To carry out the planned V-1 "flying bomb" attacks on the United Kingdom, Germany built a number of military installations including launching sites and depots. Some of the installations were huge concrete fortifications.
The Allies became aware of the sites at an early stage and carried out numerous bombing raids to destroy them before they came into use.
Production
The robot was sub-contracted by centers like Bruns Werke and Neidersachswerfen's Mittelwerk. The unpiloted aircraft was assembled at the KdF-Stadt (now Wolfsburg)[a]Volkswagenwerke ("Volkswagen works", described as "the largest pressed-steel works in Germany"[1]) at Fallersleben,[2] and at the Mittelwerk, underground factory in central Germany. Production plants to modify several hundred standard V-1s to Reichenberg R-III manned aircraft were in the woods of Dannenburg and at Pulverhof, with air-launch trials at Lärz and Rechlin.[3] Flight testing was performed by the Luftwaffe at Peenemünde West and, after the August 1943 Operation Hydra bombing, at Brüsterort.[4] Launch crew training was at Zempin, and the headquarters for the operational unit, Flak-Regiment 155(W), was originally based at Saleux, near Amiens,[5][6]: 173 but was subsequently moved c. December 1943 to a chateau near Creil ("FlakGruppeCreil"), with the unit's telephone relay station at Doullens.[7]
In addition to the storage and launching sites listed below, operational facilities included the airfields for Heinkel He 111 H-22 bombers which air-launched the V-1 from low altitude over the North Sea. The ten-day-long aircrew training was at Peenemünde, and the bases were at Gilze-Rijen airfield, Netherlands, for launches through 15 September 1944, and in Venlo for launches after the first week in December. Aircrews were billeted five miles away at Grossenkneten for secrecy.[11]
Storage depots
To supply the V-1 flying bomb launch sites in the Calais region, construction began on several storage depots in August 1943. Sites at Biennais, Brécourt, Oisemont Neuville-au-Bois, and Saint-Martin-l'Hortier were not completed.[why?][6] An RCAF Halifax pilot's logbook describes the target of his raids on "flying-bomb sites" on July 1, 4, and 5, 1944, as "Biennais #1", "Biennais #2," and "Biennais #3". This suggests that these storage sites were perhaps not completed because they were destroyed prior to completion.[citation needed]
To serve the ten launch sites planned for Normandy, a depot was constructed at[6]Beauvais. It was bombed June 14, 15 and 16, 1944.[14]
A depot to serve Cherbourg launches was built near[6]Valognes. By February/March 1944, a plan for three new underground V-1 storage sites was put into effect.[6] The Nucourt limestone cave complex between Pontoise and Gisors was bombed on June 22, 1944 [14] with 298 V-1s buried or severely damaged.[17]One in the Rilly-la-Montagne railway tunnel was attacked by the British with Tallboy "earthquake bombs" on July 31, collapsing both ends of the tunnel.[18] The Saint-Leu-d'Esserent mushroom caves was the largest of the underground V-1 sites. It was attacked by No. 617 Squadron RAF with Tallboys on July 4.[17][18]
RAF Bomber Command attacked "Bois de Cassan" (bombed August 2–4, 1944),[22] "Forêt de Nieppe" (bombed July 28, 29, 31,[13][18] August 3,4,[22] 5, 6,[13][22] 1944 and "Trossy St. Maximin" (bombed August 3–4, 1944[22][23][24])[b]
V-1 launch sequence
Final Assembly: After moving the V-1 from the storage area, the wings were slid/bolted over/to the tubular spar.[25]
Final Checkout: In the non-magnetic building, "compass swinging" was completed by hanging the V-1 and pointing it toward the target. The missile's external casing of 16-gauge sheet steel was beaten with a mallet until its magnetic field was suitably aligned. The automatic pilot was set with the flight altitude input (300–2500 metres) to the barometric (aneroid) height control and with the range set within the air log (journey computer).[26]
Hoisting: The V-1 was delivered to the launching ramp via a wooden handling trolley on rails.[27] A wooden lifting gantry on rails was connected to the V-1 lifting lug to hoist and move it onto the launching spot at the lower end of the launching ramp.[28]
Fueling and Charging:[verification needed] Via the tank filler cap, 640 litres (140 imp gal) of petrol (German: B-Stoff) were added (later longer-range models held more). The twin spherical iron air bottles were charged with 6,200 kPa (900 psi) air to power the automatic pilot (Steuergerät). Air at 620 kPa (90 psi) powered the pneumatic servo-motors for the elevators and rudder.[29]
