War Diary of the 340th Bombardment Group January 1945

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War Diary of the 340th Bombardment Group January 1945 Transcribed from US Army microfilm and illustrations added by Dan Setzer, son of Sgt. Hymie Setzer, 340th Bombardment Group HQ Squadron. Copyright 57th Bomb Wing Association 2014 The 340th Bombardment Group on Corsica Photo Credit: 57th Bomb Wing Archives

Prepared by Technical Sergeant Francis R. Hickey January 1, 1945 Commonest expression on everybody's lips at one minute after midnight this morning was: Here's hoping this is our last Christmas overseas and the last Christmas of the war.... Target today for the 340th was the Palazzolo railroad bridge. It was hit and some damage was inflicted... Rumors that the 340th will shortly cease operations and go back to the States have been circulating wildly about the base for several days. January 2, 1945 [No entry on this date.] January 3, 1945 Sgt. Raymond J. Alwood, 486th turret gunner who was wounded Saturday on a combat mission and died yesterday, was buried this morning with the customary simple military honors in the American military cemetery just below Bastia. Some thirty officers and men of the squadron were present... It was an extremely windy day here at Alesan yesterday, and there was a standdown, but today the group went out to bomb the viaduct at Lavis on the Brenner line and a bridge nearby, as well as the Mantua north rail bridge. January 4, 1945 Lt. Colonel Malcolm A. Bailey, deputy commander, and other staff officers chewed out several pilots, bombardiers and navigators at a special meeting tonight for unintelligent or at least uncoordinated flying today. With the Ala rail bridge as one of the primary targets some confusion obtained at the critical moment, and two boxes of the 488th bombed and missed the San Margherita South rail bridge. The 489th managed to crater the east approach of the Motta di Livenza rail bridge, an alternate target. However, one flight of three planes dropped phosphorous bombs right in the center of some eight to ten ack-ack guns. An Attack on Rovereto. Note white streamers on right from phosphorus bombs. Photo: 57th Bomb Wing Archive

January 5, 1945 The rest camp for Air Force officers at Cannes, France, has been opened again to personnel of the 12th Air Force. The 340th sent seven officers over there today on orders for a five-day stay... Major George B. Thabault of the 486th squadron has been transferred to headquarters to be air inspector for the group. His assistant is Captain John L. Mitchell, who was also transferred into headquarters from the 489th squadron... Bad weather today prevented combat operations. January 6, 1945 Again today the weather prevented combat operations... The nights now are so cold and rainy that outdoor movies are pretty much out of the question. Recently the special service clerks have been seeking and finding indoor theaters around the group, so now one can see indoor movies in the 487th and 489th mess halls, the group officers' club, and the 488th enlisted men's club. January 7, 1945 (L - R) Major John E. Rapp, the artist Sgt. Joe Barton, General Robert Knapp, Colonel Willis Chapman Photo: Collected from www.reddog1944.com Lt. Colonel Bailey, Major John E. Rapp, 487th squadron commander, and T/Sgt. Francis R. Hickey, section chief in public relations, took off today for Rome and Naples on public relations business. The PRO of the Mediterranean Allied Air Forces, Lt. Colonel John Tex McCrary, having expressed considerable interest in a publicity picture one of the 340th Group public relations photographers took of a 487th squadron B-25 and its crew chief, Colonel Bailey and company set out for Rome to exploit the higher echelon enthusiasm. The picture in question showed a Bill Mauldin cartoon on the plane and the caption for the photo tied in the ground support of the B-25 bombers with the muddy, bitter destiny of the ground force men. Colonel McCrary suggested that a squadron of 12th Air Force planes be named the Dogface Squadron in honor of the ground forces it supports, and Colonel Bailey and Major Rapp are going over to confer with public relations personnel on the project, the lucky squadron to be publicized being Major Rapp's 487th... No combat mission today because of weather.

