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407th AAA BN

Discussion in 'Information Requests' started by smokey, Jul 25, 2009.

  1. smokey

    smokey recruit

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    My uncle who passed away a few years ago was a member of the 407th AAA BN. I was just entrusted with his keepsakes and souveniers. I was wondering if there were any others who were interested in this particular group or who know much of their history. I am partiularly interested in their part in the Normandy invasion. From what I can surmise they arrived in France on the 23rd of June. My uncle Gerald was a Staff Seargent and was a real hero to me as a young boy. He did not talk very much about his war experiences however.
     
  2. LRusso216

    LRusso216 Graybeard Staff Member

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    I don't know anything about the unit, but I came across this reference to a book written in 1945.

    Katz, Robert J. The Buzz Bomb Kings: A History of the 407th AAA
    Gun Battalion: Commanded by Lt Col Cleo E. Coles. New York:
    Lewis Historical Pub, Co., 1945.

    I'm not sure if you will be able to find a cop anywhere, though since it seems to be a history of the battalion. You might also look into Order of Battle by Shelby Stanton. It's expensive to buy, but you can probably find a copy in any relatively large library. In Pennsylvania, at any rate, any local library card enables you to borrow a book from any library in the state on an inter-library loan. A great service.

    Good luck with your search.
     
  3. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    Not much in Stanton's book on the 407th AAA Gun Battalion (Semimobile)

    Formed 10 Jan 1943 Camp Haan, Cal.
    Departed US 27 Feb 1944 from Boston
    Arrived England 8 Mr 1944
    Arrived France 23 Jun 1944
    They were in Le Mans, France Aug 1945.

    I suspect they were attached to First Army initially and ended up at some point attached to Third Army, since they were credited with Rhineland Campaign. They were "semi-mobile", so they fielded large AA guns, probably 90mm.

    Credited with Normandy, Northern France & Rhineland Campaigns

    Here's another thread about them in the forum http://www.ww2f.com/information-requests/22141-hq-battery-407th-aaa-gun-bn.html

    407th is mentioned here:
    Skylighters, The Web Site of the 225th AAA Searchlight Battalion: The AAA War Against the Buzz Bombs

    Can't find much else.
     
  4. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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    [TABLE]
    [TR]
    [TD][​IMG][/TD]
    [/TR]
    [/TABLE]

    Antwerp X: The AAA War Against the Buzz Bombs
    [HR][/HR][TABLE="width: 640"]
    [TR]
    [TD="align: left"]Protecting Antwerp
    In Summer 1944, the Americans introduced two new wonders of technology to the battle against the buzz bombs that proved to be particularly effective. The first was was the "SCR-548" gun-laying radar, which was used in conjunction with an analog computer to automatically track and fire on aerial intruders.The second was the radio proximity fuze, which allowed a shell to explode when it came to within a certain distance from a target, rather than being detonated by a time fuze set before firing. The V-1s straight and level path made it a relatively easy target for the new automated antiaircraft gun system that utilized these new inventions,and as gun crews became more experience with their new tools, the number of kills over England and the Channel rose steadily.

    Soon, the Allies were overrunning V-1 launch sites in the Pas de Calais and the number of flying bomb attacks dropped dramatically.

    A total of about 10,000 flying bombs had been launched against London to that time. The Germans had been setting up launch sites near Cherbourg to launch flying bombs against Plymouth and Bristol, but these sites were captured before they became operational.

    Even though the launch sites were overrun, flying bombs continued to hit England, if in reduced numbers. In January 1945, however, the Germans developed a new version of the V-1 with a range of 400 kilometers (250 miles) by reducing the size of the warhead and increasing the size of the fuel tank.

    They launched about 275 of these long-range flying bombs against Britain from the Netherlands in March 1945. British defenses were able to adjust to these last-gasp attacks, and the looming defeat of the Reich ended the campaign for good at the end of March. V-2 rocket attacks against England, which had begun the previous September, also slowly fizzled out.

    During this last phase of the flying-bomb battle, however, the Germans also began launching the first of thousands of V-1s against continental European targets, particularly the Belgian port city of Antwerp and the neighboring city of Liege, in hopes of interrupting the flow of Allied supplies to their advancing armies. But it was the aerial assault on Antwerp, so important to the Allied advance, that was so relentless (it raged on from October 1944 to April 1945) that it demanded extraordinary countermeasures on the part of the British and Americans.

    The British Army had liberated Antwerp in September 1944. Soon thereafter, it became the most crucial linchpin in the supply line for the continuing Allied campaign in eastern France. Once the world-class port facilities were put into operation again, the Germans recognized its importance to British and American plans to assault the Reich, and they tried desperately to destroy it. In order to damage or destroy the vital dock facilities, the Nazis used waves of V-1 flying bombs, changing the launch points often to prevent the Allies pinpointing the missile sites. The destruction was dreadful when the so-called "doodlebugs" struck. Anyone in the south of England could confirm that (in June 1944, for example, at the end of the first week of V-1s raids on London, the Guards' Chapel was hit by one V-1, killing 189 people). They had to be stopped.