Catapult setup: The starter trolley with the hydrogen peroxide (German: T-Stoff) and catalyst (potassium permanganate granules, Z-Stoff) was connected to provide steam to the ramp's firing tube, and the steam piston was placed into the firing tube with the piston's launching lug connected to the V-1.[30]
V-1 startup: While the steam-generating trolley was being connected, the Argus As 109-014 Ofenrohr pulsejet engine was started.[31]
Launch
Post-launch: The steam piston, having separated from the V-1 at the end of the ramp during launch, was collected for re-use (the site nominally had only two pistons). Personnel in rubber boots and protective clothing used a catwalk along the ramp and washed the launching rail with brooms.[31]
V-1 launching sites
V-1 launching sites in France were located in nine general areas – four of which had the ramps aligned toward London, and the remainder toward Brighton, Dover, Newhaven, Hastings, Southampton, Manchester, Portsmouth, Bristol, and Plymouth. The sites on the Cherbourg peninsula targeting Bristol and Plymouth were captured before being used, and eventually launching ramps were moved to Holland to target Antwerp (first launched on 3 March 1945 from Delft).[32]
Initially the V-1 launching sites had storage buildings that were curved at the end to protect the contents against damage from air attacks. On aerial reconnaissance pictures these storage from above looked like snow skis ("ski sites"). An October 28, 1943 intelligence report regarding construction at Bois Carré near Yvrench[33] prompted No. 170 Squadron RAF reconnaissance sortie E/463 on November 3 which detected "ski-shaped buildings 240-270 feet long."[34] By November 1943, 72 of the ski sites had been located by Allied reconnaissance,[35] and Operation Crossbow began bombing the original ski sites on December 5, 1943. Nazi Germany subsequently began constructing modified V-1 launch sites with limited structures that could be completed quickly, as necessary. This also allowed the modified sites to be quickly repaired after bombing. The limited work necessary to complete a modified site before launching allowed the Allied photographic interpreters to predict on June 11, 1944, that the V-1 attacks would begin within 48 hours, and the first attacks began on June 13.[35]
Allied attacks
Notable bombings of V-1 facilities during World War II
9 Avro Lancasters of No. 617 Squadron RAF (The Dambusters) attacked the "Abbeville site in a wood at Flixecourt" and dropped their 12,000 lb Tallboy bombs accurately on the markers placed by a Oboe-equipped Mosquito. The markers were 350 yards from the target and none of the bombs were within 100 yards of the markers. No aircraft lost.[36]
26 Short Stirlings attacked the "Tilley-le-Haut site near Abbeville" but failed because the Pathfinder markers of the Oboe-equipped de Havilland Mosquito were no closer than 450 yards from the small target. No aircraft lost.[36]
6 RAF Mosquitos on a diversionary raid bombed the Scholven/Buer and Wessling synthetic oil plants, railway junctions at Aulnoye and Revigny and "a flying-bomb launching site at Acque".[citation needed]
^A different source[who?] puts the Fallersleben KdF-Stadt V-1 factory in Wolfsburg; Fallersleben become a district of Wolfsburg in 1972. The Allies also bombed the Opel plant at Rüsselsheim in the incorrect belief that it was a V-1 plant.[citation needed]
^Ian Bazalgette, one of the pathfinders was awarded a VC for his efforts during the attack
References
Citations
^Thompson, H L (1956). "Chapter 11 — Flying Bombs and Rockets". New Zealanders With The Royal Air Force Volume II: European Theatre January 1943–May 1945. Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–45. Wellington, New Zealand: R. E. Owen. p. 333. Retrieved February 16, 2019 – via New Zealand Electronic Text Collection.
^Ordway, Frederick I. III; Sharpe, Mitchell R. (1979). The Rocket Team. Apogee Books Space Series 36. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell. p. 118. ISBN978-0-690-01656-7.
^Irving, David (1964). The Mare's Nest. London: William Kimber and Co. pp. 168, 220, 245, 246.
^ abcGurney, Gene (Major, USAF) (1962). The War in the Air: a pictorial history of World War II Air Forces in combat. New York: Bonanza Books. p. 184.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)