THE BATTLE
OF BERLIN
For Paula
THE BATTLE OF BERLIN
Bomber Command
Over The Third Reich 19431945
Martin W. Bowman
First published in Great Britain in 2020 by
Pen & Sword Air World
An imprint of
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Yorkshire Philadelphia
Copyright Martin W Bowman 2020
ISBN 978 1 52678 638 8
eISBN 978 1 52678 639 5
Mobi ISBN 978 1 52678 640 1
The right of Martin W Bowman to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
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Contents
Chapter 1 Berlin Season
Chapter 2 Ordeal by Fire
Chapter 3 While Berlin Burned
Chapter 4 No Enemy Plane Will Fly Over the Reich Territory!
Chapter 5 An Orchestrated Hell
Chapter 6 One Night in December
Chapter 7 A Hymn for the Haunted
Chapter 8 We wont be home for Christmas; we know that very well
Chapter 9 After Every December Comes Always a May
Chapter 10 Unhappy Hogmanay
Chapter 11 Berlin Back to Back
Chapter 12 Chop City
Chapter 13 Wild Colonial Boys
Chapter 14 A Yank in Bomber Command
Chapter 15 Once the Most Beautiful City in the World
Chapter 16 The Winds of Change
Chapter 17 Berlin or Bust
Chapter 18 A Night on the Spree
Chapter 19 The Milk Run
Chapter 20 The Cost of Victory
Notes
the book Id write would not be a novel, but simply a true tale cut from the cloth of reality, concocted out of true events and characters.
Soldiers of Salamis, a novel about the Spanish Civil War
published in 2001 by Spanish author Javier Cercas
Chapter One
Berlin Season
It has been decided that the primary objective of your operations should now be focused on the morale of the enemy civil population and in particular, of industrial workers. The aim is the destruction of German cities, the killing of German workers and the disruption of civilised community life throughout Germany. It should be emphasised that the destruction of houses, public utilities, transport and lives; the creation of a refugee problem on an unprecedented scale; and the breakdown of morale both at home and at the battle fronts by fear of extended and intensified bombing are accepted and intended aims of our bombing policy, they are not by-products of attempts to hit factories.
Air Marshal Sir Arthur Travers Harris CB OBE , who once declared that the Germans living under a savage tyranny were not allowed the luxury of morale.
Achtung, Achtung! Major Eckart-Wilhelm Hugo von Bonin listened impatiently but attentively to the long litany of instructions from his bordfunker (radio-operator) crouched in the cockpit of their Bf 110G-4 night-fighter as they continued their Helle Nachtjagd (night chase) across the Belgian countryside. Thirty minutes earlier the 24-year-old Staffelkapitn (Squadron Commander) had lifted the Messerschmitt with its deadly electronic wizardry and heavy firepower off from St. Trond/Sint-Truiden and he had then climbed at maximum rate to an operational height of 5,300 metres. Their route was to take them to one of the Himmelbett Rume (four-poster bed boxes), each one of them a theoretical spot in the sky, in which one to three fighters orbited a radio beacon waiting for bombers to appear.
Each box, about 20 miles square, which had names like Hamster, Eisbr (Polar Bear) and Tiger (around Terschelling Island), was a killing zone in the path of hundreds of incoming prey. All approaches to occupied Europe and Germany were divided into circular and partly overlapping areas, which took full advantage of Bomber Commands tactic in sending bombers singly and on a broad front and not in concentrated streams. The Himmelbett Rume and the Nachtjger were orchestrated by Jgerleitoffiziers (JLOs or GCI-controllers) in Battle Opera Houses. Though the JLOs were far removed from the actual battles, high tiered rows of Leuchtspukers or Light Spitter girls projected information onto a huge screen for them and operators moved the plots on the Seeburg plotting tables.
The Jgerleitoffizier announced monotonously at regular intervals, No Kuriere in sight and von Bonin had to continue orbiting. Hugos brother, Oberstleutnant Hubertus von Bonin (Knights Cross of the Iron Cross recipient) was killed in action on 15 December 1943. Hugo, who lost two other brothers on the Eastern Front, had twenty-three confirmed night abschsse (victories). He was impatient to add to his score and probably did not concern himself with the bombers destinations on Thursday 18/Friday 19 November 1943. He was not to know that it marked the start of the Main Battle of Berlin. Some 440 Lancasters had been dispatched to the Big City. Although the Nachtjagdgeschwader did not know the actual numbers involved, the night predators were unconcerned, satisfied in the knowledge that there would be scores of ubiqutous black Fat Cats for them to aim for.
Von Bonin was one of many who eagerly awaited the code-word from the Jgerleitoffizier that would send him scurrying into action in his alloted box. Suddenly, as if by magic, Have Kurier for you, Kirchturm 10 (1000 metres), course 300. Using the figures on a clock face, i.e. east to west in the northern part of the night-fighting area, he added helpfully: Kurier flying from two to eleven.
Startled but composed, the three-man crew reacted with excitement and enthusiasm. According to the information from the Jgerleitoffizier they were only a few kilometres behind a British bomber! The enemy aircraft had been picked up on Wrzburg ground radar, fixed on the plotting table and transmitted to Major von Bonin and his crew stalking the bomber. As soon as Oberfeldwebel Friedrich Johrden, his bordfunker, picked up contact on his Lichtenstein radar set, he transmitted Emil-Emil to alert his JLO, but there was no indication yet on the Lichtenstein. It was 0220 hours. They hoped to reach the Fat Cat before it left the range of the Wrzburg ground radar.