Air Raids on East Anglia 1941

Discussion in 'The War In The Air' started by David Seymour, Jun 16, 2004.

  1. David Seymour

    David Seymour Senior Member

    Does anyone know about German air raids on East Anglia in 1941?

    I am interested in 18 January 1941 when the Station House at Halesworth in Suffolk was bombed and its three occupants killed. I would be interested to know which unit flew the mission, which types it flew, and what the real target of the mission was. Was this a raid on rail centres or just a lost plane?

    As always most grateful for any assistance.

    Regards,
    David
     
  2. BeppoSapone

    BeppoSapone Senior Member

    Originally posted by David Seymour@Jun 16 2004, 12:19 PM
    Does anyone know about German air raids on East Anglia in 1941?

    I am interested in 18 January 1941 when the Station House at Halesworth in Suffolk was bombed and its three occupants killed. I would be interested to know which unit flew the mission, which types it flew, and what the real target of the mission was. Was this a raid on rail centres or just a lost plane?

    As always most grateful for any assistance.

    Regards,
    David
    Try one of the "After the Battle" books on the Blitz.
     
  3. Dieppe

    Dieppe Senior Member

    David - I have an article (somewhere!) about a couple of incidents when bombs were dropped on Bedford, one attack resulted in a number of deaths.
    I'll hunt it down and let you have the info, it might not be exactly East Anglia (but out news reports claim Bedford is in East Anglia :lol:) but it is interesting anyway!
     
  4. Arthur

    Arthur Senior Member

    David,
    Approximately 15 Dorniers from ll/KG3 from Antwerp/Duerne, to attack airfields. Places raided: W. Raynham, Watton, Gt. Massingham, Feltwell and Hockwold. 1 Dornier crew flew to Macclesfield and left over Orford Ness. Fighters from Coltishall and Wittering unsuccessfully tried to intercept. Another Dornier tried to sink 'Sunk' light vessel.
    After facing Bofors over Horsham St. Faith, a Dornier broke cloud over w. Raynham and was made unwelcome. Then at tree-top heightit raced across Gt. Massingham, machine-gunning and dropping 16 bombs- 12 falling on the landing ground. Soon afterwards, a Dornier broke cloud machine-gunning Halesworth before dropping 8 HEs across the railway installation. The station house, booking office and track were hit andthe signal-box was badly damaged. Three were killed and four wounded.


    Regards
    Arthur
     
  5. David Seymour

    David Seymour Senior Member

    Arthur,
    Very many thanks for these details. Much appreciated. Exactly what I was looking for.

    Which book did you use? Sounds like a most useful reference.

    Presumably they were Do 17s - do you know which type?

    Thanks again,
    David
     
  6. angie999

    angie999 Very Senior Member

    There is a Bristol local history site (http://www.fishponds.freeuk.com/) with extensive details of German bombing of the Bristol area, which obviously took a lot of research and must have relied on original sources.

    Does anyone know how to access good sources for this information in English?

    The original sources are mainly in German and are in the Budesarchiv in Freiberg, a bit offputting if you don't speak the language.
     
  7. Arthur

    Arthur Senior Member

    David,
    Information came from 'Air Raid!' [The enemy air offensive against East Anglia 1939-45] by Michael J. F. Bowyer. Published by Patrick Stephens Ltd in 1986.
    ISBN 0-85059-685-8.

    Going by the next paragraph in the book: [ At 15:25 the crew of Do 17Z 5K + BN signalled that they had reached Colchester.] So on that note, I would most definately say that they were Do 17's.

    Regards
    Arthur
     
  8. BeppoSapone

    BeppoSapone Senior Member

    Originally posted by angie999@Jun 19 2004, 03:09 AM
    There is a Bristol local history site (http://www.fishponds.freeuk.com/) with extensive details of German bombing of the Bristol area, which obviously took a lot of research and must have relied on original sources.

    Does anyone know how to access good sources for this information in English?

    The original sources are mainly in German and are in the Budesarchiv in Freiberg, a bit offputting if you don't speak the language.
    Also, does anyone know of detailed information about the German bombing of London? I am mainly interested in the last, and biggest, night of the "Blitz" - May 10/11 1941.

    I would like to know the German units involved, and if possible their targets. For example, who bombed Battersea?
     
  9. David Seymour

    David Seymour Senior Member

    Arthur,
    Many thanks for the reference, and the type identification.
    Regards,
    David
     

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