    The assignment to keep the Port of Antwerp open fell to Brigadier General Clare Hibbs Armstrong. He'd commanded an antiaircraft brigade in defending Paris from air attack, and in early 1945 was given the top-secret job to protect Antwerp, code-named "Antwerp X." This new mission was so hush-hush at the time that many years were to pass before it became publicly known how critical it was to the final outcome of the war.

    Brigadier General Armstrong had graduated from West Point in 1917, but failed to see combat in WW I when he fell victim to the great influenza pandemic. He later recovered, and remained in the military between the wars. As commander of Antwerp X, he led a joint British and American force of 22,000 antiaircraft gunners (the British forces even included a regiment of artillery of the Free Polish Army). The job of these gunners was to defend Antwerp and its docks, to ensure that food, fuel, medicine, and munitions continued to flow to the armies poised to cross the Rhine and invade Germany. Field Marshall Montgomery told Armstrong if he achieved a 50 percent success rate, he'd be doing a grand job.

    But Armstrong was not a man satisfied by partial successes. He was fanatical about completing missions assigned to him and did not settle for half-measures, despite Montgomery's modest expectations. He began the Antwerp X campaign with a 60 percent kill rate, destroying six V-1s out of every 10 sent against the Belgian port. And, as tactics were refined, the V-1 kill rate increased to an incredible 98 percent by Spring 1945. At the end of the campaign, over 70% of the V-1s and V-2s had been destroyed by Antwerp X ack-ack fire and the port remained open throughout the attack. If allowed to reach their targets in mass, the missiles would have made Antwerp a smoking crater. Had it not been for those 22,000 AAA men commanded by Armstrong, Germany may have kept the Allies at bay and bought enough time for more of their wonder weapons, including the V-2, to become operational in greater numbers. (At the height of the X campaign, 26 V-2s were hitting Antwerp each day; one destroyed a cinema and killed 567 people!) This was a major victory for antiaircraft artillery, which was beginning to be disbanded in late 1944 owing to American air superiority. Combining the facts that the Luftwaffe had been pretty much vanquished from the skies over the Western Front, and that AAA men were badly needed as replacements for other units fighting in the Battle of the Bulge, Antwerp X was truly AAA's shining hour in World War II.

    The official book Antwerpen 50 Jaar Bevrijd reports that 12,000 V-1s were launched at Antwerp during WW II; Allied records indicate that only 2,448 got through, with 211 striking military targets. In addition, 1,341 V-2s were fired at the city, but few of them actually struck their targets. The docks that supplied 80% of the Allies' supplies were saved. Many Belgians, however, died, and the world got its first taste of the terror of the ballistic missile.
    My Father in law was in C Battery 407th AAA Gun BN (SM) during this campaign I hop this was a help Dad is alive and well at age 87!
    [/TD]
    [/TR]
    [/TABLE]
     
  5. SirJahn

    SirJahn Member

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    In May of 1944 they were at the following locations in England
    APO Ech Town Unit County
    [TABLE]
    [TR]
    [TD]654
    [/TD]
    [TD]10
    [/TD]
    [TD]Bottesford
    [/TD]
    [TD]407 Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Battalion (Semi-Mobile)(-), HQ & HQ Battery
    [/TD]
    [TD]Leicestershire
    [/TD]
    [/TR]
    [TR]
    [TD]654
    [/TD]
    [TD]10
    [/TD]
    [TD]Balderton
    [/TD]
    [TD]407 Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Battalion (Semi-Mobile), Battery A
    [/TD]
    [TD]Nottinghamshire
    [/TD]
    [/TR]
    [TR]
    [TD]654
    [/TD]
    [TD]10
    [/TD]
    [TD]Balderton
    [/TD]
    [TD]407 Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Battalion (Semi-Mobile), Battery B
    [/TD]
    [TD]Nottinghamshire
    [/TD]
    [/TR]
    [/TABLE]


    At the end of June only HQ Battery was still in England

    [TABLE]
    [TR]
    [TD]Middle Wallop
    [/TD]
    [TD]407 Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Battalion (Semi-Mobile), HQ Battery
    [/TD]
    [TD]Hampshire
    [/TD]
    [/TR]
    [/TABLE]
     
  6. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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    My Father in Law Ewald Hessinger was in C battery 407th AAA Gun BN during the was- Dad is still around and kicking and his mind is as sharp as a razor
     
  7. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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  8. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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  9. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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  10. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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    uThe above Pics: The painting was done by a german pow for my father in law. it was painted on a wood lid from a k ration box. the ship is how the 407th got to europe. the407th was credited for 200 confirmed buzz bomb "kills" Under the buzz bomb on the painting is the number 94 which is the comfirmed number of "kills" for c battery. The next pic is my father in law SGT Ewald Hessinger C Battery 407th AAA Gun BN (sm) late war photo. the last pic is from 2 years ago ata 407th reunion in new haven ct, dads home town. 74 of the 100 or so men in C battery were from new haven-quite a rare thing during the war
     
  11. KMB57

    KMB57 Member

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    Dad still has his ww2 uniform and the coat fits him like a glove! We visited him today and he is doing very well still sharp as a tack at age 89! We sat watching western movies on TV with him--hes a real pisser!
     
  12. Michael DellaValle

    Michael DellaValle New Member

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    My Dad Alfred "Mac" DellaValle passed in 1992 also 407th aaa, from New Haven. I'm trying to find out more about his service, their battles.
     

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