Finding Aid · Mission Log
04 NOVEMBER 1944 · SATURDAY · STATION 104

Mission 700

Hannover/Misburg
Bombed Primary
Intended Target
Hannover/Misburg
Hannover, Germany
Operating Group
93rd BG
2BD
Takeoff Base
Hardwick
Station 104
Landing Base
Hardwick
Station 104
Aircraft Effective
210 / 222
effective / dispatched
Bomb Tonnage
591.3
tons
ROUTE PLATE · TAKEOFF → TARGET
TAKEOFF · HARDWICKTARGET · HANNOVER/MISBURG
Bearing Out
88° T
Bearing In
274° T
Route Length
1,140 nmi
Time Aloft
6 h 10 m
§ Outcome
0
Ships Aborting
0
Ships Lost
0
Men Bailed Out
0
Men Lost
§ Times & Distance
Reveille
04:00
Stations
08:15
Takeoff
08:40
Form-Up
06:10
Time Over Target
10:10
Return Time
14:50
Distance
1,140 nmi
Fuel Aboard
2,500 gal
Fuel Consumed
2,250 gal
§ Weather
Cloud En-Route to Target
Heavy stratocumulus (8/10) topped by a complete (10/10) cumulus overcast — extensive cloud cover at multiple levels.
Air Temp at Altitude
-38 °F
Wind Speed
59 kt
Wind Direction
273°
§ Bombing & Defense
Bombing Altitude
24,000 ft
Bombing Run Heading
267° True
Forming Altitude
14,000 ft
Fighter Cover
7 P-51, 1 P-47 groups
Bombing Accuracy
Missed by one mile due to weather
Flak Description

Meager in Frisians, meager at landfall, intensive at target

§ Sorties · 3 Aircraft Dispatched

Each ship that lifted off, and the men aboard her.

1 ship carrying your selection
Unidentified ship
409th SQDN
Bombed Primary
Pos
Airman
Status
P
Edward L. McGuireCapt▸ THREAD
RTN
E-TT
RTN
RO
RTN
TG
RTN

McGuire M7, 1944-11-04, Hannover/Misburg (official credit Merseburg). Heavy and accurate flak, saw red in the center of bursts. Overran formation on turn into target, had to dog-leg out and back in alone; last mission McGuire had trouble holding formation. Source: McGuire memoir pp.006, 101-102.

B-24H · 42-94970 · AG · 330th SQDN
Bombed Primary

The tenth mission was to an oil refinery at Hannover, though the crew remembered it as Merseburg, one of the most heavily defended targets in Germany. The route went out over water to Cuxhaven, then Bremen, Lüneburg, and Cette before reaching Hannover. The return passed Dümmer Lake, Zwolle, and Alkmaar. Flak in the Frisians on the way in was meager, but over the target it was intense. The crew later recalled 155mm guns sending up enormous bursts that broke the formation apart before bombs away. Hughes released the bombs. Weather intervened and they missed the target by a mile. Four flak holes in the aircraft; no ships or men lost. From November 4th the missions came rapidly, five in seven days. It was, as the crew described it, their greatest period of strain. They were weary, tired almost beyond endurance.

Unidentified ship
328th SQDN
Bombed Primary
Pos
Airman
Status

Misburg (Hannover), -40 degrees, flak rough, oxygen troubles. Aircraft 994-K (42-99994 'Beaver's Baby').

Sources

Mighty Eighth War Diary
Published
Roger A Freeman · Jane's Publishing Company Limited · 1981