[specify] The industrial area of Vienna was bombed.
November 4 & 7, 1944FloridsdorfThe 32 BS bombed.
November 5, 1944Floridsdorf The 485 BG bombed the oil refinery.
November 15, 1944US intelligence reported in February 1945 that the Vienna area had no fuel since November 15.[10]: 5 
November 18, 1944[specify]The 32 BS bombed a Vienna oil refinery.
November 19, 1944WinterhafenThe 32 BS bombed the "Winterhafen"oil storage.
December 2, 1944Floridsdorf
December 18, 1944Floridsdorf
December 27, 1944Vösendorf
January 1945TheLipizzan horses of theSpanish Riding School were evacuated.
February 7, 1945[Expand] 680 B-17s and B-24s bombed oil refineries at Schwechat, Floridsdorf, Korneuburg, and Kagran refineries in the Vienna, Austria area.
February 7, 1945Floridsdorf oil refinery
February 7, 1945Kagran The Kagran oil refinery was bombed "in the Vienna, Austria area".
February 7, 1945Korneuburg The Korneuburg oil refinery was bombed "in the Vienna, Austria area".
February 7, 1945LobauThe 32 BS bombed the Lobau oil refinery.
February 7, 1945Schwechat oil refinery
February 14, 1945Floridsdorf
February 14, 1945Lobau
February 14, 1945Schwechat
February 15, 1945Korneuburg
February 20, 1944Schwechat
February 20, 1945Lobau The Lobau oil refinery and the Floridsdorf marshalling yard at Vienna were bombed. "The attack was outstandingly successful, resulting in severe damage to theboiler house, virtual destruction of thedistillation unit pump house, the"fractionating tower" probably hit, and serious damage totankage and rail sidings.[11]
March 12, 1945Floridsdorf B-24s and B-17s bombed the Floridsdorf oil refinery. The 747 bombers and 229 fighter planes caused heavy damage to the city centre and theVienna State Opera and theBurgtheater burnt, and theAlbertina, the Heinrichshof (on Ringstraße) and the Messepalast (Trade Fair Palace) were heavily damaged. The Philipphof (a block of apartments opposite to the Albertina and the State Opera House) collapsed, burying some 200 people who had sought shelter from the raid in its cellars. Most of the victims have never been unearthed and theMahnmal gegen Krieg und Faschismus (English:Memorial against War and Fascism) has been erected there.
March 14, 1945During the briefing for bombing theVienna oil refinery, the briefing officer told crews to avoid theSt. Stephen's Cathedral, theVienna State Opera, theSchönbrunn Palace and other historic buildings and schools. Due to weather, the alternate target (Wiener Neustadt marshaling yards) was bombed.[9]: 228–9 
March 15, 1945[Expand] 109 B-17s bomb the oil refinery at Ruhland (the Fifteenth's deepest penetration into Germany). 103 others bomb the alternate target, the refinery at Kolín, Czechoslovakia. 470+ other bombers attack targets in Austria, including Moosbierbaum, Schwechat, and Vienna/Floridsdorf oil refineries.
March 16, 1945Floridsdorf
March 16, 1945Korneuburg
March 1945 (mid)300 bombs were dropped on theTiergarten Schönbrunn, the world's oldest zoo. 2,000 animals out of 3,500 died.
March 16, 1945Schwechat
March 20, 1945[Expand] In Austria, 760+ B-17s and B-24s, with fighter escort, hit the Korneuburg and Kagran oil refineries.
March 21, 1945[specify] 3 oil refineries and a goods depot bombed at Vienna.
March 21, 1945FloridsdorfThe 32 BS bombed.
March 22, 1945[specify] 2 Vienna oil refineries were bombed.
March 23, 1945[specify] Vienna oil refinery(ies) bombed. On April 2, Soviet troops began theVienna Offensive.
March 30, 1945North Goods Depot In the last Lone Wolf mission, 11 x aircraft using PFF strike Wien North Goods yard between 1034 ~ 1220 hrs.
April 16, 1945"The advances of our ground forces have brought to a close the strategic air war waged by the United States Strategic Air Forces and the Royal Air Force Bomber Command." (Spaatz dispatch to Doolittle and Twining).[12]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abBremen, Vienna, Budapest get fierce mass air raid by William Dickinson, British United Press, 5 September 1942
  2. ^"Campaign Diary".Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary. UK Crown. Archived fromthe original on 2009-04-17. Retrieved2009-03-22.
    1944:JanuaryArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,FebruaryArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web ArchiveMarchArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,AprilArchived 2006-02-21 at theWayback Machine,MayArchived 2013-04-09 at theWayback Machine,JuneArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,JulyArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,AugustArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,SeptemberArchived 2004-09-29 at theWayback Machine,OctoberArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,NovemberArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,DecemberArchived June 6, 2011, at theWayback Machine
    1945JanuaryArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,FebruaryArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,MarchArchived 2007-07-06 at theUK Government Web Archive,AprilArchived 2012-01-18 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^"Army Air Forces in World War II". 6 October 2007. Archived fromthe original on 6 October 2007.
  4. ^McKillop, Jack."Combat Chronology of the USAAF". Archived fromthe original on 2007-06-10. Retrieved2007-05-25.
    1944:JanuaryArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine,FebruaryArchived 2014-12-27 at theWayback Machine,MarchArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine,AprilArchived 2009-02-16 at theWayback Machine,MayArchived 2012-06-06 at theWayback Machine,JuneArchived 2009-02-16 at theWayback Machine,JulyArchived 2013-05-27 at theWayback Machine,AugustArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine,SeptemberArchived 2009-02-13 at theWayback Machine,OctoberArchived 2010-03-07 at theWayback Machine,NovemberArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine,DecemberArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine
    1945:JanuaryArchived 2009-02-16 at theWayback Machine,FebruaryArchived 2013-09-29 at theWayback Machine,MarchArchived 2013-06-02 at theWayback Machine,AprilArchived 2010-03-07 at theWayback Machine,MayArchived 2010-03-07 at theWayback Machine,JuneArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine,JulyArchived 2010-03-07 at theWayback Machine,AugustArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine,SeptemberArchived 2009-02-11 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^Mission histories for Bombardment Groups:
    301 BG/"32 BS":Thompson, Boyd."301st Bomb Group Mission Summary of the: 32nd, 352nd, 353rd and 419th Bomb Squadrons".32nd Bomb Squadron, 1942 -1945. Archived fromthe original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved9 February 2015.
    "461 BG":"Chapter IX Target: German Oil, June 1944". 461st.org.
    "464 BG":"Our Missions: The 464 BG Mission List".[permanent dead link]
    "486 BG":"Prologue: The Stories Behind the Numbers". Retrieved9 February 2015.
    "487 BG":"487th Bomb Group (H): Combat Missions". Retrieved9 February 2015.
  6. ^abPolk, David (December 1991).World War II Army Airborne Troop Carriers. Turner Publishing. p. 48.ISBN 978-1-56311-040-5. Retrieved2009-01-10.
  7. ^"Air Force Combat Units of World War II - Part 7". Archived fromthe original on 2009-03-16. Retrieved2009-05-20.
  8. ^Griehl, Manfred; Dressel, Joachim (1998).Heinkel He 177-277-274. Shrewsbury, England: Airlife Publishing. p. 170.ISBN 1-85310-364-0.
  9. ^abAmbrose, Stephen E. (2001).The Wild Blue: The Men and boys who flew the B-24s over Germany. New York:Simon & Schuster. p. 162, 228–9.ISBN 0-7432-0339-9.
  10. ^"Meeting No. 45/6"(PDF). Enemy Oil Intelligence Committee. February 6, 1945. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 21, 2008. Retrieved2009-03-22.
    • "Memorandum": 19 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
    • "Minutes": 20 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
    • "Annex": 27 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
    • "Weekly Survey No. 31". Economic Advisory Branch. 2 February 1945: 32 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
    • "Table I, Estimated Output …". 6 February 1945: 33 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
    • "Table II …". 6 February 1945: 34 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
    • "Table III Output Production Status …": 35–7 of pdf.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
  11. ^Twining, Nathan (Foreword) (February 1945)."Attack on Vienna/Lobau Oil Refinery: 20 February 1945".Lobau Oil Refinery. Fifteenth Air Force (available atUSAHEC). Retrieved2009-03-11.UNCLASSIFIED [from SECRET] … on 9 Feb 88
  12. ^Jablonski, Edward (1971).Volume 1 (Tragic Victories), Book II (The Big League). pp. 115–6.{{cite book}}:|work= ignored (help)
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