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4th Bombardment Squadron

4th Bombardment Squadron

FieldValue
unit_name4th Bombardment Squadron
image34bg-b17.jpg
caption34th Bomb Group B-17G Flying Fortress
dates1941–1945
country
branch
roleBombardment
battlesEuropean Theater of Operations
identification_symbol[[File:4th Bombardment squadron - WWII - Emblem.png165px]]
identification_symbol_label4th Bombardment Squadron emblem
identification_symbol_2[[File:4 Bombardment Sq emblem (ETO).png165px]]
identification_symbol_2_labelEmblem used by the squadron in England
identification_symbol_3Q6
identification_symbol_3_labelFuselage code

The 4th Bombardment Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was last assigned to the 34th Bombardment Group at Sioux Falls Army Air Field, South Dakota, where it was inactivated on 28 August 1945.

The squadron was activated in January 1941 at Langley Field, Virginia. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the squadron performed antisubmarine patrols. The squadron moved to the western United States and was a training unit until the end of 1943. It then trained for combat and moved to the European Theater of Operations in April 1944. It participated in combat from May 1944 until VE Day. It returned to the United States in the summer of 1945 and was inactivated.

History

B-18 as flown by the squadron

The squadron was activated at Langley Field, Virginia in January 1941 as the 4th Bombardment Squadron, one of the original squadrons of the 34th Bombardment Group, and equipped with a mixture of B-17C and B-17D Flying Fortresses and Douglas B-18 Bolos. Along with the 34th Group, the squadron moved to Westover Field, Massachusetts four months after they were activated.

After the Pearl Harbor attack the squadron began antisubmarine patrols off the Northeast coast of the United States, but soon became part of Western Defense Command and moved to Pendleton Field, Oregon. By the summer of 1942, Second Air Force had become primarily a heavy bomber training force and the squadron became a B-17 Replacement Training Unit (RTU) at Geiger Field.

On 15 December 1942 the squadron moved to Blythe Army Air Base, California a base of the Desert Training Center. The unit provided cadres for a number of heavy bomber units that served with Eighth Air Force during this period.

The plane is Douglas-Tulsa B-24H-15-DT Serial 41-28851 of the 7th Bomb Squadron. This aircraft was damaged during a mission on 24 August 1944 and made an emergency landing in Sweden (MACR 8461). The aircraft was interned until the end of the war then repaired and flown back to the UK in 1945.}}

The 4th began training with Consolidated B-24 Liberators for overseas combat operations on 5 January 1944. Its ground echelon moved to the port of embarkation on 1 April 1944, The squadron arrived at its permanent station, RAF Mendlesham, England, in April 1944 and entered combat on 23 May 1944.

The squadron helped to prepare for Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy, by bombing airfields in France and Germany, and supported the June landings by attacking coastal defenses and communications. It supported ground forces at Saint-Lô in late July and struck V-1 flying bomb launch sites, gun emplacements, and supply lines throughout the summer of 1944.

The mixture of B-24s and B-17s in the 3d Bombardment Division presented a number of operational problems, and in early 1944 plans had begun at VIII Bomber Command headquarters to standardize the division with the Flying Fortress. The 34th Group flew its last B-24 mission on 24 August 1944. and began converting to B-17s. It flew its first mission with the new planes on 17 September 1944. The squadron engaged primarily in bombardment of strategic objectives from October 1944 to February 1945. Targets included marshaling yards in Ludwigshafen, Hamm, Osnabrück, and Darmstadt; oil centers in Bielefeld, Merseburg, Hamburg, and Misburg; factories in Berlin, Dalteln, and Hanover; and airfields in Münster, Neumünster, and Frankfurt.

During this period the squadron also supported ground forces during the Battle of the Bulge from December 1944 to January 1945. In March 1945, with few enemy industrial targets remaining and with Allied armies advancing across Germany, the 4th turned almost solely to interdicting enemy communications and supporting Allied ground forces. The 4th flew its last combat mission on 20 April 1945.

