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100th Bomber Group Museum Control Tower Plaque

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Details:

Just outside the museum, beside the 100th BG memorial plaque.


Plaque

A square metal plaque inscribed with a dedication message that is inscribed in English in raised lettering. On the bottom center is a depiction of the group’s bomber plane. This plaque pertains to the control tower that is dedicated to men of the 100th Bomber Group.

 

The 100th Bombardment Group (Heavy) arrived at Thorpe Abbotts on 9 June 1943, from Kearney AAF Nebraska. The 100th was assigned to the 13th Combat Bombardment Wing, and the group tail code was a "Square-D". Its operational squadrons were:

 

  • 349th Bombardment Squadron (XR)
  • 350th Bombardment Squadron (LN)
  • 351st Bombardment Squadron (EP)
  • 418th Bombardment Squadron (LD)

 The group flew the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress as part of the Eighth Air Force's strategic bombing campaign. In combat, the 100th operated chiefly as a strategic bombardment organization until the war ended.[5] The group gained the nickname "The Bloody Hundredth" due to its heavy losses during eight missions to Germany when the group experienced several instances where it lost a dozen or more aircraft on a single mission, whereas most units suffered losses in consistent small amounts.

 

From June 1943 to January 1944, the 100th Bomb Group concentrated its efforts against airfields in France and naval facilities and industries in France and Germany. The 100th BG received a Distinguished Unit Citation for seriously disrupting German fighter plane production with an attack on an aircraft factory at Regensburg on 17 August 1943. One memorable raid on 10 October 1943, that the 100th BG made on Münster, ended up with the only surviving 100th BG B-17 that went out on the raid, the Royal Flush (B-17 42-6087) commanded that day by Robert Rosenthal and flown by his regular crew, returning safely on just two working engines and both waist gunners seriously wounded, to Thorpe Abbotts.

 

The unit bombed airfields, industries, marshaling yards, and missile sites in western Europe, January – May 1944. Operations in this period included participation in the Allied campaign against enemy aircraft factories during "Big Week", 20 – 25 February 1944. The group completed a series of attacks against Berlin in March 1944 and received a second Distinguished Unit Citation for the missions.

 

Beginning in the summer of 1944, oil installations became major targets. In addition to strategic operations, the group engaged in support and interdictory missions, hitting bridges and gun positions in support of the Invasion of Normandy in June 1944. The unit bombed enemy positions at Saint-Lô in July and at Brest, in August and September Other missions were striking transportation and ground defenses in the drive against the Siegfried Line, October – December 1944; attacking marshaling yards, defended villages, and communications in the Ardennes sector during the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944 – January 1945; and covering the airborne assault across the Rhine in March 1945.

 

The 100th Bomb Group received the French Croix de Guerre with Palm for attacking heavily defended installations in Germany and for dropping supplies to French Forces of the Interior, June – December 1944.

 

The 100 BG flew its last combat mission of World War II on 10 April 1945 which was number 306. In December 1945, the group returned to Camp Kilmer, New Jersey. Group personnel were demobilized and the aircraft was sent to storage. The unit was inactivated on 21 December 1945 and redesignated as the 100th Bombardment Group (Very Heavy).

 

After the war, the airfield was transferred to the RAF on 27 June 1946. After many years of inactivity, Thorpe Abbotts was closed in 1956.

Source of information: www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk, en.wikipedia.org

Source of photo: www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk

Monument Text:

       THIS CONTROL TOWER       

HAS BEEN RESTORED AS A MUSEUM

AND MEMORIAL AND IS DEDICATED TO THE

MEN OF THE 100TH BOMB GROUP (H) WHO

SERVED THE CAUSE OF FREEDOM FROM THIS

AIRFIELD 1943 - 1945

  

SQUADRONS

349TH

350TH

351ST 

418TH

AND

SUPPORTING UNITS

  

13TH COMBAT WING  8TH AIR FORCE

USAAF

 

MAY

 

1981

Commemorates:

Units:

100th Bomber Group

13th Combat Wing

349th Bomber Squadron, 100th Bomber Group, Heavy

350th Bomber Squadron, 100th Bomber Group, Heavy

351st Bomber Squadron, 100th Bomber Group, Heavy

418th Bomber Squadron, 100th Bomber Group, Heavy

8th Air Force

US Army Air Corps

Wars:

WWII

Other images :