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My Grandpa Nearly Bombed the Ludendorff Bridge in WW2

2 pointsby BenMorganIOover 5 years ago
Hey guys,<p>Last week I was at my grandfather&#x27;s funeral and learned that during a bombing run as a tail gunner, his team failed to hit a target in Nazi Germany. The bombs were using up too much fuel due their weight and they needed to be dropped.<p>They came across a bridge and decided it would be a good spot to dump their bombs. They missed; again. That bridge was Ludendorff Bridge and was later critical during the Battle of Remagen.<p>Although this is talked about with quite some humor, I believe this is a serious footnote to the history of the Battle of Remagen and more importantly, the Ludendorff Bridge. To whom would I contact to help get this in the history books or at least cemented enough to earn a small Wikipedia reference?

2 comments

NeedMoreTeaover 5 years ago
RAF museum in Hendon has extensive archives, and holds a fair selection of squadron records, though mainly maintenance and base records I think, and a huge archive of photos and other papers. The National Archives holds <i>most</i> squadron operational records -- nearly all survived, so it should be relatively easy to check, and potentially get confirmation.<p>If you have his log book, a drop would be recorded by pilot and bomb aimer, but I&#x27;m not sure if that would be required for a gunner. Failing that if anyone in the family remembers their squadron # or plane&#x27;s code (RAF were 3 letters -- 2 letter squadron code and 1 letter aircraft ID, so easy to remember and they&#x27;d usually fly the same plane each time), or has any bits with his service number, either will help narrow down an archive search and correlate with records.<p>The RAF museum have had several projects gathering anecdotes, and adding personal details to their formal archives, and an extensive research section.<p>I&#x27;m sure there&#x27;s equivalents for the USAF, maybe through their museum in Dayton, OH? I&#x27;m sure both RAF and USAF museums are used to dealing with history enquiries and may be able to point you at other resources that may help.
ggmover 5 years ago
Contact his squadron&#x2F;flight history people, which the USAAF history project (or the RAF equivalent) should be able to identify and confirm from notes in their holdings.<p>All flight crew had to detail things like this, because failure to drop bombs could mean not completing your &quot;mission&quot; which meant you were one less towards being rotated out of active duty. Therefore the records where pretty remorseless<p>(on drop, bombs caused a semi-automatic camera to fire and record where they were)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.afhra.af.mil&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.afhra.af.mil&#x2F;</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.forces-war-records.co.uk&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.forces-war-records.co.uk&#x2F;</a>