The German troops heard
a whistling sound that they liken to the wind through a witch’s broom. They had
learned what that sound meant.
BOOM!
They’d been bombed by a
night witch.
The Russians were the
only country to use women in combat. When war broke out, many female
pilots volunteered for service, but their applications were rejected. When
Hitler’s army invaded the Soviet Union in 1942, however, and three million
Russians became prisoners of war, the Soviet Air Force badly needed recruits.
|
Marina
Raskova
|
Beginning in 1941,
Marina Raskova, the Soviet Amelia Earhart, had petitioned Stalin to allow women
to fly. Three squadrons were formed, whose pilots, mechanics, and commanders
were all women. Only the 588th remained all-female.
Their planes were
primitive, used mostly for training and crop-dusting. The Polikarpov Po-2
biplanes were built mainly of plywood and canvas. With open cockpits, the
women’s faces to freeze in the cold air. In winter, when they looked out to see
their target better, they got frostbite. Their uniforms were hand-me-downs from
male pilots.
Because of the weight of
the two bombs they carried and the low altitudes at which they flew, they
carried no parachutes. They had no radar to navigate their paths through the
night skies, only maps and compasses.
The women flew only in
the dark. Every night, generally forty planes would fly eight or more missions,
each crewed by two women, a pilot and a navigator. The multiple nightly sorties
were necessary since they could carry only two bombs at a time. Eighteen
missions a night was not unusual.
The women
flew their little planes low to the ground for cover and to be
undetected by radar. Their flimsy planes were highly flammable, so night
flying was preferable for protection. The planes were also noisy, so to retain
an element of surprise, they would cut the engines, glide down to the German
positions, drop their bombs and then re-start their engines and fly away.
This stealth mode
resulted in little more than the soft whooshing sound that the Germans equated
to the sound of a witch’s broomstick. They began calling the female fighter
pilots Nachthexen: night witches (which the women took as a badge
of honor). They loathed and feared them. Any German pilot who downed a witch
was automatically awarded an Iron Cross.
The bi-planes’ maximum
speed was lower than the stall speed of the German planes, so the women could
maneuver their craft with much more agility than their attackers. They could
turn away from a German fighter, and by the time the German pilot executed his turn,
he would be a fair distance away, and the Russian pilot would be
executing another turn. Hitting the Russians with cannon fire was difficult.
|
588
Night Bomber Regiment
|
From 1942 to 1945,
eighty women flew with the Russian air force. The 588th Night Bomber
Regiment was the most highly decorated female unit, flying 30,000 sorties over
the course of four years, and dropping 23,000 tons of bombs on invading German
armies.
Two of the women were
fighter aces. Twenty-three were awarded the title “Hero of the Soviet Union.”
By the end of the war, thirty women had died in battle, including Marina
Raskova. She commanded the third unit, the 125th Guards Bomber Aviation
Regiment, until she crashed on landing and died in 1943 at the age of thirty.
She received a state funeral and was laid to rest in Red Square.
The last of the Night
Witches, Nadia Popova, died in 2013 at 91 years of age. In a 2010
interview, “I ask myself, ‘Nadia, how did you do it?’”
WOW, the piece of my history :) thank you for sharing. I've learned about Nadia at school but not Marina...
ReplyDeleteSo interesting! Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Terri. I was unaware of this aspect of the war.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Terri! I was unaware of this aspect of the war.
ReplyDeleteFascinating. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of these women and their place in history. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI learned something new! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteInteresting information, thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks for that fascinating info
ReplyDeleteThose were brave ladies!
ReplyDeleteWow! That is very interesting! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWow, what courageous women to fight during those troublesome times. Thank you for sharing. This history was new to me (perhaps I had just gotten it being taught) : )
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Very interesting. Thanks .
ReplyDeleteWhat a great piece of history! Thanks so much for sharing. My daughter found the post really interesting too.
ReplyDeleteThis is a part of history that I've never heard before.
ReplyDeleteI wish my Dad was here so I could share it with him.
Janet E.
von1janet(at)gmail(dot)com