After V-E Day the squadron flew missions carrying food to flooded areas of the Netherlands and transported prisoners of war from German camps to Allied centers. The squadron redeployed to the United States in June and July 1945. The first elements of the air echelon departed 19 June 1945. The ground echelon sailed aboard the from Southampton on 6 August 1945. Upon arrival in the states, unit personnel were given 30 days leave. The squadron reassembled at Sioux Falls Army Air Field, South Dakota, where it was inactivated on 28 August 1945.

Lineage

  • Constituted as the 4th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) on 20 November 1940 : Activated on 15 January 1941 : Redesignated 4th Bombardment Squadron, Heavy on 20 August 1943 : Inactivated on 28 August 1945

Assignments

  • 34th Bombardment Group, 15 January 1941 – 28 August 1945

Stations

  • Langley Field, Virginia, 15 January 1941
  • Westover Field, Massachusetts, 29 May 1941
  • Pendleton Field, Oregon, c. 25 January 1942
  • Davis–Monthan Field, Arizona, c. 13 May 1942
  • Geiger Field, Washington, 1 Ju1y 1942
  • Ephrata Army Air Base, Washington, 1 December 1942
  • Great Falls Army Air Base, Montana, c. 15 January 1943
  • Sioux Falls Army Air Field, South Dakota, c. 13–28 August 1945
  • Ephrata Army Air Base, Washington 31 January 1943
  • Blythe Army Air Base, California, 1 February 1943
  • Salinas Army Air Base, California, 29 May 1943
  • Blythe Army Air Base, California, 13 July 1943 – c. 2 April 1944
  • RAF Mendlesham (AAF-156), England, c. 23 April 1944 – 24 July 1945
  • Sioux Falls Army Air Field, South Dakota, c. 13 – 28 August 1945

Aircraft

  • Stearman PT-17 Kaydet, 1941
  • Consolidated LB-30B Liberator, 1941
  • Douglas B-18 Bolo, 1941
  • Boeing B-17C Flying Fortress, 1941–1942
  • Boeing B-17D Flying Fortress, 1941–1942
  • Consolidated B-24H Liberator, 1942–1944
  • Consolidated B-24J Liberator, 1942–1944
  • Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress, 1944–1945

Campaigns

Campaign StreamerCampaignDatesNotes
[[File:American Campaign Streamer.png200px]]Antisubmarine7 December 1941-c. 13 May 19424th Bombardment Squadron
[[File:European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal streamer.png200px]]Air Offensive, Europe23 April 1944 – 5 June 19444th Bombardment Squadron
[[File:European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal streamer.png200px]]Normandy6 June 1944 – 24 July 19444th Bombardment Squadron
[[File:European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal streamer.png200px]]Northern France25 July 1944 – 14 September 19444th Bombardment Squadron
[[File:European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal streamer.png200px]]Rhineland15 September 1944 – 21 March 19454th Bombardment Squadron
[[File:European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal streamer.png200px]]Central Europe22 March 1944 – 21 May 19454th Bombardment Squadron
[[File:European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal streamer.png200px]]Air Combat, EAME Theater7 December 1941 – 11 May 19454th Bombardment Squadron

References

Notes

; Explanatory notes

; Citations

Bibliography

References

  1. Maurer, ''Combat Squadrons'', pp. 26–27
  2. Watkins, p. 31
  3. Freeman, p. 286.
  4. "USAAF squadron codes".
  5. Maurer, ''Combat Units'', pp. 87–89
  6. RTUs were oversized units which trained [[aircrew]]s prior to their deployment to combat theaters.Craven & Cate (eds.), Vol. VI, p. xxxvi
  7. Wilson, p. 128
  8. Freeman (1970), p. 156
  9. It transferred its Liberators for overhaul and eventual transfer to units of the [[2d Bombardment Division]],Freeman (1970), p. 172
  10. Station number in Anderson
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