On this
day in 1944, 111 U.S. B-29 Superfortress bombers raid Tokyo for the first time
since Capt. Jimmy Doolittle's raid in 1942. Their target: the Nakajima aircraft
engine works.
Fall 1944
saw the sustained strategic bombing of Japan. It began with a reconnaissance
flight over Tokyo by Tokyo Rose, a Superfortress B-29 bomber piloted by
Capt. Ralph D. Steakley, who grabbed over 700 photographs of the bomb sites in
35 minutes.
Next, starting the first week of November, came a string of B-29
raids, dropping hundreds of tons of high explosives on Iwo Jima, in order to
keep the Japanese fighters stationed there on the ground and useless for a
counteroffensive. Then came Tokyo.
The
awesome raid, composed of 111 Superfortress four-engine bombers, was led by
Gen. Emmett "Rosie" O'Donnell, piloting Dauntless Dotty. Press
cameramen on site captured the takeoffs of the first mass raid on the Japanese
capital ever for posterity. Unfortunately, even with the use of radar, overcast
skies and bad weather proved an insurmountable obstacle at 30,000 feet: Despite
the barrage of bombs that were dropped, fewer than 50 hit the main target, the
Nakajima Aircraft Works, doing little damage. The upside was that at such a
great height, the B-29s were protected from counter-attack; only one was shot
down.
One Distinguished Flying Cross
was awarded as a result of the raid. It went to Captain Steakley.
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/us-b-29s-raid-tokyo [24.11.2014]
































