Source (images included!): http://www.renegadetribune.com/judeo-allied-bombing-of-germany-mass-murdering-white-europeans-and-destroying-their-culture-178-cities-listed/
1 – Aachen
During World War Jew, Aachen was at grave risk. People were unprepared when 75 bombs hit the cloister in the first large-scale attack by English bombers on January 15, 1941 which dumped 176 high explosives bombs and 3,000 incendiary bombs. The city could not be evacuated because the air raid system broke down, and 145 people were killed or injured.
Because the fire brigade was overtaxed, 18 boys and girls created a group to guard the cathedral around the clock from then on. Light was forbidden during air raids, and in the dark of the cathedral the children climbed the tower stairs, hanging on to swaying railings and listening to the thunderous explosions echoing greatly because of the cathedral’s acoustics. As the attacks became heavier, the young guardians of the cathedral helped perform the dangerous jobs of cleaning up debris and clearing duds. In the end, the cathedral survived, despite five fires and a direct hit by a heavy bomb.
During the next four years, there were repeated large attacks on the cathedral city: on July 14, 1943 with 294 dead, on April 11, 1944 with 1.525 dead, on May 25, 1944 with 198 dead and on May 28, 1944 with 167 dead. On October 21, 1944, 65% of all dwellings were demolished after six long weeks of American bombing, and hundreds more civilians died. 64 smaller bomb attacks also took place on Aachen, and its citizens took to the shelters 1,984 times during these years. By the time Americans occupied ancient Aachen, it was 85% destroyed by bombing.
2 – Allgäu
The Allgäu is an enchantingly beautiful region in Bavaria surrounded by rivers, mountains and trees. Several of its towns and villages were bombed, most at the tail-end of the jewish war. Sonthofen im Allgäu is the most southerly town of Germany, located in the Oberallgäu region of the Bavarian Alps and situated between two rivers, the Ostrach and the Iller. The town is small and surrounded by forests, fields and lakes.
Sonthofen was bombed to punish Germany for having a boys’ training school (although the training building was left alone). On February 22, 1945, the church hospital and town bank were destroyed, and on April 29, 1945, the Catholic parish church of St. Michael was hit.
Immenstadt im Allgäu had its railway facilities destroyed on February 22, 1945 along with the Spitalstraße, much of its old Capuchin monastery, a brewery and the local museum. There was a total of 14 deaths. Oberstdorf im Allgäu, left, is first mentioned in 1141. It was damaged by US bombers at the end of war. Isny im Allgäu has a thousand year history and was bombed by the US in 1945.
3 – Anklam
On October 9, 1943, 352 heavy bombers of the US 8th Air Force struck industrial objects at Anklam and later, more than 1,000 U.S. B-17s and B-24s attacked the nearby airfield but then honed in on the city center, destroying eighty percent of the city. The civilian victims of the bomb attacks were buried in three large collective graves. Anklam was subjected to further destruction during the last days of war when the advancing Soviets burned and leveled most of the surviving town. By 1945, the Red Army occupied Anklam. Of the wonderful, diverse historical buildings from gabled Gothic brick houses to Baroque half-timbered buildings, almost nothing was spared. Anklam was then sentenced to decades of communist slavery as part of the East German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, and the town was “re-erected” in the dreary, uniform socialist style.
4 – Aschaffenburg
In an purported attempt to destroy rail lines, 50 bombs were initially dumped on Aschaffenburg which caused damage but did not cut the main through-lines. However, many other bombs fell in the center and north of the town, and about 500 houses were destroyed and 1,500 badly damaged. Many old buildings were hit, including the local castle. Johannisburg Schloss, 1605–1614, one of the most important castles of the Renaissance, was so badly injured that it has taken over 60 years to rebuild. It was hit by 5 high explosive bombs, and a 4,000 pound ‘blockbuster’ burst near by, burning out the roof and upper stories. In the end, the town was nearly completely destroyed and its landmarks all lost. Aschaffenburg lost hundreds of people in numerous attacks of the war and 2,000 people were left homeless from a raid on November 21, 1944.
On March 4, 1945, six B-24H American bombers on their way to bomb Aschaffenburg again in the “clean up” missions at war’s end, somehow ended up bombing the city of Zurich, Switzerland “by mistake,” 15 miles within the territory of the neutral power with which the Judeo-United States was supposedly trying to maintain good relations. They dropped 12 tons of incendiary bombs and 12.5 tons of heavy explosives. Most exploded in an open field, but 5 Swiss civilians were killed, 22 left homeless, and several houses were destroyed.
Previously, on April 1, 1944 the northern Swiss city of Schaffhausen was seriously damaged when 50 U.S. bombers killed and wounded 100 people and ravaged homes, factories, city buildings and railway yards of the city of 22,000 inhabitants. There were 428 left homeless and 67 buildings damaged. At the Museum of Natural History and at the Allerheiligen Museum, valuable treasures were destroyed. Nine works of Tobias Stimmer and the collection of Swiss painters of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were all burned.
America placated the Swiss with one million dollars in relief funds, followed by another 3 million. There were numerous other attacks throughout the war, including one which killed seven people and injured 16 at Taegerwilen and Stein-am-Rhein; eight died at Rafz, as did a child at Vals in two of 13 separate attacks. On Christmas Day, 1944, planes from the 1st Tactical Air Force bombed Thayngen.
Several planes attacked a railway station at Noirmont, despite the presence of Swiss flags painted on village roofs. Basel was bombed as well, damaging the freight station and injuring people. The British were also responsible for minor attacks on Geneva, Basel, and Zurich, all explained as “mistakes.” However, at the time, the Swiss accused the Judeo-Allies of attacking their railway, and claimed that the bombings were not accidental but intentional, even going so far as to proclaim the bombing of Schaffhausen a war crime. It was a fact that Aschaffenburg Germany was the primary target in the Basel bombing and Freiburg Germany was the target in the Zurich bombing, and the cities bore not much similarity at all. In fact, Freiburg is more than 200 miles away from Zurich, and Ludwigshafen, the purported intended target for Schaffhausen, was about 145 miles north.
Further, they observed that the Judeo-Allies wanted to stop German shipments to Italy over the Swiss rail system and the Swiss repeatedly rejected these demands. The 1944 bombing of Schaffhausen included destruction of the rail line and rail station (Schaffhausen, coincidentally, also lost a major watch-making and precision instruments factory that some feared was supplying precision equipment to Germany). Basel’s and Noirmont’s damage was also to the railway, and in Zurich the main destruction was to the neighborhood and homes around the Zurich rail center.
Those responsible for the Schaffhausen bombing received no reprimand, and the Swiss insisted on disciplinary action for those responsible for the Basel and Zurich bombings. The Zurich pilots were court marshaled by a reluctant US military but, amid Swiss objections, it took place in a military court instead of a civilian court (it is interesting to note that the presiding officer at the trial was future actor Jimmy Stewart), and all were later acquitted.
5 – Augsburg
The first World War Jew air raid on the church city of Augsburg took place on April 17, 1942 at a great loss to the British. Of the twelve Lancasters that took part in the raid, only five returned. 37 men died with 12 more taken as prisoners. It was mostly a military raid on industries on the outskirts. Several more attacks took place on Augsburg proper before a devastating bomb attack as part of “Operation Clarion” on the night of February 25, 1944 which nearly completely destroyed the historic Augsburg city center. The series of attacks began first with an assault by 199 USAAF bombers followed by a crude, devastating British attack using 594 aircraft. They later stated that it was “marvelously accurate.” Within 80 minutes of the two bomb attacks, 309,450 deadly incendiary bombs were dropped into the heart of Augsburg starting more than 4,600 fires.
It was 20 degrees below zero, and the water in the fire hoses was all frozen. 2,000 civilians were killed and injured, and nearly half of the population left the city afterwards. 90,000 of them had become homeless. The “military” damage was inconsequential. Augsburg was above all a quiet city and many churches were centuries old. Moritzkirche, built in 1019, was the oldest. 27 other Augsburg churches spanned the years between 1051 and 1799. Most went up in smoke. It only took about 80 minutes for the Judeo-Allies to unnecessarily destroy 2,000 years of history in one of Europe’s oldest, most historic and most benign cities.
6 – Bad Reichenhall
On April, 25th of 1945, without any forewarning, the area was bombed by Judeo-Allied forces, 200 civilians were killed. The antique town center with many hospitals and the train station was nearly totally destroyed, however the military barracks didn’t suffer any damage.
7 – Bamburg
Although Bamberg was fortunate and escaped some of the devastation, there were incidents in the closing months of the jewish war. Bombing ruined three of Bamberg’s numerous breweries and killed a number of people taking shelter in the Polarbären-Keller beer garden in 1945. Most of the major monuments and historical landmarks escaped damage but over 300 buildings were totally destroyed. On February 22, 1945, American pilots returning from a failed mission elsewhere randomly dumped their deadly load on Bamberg. Three 50 kg bombs killed 17 people and hit the old Redeemer Church, leaving only the tower undamaged.
8 – Bautzen
Bautzen is often regarded as the unofficial, but historical capital of Upper Lusatia, and it is the most important cultural center of the minority of Sorbs. It suffered from minor bombing and major street fighting during the jewish War. Approximately 10% of the residential buildings and 34% of the town’s living space were destroyed. Eighteen bridges, 33 public buildings, 46 small firms and 23 larger firms were completely destroyed. Bautzen was later infamous throughout the GDR for its penitentiaries.
9 – Bayreuth
Although Bayreuth had no military significance and posed no threat, because Bayreuth had been touted as an “Ideal German Town” and was a cultural landmark near and dear to German hearts, it was vindictively targeted for cultural bombing by the Judeo-Allies at the very tail-end of World War Two. On April 5, 1945 almost half of the historic and lovely old city was successfully obliterated and about 1,000 civilians lay dead.
10 – Berchtesgaden
Beautiful Berchtesgaden’s history dates back to the 11th century. An area rich in salt, it was ruled by a number of different regimes over its long history. It is only a few miles away from the spectacular glacial Königsee with its steep mountains on each side. Its ideological importance made the pristine region a target for Judeo-Allied bombing. On April 25, 1945, 255 RAF Lancaster bombers bombed the Obersalzberg. Later, another RAF raid included 359 Lancasters and 16 Mosquitos.
11 – Berlin
More bombs by weight were dropped on the once elegant city of Berlin than were released on all of Great Britain during the entire war. By the end, there was no electricity, gas or water, the city’s bridges and railway tunnels were gone, and the city was choked with 98 million cubic yards of rubble that stood in place of the beautiful old buildings and monuments. Its population was halved and 1.5 million people became homeless in yet another city teeming with frantic, uncounted refugees who had fled from the Red Army in eastern regions, unknowingly trading one hell for another.
Starting in 1940, Berlin was continually attacked. Between November 18, 1943 and March 1944 alone, Berlin was bombed 24 times by over 1,000 planes of the combined forces of the RAF, RCAF, USAAF and Soviets, dropping up to 2,000 tons of bombs each, and it was continually assaulted until the Russian army took the city in April, 1945. The infrastructure was destroyed.
The so-called “Battle of Berlin” was largely a British bombing campaign from November 1943 to March 1944 launched by Arthur Harris, who boasted: “It will cost us between 400 and 500 aircraft. It will cost Germany the war.” Between November 1943 and March 1944 Bomber Command made 16 massed attacks on Berlin. On December 27, 1943, Arthur Harris had requested that the USAAF attack Berlin as well and relieve the pressure on RAF Bomber Command, however, the Americans continued precision bombing German industry and refused to join the RAF campaign. The 16 raids on Berlin cost Bomber Command more than 500 aircraft and 2,690 of their men lost their lives with nearly 1,000 others becoming prisoners of war. Although devastating to civilians, the British raids failed to meet their primary objective, which was to win the jewish war by bombing Germany until its economy and civilian morale collapsed (in fact, war production in greater Berlin did not fall but continued to rise until the end of 1944).
The first major raid on the night of November 18/19, 1943 caused little damage. The second major raid on November 23/24, 1943 ignited several firestorms and caused extensive civilian damage to the residential areas west of the center, Tiergarten and Charlottenburg, Schöneberg and Spandau. The Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church was senselessly destroyed along with the British, French, Italian and Japanese embassies, Charlottenburg Palace and the Berlin Zoo. This raid killed 2,000 and rendered 175,000 people homeless. The following night 1,000 were killed and 100,000 made homeless. A December 17 attack extensively damaged the Berlin railway system. During December and January, constant civilian bombing attacks killed hundreds of people each night and rendered between 20,000 and 80,000 homeless each time. By this time, more than a quarter of Berlin’s total living accommodations were unusable. Another major raid on January 28/29, 1944 hit Berlin’s western and southern residential districts. On February 15/16, 1944 some important war industries were actually hit. These homicidal, vengeance fueled civilian attacks, ineffective though they were, continued until March 1944, causing immense devastation and death.
Out of 245,000 buildings in Berlin, 50,000 were completely destroyed and 23,000 severely damaged; 80,000 (documented) civilians had been killed. There were no trees, no grass, and only blackened corpses of both buildings and people. The city of Berlin, once among the most beautiful and enviable in the world, was in total ruin. It is now generally accepted that the Battle of Berlin was certainly not the success that Butcher Barbecue Harris, who among others wanted nothing less than Germany erased from the map for all time at any cost, had predicted and it cost the lives of hundreds of his own men.
12 – Bielefeld
The first bombs fell in June of 1940 on Bielefeld. In 1944, the heaviest air strike was launched on the city center on September 30 by 300 American bombers flying in 4 separate waves intentionally setting the city on fire with incendiaries and then issuing a final attack with time fuses ala the British.
600 civilians were killed and another 1,300 injured. 10,000 were left shelterless. More than 1,350 people in Bielefeld died from bombing by the end of the war, not accurately counting the numerous refugees from the east who had taken shelter in the city. 15,600 dwellings were damaged or destroyed, and then it experienced a flood of even more displaced refugees, raising the population from approximately 127,000 before the war to 155,000 in 1950. There was nothing much ancient or historical left in destroyed Bielefeld, and it was decided that the town would be rebuilt in the style modern at the time.
On March 14, 1945, the largest bomb which ever fell on a German city was dropped on the local Bielefeld railway viaduct, an important traffic facility which the Judeo-Allies had unsuccessfully tried blowing up many times. England had to specially convert a Lancaster bomber for the bomb. “Dam buster” bombers were specially modified to carry the ‘Grand Slam’ 22,000lb (9,979kg) monster. At almost 10 tons, the Lancaster could only carry one bomb at a time. The pilot dropped the bomb about thirty metres from the viaduct and the resulting explosion caused powerful shock waves to radiate outwards destroying two arches each 1,100 feet in length. The bomb was the largest ever used in war, it could penetrate seven meters (23 feet) of reinforced concrete as it did on the U-boat pens near Bremen. The Grand Slam measured 7.7 meters in length and contained 4,144 kg of explosive. A total of 41 of these violent super-bombs were dropped during the war.
13 – Bingen
Bingen was destroyed eight times in history, and torn back and forth between possessors and occupying forces. A French municipal government was set up in Kreuznach after 1795, and after the defeat of Napoleon the town of Kreuznach came under Prussian control. After defeat in the First World War, the French again occupied Bad Kreuznach until 1930. Today, it is just another Rhineland town, most of it flattened by Judeo-Allied bombing, with barely a pre-war building left standing from the RAF raids which left 80% of the outer city and 60% of the medieval inner city in ruins in 1944. Bingen’s old castle was all but destroyed, but has been rebuilt. Judeo-Allied bombing in 1944 also took out the ceiling and collapsed part of the high altar of Bingen’s Basilica.
During one raid, 100 citizens had taken shelter in an old wine cellar when high explosive bombs caved it in and crushed them to death. Bad Kreuznach was badly damaged by a number of air raids during the final months of World War II. On Christmas day, 1944, 140 civilians died when 800 high explosive Judeo-Allied bombs and mines plus 20,000 fire bombs were dropped on the town center. 4300 homes were destroyed and the population was halved. All bridges were blown up. 1,800 of the 3,500 dwellings and more than half of the trade and industrial plants were destroyed by the bomb attacks of 1941 followed by round the clock bomb raids at the end of the jewish war. Americans took the town and they operated notorious prison camps nearby for German POWs. The Americans were replaced by French occupation troops in June and July. It no longer contained much of historical value.
14 – Böblingen
On October 7, 1943, 408 incendiary bombs and 35 high explosive bombs were aimed at the small, militarily insignificant old town center, killing 44 civilians and wounding 200. 1,735 people were left homeless, and 70% of the old part of town was ruined. In July of 1944, another attack killed 36.
15 – Bocholt
On March 22, 1945, Bocholt was 85% destroyed when 98 British bombers dumped 180 tons of high explosive bombs and over 171,000 incendiary bombs of 1.8 Kilos each. In just a few minutes, the entire city center experienced the ungodly and terrible heat. According to the bomber crews the smoke rose to over four kilometers high. The ensuing fire suction burned everyone alive in its path and sucked the air out of those trying to survive underground in cellars. Mutilated corpses littered the roads leading out of the city center, and those found within the city later were completely shrunken.
16 – Böhlen
Böhlen is another very old Saxon city. First mentioned in 1353, Böhlen remained rural and sleepy until the 1920s. 224 Lancasters and 11 Mosquitos attacked an oil plant near Böhlen, also managing to damage the town and kill a few civilians.
17 – Bonn
In a Judeo-Allied fire bomb attack of World War Two that struck directly into the heart of Bonn, these centuries were thrown into an ash heap. 700 buildings were destroyed and 1,000 seriously damaged, with its university, many cultural and public buildings and large residential area within the ancient city center totally destroyed with a great loss of life. So was the organ in a church Beethoven once played.
18 – Braunschweig
On the fifth British raid on Braunschweig by the RAF, October 15, 1944, 240 bombers dropped their lethal load which produced an intentional fire storm that completely destroyed the old city center within the moat, and other large areas. In what was called “sector bombing,” the RAF used the cathedral as a reckoning point for the master bomber in the lead plane who dropped a green marker on the cathedral dome to guide the aimers in the following aircraft, who then flew over it from various directions in a fan-shaped formation and dropped their deadly loads.
The first of the 200,000 phosphorus and incendiary bombs to fall on the city were 12,000 “Blockbuster” explosive bombs. These were typically laid in “carpets” on the historical centers of old timber-frame towns to efficiently expose the town’s guts for an injection of fire and the intended firestorm and Braunschweig’s medieval houses were perfect fuel. The blasts blew off the old wooden houses’ roofs and windows, then split the house’s interior walls open so as to receive their death by fire. After the explosive bombs, the phosphorus and incendiary bombs were dropped.
Their job was to ignite the firestorm. The British perfected this technique after careful research done in conjunction with the US in places like Dugway. The bombers were long gone when the firestorm reached its peak in the core of the city. In a scene reminiscent of the eruption of Vesuvius, sparks and embers rained in a lethal deluge over the blazing inner city, making it nearly impossible for rescue vehicles and fire engines to reach into the fire and try to save people. The city had a well planned system of bunkers for shelters, but some were made inaccessible to rescue crews by flames. Rescue and fire personnel screamed into the burning city from all surrounding areas to help and an amazing and courageous rescue of 23,000 trapped people was carried out, although 100 people in one shelter suffocated and could not be saved. 1,000 were killed, but 2,905 more died later from after effects and UXB’s. The hideous glow of the incinerating city could be seen for miles and miles. It was so bad that even the next morning when British reconnaissance flew overhead to take pictures of their handiwork, they had to turn back because the smoke was still too thick. They were satisfied none the less, for they only lost a single Lancaster bomber to anti-aircraft fire that night.
The fires raged for 2½ days, in the case of Braunschweig about 200,000 phosphorus and incendiary bombs. Within the 24 hours of “Operation Hurricane,” the RAF dropped over 10,000 tons of bombs on Duisburg and Braunschweig alone, the greatest bomb load dropped on any one day in the war. There were 202,284 city citizens before the war, and only 149,641 by the war’s end. The city also lost 15,000 men during the war years. The lovely ancient city is but a small shred of her former self.
19 – Breisach
During World War II, 85% of Breisach was destroyed by Judeo-Allied artillery as the Judeo-Allies crossed the Rhine. The Cathedral was heavily damaged.
20 – Bremen and Bremerhaven
On June 26, 1942, British attacked the heart of old Bremen City with one of their infamous mega bombings called a “thousand bomber raid.” Blockbuster bombs and 20,000 incendiary bombs were dropped in an hour, destroying hundreds of homes and leaving thousands homeless. On August 18, 1944, another massive attack on the Hanseatic city was launched by both Americans and British. 273 British bombers flew in five waves of attacks on the city, pounding her nearly to death, leaving so many victims that they had to be put in mass graves.
While the harm to the civilian population was horrible, damage to military targets was rather light. As for Bremerhaven, the goal of the Judeo-Allies on September 18, 1944 was purportedly the complete destruction of the port, but within 20 minutes of bombing, 421,060 incendiary bombs, 480 high-explosive bombs and thousands of mines were instead dumped on the city itself. In this civilian attack, 30,000 people were homeless, dead or dying under a rain of burning debris or a crush of rubble. 97% of the city’s buildings were destroyed. The harbor facilities and the German barracks were unharmed.
21 – Breslau
Breslau was the last major city in eastern Germany to fall on May 7, 1945. Although the city was only bombed once, massive destruction took place in the aftermath and Breslau was largely destroyed. The medieval parts of the city and almost all historical landmarks were gutted. The buildings that escaped bomb damage were burned and looted by the Soviets. It is said there was a murdered and disfigured or disembowled German soldier hung on every lamp post in the city. Like most of Silesia, Breslau was placed under Polish administration. Most surviving German inhabitants were expelled and all German property was taken. By the 1950s, Breslau had been cleansed of most of its dried blood as well as remaining Germans and the real history of the city. Renamed “Wrocław,” it was resettled with Poles.
22 – Bruchköbel
Bruchköbel was attacked on August 10, 1940 by the RAF for no apparent reason. It was bombed for about 2½ hours with incendiary and high explosive bombs which initially ignited several barns on fire, and residents still remember the plaintive cries of cattle, pigs, horses and all manner of trapped beasts, some of which were rescued. In all, some 25 buildings, houses, sheds and barns were destroyed. A large crater, uprooted trees and collapsed roofs bore witness to the event. In March 1945, the Americans occupied the town.
23 – Bruehl
The Judeo-Allied artillery could not resist shooting at old German castles, and stocked castle wine cellars also made them targets for plundering. The castles had been sometimes used to store artwork and archives evacuated from the cities. Augustusburg Schloss in Bruehl, the old castle of the Dukes of Württemberg, was a stunning example of Rhineland baroque architecture, complete with a grand staircase, chapel, gardens and hunting lodge.
On October 10, 1944, a single bomb destroyed the north wing for no strategic reason. On December 28, bombs hit near the chapel and the impact smashed the plaster baroque and rococo interior. On March 4, only two days before the castle fell into American hands anyway, artillery shells struck the main building. Testimony taken later indicated that no German troops had been in or near the building. One shell blew a corner off the roof and the other two detonated inside and did extensive damage. Before the military government detachment arrived in Bruehl, troops had bivouacked in the Schloss and caused even more damage. The Judeo-Allied detachment finally stationed two policemen on the grounds, but they had no authority or incentive to control US soldiers who continued to go in and out, looting and vandalizing as they pleased.
24 – Castrop-Rauxel
Castrop-Rauxel, nestled between the major cities of Dortmund, Bochum, Herne, Recklinghausen and Waltrop, was first mentioned in 834 as Villa Castorpe, receiving free city rights in 1384. It was once ruled by the Counts of Kleve. In the war, 26.1% of civilian buildings were destroyed.
25 – Chemnitz
Chemnitz had a pre-World War Two population of 370,000, larger than it has today. On February 15, 1945, Dresden and Chemnitz, both lying in the direct path of the advancing Russian armies, and Magdeburg, about seventy miles south-west of Berlin, were the main targets for devastating blows by over 3,600 planes of the R.A.F and the Eighth US Air Force so as to pave the way for the Red Army. 450 bombers attacked Chemnitz, while 400 went to Magdeberg and 450 to Dresden. The daylight bombing at Chemnitz absolutely devastated the city, destroying it almost completely.
The old St. Wolfgang church in Schneeberg had an altar by Lucas Cranach, with 11 very important scenes, and also a bibliotech with priceless ancient manuscripts, including music scores of the miners’ music. In 1945, low flying American bombers totally destroyed the church and the bibliotech. The altar was taken from the burning building and survived. The city then fell under judeo-communist rule and decayed further. In 1953, Chemnitz was renamed Karl-Marx-Stadt, and the city was rebuilt according to judeo-communist principles, with prefab concrete housing blocks and streets adorned with heroic Soviet-style statues, including a huge head of Karl Marx. Very few pre-war buildings were restored. It returned to the original name of Chemnitz in 1990. The city of Chemnitz today is thought to have the lowest birth-rate in the world.
One remaining old landmark is the red tower, built in the late 12th or early 13th century as part of the old city wall. The old Renaissance Rathaus is still standing, as is the smallest castle in Saxony, Rabenstein.
26 – Colberg (Kolberg)
C(K)olberg, a small city on the Persante river, was one of the oldest in Pomerania, having been granted city rights in 1255. In 1284, it became a member of the Hanseatic League. The Swedes captured the town in 1631 during the judeo-christinsane Thirty Years’ War, then it passed to Brandenburg. It was severely bombed when, with German defeat, it was a frantic embarkation point for escaping German refugees from the east. This cleared the way for the Judeo-Red Army. Under Soviet occupation, 3/4 of the people were starved to death by spring of 1947.
27 – Cologne (Köln)
By 1942, the Judeo-Allies had stopped bombing key military targets in favor of burning the cities and residential districts. Cologne “got what it deserved” on the night of May 30, 1942, when 1,046 RAF aircraft took off from 52 airfields to destroy her. The attack, while hitting only a few factories, managed to cause an enormous loss of life, particularly of women and children.
2,000 tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs dropped on the medieval town until it was engulfed in flame from end to end in 12,000 separate fires. This raid, one of 262 inflicted on the ancient city, lasted about 75 minutes and the fires could be seen 550 miles away. 600 acres of built-up area were destroyed. 90% of the city was utterly destroyed. The Cathedral suffered 14 direct hits but, although badly injured, miraculously remained at least salvageable, and it remains the tallest Gothic structure in the world. The bombs demolished 21 other churches, hundreds of businesses, libraries and schools as well as and nearly 13,000 homes, leaving 45,000-55,000 people homeless. Thousands of people were killed, maimed and burned to death. By the end of the jewish war, the population of Cologne was reduced by 95%.
28 – Cottbus
On February 15, 1945, the lovely old town of Cottbus was bombed by 400 American B-17 bombers dropping 4,000 high-explosive bombs, destroying 356 houses and damaging 3,600. 1,000 people were killed, among them 400 children, and 13,000 were left homeless. Parts of its hospital was destroyed, its doctors and nurses killed. By 1945, only 8,000 out of 50,000 pre-war inhabitants remained alive. 187 people committed suicide. It was handed over to the judeo communists.
29 – Cuxhaven
Cuxhaven in Lower Saxony is situated on the shore of the North Sea at the mouth of the Elbe River. For over 600 years, it belonged to Hamburg. British bombing attacks on the German cities of Wilhelmshaven and Cuxhaven began early in the jewish war, on September 5th, 1939.
30 – Darmstadt
Darmstadt produced less than two-tenths of one percent of Germany’s total war production, yet a minimum of ten percent of Darmstadt’s civilian population died from the intentionally created firestorm that utterly destroyed the city.
The indelible date of September 11 also has special meaning to the people of Darmstadt. One of the “lesser Dresdens” nobody hears much about, the beautiful 1,000 year-old city of Darmstadt was an innocuous forest-bound center of art and culture and once a hub of the Art Nouveau movement. She produced less than two-tenths of one percent of the total war production of Germany, yet she was senselessly and brutally destroyed by RAF bombers on that date in 1944 in a needlessly ferocious attack that created a firestorm which murdered at least ten percent of Darmstadt’s civilian population.
Indeed, Darmstadt was hit several times, in fact, there were over 35 air raids and 1,567 air alarms on the city between June 1940 and March 1945. Before the September 11 attack, Darmstadt was previously bombed on the night of September 23/24, 1943 by a relatively small force of RAF bombers in a “diversionary raid” to draw night fighters away from their intended target of Mannheim, causing the first extensive damage in the university town which had not been seriously bombed before and had little industry. On April 24/25, 1944, RAF planes again bombed Darmstadt and other towns simply because, due to low clouds, they failed to find Karlsruhe, their intended target on that night. Another night attack on August 25/26, 1944 by the RAF was a failure because the pathfinders’ flares were dropped too far to the west, only hitting 95 buildings in Darmstadt and killing only 8.
The September 11th destruction of Darmstadt, yet another ancient city, was achieved within one half hour when 234 bombers dropped 500,000 high-explosive bombs, over 300,000 incendiary bombs and 300 aerial mines in a so-called “fan attack” which intentionally created a firestorm. Darmstadt was targeted as the terrible “test run” for the pattern which later created the Dresden inferno.
Even after the hideous September 11 raid, there was yet a further “diversionary raid” on the night of February 23/24, 1945 to draw night fighters away from their main target, this time the town of Pforzheim. According to the RAF, the bombing of Darmstadt was “an outstandingly accurate and concentrated raid on an intact city of 120,000 people. A fierce fire area was created in the centre and in the districts immediately south and east of the centre. Property damage in this area was almost complete. Casualties were very heavy.”
Note: The Hessische Landesbibliothek was only one of the old cultural institutions destroyed in the firestorm in Darmstadt, and it lost about 760,000 volumes, many extremely rare. But then, almost every learning institution, library and bibliotech in all German towns suffered cataclysmic losses due to bombing. The bibliotechs in Magdeburg and Bremen lost 140,000 and 150,000 volumes respectively to bombing, Frankfurt’s losses in books from its main libraries were 550,000 volumes, 440,000 doctoral dissertations and 750,000 patent documents, the University of Munich lost 350,000 books, and a half a million books were lost in Leipzig’s ancient book district.
31 – Datteln
Judeo-Allied air attacks heavily destroyed Datteln’s residential area. The worst attack was on March 9, 1944 by 77 RAF Halifax Bombers. They destroyed the churches, including St. Amanduskirche, 3 schools, several buildings of the local mine and 12% of the houses. 64% of the remaining homes were gravely damaged. There were a number of dead civilians who were buried in a mass grave. All the bridges were blown up by Judeo-Allied troops.
32 – Dessau
Between 1940 and 1945, Dessau had 20 Judeo-Allied air attacks beginning in 1940, but the bombing on March 7, 1945 sent it into rubble and ash. Out of the red sky, from the mouths of 520 Royal Air Force Lancasters and 5 Mosquitos, fell 1,693 tons of bombs, of which about 800 were high explosives and 600,000 were incendiary bombs dropped in three waves of attack, all intended to assist the Red Army. Dessau was 84% destroyed and 1,136 civilians lost their lives.
Nearby Zerbst is located about halfway between Magdeburg and Dessau in the district of Anhalt. The town is first mentioned in the chronicle of Thietmar of Merseburg in 1018 and after the Reformation, from 1582 to 1798, it became a center of Calvinism in Germany. It is best known for Princess Sophie Auguste Friederike von Anhalt-Zerbst who became known as Catharine the Great of Russia and her manor home was in Zerbst.
On April 16, 1945, mere weeks before the final surrender of Germany, eighty percent of Zerbst was destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing. Zerbst was pummeled by four or five waves of 20 to 60 aircraft each for an estimated 40 minutes. The city was teeming with refugees fleeing from the east and wounded soldiers. 574 people were killed by bombing. The Americans were the first to occupy the city and handed it over to the Russians the following month. Only a few historical structures being preserved.
Construction of Zerbst Palace was first begun in the year 1196 and it was expanded and improved in 1681 by Prince Karl Wilhelm of House of Anhalt-Zerbst. In the bombing of April 16, 1945, the castle was bombed and burned out completely destroying the precious interior as well as the exhibits in the museum and the documents held in the State Archives. Reconstructing the palace would have been possible, but this option was rejected by the communists for ideological reasons.
33 – Dillenburg
In World War Jew, Dillenburg became a target of Judeo-Allied attacks with its now closed marshalling yard.
34 – Dollbergen
From 1940 to 1945 numerous Judeo-Allied bombing raids took place on the village of only 1,400 inhabitants because of the nearby oil refinery, killing 12 civilians and several foreign farm workers. There is a Memorial in the village and several of their graves. At the War Memorials there are 28 names of native sons lost in World War One and 49 from the Second World War. The town was first occupied by the Americans, then the British.
35 – Donauwörth
On April 11 and 19, just weeks before the end of the jewish war in 1945, last minute insane attacks took place on an unprepared population. Donauwörth was attacked and 75% of the town was utterly destroyed.
36 – Dorsten
Approximately 5,600 Judeo-Allied bombs in March 1945 destroyed the town by 80%: St. Agatha Church, parts of which dated to 1170, the Franciscan Monastery of St. Anna from 1488, Magdalene Chapel from 1488, the Ursuline convent founded in Cologne in 1699, Ursulinenkirche from 1707, the Dorsten Rathaus, the Siechenkapelle (with hospital) from the 14th century, and hundreds of timber-framed buildings. 2,959 buildings were lost. It took three years, until 1948, to clear the debris.
37 – Dortmund
From May 5, 1943 to March 12, 1945, 22,242 tons of bombs were dumped over Dortmund. After each bomb attack, people would write short message for their friends and relatives on the doors or walls of their destroyed houses in chalk, hoping they would find them later. The first two large-scale attacks on May 5th and 24th of 1943, caused over 9,000 fires, killed approximately 1,400 people, left approximately 130,000 shelterless and destroyed cultural monuments, hospitals, schools and factories.
The third large-scale attack on May 23, 1944 was applied methodically to the residential areas in the south, southeast and the east of the city. On the evening October 6, 1944, a fourth large-scale attack left 60,000 more people shelterless and 1,015 dead in 40 minutes. High-explosive bomb attacks now started to increase. The most terrible attack took place on March 12, 1945 when 1,069 bombers dropped nearly 5,000 tons of explosives over Dortmund. For 43 minutes, the earth trembled and the buildings and homes could be heard creaking and collapsing all around, while the smoke clouds finally seeped into the cellars and shelters, choking the terrified people huddling in the cold, dark holes filling with groundwater.
Civil records estimated 6,341 deaths by the bombing. 70% of all dwellings were destroyed, as was the entire historic town center and the residential area where in former times about a quarter of a million humans lived. Rubble and broken roads blocked traffic. Water, gas and electric supply lines were gone, and the drainage system inoperable. The once beautiful Hanseatic city filled with romantic Gothic churches and monuments was gone. The majority of the inhabitants lost homes and property and were soon hungry and freezing in miserable emergency accommodation. 15,520 of their sons, fathers and husbands were soldiers that never came home.
38 – Dresden
With her reputation of grandeur and magnificence, the destruction of Dresden brought more attention than the scores of other German cities and towns that were erased by Judeo-Allied bombs. Dresden burned for five days. There were so many bodies they were hauled to huge funeral pyres throughout the city and burned. Accounts of the hellish scenes after such fire bombings are sickening: the human loss was catastrophic, the deaths gruesome and the carnage inflicted upon non-combatant civilians was of horrible proportion. Thousands of remains were thoroughly incinerated, while others were so shrunken in size that several bodies at one time fit into a wagon or wheelbarrow. There were bodies and parts of bodies everywhere: in cellars, in the river and in huge mounds on all roads leading out of the city where panicked people tried to escape and were blown apart or fried to the pavement.
Judeo-Allied bombing was fiercest at the end of the war, when Germany’s defeat was clearly imminent and her defenses minimal at best. 800 RAF Bombers dropped their Valentines upon the core of Dresden in the form of 650,000 incendiaries, 8,000lbs of high explosives and hundreds of 4,000lb bombs in two waves of attack, facing little anti-aircraft fire. RAF crews reported smoke rising to a height of 15,000 feet and the fires could be seen from a distance of 500 miles away. The Americans sent in 450 B-17 Flying Fortress long-range bombers the next day on the still burning city, a city of questionable military importance. The British dropped 2,656 tons of bombs, of which 75% were incendiaries unquestionably calculated to spark a massive firestorm and cause a cataclysmic loss of civilian life. The Americans then polished off what was left with 771 tons of bombs.
The exact death toll will never be known. Not only was Dresden teeming with thousands of refugees who had fled into the city from the eastern regions seeking protection and shelter, but all body counts were immediately suspended when the Judeo-Red Army seized the city. Yet, bombing apologists regularly refer the Dresden atrocity as a “debate” and relentlessly deflate the death toll as if that is somehow the issue, whether 100,000 human beings were killed or a “mere” 40,000. Unwilling to assign moral accountability for that which by any other measure would be viewed as a blatantly criminal act, they have led us to believe that not only was it militarily justified, but that its perpetrators and architects were heroes. They claim the moral high ground on the premise that the cold blooded murder of thousands of innocent women and children was, in a warped interpretation of collective guilt, something the victims “brought on by themselves” and therefore legitimate.
But what of their own? In the insanity of the Judeo-Allied terror-bombing of Germany, not only were hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians killed, 26,000 American airmen out of the 350,000 who served of the US Eighth Air Force were killed, 18,000 wounded, and over 23,000 became POWs. In the British Bomber Command, 55,573 aircrew were killed out of a total of 125,000 who served, a 44.4 per cent death rate. A further 8,403 were wounded and 9,838 captured. Hundreds and hundreds of bombers were left with devastating emotional scars, haunted by their own sense of moral right and wrong and from that small, still voice in their heads begging in vain for mercy.
The Soviet Memorial in Dresden, below, far right, was built inaugurated in November 1945. It says: “Eternal glory to the warriors of the Red Army in the battles against the German fascists.(?!) Conquered for the liberty and independence of the fallen Soviet homeland.”
After bombing, the charred and rotting and stinking hulk of Dresden was sent into judeo-communist slavery for decades. Between May, 1945, when the Judeo-Soviet army first occupied the 18 million cubic metres of rubble which was once Dresden, and unification in 1990, the once romantic city of Dresden was redesigned and reconstituted as a “model socialist city” with its grim, grey streets arranged to keep industrial chimneys in sight.
Wide streets and squares were cut into the landscape and “Socialist Realist” structures took the place of the destroyed Baroque wonders in central public spaces. Even today, well over a half a century later, bits and pieces of human remains are still occasionally found in unlikely places.
39 – Duisburg
Like the rest of the Ruhr, Duisburg’s industries made it a primary target of Judeo-Allied bombers, but the residential areas were attacked with equal vengeance. Starting in 1941, there were daily bombing raids as British bombers drop a total of 445 tons of bombs. In July of 1942, another attack took place. In 1943 1,599 more tons were dropped. By then 96,000 people were homeless. Another 2,000 tons were dropped in 1944, and then doubled to 4,000 tons again in 1944. In one massive assault, 2,000 bombers attacked at once, dropping 9,000 bombs and killing 3,000 more civilians. Attacked repeatedly, the city was under constant barrage until April 3, 1945. A grand total of 299 bombing raids had all but completely destroyed the historic cityscape. 80% of all residential buildings were lost.
40 – Düren
On November 16, 1944, the sky over Duren filled with bombers overloaded with incendiaries and high explosive bombs as part of a lethal joint Judeo-British-American operation called “Operation Queen.”A few quick snaps and the town was engulfed in a tower of fire, houses collapsed into rubble, and the tar on the roads became so hot that the soles of shoes stuck to it. 1,204 heavy US bombers joined 498 British bombers, and within two hours dropped over 9,000 tons of bombs on the ancient town. The idyllic city life as well as the beautiful, old buildings were obliterated. Of 45,000 humans who lived there, 3,127 who didn’t evacuate in time were painfully extinguished.
The aerial mines sucked off rooftops, opening the houses up for total destruction from within and without by the heavy pounding of heavy, high-explosives bombs, which brought the houses to their helpless collapse and broke water, sewer and gas pipelines, while smaller high-explosives bombs spread panic and forced people into cellars. Afterward, the release of heavy liquid incendiary bombs created fire towers and suffocated those who fled below ground. Burning phosphorus, which turned people into living candles, blanketed any area of possible escape. Duren had 6,431 houses before the assault, and only 131 after. The whole medieval core of town was totally destroyed. There is no building in Duren today which dates from before 1945/46.
Also destroyed or damaged during this operation were several surrounding towns and villages. The 8th U.S. Air Force hit the three towns of Eschweiler, Weisweiler and Langerwehe with 4,120 bombs. 339 fighter bombers of the 9th U.S. Air Force attacked Hamich, Hürtgen and Gey with 200 tons of bombs. Gey was a town located at the outskirts of the beautiful Hürtgen forest, situated in a valley through which all roads leading from the forest intersect. The forest is about twenty miles long and ten miles wide, just a few miles from Aachen and Düren. It is accented with steep gorges and winding slopes covered with thick layers of evergreens and firs. There was heavy fighting in the war here after it was bombed during “Operation Queen.”
Among the many towns also bombed in “Operation Queen” was Aldenhoven whose history goes back 4,000 years before the birth of rabbi christ of christinsane fame. The still well-preserved castles in the towns and Dürboslar Engelsdorf date from 898 and 1080. There was a 12th century church (only parts of it stand today) and in the neighboring village of Siersdorf was one of the most important branches of the Teutonic Order. This incredibly destructive and yet militarily ineffective bombing operation destroyed the ancient city of Jülich as well because of faulty information.
41 – Düsseldorf
Round the clock air attacks and a 2,000 ton raid reduced Düsseldorf to rubble. Starting from May 1940 there were numerous air raids, but without substantial casualties. In 1942, attacks increased and whole bomber fleets were set on the city. Large-scale attacks took place on July 31 and August 1, 1942 leaving 290 dead over 1,000 missing. The old city center was attacked on November 10, 1942, leaving 132 dead and 550 injured. Further large-scale attacks on January 27, 1943, June 12, 1943, April 22, 1944 and April 24, 1944 killed around 1,000 people. 243 attacks were counted in total, killing 6,000 civilians and destroying over 176,000 dwellings, all three Rhine bridges, numerous roads, as well as the drainage system, leaving behind 10 million cubic meters of rubble. Only 10% of buildings were undamaged. The number of inhabitants plummeted from 540,000 in 1939 to approximately 235,000 in 1945.
42 – Eilenburg
Approximately two weeks before the end of the War, the city was almost completely destroyed. It was choked with desperate refugees from the eastern regions fleeing judeo-communist murder. On April 17, 1945, many of these refugees joined the town’s citizens and fled this city, too. About 4,500 others looked for protection in the old mountain beer cellars. For three days and three nights, the city was under heavy artillery bombardment, in which 90 percent of the city center (65% of all buildings in the city) were destroyed. In vain, some people frantically hung white sheets and cloths from their windows and church steeples desperately signalling surrender. 200 people were killed, a great many of them young boys, while the American forces suffered no losses because Germany’s defenses were all but absent. Eilenburg was one of the most heavily damaged cities in Germany. The town was absolutely flattened before being handed over to the Red Army.
43 – Eisenach
In 1944 and 1945, there were several unnecessary cultural attacks on the old hamlet of Eisenach which caused severe damage. The house Luther stayed in 1498 was destroyed along with the birthplace of Bach, which has been rebuilt, left, before and after.
44 – Eisleben
Eisleben, a city with about 24,000 inhabitants in 1945, was attacked with artillery fire and low-flying attacks, and while no major physical damage was caused to the city itself, three firefighters and fourteen people were killed in the shelling of the town and the surrounding mining and industrial enterprises were greatly impacted. By the end, in April 1945, every major school, several restaurants and the city hospital were being used as a hospital for casualties from the surrounding area.
45 – Elbing
The judeo-communist army then went on another bloody rampage, torturing and murdering civilians, including women and children, just as they did in nearby Danzig. Elbing remained predominantly German as an Independent Free City State until it was handed over to Poland at the end of World War Two for “preliminary administration” which still continues. 98% of the new inhabitants were Poles trucked in from elsewhere. It was renamed Elbląg, and its new history rewritten to remove all “Germanism.” There has been no restitution for stolen homes, property and businesses. Almost the entire German population was murdered, enslaved or expelled by the communists. Even the cemeteries were bulldozed to hide traces of the city’s German heritage and most are now only a pile of rubble. Only since the “fall” of communism in the 1990’s can the tiny surviving remnant of German citizenry speak their native language without fear of imprisonment.
46 – Ellingen
Ellingen is a small farming hamlet in Bavaria in the vicinity of Mad King Ludwig’s castle. It had 1,500 inhabitants, most of whom were farmers, and nothing of military value to attack. It was totally unprepared on February 23, 1945 when, for no good reason, 25 American bombers violently dumped 285 high explosive bombs on the small town in a surprise attack which left 120 bomb craters. The assault killed the town’s farm animals and 98 villagers.
47 – Elmshorn
Elmshorn became the secondary target for bombs that for some reason could not be dropped on Hamburg. A British bomb attack on August 3, 1943 killed 62 people killed and injured 150 because cloud formation obscured the primary objective of Hamburg. 250 buildings were destroyed, 220 heavily damaged. A British source noted that “A sizeable raid developed on the small town of Elmshorn, 12 miles from Hamburg. It is believed that a flash of lightning set a house on fire here and bomber crews saw this through a gap in the storm clouds and started to bomb the fire.”
Again, on April 26, 1945, in connection with the thrust of British land forces to Schleswig-Holstein, a low-flying attack killed another 92 civilians. Another attack was slated for May 3, but due to poor visibility the bombs were instead dropped on a train, resulting in more deaths. At the end of the jewish war, 13,000 refugees – almost as many refugees as residents – remained in the city, resulting in a housing crisis.
48 – Emden
The first air raid on Emden took place on July 13, 1940 and the last on April 25, 1945. The old city was hit 94 times by Judeo-Allied bombs. On April 1, 1941, British Wellingtons dropped their first Blockbuster bomb (known as “cookies”) in an attack on Emden. They were 8,000 and 12,000 pound high-capacity bombs with very thin casings that allowed them to contain approximately three-quarters of their weight in explosives. The 4,000 pounder contained over 3,000 pounds of explosive filling, while their other regular bombs contained only 50% explosive by weight, the rest being made up of the bomb casing. These bombs were designed for blowing off the buildings roof tiles so that the smaller incendiary bombs could reach the building interiors.
In the morning of September 27, 1943, all three bomber divisions of the heavy combat flier corps of the 8 USAAF were assigned with altogether 308 “flying fortresses” to attack the city of Emden after several previous strikes. At the same time 24 bombers were sent out as diversion over the channel. “Thunderbolts” from the 8th USAAF escorted the operation as protection for the heavy bombers. The air raid did not run well for the Americans, because only 180 combat aircraft were able to drop their bomb load on the city.
By far, the heaviest bombardment experienced by the civilian inhabitants of the city was on September 5, 1944. The entire city center was levelled and burned in minutes. 63 children in a school cellar died with the first attack. The bombers dropped 1,500 high explosive bombs, 10,000 incendiary bombs and 3,000 phosphorus bombs. The city was 85% destroyed. Numerous air raids on Emden claimed 370 more civilian lives.
49 – Esens
For the small town of Esens (not to be confused with Essen), it would be a bad day when 36 disappointed American bombers, having failed to finish off Emden, saw the small town below and angrily unloaded their destruction and death upon it. Within minutes, one third of all houses of Esens were destroyed or damaged and 490 humans left shelterless at the end of the day. Far worse, 165 unprepared civilians were dead, among them 108 children whose bodies were found along with their dead teachers in the rubble of the local orphanage.
50 – Emmerich
The British left behind 680,000 cubic meters of rubble in their place on October 7, 1944, destroying 97% of the ancient city and its 9th century churches.
51 – Erfurt
From 1940, historically priceless Erfurt was bombed at least 14 times. On February 25, 1945, British bombers destroyed 74% of the medieval center and killed 8,800 civilians, or 21% of its population.
The Augustinerkloster in Erfurt was an Augustinian monastery where Martin Luther lived while he studied at the university for a few years after 1505. February 25, 1945 was one of the darkest days in the history of the building. Due to an air raid, numerous townspeople sought refuge in the cellars of the monastery. However, two British planes dropped two bombs on the building, causing it to completely collapse. The 267 people huddled below for safety met their deaths, the only survivor being a little girl pulled from the rubble who lost an arm in the blast. On April 12, 1945, Erfurt was taken by units of the U.S. Third Army under General George Patton and occupied until July 3, when to the horror of the citizens, American troops handed it over to the Judeo-Soviet Red Army.
52 – Erkelenz
After World War One, the Ruhr region was occupied by the French and Belgians and both tried to attach the Rhineland to their countries. Under the terms of Versailles, the citizens engaged in mining and other industries had to work for them almost as slaves as they watched German coal and steel leaving for France and Belgium. It was a bitter occupation and the people were subjected to much abuse from the occupiers.
The city was first bombed on October 8, 1944. The second bomb attack on December 6, 1944 killed 44 civilians. It was then carpet bombed almost from morning till late at night. Since December, 1944, the city was also within range of Judeo-Allied grenade attacks. In another bomb attack on January 16, 1945, 31 more people were killed, 16 in a bunker. The fourth and heaviest air raid on the now abandoned town was on February 23, 1945. About 90 bombers flew in two waves and focused on bombing the churches, the town hall, the public baths, the hospital, schools and kindergarten. The only surviving tower of the bombed Catholic parish church was severely damaged. 1209 Erkelenz houses were destroyed and 536 damaged. Only two buildings survived the war undamaged. Bombing killed 312 people and wounded 974. As many other towns in the region, it witnessed in the midst of the chaos and carnage, the long flow of refugees passing by with nowhere to go but Hell. But the fun was just starting for the weary residents. A concentration camp was waiting.
53 – Essen
On September 1, 1939, the first air-raids started in Essen, mostly on military targets. The Rhine Ruhr was exposed to bomb attacks from May, 1940. On February 14, 1942, a British directive determined the conduct of the air war by the British Bomber Command from then until the end of the war. Area attacks should “destroy the morale of the German population and the infrastructure in the large cities.”
The “1,000-bomber-raid” on Cologne on the night of May 29/30, 1942, caused major damage and huge casualties for the first time in one of the largest cities in Germany. But the numerous area raids on the Ruhr in 1942 were less successful because of the strong air defense. On March 5th, 1943, the inner city of Essen experienced one of the heaviest air-raids, killing 461 people and injuring 1,593, and leaving 50,000 inhabitants homeless. On the 26th, another 700 bombers flew over the city and unloaded 1,000 high-explosives bombs, 160,000 staff and 30,000 incendiary bombs. 550 more died, 1,500 were injured. 7,000 more homes, 2 hospitals, 4 churches and 6 schools were destroyed.
In May and June, 1943, the “Battle of the Ruhr” increased, killing more than 6,000 civilians in two attacks on Wuppertal and almost 5,000 in Cologne in the night of June 28/29, 1943. The attack on Wuppertal in the night of May 29/30, 1943 was the first example of a firestorm (under Wuppertal).
Only the city Hagen in the south of the Ruhr remained past the summer of 1943 without damage. Hagen, the “Gate to the Sauerland,” is the mountain region south of the Ruhr. It was an historical areas for fossils and archaeology in Germany. By August, 1943, Dortmund, Bochum, Mülheim, Essen, Duisburg, Cologne, Wuppertal and many other cities and towns were only ruins.
Hagen is on the eastern edge of the Ruhr area. It was first mentioned about 1200, and grew from the 19th century with the mining of coal and the production of steel in the Ruhr. The Hagener museum had one of the largest collections of geology and archaeology in Germany. Hagen was mostly destroyed on October 1, 1943 in one British area attack, but Judeo-Allied bombing raids on Hagen between October 1943 and March 1945 destroyed the museum building and the bulk of the collection as well as the extensive image collection and the thousands of specialized library volumes. 267 RAF aircraft attacked Hagen and started 1,439 fires, of which 124 were classified as large.
Running parallel to their air raids, the Judeo-Allies conducted an extensive psychological warfare campaign until the end of the war in May 1945 and dropped billions of leaflets over Germany to inform the German population of the (imaginary) crimes of their government. Of course, these were not too impressive to the German people and the arrogant request seemed disingenuous while babies and children were being incinerated by their authors in British air attacks which honed in on the civilian population.
By 1944, the RAF and the USA both took part in “round the clock bombing” by their combined forces night and day. The industrial and city landscape, in which over four million humans lived in 1939, sank into debris and ash. The number of inhabitants of Essen was halved. On October 15, 1944, Essen was hit with large-caliber “Tallboys,” so-called earthquake bombs with a weight of about five tons. On October 25, 1944, the ruins of Essen were the goal for about 1,800 bombers.
Two unnecessary “1,000 bomber raids” were executed over Essen near war’s end on March 11, 1945 when 1,079 RAF aircraft departed for a daylight operation on the city in what was recorded as the second largest bombing attack of the second jewish world war, surpassed only by the following night’s 1,108 plane attack on Dortmund (elsewhere). In what must have seemed a horrifying scene straight from hell, the huge number of Allied aircraft involved in this operation was reported to be eight miles long and five miles wide. The RAF Bomber Command record for the largest tonnage dropped on a single target in a single day was the 4,661-ton drop of bombs on Essen.
The 9th American army took control over the city a month later. What comprised the Germany army in the “Battle of the Ruhr” toward the end were 12-14 year-old German boys and men over age 65. The “battle” managed to kill 5,000 British and Commonwealth air crewmen as well.
Post-war analysis indicated that the impact upon German industry by the attacks on the Ruhr was not as great as had been believed. But it was a success if looked at in terms of impacting civilians. Over 50,000 people, including Allied prisoners of war, met their death in the Rhine Ruhr by Allied bomb attacks. The closely cultivated city centers, many from the Middle Ages, lay in rubble, with just narrow paths marking former roads.
While the damage to the cities and towns in the Rhine-Ruhr region was immense, such as the air raid on Dortmund in the night of May 4/5, 1943 that destroyed almost the whole city center with its medieval historical monuments in one hour, damage to the armaments factories was quickly repaired.
While the US later partook in the destruction of Dresden and many other cities, only 6% of American bombs actually fell on German city centers in the war. At the peak of the bombing “war” in 1945, the U.S. Eighth Air Force dropped fully half of its bombs on transportation targets; the figure for the RAF, who concentrated largely on cities, was only 13%. The RAF Bomber Command would end up killing three German civilians for every one killed by the U.S.A. In contrast, Germany bombed Britain with a mere five percent of the tonnage that Britain slammed down on Germany, and more British bombs fell on the city of Berlin alone than German bombs fell on Britain during the entire war. From July 1944 to January 1945, a low average of 14,000 German civilians, not including countless undocumented refugees, were killed from bombings every month in just the western areas of Germany. “Town areas” below indicate civilian centers.
54 – Flensburg
During the Second jewish World War, the town was left almost unscathed by the raids that laid other German cities waste. However, in 1943, 20 children died when their nursery school was suddenly bombarded.
55 – Frankfurt
Although Frankfurt had been bombed repeatedly in World War Two, 54 times prior to July 25, 1942, the British had not yet aimed at civilian targets. The daylight raid on this day was the first direct civilian attack that took place on Frankfurt. Two weeks later she was bombarded again by 226 bombers. In January of 1943, the British and Americans decided to unite their air forces, and on April 11, the savage attacks began again, followed by another large scale attack on October 4, 1943 when 650 aerial mines, 217,000 incendiary bombs and 16,000 liquid incendiary bombs were dropped by 300 British airplanes.
Frankfurt was further attacked on January 28, 1944 and November 26 and December 20, 1943. Four weeks later, on January 29, 1944, more than 800 American bombers dropped 5,000 high-explosive bombs and 10,000 incendiaries over the entire city. All of these attacks killed people in the high hundreds. On February 8, 1944, 88 American bombers struck, but mostly industrial areas and killed only a few hundred. On March 18, she was hit again. But the attack on March 22 by 800 British bombers destroyed the old city forever in 9,000 separate fires, and by now the human suffering was beyond comprehension. 1,300 high explosive bombs up to 8,000 pounds, 600,000 incendiary bombs and 50,000 incendiary bombs rained death and destruction upon Frankfurt from the medieval city center out. By now, thousands of civilians were dead and 150,000 shelterless. Then, as if that were not enough for the old city which was now just a heap of rubble filled with the stench of rotting bodies, 175 American bombers dropped bombs on the city center to polish it off. The only targets left were the maimed, injured, orphaned, deranged, or elderly people and rescue workers.
56 – Frankfort on the Oder
Frankfurt decayed under Communist occupation, its bomb damage unrepaired. Ancient Marienkirche had been destroyed and its red brick tower rebuilt in white concrete, the stained glass windows removed and shipped to museums in Moscow. Once located on both sides of the Oder River, it was cut in two by the new border, and its other half is in Poland and goes by the name of Słubice.
57 – Freiberg/Saxony
On October 7, 1944, 521 US bombers set out to attack oil refineries in the east but were hampered by bad weather and looked for a secondary target. A group of three bomber squadrons with 24 B17s dumped 60 tons of bombs on Freiberg, destroying hundreds of homes and killing 172 civilians.
58 – Freiburg im Breisgau
One of the earliest purely civilian bombing attacks by the British was on the town of Freiburg when in 1940, a playground was bombed, killing 15 adults and 12 children. The British denied it, claiming it was mere propaganda. Wire service photo, below, describes the playground bombing in 1940.
The deadliest bombing came later and caused an intense firestorm and utterly savaged the quiet old university town, leaving almost no historical landmarks intact and causing massive civilian loss of life and hideous carnage. Like many cities in Germany it was rebuilt in a grey, drab, “modern” method devoid of aesthetic beauty.
Freiburg had almost no industrial or military targets and was considered a military hospital town. It was attacked on the pretext that it was a “railway target.” During “Operation Tigerfish,” on Nov. 27, 1944, around 441 British Lancaster bombers, some loaded with deadly phosphorus, flew up from the west and for 25 minutes unloaded approximately 1,900 tons of 14,000 high-explosive and incendiary bombs, igniting a firestorm. The high-explosive bombs destroyed all the windows and the air pressure caused tiles to fly from the rooftops. The water pipes were broken and the roads were blocked by rubble instantly. People tried to fight the fires with wine barrels from the local wineries, but 80% of the historic old town was destroyed and the famous medieval University of Freiburg was devastated. In December, 1944 there was another major attack to add to the destruction of Freiburg.
3,000 civilians were killed, 10,000 injured and 858 lost. There would have been more, but legend has it that the drakes in the park became raucously noisy and seemed to announce the approaching bomber stream, causing many citizens of Freiburg who lived around the city park near the cathedral to run to the air raid shelter. Photographs show that no railway targets were not hit in this attack.
The great cathedral, the Münster of Freiburg, was built across a span of several centuries, and exhibited a range of architecture from late Romanesque to Late Gothic and even a tad of Rococo. Its single tower with a lacy spire was the first of its kind. The building remained mostly unchanged since its completion in 1513.
Miraculously, unlike so many great cathedrals and churches in Germany, it was not entirely destroyed during the severe Judeo-Allied bombing of Freiburg and its ensuing firestorm, although the whole area around it was reduced to rubble. Its ancient stained glass windows had fortunately been taken to safety first. Its only remaining original bell, the oldest Angelus bell in Germany, called the Hosannaglocke was cast in 1258 and weighs a hefty 5.5 tons.
59 – Freudenstädt
The old city was nearly totally detroyed by bombing and its citizens raped, robbed and looted by Judeo-Allied troops afterward.
During the Second jewish World War, the French bitterly avenged themselves under General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny on April 16/17, 1945, after German troops had withdrawn and the town was undefended. French troops began a bombardment of the town with explosives and incendiaries in late afternoon, followed by a heavy bomb attack, and then another.
The barrage lasted into the following night, reducing the town to rubble and ash and unnecessarily destroying 95% of the core of the city. French soldiers of the third Moroccan Spahi regiment under the command of Major Christian de Castries went into the town with official permission to plunder, and this they did, for three days and three nights, even robbing the inhabitants in broad daylight.
Buildings which had been lucky enough to escape bomb destruction were set ablaze and the Germans were forbidden to extinguish the fires which were burning their homes and businesses. Surviving citizens of Freudenstädt who had taken refuge in their cellars were ferreted out of their shelters, thrown into the streets and robbed and shot. 500 women and girls were documented as having been raped. The carnage went on for days, leaving 1,400 families homeless. As in other bomb ravaged cities, there was great debate later as to whether to rebuild in modern or original form and a combination won out. After “re-education,” beleaguered Freudenstädt led the pack in the apologetic “reconciliation” movement and is now “twinned” to a French city.
60 – Friederichshafen
The British and the USAAF both attacked Friedrichshafen in March and April 1944, the worst air raid being on the night of April 27-28, 1944, when the RAF killed 850 civilians.
61 – Fulda
The majestic basilica towers of Fulda, high above the city, looked up to the skies raining death and destruction on July 20, 1944. Eighty people were killed and the cathedral damaged. On August 5th, 30 incendiary bombs fell. On September 11th, bombers appeared again and covered the city, killing 341 people. On the next night, Fulda was again the target of 444 bombs, all dropped within 5 minutes. The few noteworthy buildings which remain are a couple of churches and the cathedral.
62 – Geilenkirchen
Geilenkirchen is north of Aachen near the Dutch border. Its name was first mentioned in the 12th century. On November 16, 1944, the city was largely destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing, its Gothic and Romanesque churches either levelled or severely damaged. During rubble removal, a Roman street was discovered.
63 – Gelsenkirchen
Gelsenkirchen was first documented in 1150, but it remained a tiny village until the 19th century, when the Industrial Revolution led to its growth. In 1840, when coal mining began, 6,000 inhabitants lived in Gelsenkirchen; in 1900 the population had increased to 138,000. On the night of June 25, 1943, 473 RAF bombers attacked the city. The next major attack came on the night of July 9, 1943 by 418 bombers. The city was three-fourths destroyed.
64 – Gera
Although the military targets in Gera such as the railway facilities and industrial companies had already been destroyed in 1944 bombings, at the tail-end of the war the antique spinning mills, city museum, 300 homes and 153 people were destroyed by an American terror-bombing raid on April 6, 1945, shortly before it was handed over to the Soviets.
65 – Gladbach
The first openly stated intentional British attack on German residential areas began on the night May 1, 1940 with a raid on the town of Moenchengladbach. By the end of the jewish War, the historical part of the city and its immediate area was 60% to 90% destroyed.
66 – Gotha
Gotha was attacked several times by American and English bombers. 542 civilians were killed.
67 – Göttingen
From July 1944 to the bitter end of war, Göttingen experienced some heavy air attacks, but nothing near the scale of the attacks which destroyed the neighbouring cities of Kassel, Hanover and Braunschweig. On July 7, 1944, an air strike took the first Gottingen life and inflicted property damage. On November 23, nine more died from air strikes, and the municipal gas works was hit and neighboring houses were severely damaged. There were nine more deaths to mourn. On November 24, an air raid destroyed another whole row of houses and St Paul’s Church, St. John’s Church, the bank and several neighboring buildings were badly damaged. The attack took more human life. The university library was damaged. The town hall and the city hall had strong window damage, as did the main streets, where the large shop windows were destroyed by the massive pressure. A fourth bomb hit the Luther school and tore out the walls and damaged the gym. Another life was lost.
On January 1, 1945, heavy air attacks on the railway yard destroyed several surrounding houses and damaged the city cemetery. The attacks claimed 47 lives, including many Russian prisoners of war. On February 9, more air raids killed another 21 people, and on February 22nd, 27 more people. On March 21, more destruction by air raids occurred and more people were killed. April 7, 1945, Göttingen suffered heavy air attacks by five waves of 18 American bombers. The bombs fell on the Geology and Zoology Institute. The classical anatomy building with beautiful Doric columns went down to the ground, the Zoological Institute was burning and the beautiful old anatomy building was in ruins. The town was at this point crowded with bombed out refugees from other areas. It was then given to the communists for decades of slavery.
In June of 2010, Göttingen again mourned bombing deaths, this time three bomb disposal experts killed by an unexploded 2,000lb World War II aerial mine. Three others were seriously injured by the explosion which occurred when the team was cutting through the acid fuse of the bomb buried 24ft down in the university city of Goettingen. 7,200 people living in a wide radius from where the bomb lay had been evacuated earlier. Altogether, there were 13 bomb disposal workers in the area. The bomb was found as builders dug the foundations for a new sports hall.
Germany remains contaminated with unexploded bombs that are becoming increasingly unstable. More than 2,000 tons of American and British bombs and all sorts of munitions are still being recovered every year. The type of bomb which exploded in Göttingen is of a type containing a vial of acetone which bursts on impact and is meant to trickle down and dissolve a celluloid disk that keeps back the cocked firing pin that then ignites the TNT inside. They were set to go off after people emerged from the shelters, thinking they were safe. There is great danger of rotting detonators and the bombs are becoming increasingly brittle. Some believe that eventually, such bombs will be so sensitive that no one will be able to handle them.
68 – Graz
The first documented air raid in Austria in World War Two was the attack by 3 Yugoslav airplanes on Graz on April 6, 1941. During the War, historic Graz was attacked by 58 air raids.
69 – Grötzingen
April 24-25, 1944 was the date that Karlsruhe was slated to be completely destroyed. 666 Judeo-Allied bombers loaded with 4 tons of heavy high-explosives bombs and 373,206 incendiary bombs had Karlruhe in their scopes. The fate of the city seemed sealed. But things went wrong. Briefly after midnight, as the planes almost reached their target, a violent thunderstorm caused complete disorder, driving the pilots markings off. The bombers piloted eastward and blindly unloaded their bomb loads. Karlsruhe was temporarily saved. However, for the countryside to the east of Karlsruhe, particularly the pretty tourist triangle of Rintheim-Hagsfeld-Grötzingen, hell was unleashed.
Approximately 300 aerial mines and high-explosives bombs and ten thousand incendiary bombs alone rained down on quiet Grötzingen, a picturesque hamlet settled for 2,000 years. For 40 minutes the bombs pummeled the earth, igniting at least 400 fires. Over 1,000 unsuspecting and unprepared people were murdered and a quarter of the village completely destroyed. The school, festival hall, savings bank and most of the old tourist hotels were destroyed. 58 houses disappeared and 426 were damaged. In addition, hundreds of stables, barns and sheds (with animals) were destroyed.
70 – Guben
At the end of the jewish war, Guben was 90% destroyed by Judeo-Allied Bombing and because Guben was on the Lusatian Neisse, the city was separated into German Guben and Polish Gubin. The German residents of the Polish part of Guben were forcibly “evacuated” in 1945. Because the historical center of Guben became Gubin, the western suburbs which grew from the cloister remained in Guben.
71 – Halberstadt
Halberstadt’s timber frames medieval homes would prove hazardous during brutal Judeo-Allied bombing, the worst of which took place on April 8, 1945 in the very last days of the war as was the case in so many German cities. Over 900 years of history were wiped out within minutes in a violent raid on the old Cathedral city. 218 bombers dropped 550 tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs, destroying all but one fifth of the city and killing 2,500 civilians. The ancient churches were tortured, the narrow historic roads a heap of rubble, and 676 medieval half-timbered houses disappeared.
On the late morning of April 8, 1945, at the very tail-end of the conflict, a single 16 minute attack by US bombers in an action nicknamed “Operation Sardine” swooped down from the sky like birds of death and destroyed nearly the entire historic town of Halberstadt in a massive, vengeful, unnecessarily violent bombing. The Americans at this point in the war had begun following the British tradition of bombing civilians.
As per the British method of incinerating antique towns, the detonating bombs first tore off the roofs and imploded the walls, which clogged the roads and destroyed the water lines so that the fires which broke out when the incendiary bombs rained down could not be fought. The tremendous heat melted the old church steeples and fried people to the roads. The city was 82% destroyed with its ancient center getting the worst of it. Over 550 tons of bombs fell on Halberstadt and in less than a half hour she lay in rubble and ashes, with 2,500 of its civilians dead. Only 1,350 of the bodies could they be identified, as the others were torn, mutilated, burned or mangled so horribly that their identity could no longer be established. Of the approximately 65,000 registered inhabitants of the city, 35,000 were left suddenly homeless as half of all residential buildings of the city disappeared in those few minutes.
There were disasters in cellars, bunkers, the hospitals, on the street and in the homes as people frantically fought for their lives. 900 commercial businesses no longer existed. In addition, all of the cultural facilities such as cinemas and theaters were totally destroyed, as were half of all hospitals and 3 schools (7 others were unusable). Electricity, gas and water were all gone. The main roads were impassable and the train station and trams were gone.
Three days after the destruction, the Americans moved into the city and they immediately freed foreign prisoners in nearby work camps and let them to run amok through the town of unprotected women and children and old folks, allowing them to rob, rape and loot everything they could get their hands on. In this scene of pain, stench, fear and grief, one and a half million cubic meters of rubble and debris covered the totally destroyed historic city center in an area of about 1.1 square kilometers, creating a rubble pyramid 100 meters high. The town was then handed over to the Russians for decades of decay and judeo-communist slavery.
After the collapse of the GDR, many of Halberstadt’s younger inhabitants lost their jobs and moved away and the town also has a severe declining birth rate. Population fell from over 48,000 in 1987 to about 38,000 today because so many inhabitants left in search of better prospects elsewhere.
72 – Halle
Noble Halle, the seat of intellectual church life for generations, was not totally destroyed by bombs. Although there were 553 air alarms, Halle suffered only two attacks, both shortly before Americans took the town on April 17, 1945. Non-military targets such as the national theater and the old Rathaus were ruined. The enormous bell and clock tower called the Roter Turm (red tower) stood on the marketplace in Halle as a landmark. 84 meters high, its construction began in 1506. In April, 1945 the tower was hit by American shells.
73 – Hamburg
As Hamburg burned from the bombings, artificially created volcanic flames five times the height of New York’s Empire State Building and winds in excess of 150 miles per hour swallowed everything in their path…
Hamburg’s population would be halved once again by World War Jew, mostly in what was at the time considered the heaviest assault in aerial warfare history. British officials later called it the “Hiroshima of Germany.” From the beginning of the war up to October 1, 1943 alone, 1,200,086 German civilians were killed or reported missing and believed killed in air raids. The number of people bombed out and evacuated for safety was already 6,953,000. Figures did not include refugees. The situation would become far more grim over the next 2 1/2 years as the war proceeded.
It was a joint effort, the RAF, Canadians and the USA combined to create an “around the clock” bombing mission spanning 8 days and 4 nights. On the night of July 27, 1943, starting shortly before midnight, Hamburg was by attacked hundreds of aircraft in a massive, intentional effort to incinerate the city and its civilian inhabitants. On that July night, as part of “Operation Gomorrah,” utter hell devoured the city. With this event, the world media, starting in London, somehow managed to turn the mass murder of German civilian populations, especially those of the working class, into an “acceptable” and “legitimate” method of war. The term “Hamburgerization” was used by the RAF to jokingly refer to future bombing missions.
On that hellish July night, Hamburg was engulfed in a chasm of flames five times the height of the Empire State Building with winds exceeding 150 miles per hour. Everything and everyone in its path was sucked up and swallowed alive. It fried people to the burning pavement and roasted people in shelters as they hopelessly struggled for breath. “Operation Gomorrah,” the hideously ten day long firebombing of Hamburg by the British, left 60 percent of the city destroyed under the rain of 9,000 tons of bombs. It murdered 40,000 to 50,000 people in as an agonizing manner as could be devised and left a million people suddenly homeless. The university library with its 800,000 volumes was gone, the ancient city was wholly obliterated, yet Hamburg would be hit 69 times by war’s end.
A Swiss eye-witness of the Hamburg raids, writing in the National-Zeitung, reported: “Whole streets, squares, and even districts had been razed. Everywhere were charred corpses, and injured people had been left unattended..Charred adult corpses had shrunk to the size of children. Women were wandering about half-crazy. That night, the largest workers’ district of the city was wiped out.”
Neutral nations reporting bombing fatalities estimated much higher figures at the time than we hear today. Swedish reporters described the phosphorus bombs: “They talked of the strange sensation of seeing gardens on fire in a city ravaged by flames. Hundreds of people were found burned to death in the streets and the clothing was scorched off many by the fires. About 47,000 dead bodies were counted before search work began, and estimates of people killed vary from 65,000 to 200,000. In Hamburg, 18,000 people alone were reported to have been drowned there when the Elbe Tunnel received a direct hit.”
74 – Hamelin
Several small airstrikes were directed at Hamelin in 1940 resulted in only minor property damage. The first concentrated attack was on June, 1941 when a British bomber night attack hit residential houses and killed 24 people. In July of 1944, the RAF attacked again, hitting another few houses, killing 20 more civilians. In March and April 1945, there were constant, increasing threats.
On Wednesday, March 14, 1945, the sky was beautifully blue at lunchtime. Many of the people coming and going to work or shopping were at the railway station in hopes of catching the midday trains. They did not know the trains has stopped running in the area because of bomber activity. When enemy bombers were first spotted over the horizon, they flew in the direction of Hanover, and the people breathed a sigh of relief, but 12 British bombers suddenly reappeared from the east, gunning for the crowded train station. People had no time to react. Immediately, bombs rained their death on the station grounds, dropping 93 spring-loaded bombs and 1,200 incendiaries.
75 – Hamm
55 Judeo-Allied air raids destroyed 60% of the old part of Hamm, starting with devastating daylight air raids from March 4 and 6, 1943 that killed 154 people. The first large-scale attack on the entire city followed in the evening hours of April 22, 1944 by 750 bombers and 100 fighters dropping 8,000 high explosive bombs and 3500 incendiary bombs. Within 45 minutes, the city was a sea flame and a desert of rubble. While a marshaling yard was hit, so were the residential areas. 240 buildings were destroyed and 350 heavily damaged. 300 civilians died in this attack. On May 31, 1944 another large scale attack followed, killing with 200 more civilians. Hamm lost 1,029 civilians to bombing.
76 – Hannover
Since the beginning of the war, there were 428 raids on old Hannover. In October of 1943, the British dropped 3,000 high-explosive bombs, 28,000 phosphorus bombs and 230,000 staff incendiary bombs, destroying 4,000 houses and killing 1,245 humans in one night. Witnesses reported later that when the scorching fire wind blew, people frantically fled on pavement which was actually on fire. Time fused bombs from three of the attacking airplanes still released their deadly charges for up to 144 hours after the attack. Ten days later, another 23,051 tons of bombs fell on Hannover, and left 6.3 million cubic meters of rubble. The Ebstorfer map of the world was the largest and most contents-rich map of the Middle Ages, created between 1230 and 1250 and was also the oldest map of Germany. It was destroyed along with the federal state library in Hannover.
77 – Hanau
It was unnecessarily destroyed by British airstrikes on March 19, 1945 a mere few days before it was inevitably taken by the US Army. 85% of the city was blown up. The number of its inhabitants sank to under 10,000. Hanau lost its most important monuments and the medieval section of the city was burned into oblivion. The ancient city castle was ruined and the city theater were in pieces. The historical Walloon church stands today as a ruin. More than 30% of the inhabitants are foreigners.
78 – Hattingen
On February 13, 1945, Hattinger station was the target Judeo-Allied bombers, and it was later occupied by French troops. The jewish war did not end for Hattingen, Germany: a Second World War bomb exploded in September of 2008, injuring 60 people.
79 – Heilbronn
Between December 27, 1944 and March 31, 1945, thirteen air raids took place on Heilbronn. A raid by the judeo-allies targeted the city on September 10, 1944, and dropped 1,168 bombs killing 281 residents. The city was carpet bombed from the southern quarter all the way to the Kilianskirche in the center of town, and the church was burned out. But the real devastation took place on December 4, 1944, when the center of town was targeted for death by a Butcher Harris barbecue, a planned fire storm on the oldest part of town using a lethal and effective mix, and one which had already incinerated other cities.
Heilbronn’s dose was 830,500 kg of high explosive bombs and 430,300 kg of incendiaries. When the first bomb fell, earthquake control in Stuttgart noted vibration in a seismograph. From a height up to 5,000 meters, 283 Lancasters with nine Mosquito escorts dropped their deadly loads while 150 tons of bombs were dropped on the railway connections at the same time. Hero and “Master bomber” Maurice A. Smith, who also would lead the attack on Dresden in February, 1945 flew in with his Mosquito DZ 518 between 300 and 600 meters over Heilbronn and directed the bombardment with technically precise markers. Within 37 minutes, the town center was at once a glowing hell producing gale force fire winds that raved for nearly four hours over the city.
The fire tower raced through the roads, seized humans and transformed them into living torches. Deadly carbon monoxide crept into the cellars and shelters. There was no escape. Almost all of the city center was gone, and survivors were homeless in a stinking, toxic atmosphere.
In larger air raid shelters everyone had instructions to keep the doors locked and there was terrible pandemonium as suffocating crowds frantically tried to breathe, to escape, willing to face a quicker death in the inferno outside. Later, many of the bodies were found with violent blows to the head, perhaps from fighting, maybe from mercy killing or suicide. In some cellars, clumps of 30 to 40 bodies were found welded together by heat, and in home cellars whole families were found huddled together, “glued” into a solid mass. Some were found as figures are seen in Pompei: sitting up at the table, children in the arms of their mothers, standing with a picture book in their hand, someone seizing an object or a pet. Hundreds burned to grey or paper-white ash. Others had shrunk together by the heat to half of their normal size, others were charred.
Rough estimates at the time were 18,000 dead, but this number has been typically downsized in recent times to 6,530. In any case, 1,000 children under 10 years old were documented. Hundreds more were hideously burned and wounded. When the bombed hospital buildings caught fire, 20 babies and four nurses burned to death.
5,000 humans had to be buried in mass graves, and the digging began immediately. Hundreds more were left in total devastation and grief bordering on insanity. Men in white smocks threw layers of lime in pits, and after each layer of human corpses covered it with another layer of lime… and another. There was no time to mourn. The war was not over, even for a destroyed Heilbronn. There were even more air raids on the rotting, dead town between December 27, 1944 and March 3, 1945.
On April 11, 1945 the Americans mauled through the ruins of Heilbronn, Germany, and engaged in a 10 day “battle.” Although the war was clearly lost by this stage, remnants of some German units together with a segment of devastated surviving citizens stubbornly defended the city. The “Battle of Heilbronn” was a reaction to the massive destruction caused by the violent bombing.
80 – Heinsberg
Heinsberg in the west of North Rhine-Westphalia is another victim of bombing. Until World War II, a medieval mill stream flowed through the town. Following bomb attacks, the creek bed was destroyed and has never been repaired. The grave of the Dukes of Heinsberg from the early 15th century were destroyed as well. Heinsberg and Geilenkirchen merged in 1932.
The 8th U.S. Air Force was to bomb the fortifications around Eschweiler and Aldenhoven, while the medium bombers of the 9th U.S. Air Force were assigned to the second line of defense around Jülich and Langerwehe. At the same time the RAF Bomber Command was to hit the traffic centres of Jülich and Düren hard; the smaller towns of Heinsberg, Erkelenz and Hückelhoven were designated as secondary targets. The offensive began on November 16, 1944. 1,204 heavy bombers of the 8th U.S. Air Force hit Eschweiler, Weisweiler and Langerwehe with 4,120 bombs, while 339 fighter bombers of the 9th U.S. Air Force attacked Hamich, Hürtgen and Gey with 200 tons of bombs. At the same time 467 Halifax and Lancaster Bombers attacked Düren and Jülich; 180 British bombers hit Heinsberg.
Hückelhoven is today a town in the district Heinsberg, named for its village founder Reinhard von Huckilhoven in the 13th century. There was a wonderful old castle first mentioned in 1248, Schloß Rurich. The town was bombed on November 16, 1944 during Operation Queen, a joint British-American bomb operation carried out between Aachen and the Rur river in November 1944.The castle above survived the immense destruction caused by “Operation Queen” only to be hit by a grenade attack on Christmas of 1944, which caused immense, and in part irreparable damage. The valuable castle library of over 18,000 volumes was thoroughly looted by American GIs.
81 – Helgoland
The events unleashed by the military force in just the first few months of War were strong enough to change weather conditions in Northern Europe, resulting in the coldest winter for 110 years. (Intentional geoengineering?) Tens of thousands of massive explosions from bombs and depth charges were employed since September 1, 1939 as well as a number of aerial bombs released over the sea, shelling, anti-aircraft fire and other activities that confused the normal pattern of life at sea to such an extent that it quickly reacted by cooling out too early for the forthcoming winter season. Arctic air was then allowed to penetrate Northern Europe without resistance. The war at sea actually modified the weather, sending Europe into a temporary Ice Age. The first British bomb in the war dropped on German soil was here.
82 – Heme
The villages of the Ruhr area were targeted by the RAF on June 4, 1940, early in World War II. Three high-explosive bombs were dropped and one house was damaged.
83 – Hildescheim
Before March of 1945, Hildescheim had 68,000 inhabitants. The town contained established civilian hospitals and the town center held no military installations or anything else of military importance. However, industries outside of the small city did, and many of the townsfolk had worked in these factories. There were factories that produced parts for fuses, ignitions and gearboxes for tanks as well as other important war equipment, one that built parts for torpedoes (even one that was later rumored to have built nose cones for the elusive V-2 rocket). Other plants produced machinery, engine parts, airplane parts, and various weapons. There was also a rubber factory making gas masks, life jackets, rubber boats for both Army and Navy, and rubber parts used for torpedoes and cockpits of aircraft. At this point in the war, however, many industries were not functioning.
Although there had been seven or eight minor bomb strikes beginning in July of 1944 hitting a factory, a railroad installation, St. Michaels church and a few buildings in town, nothing was a clue as to the devastation which would utterly destroy the town on March 22, 1945.
84 – Homburg
Judeo-Allied bombing killed 70 civilians. In the very last stages of the jewish War, a few thousand people ignored their government’s advice to leave their town and head out to the countryside even though everyday living was becoming difficult and food and services were inadequate. Work had almost ground to a halt. Neighboring cities were being violently bombarded. Yet, many civilians remained in spite of it all because they felt reluctance to abandon their homes or simply because they had nowhere else to go. Women with small children were especially terrified to leave urban areas where there were at least air raid shelters.
85 – Ingolstadt
Ingolstadt is an ancient university town located on the banks of the Danube in the center of Bavaria. Spared bombing until the beginning of 1945, 650 people met their death from the first attacks in January by the 640 long-range American bombers. 782 fighters dropping 480 spring loaded bombs and 330 fire bombs. 70% of the buildings were damaged and 22 people dead. On March 1, the Americans struck again and dumped 603.3 tons of explosives and fire bombs in just 4 minutes from a height of about 5,500 meters in three successive waves, killing 133 more people and wounding hundreds. By now, large parts of the historic city were in ruins. Yet, on March 4, 1945, they struck again… and then on April 5th again, dropping 1,575 Spring loaded bombs with a total load of 621.4 tons as well as numerous propaganda pamphlets. 92 more civilians were killed, 56 seriously injured and 170 left homeless.
On April 9, 1945, no Judeo-Allied air attack on Ingolstadt was planned, but as 212 American “Flying Fortresses” were returning from another mission, ten of them made a surprise u-turn and decided to dump their loads on Ingolstadt. From an altitude of about 7,000 meters, they dumped 29 tons of explosives and fire bombs on the antique Augustinian church with its adjoining Franciscan monastery. 73 bodies were later pulled from its ruins, mostly refugees from Pomerania who had fled to the church for protection. Only one young woman, after ten hours of being trapped, could be saved. 100 elderly people taking refuge in their home also died. This attack destroyed the municipal theater, the Rathaus square and numerous other residential and commercial buildings.
Attack after attack then followed: on April 10, 11, 16 and 20th, each successively bigger, more violent and destructive. The residents were no more than trapped rats in a cage, unable to change their fates. On the 21st, 30 U.S.bombers attacked in B-17s in five waves over the surviving urban area, dropping firebombs and more high-explosives on the defenseless city and even its rural surroundings. 2,000 people were now homeless.Yet, even then, U.S. low flying bombers picked off any moving life forms below and at least 28 deaths by their shelling were recorded.
86 – Innsbruck (& Tirol)
During the Second jewish World War, all of the Austrian Tirol suffered massive damage from air attacks. From 1943 until April, 1945, Innsbruck experienced 21 bomb attacks and suffered heavy damage. By May 1945, Innsbruck lost hundreds of civilians to the Judeo-Allied bombing. The Innsbruck cathedral, with its domes and Baroque interior featuring a high altar painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder, the Bahnhof and Maria-Theresienstrasse were destroyed. 20,000 tons of bombs were dropped on Vorarlberg and north and South Tirol, killing 1500 civilians. Over 6,849 sorties were flown over targets from Verona to the Brenner Pass with 10,267 tons of bombs dropped. The Judeo-Allies made sure that South Tirol remained severed from her cultural and historic roots with Austria.
87 – Itzehoe
In October, 1941, nine Judeo-Allied bombs were dropped on Itzehoe. From July 1943, after the attacks on Hamburg and Kiel, homeless people streamed into the pristine area and the population of the city climbed. Then in 1944, refugees from the East flooded in. In May 1945, almost 12,000 more people lived in the city than in May 1943, resulting in an extreme housing emergency.
88 – Jena
Jena was destroyed 15% by World War II bombs.
89 – Jülich
On November 16, 1944, 97% of ancient Jülich was destroyed during Judeo-Allied bombing. The ruined city was subject to heavy fighting for several months. Jülich’s historical town center was rebuilt vaguely along the plans of the Renaissance town. All that remains of its medieval splendor are small parts of the old city walls with two towers. There is a plaque made for the bomb attack which states: “On this day, Jülich sank to rubble.” The ancient casements of the citadel of the fortress of Jülich which had once served the rich and powerful Dukes of Jülich as part of the United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg now served as an air raid shelter. It was one of the oldest and most unusual testimonies of fortress architecture of its time north of the Alps. The renaissance citadel and Napoleonic bridge were possibly the most important ensembles of early modern military architecture in Germany, indeed in Europe.
In the bombing of November 16, 1944, it was badly damaged and all the buildings burned. In the Bastion St. John, numerous civilians who had sought refuge there were killed. More bombings, shelling and looting continued the destruction. In 1964, the ruins and about two thirds of the castle were simply blown up. There has since been some reconstruction.
Operation Queen was a lethal but militarily ineffective joint British-American operation carried out between Aachen and the Rur river in November 1944. The 8th U.S. Air Force was to bomb the fortifications around Eschweiler and Aldenhoven, while the medium bombers of the 9th U.S. Air Force were assigned to the second line of defense around Jülich and Langerwehe. At the same time the RAF Bomber Command was to destroy the ancient cities of Jülich and Düren, the smaller towns of Heinsberg, Erkelenz and Hückelhoven were designated as secondary targets. The offensive began on November 16, 1944. 1,204 heavy bombers of the 8th U.S. Air Force hit Eschweiler, Weisweiler and Langerwehe with 4,120 bombs, while 339 fighter bombers of the 9th U.S. Air Force attacked Hamich, Hürtgen and Gey with 200 tons of bombs. At the same time 467 Halifax and Lancaster Bombers attacked Düren and Jülich; 180 British bombers hit Heinsberg.
The raid on Jülich was particularly fierce because French and U.S. military maps still showed it as a fortress, which it had ceased to be in 1860. The goal was to destroy the alleged “heavy fortifications” by smashing the whole city. The attackers dropped seventy-five 4,000 lb bombs; 361 2,000 pounders; 1,945 1,000 pounders; and 1,613 500 pound bombs. A total of 3,994 bombs with 1,711 metric tons, plus 123,518 firebombs, were dropped individually or in clusters of 106 pieces. The city was completely destroyed, and burned for several days. Roads and railroads, industry and infrastructure, including the bridge across the Ruhr, were wiped out and an estimated 4,000 citizens and soldiers killed, and about 97% of all buildings destroyed. Düren was also utterly obliterated, and Heinsberg took heavy damage as well.
90 – Kaiserlautern
World War II nearly destroyed Kaiserslautern, with more than 60% of the city bombed and destroyed by Judeo-Allied aircraft. Heaviest attacks occurred January 7th, August 11th, and September 28th, 1944. Of the 20,000 homes, 11,000 were destroyed or damaged. More than 516 civilians lost their lives, and 4,132 buildings had been destroyed or damaged. By January 5, 1944, the population had run to shelters 243 times under the howling sirens.
Although the city of Kaiserslautern still stood intact, the attacks on periphery of the Pfalz, on Mannheim, Ludwigshafen, Karlsruhe and Saarbruecken, increased in violence. An 8 pronged attack on April 23, 1944 caused major damage. Then, a second attack followed on August 14, 1944, which was aimed at the city center, the east, south and partial north side of the city. 342 houses were totally destroyed, 79 heavily damaged. But that was not enough for the Judeo-Allied bombers. When the middle of the night on September 28, 1944 arrived, an inferno was in store. People frantically raced to shelters in their nightclothes as the incendiaries started to rain down around them, and with every dull thump of detonation, the cracking and bursting of collapsing buildings melded into the sizzling echo of the surrounding fire.
There was no escape for those who were late fleeing, and despite attempts by rescue units, salvation was usually unsuccessful. The danger of suffocation or fire drove the people from their homes, and they raced about the street finding no place to go. The working class houses were hit with numerous incendiary bombs, causing chaos and death. After only one hour, the city was a only one moaning, smoking sea of flame and on the next day, the complete destruction of Kaiserslautern was final. Over 1,000 fires had consumed 190 roads, 2143 houses and a few hundred civilians. But it was not over yet. 28 more brutal attacks took place, until March 17, 1945. On March 18, “Hornets” circled the defenseless town, dropping bombs and machine gunning any moving object below.
91 – Karlsruhe
135 air raids aside, the first large scale British attack on the old college town of Karlsruhe damaged its Rhine port and military station. Then the attacks got personal as the second attack destroyed the federal state library resulting in a loss of 350,000 volumes. The third attack levelled and burned the western residential part of the city. In 1942, the first 8,000 pound British “blockbuster” bomb was dropped on Karlsruhe. After “Butcher” Harris took control, the city experienced longer and more prolonged civilian attacks.
Karlsruhe became the pilot project for the so-called “Christmas tree” bombs, and on September 25, 1944, the housing in the suburbs as well as the eastern part of the city were bombed. On September 27, the city center was bombed. From April to December, 1944, Karlsruhe suffered 13 incendiary bomb attacks. In total, more than 10,000 tons of bombs were dumped on the city. Of 17,134 family homes, only 3,414 remained. 1,745 civilians were dead, and 3,508 injured.
92 – Kärnten
Kärnten was attacked 32 times until the end of the jewish war in 1945. In the worst attack, 67 American bombers released over 200 one ton bombs with the purported principle purpose of hitting the air base in Annabichl. While 30 per cent of the factory residential area was destroyed, only 18% of the industrial section was hit. The airport in Annabichl was indeed damaged, but the attack on the surrounding urban areas was deadly, and had no militarily purpose. The venerable building of the Kärntner state museum was nearly completely destroyed. 512 civilians died, hundreds were injured and 3,556 buildings damaged and destroyed.
93 – Kassel
On the night of October 22, 1943, British bombers feigned an attack on Frankfurt so as to catch Kassel unprepared. Five minutes later, 569 Bombers instead turned and aimed their forces at Kassel and destroyed 90% of the ancient city center, killing over 10,000 people in a firestorm comparable to the one in Hamburg 3 months earlier. For 80 minutes, waves of bombers dropped at least 1,800 tons of high explosives and incendiaries in bombing was so intense that bombs fell with a density of up to two per square meter.
Every building in the city center was hit by at least two liquid incendiary bombs and 460,000 “firesticks” rained on the city creating a firestorm with temperatures of 1500°C and above, consuming nearly all oxygen as it pulled fresh air into the fire. People trying to escape the fire zone were caught in the ensuing 100 mph wind and sucked back into the fire. Those who fled into cellars suffocated. The attack on Kassel destroyed 76% of the houses and 85% of all dwellings. Most of the casualties were civilians or wounded soldiers recuperating in local hospitals, whereas Kassel’s heavy weapons factories survived the attack almost undamaged. It instantly left 150,000 families homeless. The attack on Kassel included one of the most accurate target markings since the Hamburg firestorm raid because the RAF introduced Operation Corona on the night of the raid to confuse the German nightfighters, making the raid a complete ‘success.’
Kassel, which had a pre-raid population of 236,000 in 1939, burned for 7 days. It took weeks to collect all the corpses from the streets and out of the ruined cellars. When Americans, the folks who would later ban the Grimm brothers’ stories for “violence,” captured the city in March 1945, only 50,000 people were living there. Civilian corpses after bombing, above left. Only a very few of the ancient buildings were restored after the war, and most of the city was almost completely rebuilt in the 1950s. St. Martin Church is only in part still medieval as the towers are from the 1950s. What historic buildings have survived are mainly outside the once lovely center of town.
94 – Kiel
Because of its status as a naval port and submarine producer, Kiel was heavily bombed by the Judeo-Allies in WW Jew, destroying not only 83% of the industrial areas, but the old center city itself by 80% and the residential sector 72%. On August 17, 1944, 900 tons of bombs were dropped on the city, and ten days later another 1,448 tons of bombs. At the very tail-end of the war, on April 3, 1945, 700 bombers attacked the city again and dropped 2,200 tons of bombs on its remains. Altogether the city had 90 air raids, which destroyed 36,000 (58%)dwellings and killed 3,000 civilians. There was additionally an enormous inflow of refugees from the east, more than in any other European city, and the pre-war population grew by eight times.
95 – Kleve
DCF 1.0
Although Kleve provided Henry the 8th of England one of his many wives, there was no sentimentality during World War 2 when British Bomber Command instructed 285 of its aircraft to plaster 1,384 tons of high explosive on the ancient and historic town, destroying over 90% of its medieval buildings. Nothing substantial of the medieval city remains today. Kleve claimed to be the most completely destroyed town in Germany of its size.
96 – Koblenz
Especially at the end of the jewish war, Koblenz was attacked repeatedly for no valid military or strategic reason. There were no important war industries and even during the attacks, the transportation facilities of the city were not the priority targets, the civilian population was. The heavy air raids of 1944 and 1945 of both the US and British destroyed 87% of the historic, 1,000 year-old inner city. The bombardment of Koblenz left thousands of dead and wounded and 2 million cubic meters of debris and rubble. Of the 94,417 inhabitants in 1943, only 9,000 remained in the city at the end of war, living for weeks in large concrete shelters, having lost even rudimentary necessities. She was assaulted until 1945 when the French occupied the city.
97 – Königsberg
The RAF first attacked the city on the night of August 26/27, 1944. The 174 Avro Lancasters flew 950 miles from their bases to bomb the city. Three nights later on August 29/30, 189 Lancasters of No. 5 Group struck again, dropping 480 tons of bombs on the center of the city. Bomber Command estimated that 20% of all the industry and 41% of all the housing in Königsberg was destroyed in the attack. Further destruction was brought about during the 3 month siege of Königsberg by the Soviet Red Army in early 1945 which ended on April 9 with the surrender of the local German army. The city was almost completely destroyed. What wasn’t bombed was bulldozed.
98 – Krefeld
War met the small city of Krefeld on the night of June 21, 1943, when 700 RAF bombers dumped enough incendiary bombs to destroy most of the historic city center.
99 – Landau/Pfalz
Heavy bombing by the Judeo-Allies in 1944 and 1945 destroyed 40 per cent of the old town.
100 – Landshut
Landshut was almost spared destruction until the tail-end of war when, like so many others, it met needless ruination. Fortunately, most of the downtown historic district was not destroyed, but there were several attacks on the outskirts, including a severe bombing raid on March 19, 1945 which destroyed the railway station and its surrounding residential neighborhood, churches and farms.
101 – Leverkusen
On the night of June 5, 1940, the first air attack took place, but on the railway and factories. The city was then subjected to repeated bombing throughout the war. Finally, in August and November 1943, Leverkusen was carpet bombed. The worst attack was on October 26, 1944, when a total of 1,017 Spring loaded bombs and about 12,000 fire bombs fell, killing 124 people and causing enormous material damage. Between December 1944 and March 1945, many more lives were lost and greater destruction followed.
102 – Leipzig
Between August, 1942 and April, 1945 altogether 24 air raids were flown against Leipzig, and they cost over 5,000 civilian lives, yet a small number in comparison to most German cities. However, this figure was probably grossly underestimated and it did not include thousands of refugees.
In the worst attack, the RAF opted to use the lethal mix of 50% high explosive and 50% incendiaries. The “bomber stream” of over 500 aircraft menaced the sky, dropping 90,000 staff incendiary bombs and over 1,000 liquid incendiary bombs. 5,000 fires erupted at once, mostly in the city center and the historical old part of town, making it impossible to control. The major roads were made impassable.
The entire historic city center burned. An attack by over 400 US bombers polished off what was left of the city, any surviving cultural facilities as well as hospitals and science enterprises, the esteemed Leipzig university and 78 clinic and hospital buildings, the oldest theatre Schauspielhaus, the famous crystal palace, the municipal library as well as 17 Leipzig school buildings. The entire ancient book center was lost. But it was not over yet. Even though the city was in its last gasps, 820 RAF bombers decided to paw at the dead mouse of a city in another attack. Knowing that refugees from the east had since fled there in panic and fear, the Americans joined in with 2,000 bombers. On February 27, 1945, over 700 American B-17 bombers attacked again, and yet again on April 6th and 8th.
The British then pounced again on the easy prey, on April 10, 1945 with 230 bombers,and on April 11 with 95 bombers. One fifth of the native inhabitants, over 140,000 humans, were homeless and shocked, and along with confused refugees were all ripe for the Judeo-Soviet domination the Judeo-Allies had planned. Of 221,178 dwellings, 28,178 were completely destroyed and 93,000 were damaged, thus 20 per cent of the native Leipzig inhabitants had become homeless. Over 4,000 non-residential buildings were destroyed by the last attacks as well, among them fifty six schools, several hospitals, nine churches, several theatres, the art museum, and the main building of the university. The city hall and the historical museums were heavily damaged, the historic houses from the middle ages lost.
More than three quarters of the historic printing district with its printing and publishing houses, bookshops and book and the book museum, were wholly obliterated. The city famous for its book arts lay in ruins. Over 50,000 books and rare manuscripts burned. On April 18, 1945, units of the US army took over and “liberated” the city just long enough to hand it over to the Soviets, horrifying the entrapped local citizens and the refugees who had just fled from the Soviet invasions in the east.
103 – Linz
Linz lost 12,084 buildings and 1,679 civilians due to bombing. Altogether in Austria, from August 13, 1943 up until the end of war, approximately 120,000 tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs were dropped. From 1944 to 1945, there were more than 200 air raids and 22 bomb attacks on Linz, left. It was also the scene of “Operation Keelhaul,” the horrible betrayal of the Cossacks by the Judeo-Allies which resulted in the cold blooded slaughter of thousands of forcefully “repatriated” Cossacks to the Soviet Union.
104 – Lubeck
The first deliberate attack on a cultural target and mass bombing of a historic city was the RAF attack which incinerated over 80 per cent of the old timberbuilt Hanseatic town of Lubeck on Palm Sunday, March 28, 1942.
This attack by over 200 heavy bombers was ordered by South African commander of Bomber Command, Air Marshal Arthur Harris, as an experiment, to test whether bombing timberframed buildings could start an inferno large enough to be used as an easy aiming point for later waves of bombers: “I wanted my crews to be well blooded, as they say in fox hunting, to have a taste of success for a change.” A devastating hail of 33,000 bombs with a weight of approximately 180,000 kilograms fell on the medieval city center.
More than 80% of the historical buildings were victims of the flames and 10,000 people were left shelterless, 300 people were killed and 650 injured. 700,000 cubic meters of rubble were left. Afterwards, Lübeck was very fortunately preserved as an International Red Cross city despite Judeo-Allied demands to bomb it again. Toward end of the war, Lübeck also accepted nearly 100,000 refugees.
105 – Ludwigshafen
During World War II, the city was a prime target for strategic bombing because its industry which employed 40,000 workers. But the factories were not significantly harmed until almost war’s end, rather, the civilian areas were. Thirteen thousand Judeo-Allied bombers attacked the city in 121 separate raids during the war, of which only 56 were aimed at the main factories, including the Farben plant. Those 56 raids dropped 53,000 bombs each containing 250 to 4,000 pounds of high explosives, plus 2.5 million 4-pound magnesium incendiary bombs.
Since cloud cover often obscured the target, “pathfinder” planes identified the general vicinity with flares which bombardiers unloaded. Even then, out of 1,700 bombs dropped on January 7, 1944, for example, only 127 hit the Farben factory and most still hit residential areas. Thousands of homes were destroyed and there was a great loss of civilian life. But in a raid in January of 1945, 1,000 high explosive bombs and 10,000 incendiaries finally fell within the factory fences, starting over 250 separate fires. This bombing also destroyed even more residences and “dehoused” another 1,800 people. 50% of the houses in Ludwigshafen were destroyed and it was one of the most thoroughly bombed cities in Germany.
106 – Magdeburg
Magdeburg experienced 31 large air raids in the War, in which both British and Americans dumped over 12,000 tons of bombs. Over 6,000 humans died and 11,200 were injured and 190,000 people left homeless. On January 16, 1945, hundreds of British airplanes crowded the skies over the core of the old city, coming in several waves so that their bombs would efficiently detonate at once. The aerial mines, firebombs and high explosives bombs ripped through the city with furious speed and seized fleeing civilians, buildings, trees and even ignited the tar on the roads.
It took 26 minutes for the oldest part of town to burn up. Over 1,050 tons of bombs rubbed out the civilian center of the city, an area of 2.4 square kilometers. 14 more fierce attacks followed, half of which took place in the last three months of war. Like the bombing of Hamburg, Kassel and Dresden, it was calculated to hit the flammable core of the city and tear its heart out, causing as much destruction and carnage as possible. Magdeburg was the third most heavily destroyed city in Germany. Filled with six million cubic meters of rubble, her population plummeted from 330,000 to less than 90,000. She was then sentenced to slavery under judeo-communism…
107 – Mainz
Although the French burned the city and brought near destruction to Mainz as they did to most of the Rhineland in the 17th century, worse was in store for her on February 27, 1945 when 435 British bombers attacked, dropping 1,500 tons of bombs and thousands of incendiaries. Within 20 minutes, 200 people were dead, and the city center was 86% destroyed, including almost every historic structure. The cathedral, from 1037, was badly damaged and other churches were lost forever. Much of what had stood for centuries bearing testament to early European history was snuffed out.
108 – Mannheim
Before Arthur Harris publicly stated the British intention of bombing German civilian centers, the first ‘area air attack’ of World War Two was carried out by British bombers on the old city of Mannheim on December 16, 1940. The object of this deliberate terror-bombing, as then Air Chief Marshall Peirse later explained, was ‘to concentrate the maximum amount of damage in the center of the town.’ “Operation Abigail” was approved by the British War Cabinet on December 13 on the condition that it “receive no publicity.” It was carried out by 98 out of 134 twin-engine bombers who dropped 100 tons of explosive bombs and 14,000 incendiaries. Indeed, from December 1940 on, Mannheim was bombed more than 100 times and was the goal of over 150 air raids. The heaviest air raid which destroyed most of the city took place on September 5 and 6, 1943.
In 1944, bombing raids destroyed Mannheim Palace, leaving only one undamaged room out of over 500. On March 2, 1945 the RAF launched a 300 bomber attack against Mannheim, causing a devastating firestorm, finishing the grand city off for good. Mannheim was destroyed with the accompanied loss of life. 25,181 tons of bombs fell on Mannheim.
109 – Marburg
Marburg was bombed, but fortunately suffered relatively minor civilian damage.
110 – Meerbeck
A terrible fate befell the settlement in 1943 and 1944 when Judeo-Allied bombing killed 1,000 civilians and destroyed 3,000 houses, almost totally destroying the town. In March, 1945 there was one last attack on Meerbeck in which 70 people leaving a bomb shelter were machine gunned by a low flying plane.
111 – Memmingen
The air raid alarm went off here 437 times in the last 16 months of war. The first major attack on the city was on the outskirts on March 18, 1944 with two more attacks on the city itself on July 20, 1944 and April 9, 1945 which levelled almost the entire southern part of town. A third major attack on the city took place immediately before the war ended on April 20, 1945, even though it was known the German air base in Memmingerberg was no longer operable. Bombing destroyed over 30% of residential buildings, many antique buildings. 630 people lost their lives. After the Americans arrived there was looting.
112 – Minden
From 1943 to 1945, Minden was bombed. On December 29, 1943 British high-explosives bombs and aerial mines destroyed a good part of the older upper section of town and damaged 420 buildings in the city center. 29 people were killed. In October 1944, 250 American bombers attacked Minden, killing 73 people, 25 firefighters among them. In November, 1944, 305 high-explosive bombs were again dropped on populated areas killing another 115 people, 103 of them inside an air raid shelter, and injuring 50 more.
Attacks in December, 1944 took another 41 victims and left 820 families homeless.The December attack severely damaged the ancient cathedral. Minden faced daily alarms from the beginning of 1945. At this time, 1,000 civilians a day were dying from air attacks in Germany. On the late morning of March 28, 1945, bombers dropped lethal loads on the ancient Minden cathedral and surviving parts of the historic city center. 186 more people died. Six days later, the town was occupied anyway.
113 – Moers
Judeo-Allied bombings here killed about 558 Russian prisoners in a work camp here and about 200 other workers. Atop of 150 civilian bombing victims, one fifth of the soldiers drafted from Moers were killed or missing in war. Almost all of the 3,000 houses were damaged and 1,000 completely destroyed.
114 – Mühldorf am Inn
The fact that people just walking and farmers doing their chores seemed to be intentionally struck down from the air gave way to some panic and even increasing bitterness of the victims. On March 19, scenic Mühldorf am Inn in Bavaria was hit, killing 130 civilians and their farm animals, above.
115 – Mülheim
The first purposeful attack on Muelheim was minor, and took place on May 13, 1942. By the end of the jewish war, 1,305 civilians in Muelheim died from Judeo-Allied bombs, with the strongest attack killing 530 on June 23, 1943. 557 British bombers attacked Muelheim city center and industrial areas to the north in three waves, destroying 64% of the city center. Mosquitos, in low-altitude flight, disengaged the fire protection and police channels. This was an unwarned attack. Marking of the city center first by the “pathfinders” was a well rehearsed, accurate art by now, so that bombs of the first wave fell concentrated into the range of the targeted city center.
The Rathaus, both hospitals, and the ancient churches of Petri and Marienkirche burned completely. 530 civilians were killed, 1,630 buildings were totally destroyed, and the firemen had to struggle with 150 major fires, 700 medium fires and 2,250 small fires. 40,000 humans were suddenly shelterless with no gas, water or electricity.
On Christmas Eve, 1944, 338 British bombers in a combined attacked struck the airfields at Muelheim with 200 airplanes and 760 tons of bombs, but killed 250 people in an air raid shelter. The USAAF attacked the battered city center on March 21, 1945, killing another 22 people.
116 – Munich/München
When American troops entered Munich on April 30, 1945, 50% of the city’s buildings were in rubble and its population had been reduced by 250,000. Munich suffered heavily from Judeo-Allied bombing in 71 air raids over a period of five years. The first attacks on Munich began in 1942, and for the next three and a half years, residents of the city were sent to their cellars over 1,600 times during air raids, 24 of which were devastating. The old city center clustered around the ancient crossroads of the marketplace in the Marienplatz lost its timeless character. Only three of the seven town gates dating from the 14th century still stood. The city of culture was disfigured.
The oldest of the Wittelsbach palaces, The Residenz, dating from the 16th century was destroyed. The Munich University Institute and its entire collection was destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing. Munich’s oldest church, St. Peter’s Church from 1169, and the Cuvilliés Theatre at the Residenz, a grand theatre built for the Wittelsbach court between 1746 and 1777, were gone.
So was the Bavarian State Library, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, one of the largest libraries in the German-speaking world, founded in 1558 by the Wittelsbach Duke Albrecht V. The last totally unnecessary cultural bombardment took place only few days before end of war. Approximately 6,500 residents of Munich were killed by the attacks, 300,000 were left homeless and it took two years to clear away the 5 million cubic meters of bomb rubble.
117 – Münster
The ancient city center of Münster was turned to cheese and 91% destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing by both British and Americans, with the loss of nearly all historical buildings. With the first air raid on May 16, 1940, an industrial camp was destroyed. By December 23, further attacks followed. In the nights between July 6th and 10th, 1941, the first surface bombardments came. After a large-scale night attack on June 12, 1943, in which the target was the Cathedral entry, and in a daylight raid on October 10, 1943, large parts of the city center were destroyed or heavily damage.
Between September, 1944 and March, 1945 there were 50 more air raids directed at the cathedral city, of which the last and most devastating was on March 25, 1945 toward the end of the war. 112 heavy bombers dropped over 1,800 high impact bombs and 150,000 incendiary bombs. The fabulous cathedral sustained direct hits on the western porch and the nave, and was filled with unexploded bombs, leaving the nave and towers roofless. The Prior responsible for the church treasures was dead. On the evening of April 2, 1945, the Judeo-Allies took the town anyway. Up to this time there were 1,128 air alarms and 112 air raids in altogether. The bombs amounted to altogether 32,000 high-explosives, 642,000 staff incendiaries and 8,100 phosphorus (napalm) bombs. With the numerous attacks more than 1,600 people died. Of 33,737 dwellings once in the city, only 1,050 remained intact, and more than 60% were mostly or completely destroyed.The infrastructure broke down completely.
Substantial parts of the water pipe lines were destroyed as well as electricity and gas supply. Roads were not any longer passable. 24 schools as well as a majority of the hospitals were destroyed, so that only 400 beds remained to treat the wounded. Standing in place of hundreds of years of history was 2.5 million cubic feet of debris and rubble. Burned out towers of the medieval churches jutted up in the ruined city, the 14th to 18th century buildings all gone. The piled up rubble caused a flood disaster by February of 1946. These gigantic heaps of rubble had to be removed for traffic to flow again. Young kids, women and old people had to do this all over Germany because the men were either dead, missing or prisoners.
118 – Naumburg
On April 9, 10 and 11, 1945, just weeks before the jewish war ended, British and American planes bombed the city destroying or heavily damaging areas of the Old Town and adjacent areas. On April, 12, the city of Naumburg was hit by an American bomb attack which severely affected it. More than 100 people died and about 700 houses were damaged. American troops occupied the city and opened up a notorious prisoner of war camp. Only three months later, the city was handed over to the Red Army. With the influx of refugees and displaced persons, the city held up to 60,000 people.
119 – Neumuenster
The first bomb attack from the air was in 1941, followed by more bombings, the worst of them on April 13, 1945. After the end of the War, Neumuenster had a wave of refugees and a severe housing shortage.
120 – Neuss
Between 1940 and 1945, Judeo-Allied bombers flew 136 air raids on ancient, medieval Neuss because of its proximity to Düsseldorf, and in ten large scale attacks dropped approximately 12,000 high-explosive bombs, 130 aerial mines, 102,500 staff incendiary bombs, 6,300 phosphorus bombs and 70 phosphorus canisters, destroying the hospital, schools, churches and transforming the ancient city into rubble and killing 900 civilians. On New Years Eve of 1945, they destroyed the medieval center. Only 189 dwellings were still intact out of 7,100 by the end of war.
121 – Neustrelitz
Its Baroque Schloß (palace) was destroyed in 1945, when it was enslaved by judeo-communism, but the palace gardens (Schloßgarten) still exist.
122 – Neuwied
Neuwied was almost 20% destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing.
123 – Nordhausen
On August 24, 1944, 11 B-17 Flying Fortresses of Mission 568 bombed the airfield at Nordhausen as a “target of opportunity.” The British repeatedly struck Nordhausen, murdering around 8,800 civilians. On April 3 and 4, 1945 three-quarters of the town was destroyed by more bombing raids. The labor camp nearby was bombed purportedly because it was “mistaken for a German munitions depot” by the US. This bombing killed thousands of inmates which were later erroneously reported as being killed by Germans. 20% of Nordhausen’s civilian population was killed by Judeo-Allied bombing before the US Army gave it to the communists.
124 – Nürnberg
For centuries, Nürnberg was renowned for her beauty and dignity. Her narrow lanes were trod by some of the greatest people in history, and she breathed life into many of the finest craftsmen, musicians, artists and scientists ever born. Truly a cradle of European culture, her glorious churches, grand residences, ancient walls and old castle quietly rested by the banks of the river, enchanting and fragrant with history long before the dawn of twentieth century. Nürnberg posed no critical threat and her ancient town center certainly had absolutely nothing of military significance. However, in the bombing campaigns instituted at the end of the war, when defenses were shattered or minimal, cultural targets became a goal, especially if deemed “idealogical centers.” This is when a campaign of sheer vengeance commenced, and the once heavily defended targets were easy prey.
Now, every exquisite detail painted by the ages in this glorious city lay in blurred, gray dust, lost in an act of completely unnecessary vengeance and wanton violence. In just one 53 minute raid, over 6,000 “blockbuster” high explosive bombs and over a million firebombs were dropped on the heart of Nürnberg, needlessly destroying over six centuries of history in less than an hour.
The RAF had already dropped 1,500 tons of bombs on the city as early as August 10, 1943, and another 1,500 tons on August 27, leaving over 4,000 dead at a cost of 49 Judeo-Allied bombers. While a few military targets were damaged in raids of 1943 and 1944, there were increasing terror attacks on the city’s civilian residential areas. The catastrophic attack of January 2, 1945 was calculated to destroy the medieval city center once and for all. 1,800 residents were killed in this one attack and another 100,000 left homeless and without any shelter. Even more attacks would follow on the beleaguered wreck of a city and 8,000 of its surviving civilian population died as a result.
When the first big international effort “to pass judgment on man’s savagery” took place in the ruins of Nürnberg at the Judeo-Allied sponsored War Crimes Trials, the subject of strategic bombing was carefully avoided. There were 38 Judeo-Allied air raids on Nürnberg in the waning days of World War Two. In the final assault, 795 Allied bombers unleashed their fury over the old city. 95 of them were lost and 545 RAF airmen died, more in that one night than during the entire battle of Britain. Centuries of culture and history were smashed into oblivion unnecessarily. When it was over, 90% of the city’s historic buildings were completely destroyed and the city’s pre-war population was halved.
