Finding Aid · Mission Log
07 APRIL 1945 · SATURDAY · STATION 104

Mission 931

Krummel
Bombed Primary
Intended Target
Krummel
Krummel, Germany
Operating Group
93rd BG
2AD
Takeoff Base
Hardwick
Station 104
Landing Base
Hardwick
Station 104
Aircraft Effective
128 / 340
effective / dispatched
Bomb Tonnage
350
tons
ROUTE PLATE · TAKEOFF → TARGET
TAKEOFF · HARDWICKTARGET · KRUMMEL
Bearing Out
76° T
Bearing In
264° T
Route Length
1,100 nmi
Time Aloft
4 h 05 m
§ Outcome
0
Ships Aborting
5
Ships Lost
6
Men Lost
§ Times & Distance
Reveille
02:00
Stations
08:20
Takeoff
09:00
Form-Up
06:05
Time Over Target
10:30
Return Time
13:05
Distance
1,100 nmi
Fuel Aboard
2,500 gal
Fuel Consumed
1,800 gal
§ Weather
Cloud En-Route to Target
Clear skies with good visibility throughout the route.
Air Temp at Altitude
-18 °F
Lowest Temp
-20 °F
Wind Speed
25 kt
Wind Direction
20°
§ Bombing & Defense
Bombing Altitude
19,000 ft
Bombing Run Heading
15° True
Forming Altitude
9,000 ft
Fighter Cover
2 P-47, 1 P-51 groups
Bombing Accuracy
Very good
Flak Description

None at target; intense fighter-cannon fire — a 30mm shell penetrated the pilot's armor plate

§ Sorties · 1 Aircraft Dispatched

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

1 ship carrying your selection
Unknown · 42-50543 · AG · 330th SQDN
Bombed Primary

The 34th mission on April 7th went back to an oil refinery southeast of Hamburg, twelve miles out. The familiar anxiety returned the moment the map curtain came back. When the pilot inspected the assigned aircraft before takeoff he found that some previous crew had lined the pilot's seat and back with several layers of flak vests. He hadn't seen that done before and left them as they were. Everything went smoothly until the IP, where fighters jumped the formation. They broke off when the 88s opened up over the target. The bombs went down, and the fighters came back as soon as the formation cleared the flak. Thorstenson shot down an ME-109. Conway then called out two P-51s at two o'clock high, moving to eleven o'clock. When the second of the pair turned its nose toward the squadron, Conway recognized it as German and opened fire. The aircraft went below them, rolled over, and the pilot bailed out. With 450 jets reported in the area, and both enemy aircraft having approached from behind American planes, no one else in the squadron had fired on them. Near the end of the running fight, a fighter cannon shell came through the armor plate beside the pilot's seat, angled back, and exploded. The blast shredded the flak curtain and broke the pilot's seat belt. A piece lodged in the co-pilot Doug Schetter's left knee and drove toward his hip. The radio operator Eck was also wounded. The pilot looked at his seat after they parked. The flak vests were chewed to pieces. A distress message got through and they were given plenty of runway. Schetter and Eck were taken to the hospital. Two more gunners finished their tours that day, having volunteered for extra flights earlier. Thorstenson later received an Oak Leaf Cluster to his Air Medal for the engagement.

Sources

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