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92nd Bomb Group Memorial

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Details:

On the back of the church organ pipe.

A pipe organ bearing an inscription with the 8th Air Force insignia on the left-hand side and the 92nd Bomb Group insignia on the right. An aircraft propellor stands on a concrete base below the pipe organ. The inscription is written in English in paint lettering. The church's pipe organ was restored by the 92nd Bomb Group Memorial Association. The dedication took place on May 8, 1985.

 

The 92nd Bomb Group was known as "Fame's Favored Few", and it was assigned to the 40th Combat Wing, at RAF Thurleigh. The group tail code was a "Triangle B". Its operational squadrons were:

 

  • 325th Bombardment Squadron (NV)
  • 326th Bombardment Squadron (JW)
  • 327th Bombardment Squadron (UX)
  • 407th Bombardment Squadron (PY)

 

Lockheed/Vega B-17G-10-VE Flying Fortress Serial 42-39958 of the 92d Bomb Group. This aircraft suffered severe damage during a mission to Hamburg Germany on 4 November 1944 attacking the Harburg oil complex. It was written off after it landed safely.

 

B-17s of the 92d Bomb Group on a mission over Nazi-Occupied Europe. Visible is Lockheed/Vega B-17G-70-VE Flying Fortress Serial 44-8579

From Podington, the group flew almost 300 operational missions over Nazi-Occupied Europe. Missions were flown to Wilhelmshaven, a tire plant at Hanover, airfields near Paris, an aircraft factory at Nantes, and a magnesium mine and reducing plant in Norway.

 

Although handicapped by weather conditions, enemy fire, and insufficient fighter protection, the 92nd bombed aircraft factories in central Germany on 11 January 1944 and received a Distinguished Unit Citation for the mission.

 

The group took part in the intensive campaign of heavy bombers against the German aircraft industry during Big Week, 20–25 February 1944. After that, it attacked V-weapon sites in France; airfields in France, Germany, and the Low Countries, and industrial targets in France, Germany, and Belgium, making concentrated strikes on oil and transportation facilities after October 1944.

 

In addition to strategic missions, the 92nd performed some interdictory and support operations, assisting the Normandy invasion in June 1944 by hitting gun emplacements, junctions, and marshaling yards in the beachhead area, supporting ground forces at Saint-Lô during the breakthrough in July 1944, bombing gun positions and bridges to aid the airborne assault on the Netherlands in September 1944, participating in the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944-January 1945, by attacking bridges and marshaling yards in and near the battle area and bombing airfields near the landing zone to cover the airborne assault across the Rhine in March 1945.

 

After V-E Day, the 92nd Bomb Group Moved to Istres Air Base, France in June 1945 where the unit transported troops from Marseilles to Casablanca for return to the United States. The group was inactivated in France on 28 February 1946 where the personnel demobilized and B-17 aircraft were sent to storage.

Source of information: www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk, Imperial War Museum War Memorials Register, en.wikipedia.org

Source of photos: www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk

Monument Text:

IN THANKSGIVING

AND IN MEMORY OF

"FAMES FAVORED FEW"

THE 92ND

BOMBARDMENT GROUP

OF THE

UNITED STATES

8TH AIR FORCE

1943 to 1945

IN THE CAUSE OF PEACE

AND FREEDOM THE GROUP

FLEW 308 MISSIONS 274

FROM PODINGTON AIRFIELD

THIS ORGAN WAS RESTORED BY THE 92ND

BOMBARDMENT GROUP

MEMORIAL CORPORATION

IN THE HOPE THAT THE

VOICE OF THIS

INSTRUMENT WILL SPEAK

FOR THEM: THE LIVING

AND THE DEAD : TO THE

PEOPLE OF PODINGTON

EVERY TIME IT IS PLAYED

DEDICATED BY JOHN-LORD BISHOP

OF ST ALBANS

18TH MAY 1985

Commemorates:

Units:

325th Bomber Squadron, 92nd Bomb Group

326th Bomber Squadron, 92nd Bomb Group

327th Bomber Squadron, 92nd Bomb Group

407th Bomber Squadron, 92nd Bomb Group

8th Air Force

92nd Bomber Group

US Army Air Corps

Wars:

WWII

Other images :