Yesterday     Tomorrow

May 28th, 1944 (SUNDAY)

UNITED KINGDOMHMCS Algonquin and Sioux departed Scapa Flow to Portsmouth and D-Day Ops.

The USAAF's Eighth Air Force in England flies two missions.

Mission 376: 1,341 bombers and 697 fighters in five forces are dispatched to hit oil targets in Germany; 32 bombers and 9 fighters are lost; they claim 64-30-31 Luftwaffe aircraft:

1. 610 B-17 Flying Fortresses are dispatched against an oil targets at Ruhland/Schwarz-Heide (38 bomb) and aircraft factory at Dessau (12 bomb); secondary targets are aviation factories at Zwickau (15 bomb) and Leipzig (28 bomb); 14 bomber hit Bohlen, 15 hit Meissen, 19 hit Brandis/Polenz Wusten-Sachsen Airfield, 12 hit Frankfurt marshalling yard, 32 hit Ubigau, 20 hit Dessau, four hit Frankfurt, five hit Camburg and 22 hit targets of opportunity; they claim 20-21-18 Luftwaffe aircraft; 17 B-17s are lost.

2. 255 B-17s are dispatched to an oil dump at Konigsburg/Magdeburg (105 bomb) and oil industry at Magdeburg/Rothensee (55 bomb); 17 hit Dessau and six bomb the marshalling yard at Gera; they claim 16-8-6 Luftwaffe aircraft; nine B-17s are lost.

3. 106 B-24 Liberators are dispatched to Lutzkendorf/Halle (66 bomb); ten hit Wetzlar and six hit a target of opportunity; three B-24s are lost. 

4. 311 B-24s are dispatched to oil targets at Merseburg/Leuna (63 bomb) and Zeitz-Troglitz (187 bomb); 10 hit Limburg, eight hit Memmingen, nine hit Saalfeld and ten hit targets of opportunity; they claim 1-0-0 Luftwaffe aircraft; three B-24s are lost.

5. 58 of 59 B-17s hit Cologne/Eifeltor marshalling yard without loss; glide bombs are used but the weapon proves unsuccessful. 

     Personal Memory: A glide bomb attack on Cologne. This was largely a failure because we needed 50 mile visibility since we dropped the bombs 18 miles from the city. This was to avoid the heavy flak concentration there. It worked well for the air crews and we considered it a milk run.But we got too close to Brussels on the way to the target and our airplane ("Betty Jane") got a piece of flak into Number one engine which penetrated the case and destroyed the engine. But it never quit running and we didn't know about the damage until we got back to Molesworth. The glide bomb was a failure as all our bombs missed the Eifeltor  Marshalling yard by over a mile and  the rest of the bombs fell straight down or scattered through Cologne, killing 87 civilians and wounding over 15 others. Our 41st Wing dropped 113 of these bombs.

    Since we had dropped the bombs 18 miles short of the city the Germans had no warning. The control box on each winged bomb had gyroscopes to guide it and at contact the box exploded scattering the wings and tail while the bomb bounced along for eleven more seconds before exploding. This 2000 pound bomb had an amazing five to one glide ratio.

    That night, Lord Haw Haw said that Cologne had been bombed by US bombers from 40,000 feet. We all laughed of course and in three more days they had figured out what had happened. Lord Haw Haw said that it was a terrorist raid and any airman shot down during such a raid would be executed the same day. Not another raid of this type was aver attempted, but not because Lord Haw Haw threatened us, but because the system was a multi million dollar failure.  Score:3 Milk Runs: 2 others. (Dick Johnson)

Escort is provided by 182 P-38 Lightnings, 208 P-47 Thunderbolts and 307 P-51 Mustangs; no P-38s are lost; P-47s claim 2-0-1 Luftwaffe aircraft in the air and 0-0-1 on the ground with the loss of four P-47s; P-51s claim 25-1-5 Luftwaffe aircraft with the loss of five. 527 Ninth Air Force fighters also fly escort and claim 33-0-10 Luftwaffe aircraft in the air and 5-0-7 on the ground for the loss of fighters.

Mission 377: Five B-17s drop leaflets in Belgium and Norway.

22 B-24s are dispatched on CARPETBAGGER missions; one is lost.

The USAAF's Ninth Air Force in England dispatches 600+ B-26 Marauders and A-20 Havocs to bomb marshalling and naval yards, railway bridges and V-weapon sites in France and Belgium; eight aircraft are lost. P-47s dive-bomb several targets in the same general area.

GERMANY: The USAAF attacks five synthetic oil targets at Heide, Magdeburg, Rottensee, Leuna and Troglitz. Once more their pattern bombing rips the factories apart.

ITALY: Artena: Davila, Rudolph B., SSgt. (later 2nd Lt.), 7th Infantry, awarded the MOH for his actions today.

The USAAF's Fifteenth Air Force in Italy dispatches 100+ B-24s to bomb Genoa harbor and Vercelli marshalling yard and troop concentrations at Niksic, Yugoslavia. In Yugoslavia, P-38s fly fighter sweeps against airfields in the Kurilovec area and vehicles, communications lines and targets of opportunity in the Knin-Bihac-Banjaluka area.

COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES: The submarine USS Narwhal (SS-167) lands 23-men and 25 tons of supplies on Samar Island.

NEW GUINEA: On Biak,  the US forces extend their perimeter. 

The advance of the 162d Infantry Regiment along the coastal track toward the airstrips is slowed by equatorial heat; thick, 12-foot (3.7 m) scrub growth; rugged terrain; and small parties of Japanese entrenched in caves cut into the face of a 200-foot (61 m) high cliff. Patrols advance to within 200 yards (182.9 m) of the airfields when a Japanese counterattack drives them back. The infantry is now under attack from the west and the targets of well-aimed fire from the East Caves which dominate the coastal road. In danger of being cut off, the regiment withdraws late in the afternoon. USAAF Fifth Air Force B-24s and B-25 Mitchells in support of ground forces on Biak Island hit villages, supply areas, troop concentrations and gun positions on Biak, Noemfoor, and Japen Islands

General MacArthur announces that the strategic campaign for New Guinea is complete. He cautions that some hard tactical fighting remains to clean up the remaining Japanese.

CANADA:

HMCS Magog and Stettler arrived in Halifax from builder in Montreal.

HMCS Toronto arrived in Halifax from builder in Levis, Quebec

Frigate HMCS Ste Therese commissioned.

U.S.A.: The motion picture "It Happened Tomorrow" is released in the U.S. This fantasy drama, directed by Rene Clare, stars Dick Powell, Linda Darnell, Jack Oakie and Edgar Kennedy. The plot involves an early 20th century reporter (Powell) who meets an old man who gives him the power to predict the news 24-hours in advance. Powell starts scooping the other papers and winning big at the horse races until he learns of his own death and then must try to change the future. The film is nominated for two technical Academy Awards.

Submarines USS Charr and Lagarto launched.

Coast Guard-manned Army vessel FS-179 was commissioned. She was assigned to and operated in the Southwest Pacific area. She was decommissioned on 1 October 1945.

Top of Page

Yesterday     Tomorrow

Home