The 844th Bombardment Squadron is an inactive United States Air Force unit. It was assigned to the 489th Bombardment Group, flying Consolidated B-24 Liberators. After training in the United States, it moved to England and engaged in the strategic bombing campaign against Germany until V-E Day. It returned to United States in 1945 and began training with the Boeing B-29 Superfortress, but was inactivated at March Field, California on 17 October 1945.
The 844th Bombardment Squadron was activated as a Consolidated B-24 Liberator heavy bomber squadron on 1 October 1943 at Wendover Field, Utah, one of the four original squadrons of the 489th Bombardment Group.[2][3] The squadron completed combat training and departed Wendover on 3 April 1944.[2] The air echelon flew to the United Kingdom via the southern ferry route along the northern coastline of South America and across the Atlantic to Africa before heading North to England.[4] The ground echelon sailed from Boston on board the USS Wakefield on 13 April 1944, reaching Liverpool on 21 April.[5] The squadron arrived at RAF Halesworth, England, in May 1944, where it became part of Eighth Air Force.[3]
The squadron entered combat on 30 May 1944 with an attack on Oldenburg, Germany.[5] It then concentrated on targets striking in France to prepare for Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy. The 844th supported the landings on 6 June 1944, and afterward bombed coastal defenses, airfields, bridges, railroads, and V-1 flying bomb and V-2 rocket launch sites (Operation Crossbow) in the campaign for France. It participated in the saturation bombing of German lines just before Operation Cobra, the breakthrough at Saint-Lô in July.
The 844th began flying strategic bombing missions to Germany in July, and engaged primarily in bombing strategic targets such as factories, oil refineries and storage areas, marshalling yards, and airfields in Ludwigshafen, Magdeburg, Brunswick, Saarbrücken, and other cities until November 1944.[3] The squadron dropped food to liberated French and to Allied forces in France during August and September, and carried food and ammunition to the Netherlands later in September.[3] For these missions, a loadmaster from IX Troop Carrier Command directed the drops from the bombers.[6] On other missions, squadron aircraft flew into Orleans/Bricy Airfield to deliver supplies.[7]
The 844th was part of the first group in Eighth Air Force selected for redeployment to the Pacific theater and became non-operational on 14 November 1944 and most of its B-24s were assigned to other groups in England. It was relieved of assignment to the theater on 29 November 1944, and returned to the United States.[4][5]
The 844th Squadron returned to Bradley Field Connecticut at the end of December 1944, where most returning personnel were reassigned to other units[4] while the squadron moved to Lincoln Army Air Field, Nebraska. At Lincoln it again became part of Second Air Force. On 22 January 1945, the squadron's personnel were informed that previous plans for refresher training had been cancelled and instead the squadron and its associated 369th Air Service Group were retrained as Boeing B-29 Superfortress combat and support units. However Second Air Force did not receive redesignation orders for the group until 17 March, until which time they were compelled to maintain duplicate rosters and tables of organization, one for a heavy bombardment group of four squadrons, and one for a very heavy bombardment group of three squadrons. The readiness date for the group air echelon was set back from 1 March to 1 August 1945.[citation needed] The squadron moved to Great Bend Army Air Field, Kansas in mid-February to re-equip with the B-29,[4] and was redesignated the 844th Bombardment Squadron, Very Heavy in March.[3]
The group was alerted for movement overseas in the summer of 1945 and moved to the port of embarkation for shipment, but with the Japanese surrender, the squadron was inactivated on 17 October 1945.[3]
This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency