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ANDREAS |
Posted: December 18, 2011 10:21 pm
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Locotenent colonel Group: Members Posts: 814 Member No.: 2421 Joined: March 15, 2009 |
Alex,
Where do you find any evidence of the importance of this objective near Mures? Is it from the US reports about the mission? Or what make you say it was a target or an important objective for the US bombers? |
ANDREAS |
Posted: December 18, 2011 11:02 pm
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Locotenent colonel Group: Members Posts: 814 Member No.: 2421 Joined: March 15, 2009 |
I found a link that can maybe help : http://www.harta3d.ro/harta-3d-arad.html
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yugit |
Posted: December 19, 2011 09:07 am
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Sergent major Group: Banned Posts: 216 Member No.: 3058 Joined: May 07, 2011 |
Andreas
Thanks for the map, the way that buldg.compound looks like to be a factory of war related material or something of that kind.....I am not sure however because the mission was initiated based on Soviets request and primarily to knock out the M/Y and car repair shops at and around the railway station BR Alex This post has been edited by yugit on December 19, 2011 09:08 am |
romrail |
Posted: December 19, 2011 01:27 pm
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Fruntas Group: Members Posts: 64 Member No.: 852 Joined: March 19, 2006 |
I've spent all the morning trying to identify the building complex in yuggit's second picture and until now I was unable to reach any plausible result.
The only hint which might help us is the fact that, as one can clearly see in the picture's middle area, the complex seems to be right near some marshalling yard (there are just too many lines for a simple station). I've tried to compare the picture with the actuall satelite image from Google Earth and I can't find any hint which might led me to an accurate conclusion. The river is just too close from the lines and ther buildings. On the other hand, I've remembered and checked my sources about a hint: the same day (July 3 1944) Timisoara railway complex was also heavily bombed by US air force. Corellating the info above with your picture, I may make a supposition (I hope I'm not very wrong): the second picture is not from Arad, but rather from Timisoara city. Other facts which support my theory are: the position of Bega cannal, which runs very close to Timisoara station, the fact that even today the with of the actuall lines pack in the stations seems to be very close of the one in yuggit's picture and the presence of factories (which are still active today) in the neighbourhood of Timisoara main railway station. This post has been edited by romrail on December 19, 2011 01:27 pm |
yugit |
Posted: December 19, 2011 02:10 pm
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Sergent major Group: Banned Posts: 216 Member No.: 3058 Joined: May 07, 2011 |
Romrail
Thank you for your research. I know the issue is not simple and if you believe is Timisoara, then maybe you can get a hold of a photo which more or less will correlating the complex depicted on my photo. The history books of the 15th Air Force do not indicate as if that complex building belonged to target folders Arad or Timisoara. According these books , the 15th Air Force along with 8th Air Force ( over 600 planes and a large number of escorts) attacked Rumanian targets while splitting the formations when reached Rumania. Bucharest oil storage, oil refinary and Locomotives repair works ( presumambly Titan oil or Mogosioaia and Malaxa works ) Timisoara M/Y and Repair Works Arad " " " 8th and 15th Air Forces Giurgiu Oil Storage Turnul Severin railroad targets of opportunity Piatra, Bridge ( do you have details of this bridge of then and now) ==================== Szeged ..Bridge Belgrad ...Oil Storage The Luftwaffe and AAR seems to have been caught with their pants down as out of this massive armada, only 4 B-24's were lost.Between them also the Lib.of Lt.William Cubbins, later on POW in Bucharest and who wrote the famou books " The War of the Cotton Tails ".He died few months ago due agging. The 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian fronts air arm fleets seems too to have given great headaches on that day to the Germans and Rumanian troops too, through massive IL-2 and A-20 bombings at lower altitudes ,mainly straffing missions. Best Regards Alex This post has been edited by yugit on December 19, 2011 02:32 pm |
Dénes |
Posted: December 19, 2011 03:07 pm
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Admin Group: Admin Posts: 4368 Member No.: 4 Joined: June 17, 2003 |
Can you share with us which books do you actually mean? Thanks, Gen. Dénes |
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yugit |
Posted: December 19, 2011 03:38 pm
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Sergent major Group: Banned Posts: 216 Member No.: 3058 Joined: May 07, 2011 |
But of course ,
All history books of every BG's and every FG's of the 15th AF I have available. Many books written by the vets ,also Nathan Twining " The Air Battle of Ploesti" dated 1945, The Poltawa Disaster and Fighting with the Soviets. Most of the books may no longer be available and some not all as they were printed in limited numbers .As into my 1941 -1944 VVS and VMF histories ,many books in Russian and some in English..lately also family of the vets through the Russian Aviation & Navy forums. Alex |
ANDREAS |
Posted: December 19, 2011 06:59 pm
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Locotenent colonel Group: Members Posts: 814 Member No.: 2421 Joined: March 15, 2009 |
Hallo Alex,
Hallo Romrail, As I was not certain earlier, I presented only a guess, that the river from the second foto wouldn't be Mures river but a channel, but now, with the help of Romrail guess, I am more confident that the foto is not about Arad area, more likely Timisoara... can not bet on this but I believe more in this Romrail ideea! |
romrail |
Posted: March 26, 2012 09:44 pm
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Fruntas Group: Members Posts: 64 Member No.: 852 Joined: March 19, 2006 |
Hello everyone!
Searching through my railway related stuff, I've came across several pages from a book published last year, called "Pages from Arad Town-planning's History". While reading the pages concerning Arad railway station's history, I've found a very intersting notice about the air strike from July 3 1944. "On July 3rd 1944, during the military operation Frantic Joe II, the Allies bombed Arad city. The attack, which was carried out in two stages, had four objectives: the train station, the railway cars factory, the Gestapo's headquarters (in the lake's area) and the cavalry divison's barracks (on Aurel Vlaicu Street)." Could the Gestapo headquarters actually be the building marked with #16 on the aerial photo from the topic's first post? This post has been edited by romrail on March 26, 2012 09:47 pm |
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