January 8, 1945 [No entry for this date.] January 9, 1945 After having gone after the Pontetidone rail bridge in northern Italy yesterday and forced to turn around because of bad weather, our crews today went back to the objective and pounded it very successfully. The Palazzola rail bridge was also effectively bombed. January 10, 1945 Weather over the operational sector was bad today, precluding possibilities of a combat mission... Colonel Bailey returned from Rome today and reported that the progress on the development of the Dogface Squadron publicity is good, and that Bill Mauldin, the artist, has designed twelve 'dogface' characters to be painted on the 487th planes. This will leave about ten of the 487th planes without the distinctive design, since the squadron maintains almost two dozen planes. January 11, 1945 Rumors of the 340th group making an early return to the States are being passed around by almost every individual in the group lately. One notion that was happily bandied back and forth by the boys was that our unit would be in the U.S. or en route to it by April. Another one has us returning even sooner, while a third calls for us to move very soon to the northeastern coast of Italy, and remain there fighting the war until March or April, at which time (of course!) we would be sent home. Still another rumor calls for us to be paid in American currency at the end of February... 'Midst this maelstrom of whispering fancy the 340th flew no mission today bad weather again.

January 12, 1945 The algebra classes in the 340th group organized under the army's Information and Education program by Captain James Shear, weather officer, are progressing nicely, with about 70 men enrolled in two review courses on the high school level. Language classes, in either French or Italian, and possibly both, may start soon it is said. In at least one squadron round-table discussion of such topics as postwar disposition of the conquered countries, postwar objectives of the United States and United Nations, and similar topics are held with officers and enlisted men both participating. Some study material is supplied through a government agency, but all outside informational sources are permissible, so the discussions are free and democratic... There was a stand-down again today. January 13, 1945 [No entry for this date.] January 14, 1945 What Lt. Gjertson, the group Special Services officer, described as the best U.S.O. show to play for the 340th appeared tonight in the enlisted men's club. Consisting of a male quartet who sang, cracked jokes and ran off skits, and a shapely girl of 18 named Peggy Jean who twirled a baton and displayed some attractive anatomy, the U.S.O. unit made a big hit with everybody... No combat mission again today because of bad weather. January 15, 1945 The Ala rail bridge was hard hit today by the 488th squadron. San Peggy Jean Roan Margherita north railroad bridge was the other target. One box dispatched to hit this one attacked a bridge north of the target instead, and missed it. Another box attacked the San Margherita south railroad bridge, and hit it successfully, while still other 340th planes damaged the approach to the Motta di Livenza rail bridge, the alternate target... The movie tonight was Laura, featuring Gene Tierney.

January 16, 1945 [No entry this date.] January 17, 1945 M/Sgt. Tom Lennon, section chief in group operations, is in the hospital with a case of near-pneumonia, and his tent-mate S/Sgt. Ed Lorenz, also an operations clerk, is under observations for stomach ulcers... Heavy rains yesterday knocked out operations, but today the 340th got bombers out to the Calliano bridges on the Brenner line and also Rovereto. Latter target was missed, while Calliano #2 was hard hit, and Calliano #1 cut on the approach. January 18, 1945 Because the colored troops of the 367th separate infantry battalion (or company?) has been moved off the island, the 340th group has to pull its own guard duty again. After a long layoff from such monotonous duties our men will now have to take turns on sentinel in such areas as the airfield proper, the various road crossings on the base, the Operations S-2 area, and possibly even the bomb dump. As presently constituted under the direction of Major Fields, group adjutant, the guard set-up calls for a three day tour of duty on the part of all squadron men below the rank of technical sergeant. These men will pull three or four assignments of four hours each in their three-day tour. Master and technical sergeants will serve, each in his turn, as sergeant of the guard... In combat operations today San Michele rail bridge was hit, the San Michele railroad diversion missed, and a target of opportunity, Salorno road bridge, cut on the approach. January 19, 1945 [No entry this date.] January 20, 1945 This was a rather bleak Saturday for the 487th and 488th squadrons. Early in the morning 1st Lt. Clarence V. Haynes, censor and assistant S-2 officer of the 488th, died in a nearby army hospital of internal hemorrhages caused by an intestinal ulcer. He was buried at 1500 hours in the American military cemetery south of Bastia... In the mission against the Trento marshaling yards the B-25 piloted by 2nd Lt. Morris D. La Vine and crew of five others[lt. Stanly J. Gluezkowski, F/O Paul R. Farone, S/Sgt. Joel B Mayer (all KIA), Sgt. Jesse A Summers, Jr. and S/Sgt. George Gregor (both POW)] was shot down by flak and seen to crash. No parachutes were reported seen. The mission was highly successful... Yesterday there was no mission owing to unfavorable weather.

January 21, 1945 2nd Lt. William B. Pelton and his co-pilot, F/O Harry K. Shackelford, of the 488th squadron pulled an aerodynamic miracle this afternoon when they brought their B-25 back from a mission to the OraSan Michele rail diversion without any right stabilizer or right elevator. How they landed the plane safely is still bewildering our operations officer and the hundreds of men who saw the damaged craft come in. The plane was battered in a collision with another 488th B-25 when one element of the formation was making a third run on the target, owning to a malfunction. The other plane, piloted by 1st Lt. William Simpson, went down over the target, and Pelton's plane also went into a spin, but the latter officer was able to recover. The tail gunner [S/Sgt. A. B. Porter] was lost however, when Simpson's aircraft scooped out the empennage of Pelton's plane. No trace of his body, clothing or parachute was found when Lt. Pelton landed. The target this formation was attacking was largely missed, but other 340th planes knocked down two spans of a road bridge nearby and the Pontetidone railroad bridge was also well hit. Tail Damage on 8P, "Sweet Pea" Photo: 57th Bomb Wing Archive January 22, 1945 The group flew its 700th mission today, against the Ora-San Michele rail diversion again. The crew participating managed only to cut a rail highway there. On the alternate target, the Bressana road and railroad bridge, possible hits were scored on the south span. Another mission, to Dogna town rail bridge, eight miles from the Austrian border, scored possible hits.

January 23, 1945 Boys in the photo lab are busy today putting together prints for a mosaic of Rimini airdrome in Italy on the Adriatic coast. The place has already been designated as our next home, the well-informed rumor merchants tell us... Sgt. Tom McRae, Stars and Stripes reporter, interviewed personnel at the 340th all day today, looking for stories... Early in the afternoon, General Cannon pinned on our second War Department Distinguished Unit citation streamer to the 340th group standard at a formal ceremony... There was a stand-down because of bad weather. January 24 25, 1945 [No entries for these dates.] January 26, 1945 The only operations we have had in the past three days was a weather recce yesterday in the Venice area. The weather over our combat operational sector has been almost uniformly poor recently... The Shamrock Review, a U.S.O. show, played at the base today. January 27, 1945 [No entry for this date.] January 28, 1945 Today the San Michele railroad diversion bridge got an effective bombastic treatment by the 340th, but at Rovereto railroad bridge the boys missed by a hair. Yesterday our mission to Rovereto was abortive because of bad weather. Another attack on the Bressana bridge met with much success, however, several hits being scored on the bridge, apparently... Some of the enlisted men who have been with the 340th since the earliest days and whose appreciation of officers, after two years overseas, is almost wholly based on their evaluation of them as human beings, are getting much amusement from the present crop of newly arrived combat crew officers. Said one enlisted man: Why don't they tell those guys in the States what it's like over here before they ship 'em over? One (of the new officers) wanted to know where the Coke (Coca-Cola) machine was. Another guy wanted to draw his radio set from supply. He said they told him at the P.O.E. (Point of Embarkation) that all tents came equipped with radios. January 29, 1945 Targets today were Calliano #3 rail bridge, Marciana rail bridge, the Motta di Livenza west railroad bridge, and the span at Rovereto. The first target was missed, and only minor damage inflicted on the other objectives.

January 30, 1945 [No entry for this date.] January 31, 1945 There was a medal presentation ceremony at the base today with General Knapp of the 57th Wing dispensing the brass... Major J. Paul Johnson, matériel officer, has returned to the group after his 30day leave in the U.S. - and looking very much refreshed too... Four new crews have reported in and have been assigned to the four squadrons... Today our planes hit the San Michele diversion bridge and the Rovereto bridge, besides patterning the Rovereto station yard where 100 rail cars were standing. Yesterday operations took our crews to the south bridge on the Lavis rail diversion of the Brenner line. Target was well hit. A second objective, the Lavis railroad station yards, containing 150 cars, was also hard hit, and many of the cars destroyed.