The Night Witches - WWII History

A place for posting non-specific gaming related topics or off-topic discussions such as general news, current events, film, literature, music, travel, sports, etc.
Post Reply
User avatar
Necron 99
Level 8: Noble
Level 8: Noble
Posts: 2092
Joined: December 5th, 2018, 1:43 pm
Location: Jacksonville, FL

Post October 19th, 2020, 8:01 pm

This is one of the coolest stories from history I've ever read, unfortuantely I'd never heard of these ladies until recently; these women were bad ass, nothing else can be said.

Read the full article: HERE

MTU3ODc4NjAwMjkxNjU3NDM5.png
Meet the Night Witches, the Daring Female Pilots Who Bombed Nazis By Night

They flew under the cover of darkness in bare-bones plywood biplanes. They braved bullets and frostbite in the air, while battling skepticism and sexual harassment on the ground. They were feared and hated so much by the Nazis that any German airman who downed one was automatically awarded the prestigious Iron Cross medal.

All told, the pioneering all-female 588th Night Bomber Regiment dropped more than 23,000 tons of bombs on Nazi targets. And in doing so, they became a crucial Soviet asset in winning World War II.

The Germans nicknamed them the Nachthexen, or “night witches,” because the whooshing noise their wooden planes made resembled that of a sweeping broom. “This sound was the only warning the Germans had. The planes were too small to show up on radar… [or] on infrared locators,” said Steve Prowse, author of the screenplay The Night Witches, a nonfiction account of the little-known female squadron. “They never used radios, so radio locators couldn’t pick them up either. They were basically ghosts.”

Using female bombardiers wasn’t a first choice. While women had been previously barred from combat, the pressure of an encroaching enemy gave Soviet leaders a reason to rethink the policy. Adolf Hitler had launched Operation Barbarossa, his massive invasion of the Soviet Union, in June 1941. By the fall the Germans were pressing on Moscow, Leningrad was under siege and the Red Army was struggling. The Soviets were desperate.
“He found himself wondering at times, especially in the autumn, about the wild lands, and strange visions of mountains that he had never seen came into his dreams.” - Fellowship of the Ring, J.R.R. Tolkien

grodog
Level 6: Adventurer
Level 6: Adventurer
Posts: 302
Joined: December 9th, 2018, 2:19 pm

Post October 19th, 2020, 11:34 pm

Very cool, I hadn't heard about them either.

I'll check out the article, thanks Jay! :D

Allan.
grodog
----
Allan Grohe
Editor and Project Manager
https://www.facebook.com/BlackBladePublishing/

grodog@gmail.com
http://www.greyhawkonline.com/grodog/greyhawk.html for my Greyhawk site
https://grodog.blogspot.com/ for my blog, From Kuroth's Quill

User avatar
Captain_Blood
Level 6: Adventurer
Level 6: Adventurer
Posts: 267
Joined: December 10th, 2018, 10:21 pm

Post October 25th, 2020, 3:27 am

I learned about the Night Witches from Sabaton. If I recall correctly it's the first track on the Heros Album.



“May have been the losing side. Still not convinced it was the wrong one.” -Malcom Reynolds

Post Reply