125 – Offenburg
Offenburg was the target of 1944 bomb attacks which, beside the railway facilities, destroyed the bell tower and stained-glass windows of an ancient church.
126 – Ohrdruf
It was destroyed along with other gems by Judeo-Allied bombing in 1945. Only a tower fragment remains.
127 – Olpe
On March 28, 1945, a Wednesday in the Holy Week during the dying days of the war, at a time when Germany was basically defenseless, Olpe and Attendorn were heavily bombed in a major American attack to assist the Soviet offensive. 46 American Mitchell and Boston bombers dropped 309, or 32,000 pounds of high-explosive bombs on Olpe’s residential and commercial district and on Attendom from a height from 4,300 to 3,600 meters. The whistling of falling carpet bombs drowned out the shrill warning sirens in Olpe. Crowds of frightened people frantically sought shelter from the waves of bombers, but 119 civilians died, with 80 foreign workers/prisoners adding more to the death rate. In addition, 75 people were seriously injured. 215 dwellings were destroyed in Olpe and 42 in Attendorn, with hundreds more in severe disrepair.
The majority of the death in Attendom took place in the Bahnhofstrasse, where women and girls were standing in line to shop with their Easter special food allocations. They were literally mowed down by the bombs in the surprise attack. Official findings said 150 people were killed immediately or soon succumbed to their injuries. Seven were missing.
When war was over, Attendorn had another terrible, terrible misfortune. At the time there was a part of the town hall in which the food office was located where many people went to pick up their food ration cards. In the basement was a large ammunition dump where, on the orders of the occupying Americans, bombs, grenades and other military equipment was collected and stored. At 10:30am on June 15, an Allied soldier with a lighted cigarette went down into the basement and shortly after, a large part of the town hall blew up. The huge explosion claimed 35 more lives.
128 – Osnabruck
Like most German cities, Osnabrück was all but destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing in the Second World War. The flight paths of both the British and American bombers from London to Berlin and Central Germany were directly over Osnabrück. Thus, on their return flights they casually dumped their leftover bombs on the city, not for any military significance, but merely for its use as their trash can. Osnabrück was among the first and the last bombed German cities. On September 4, 1939, sirens howled in Osnabrück for the first time, the first of 2,400 trips to shelters and cellars for Osnabrückers during the course of the war (Germany did not attack Coventry until 1940).
78 air raids later, and Osnabrück was no more. The last bombing took place on March 25, 1945. 181 aerial mines, nearly 25,000 high explosives bombs, over 650,000 incendiary bombs and nearly 12,000 liquid incendiary bombs were dumped between 1942 and 1945 over Osnabrück. The bombing killed a couple thousand people, including 268 Judeo-Allied prisoners of war, and injured 2,000. 750 major and 3,600 smaller fires incinerated the city. The old part of town was 85% destroyed. 14,000 dwellings were destroyed, leaving 87,000 humans shelterless. All industrial and public plants such as post offices and all public utilities were trashed. 141 public buildings, 7 churches, 13 schools and a hospital went up in flames. 900,000 cubic meters of rubble was left.
129 – Ottbergen
When an unexpected American air raid directed its fury at the small Saxon town of Ottbergen on February 22, 1945, it only destroyed a few houses, but many people fled in panic to a town shelter to find protection. This being calculated, the shelter was suddenly bombed, killing the 91 civilians who had fled there for safety. The principal target of this attack was purportedly defense cannons at a nearby plant, but they were left largely undamaged. Ottbergen would lose 79 more of its people before war’s end.
130 – Paderborn
Paderborn belongs to the list of the most destroyed cities in Germany. Only burned out ruins and mountains of rubble remained of the medieval city center after March 27, 1945, when 275 heavy British bombers accompanied by 115 American fighters set their sites on Paderborn.
The order read: ‘Destruction of city center.’ 1,200 years of history turned to ashes in a mere thirty minutes under the hellish bombardment of 200 aerial mines, 11,000 high-explosive bombs and more than 92,000 incendiary bombs. The target was supposedly the railroads, but they had already been hit. The old city center was an instant apocalypse, the large churches, including the 11th century cathedral, were lost in a sea of flame. The splendid 1613 Rathaus toppled into cinders. Thousands of rare books and irreplaceable manuscripts were lost forever both by the bombing and by the looting afterward. 85% of Paderborn was destroyed on Palm Sunday. Hundreds were killed. Later, the ruins of one of Charlemagne’s palaces was discovered beneath rubble.
131 – Pforzheim
The post-war British Bombing Survey Unit called the gruesome bombing destruction of Pforzheim, which was based on a rumor, “probably the greatest proportion in one raid during the war.” It was a “smashing” success.
The first surprise Judeo-Allied air raid by Americans which took place over the city of Pforzheim on April 1, 1944 killed 95 civilians. Then, based on a faulty RAF bomber command report of June 1944 which erroneously stated that Pforzheim was “one of the centers of the German jewellery and watch-making trade and is therefore ‘likely’ to have become of considerable importance into the production of precision instruments” and an Allied report issued in August 1944 which continued (on the basis of British reports and without further evidence) to exaggerate the rumor that “almost every house in this town centre is a small workshop,” an attack on the city was suggested to destroy the “built-up area (meaning the civilian residential center of town), the associated industries and rail facilities.”
The RAF carried out constant night-time nuisance raids on cities like Pforzheim to disturb the civilian population: making them run to shelters, jump from their sleep, grab for their children, get the old folks into wheel chairs and secure pets, the essence of terror-bombing. On October 3, October 4 and October 5, 1944 there were raids on Pforzheim, and another three in October and one in November. Also, in that November, Pforzheim was officially placed on a target list. With its medieval city center, it was said to be especially ripe for the devastating firestorms that the RAF had perfected.
The astronomical attack that destroyed yet another medieval city center occurred on the evening of February 23, 1945. The first bombs were dropped at almost 8 pm and the last at a little past 9 pm. The attack on the clockmakers of Pforzheim included 379 aircraft, and they attacked from a height of 8,000 feet, dropping half a million high explosive and phosphorus incendiary bombs, with a weight of 1,825 tons. A firestorm immediately enveloped the heart of the town in complete devastation. The bombed gas works added fuel to the fire. The smoke over the town was so high that returning bomber crews could see the glare of the fire 160 kilometers away.
In an area about 3 kilometers long and 1.5 kilometers wide, all buildings were reduced to rubble. 17,600 citizens, or one out of three Pforzheimers, were officially counted as dead and thousands were injured. Some died instantly from the impact of explosions, many from burns due to the hellish burning phosphorus that seeped into the cellars of houses where they hid, and others suffocated from lack of oxygen and poisonous gases or were crushed to death by collapsing walls.
Many drowned in the river into which they had jumped, trying in vain to escape from the burning materials in the streets, but even the rivers were burning as the phosphorous material floated on the water. The phosphorous bombs formed a burning gel which water, while extinguishing normal fires, didn’t quench. The gel would reignite instantly when the victim reemerged, giving them a choice between drowning or burning to death, and some people drowned themselves and/or their burning children to end their suffering.
Its victims slowly perished as well when blankets thrown over them to smother the fire caught fire themselves, adding another coating of flame. If it landed on the hair, the victim’s whole head caught fire, and people in these attacks were seen running like human torches until they mercifully expired.
The vivid and horrifying accounts of its use and its victims were for the most part ordered stricken from the U.S. Military records, but a copy of the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey does admit that: “Phosphorous burns were not infrequent” at the tail-end of the war on the Americans’ part. The USA in fact supplied the deadly phosphorus to the British. The British, from the beginning, justified its use because it “depressed the morale of the German people.”
After the attack, 30,000 stunned, frantic, heartbroken and half-insane people had to be taken care of, doctored and fed, and their facilities were all gone. 90% of the buildings in the city center had been destroyed. Many citizens were buried in mass graves at Pforzheim’s main cemetery because they were burned beyond recognition. In the days following the attack, more and more died in pain and suffering. There are many graves of complete families. The inner city was completely depopulated.
Even after the small city was in her last gasps following the utter holocaust it suffered, there were additional attacks on Pforzheim. On March 4, the USA bombed the area around the Kupferhammer and flew low, opening fire on crowds of civilian citizens, murdering 100 more people. To justify the slaughter, the people of Pforzheim have been told, well after the fact, that their city “had to be bombed because fuses for German bombs were being made there,” but it was not until March 14, 16, 18, 19, 20 and 24, that the railway facilities were bombed and the local section of the Autobahn was destroyed!
In any case, the war was basically over at the point in time when small Pforzheim was incinerated. And if there was any honest, actual evidence that all of the folks here were making bomb fuses in their houses, it surfaced long after the murderous rage was inflicted upon a civilian population in what, by any other standard, would be considered a war crime. The April 8, 1945 headlines read: “US Seventh Army captures Pforzheim.”
Like other bombed German cities, a mountain was formed out of the rubble from Pforzheim’s destruction. The shattered bits and pieces of an old, beautiful town were heaped into large mounds on the outskirts of the town and covered with soil and vegetation.
132 – Pirmasens
American eye-witness account: “The Group Headquarters entered Pirmasens late the night of the 23rd and here at close range saw the devastating effects of Allied aerial bombing. The town of perhaps fifty thousand was practically leveled. German families were huddled together wherever they could find shelter. Others wandered in a daze through still smoking rubble Broken water mains spouted water and the smell of death was everywhere. That night the Group found a place to bivouac near a mausoleum and cemetery at the edge of town. In back of the buildings were row upon row of coffins of the unburied dead and within the mausoleum was a large room completely filled with corpses. We were glad to soon move on. The following day the results of Judeo-Allied air power could be seen again along a mountain road. For well over a mile were at least two hundred dead horses from a German supply column that had been strafed, still harnessed to their wrecked wagons. I for one was not ashamed to feel the same deep sorrow and anguish that I had felt on seeing our dead GIs, and for that matter the young teen age dead German soldiers.”
133 – Plauen
5,700 tons of weapons were dropped by British and American bombers on Plauen, destroying 75% of the city and killing 2,443 humans in 14 air raids. In the bombing, the citizens had ingeniously fortified old rock cellar areas under a former factory. The underground halls held 7,000 to 8,000 persons and it had its own water and electric supply. However, in these closed cellars crowded with people, the air supply became dangerous during 2-3 hour air raids. Ancient St Johann’s Church was all but totally destroyed. From April 16 to June 30, 1945, the American army occupied Plauen and the Vogtland, containing the people before handing them over to the communists on July 1. The ancient city entrances were later blown up by judeo Soviets.
134 – Potsdam
In April of 1945, Potsdam was horribly bombarded by 512 RAF bombers. 7,000 civilians died as a result of bombings, and most historic buildings and palaces were either gravely damaged, destroyed or extensively and joyfully looted by marauding troops. Even the bones of the great king were moved, and Potsdam was turned over to the judeo-communists as earlier agreed upon by the Judeo-Allies.
135 – Prenzlau
On April 25, 1945, almost the entire city of Prenzlau was destroyed by American bombers. On the day before there were about 1,850 houses and two days later only 870 still stood. The population fell in the same period from 28, 500 to 15,700.
136 – Rathenow
On April 18, 1944, Rathenow was attacked by U.S. bombers on their way to Berlin. Forced to turn around because of violent anti-aircraft fire, they dumped part of their lethal cargo on Rathenow. Between that and the destruction from Soviet troops, more than 75 percent of the city was destroyed.
137 – Recklinghausen
On November 5, 1943, 374 USAAF bombers attacked the synthetic oil plant and marshalling yards near Recklinghausen. On the 19th another attack followed by 160 USAAF bombers. In the process, 12 churches and about 50% of the residential houses were destroyed.
138 – Regensburg
Unlike the 190 other medieval German cities completely flattened by Judeo-Allied bombing, many of Regensburg’s ancient buildings amazingly survived, including the famous cathedral. However, it was not for lack of trying. Regensburg suffered from 20 British bomb attacks and 8 American air assaults from 1943-1945. In 1943, an RAF attack killed 402 civilians. In total, 3,000 civilians here were killed by Judeo-Allied bombing, including many prisoners of war. The Romanesque 9th century church of Obermünster was completely destroyed at the tail-end of the War by a violent, senseless bombing in March of 1945. Only the belfry still stood. The church could not be rebuilt.
139 – Remscheid
On July 31, 1943, Remscheid-Lennep was almost completely destroyed during a British bombing which caused a horrible firestorm that killed 1,220 people. Today, a fifth of its inhabitants are foreign.
140 – Reutlingen
During World War II, the city became the target of several Judeo-Allied bombing raids and there were three massive bomb attacks in Reutlingen 1945. It belonged to the ten most affected cities in the territory of present-day Baden-Wuerttemberg.
141 – Rositz
There are deep traces of the destruction, suffering and grief left behind from the war in Rositz even today. Although two major bomb attacks initially aimed at industrial targets in August 1944 and on February 14, 1945, many homes were also destroyed and 49 civilians killed.
142 – Rostock
Rostock evacuated 80,000 people during the war. Large parts of the historic city center city were destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombing in 1942 and 1945. It was then sentenced to communist slavery for decades. Germans living on German soil that had been given to Poland were subjected to a policy of terror and/or deportation. Freed after reunification, only the western part remained part of Germany.
143 – Rothenburg au Tauber
At the end of the second jewish World War, there was a rush to destroy as many remaining towns as possible to insure the ground was cleared for “liberation” without any real struggles. March 31, 1945, the day before Easter, a Judeo-Allied bombardment destroyed the east of the old town and 40% of the original city. But, who would know?
144 – Saarbrücken
War came early to the Saar, when 185 people were killed by bombing in July, 1942. Since then, the British and Americans both hammered the Saar. A heavy daylight attack of the American “flying fortresses,” supposedly aimed at the railway facilities, but of course just happened to hit residential areas and killed over 200 civilians. Twelve bomb attacks in three months would be the prelude to a series of another twelve attacks in three months, killing over 400 more civilians. While rubble of the last attack blocked the roads, another attack would commence, and the destruction grew larger and larger with each attack. In September of 1944, a new threat came from the air. Fighter bombers dive bombed the city, shooting at buildings and humans.
From October 5th, Britain’s “Butcher” Harris planned a solid double impact against the city: The first wave applied to the railway facilities, the second to the whole city. Old Saarbruecken went down, its residential areas foremost. A federation of 325 Lancaster bombers aimed at Saarbruecken in three waves, dumping approximately 2,500 high-explosive bombs as well as over 350,000 staff incendiary bombs in about a half hour. In the closely settled quarters of old Saarbruecken, the incendiary bombs released an enormous fire tower. Many Saarbrueckers who couldn’t reach shelters tried to survive the attack in their cellars, and hundreds died of suffocation or burned in their houses. 45,000 people became shelterless. Saarbruecken’s landscape was death and devastation. Authorities ordered the evacuation of the city. Even more attacks followed, and the British shifted to the use of sporadically released mines. When it was over, 1,334 more people were dead. After World War II, France again occupied the coveted Saar until 1957.
145 – Saarlautern
There were several violent Judeo-Allied bomb attacks on the city.
146 – Salzburg
Although Salzburg had cleverly escaped the ravages of the christinsane Thirty Years’ War and the Turkish invasion, Salzburg was bombed in World War Two as a cultural target. Judeo-Allied bombing destroyed 7,600 houses and killed 550 inhabitants. A total of 15 strikes destroyed 46 percent of the city’s buildings, especially around Salzburg train station. The town’s historic bridges and the dome of the ancient cathedral were demolished when on October 14, 1944, 900 American bombers took the city by complete surprise and unloaded more than 9,000 high-explosive bombs on the historic city center, aiming for the cathedral dome and causing its collapse.
147 – Schwandorf
In a 15-minute bomb attack on April 17, 1945 by Canadian and British bombers, 1,250 civilians were killed, the railway station and immediate area were fully destroyed as well as two large residential districts including historic Kreuzberg. Around 1,000 buildings, including 862 houses, were lost and 75% of the city was totally or partially lost, requiring ten years of reconstruction. A Baroque pilgrimage Catholic church and convent, Our Lady of Kreuzberg, which had stood since the 1600s, was among the victims and almost completely destroyed. It contained an alter by Lucas Cranach. Schwandorf became home to many displaced expellees from the Sudetenland.
148 – Schwäbisch Hall
On February 23, 1945, 24 “Liberator” bombers hit an air base near Schwäbisch Hall. American air raids aimed for the town center, and on February 25, 1945 nearly destroyed it. 53 civilians died. Again, on April 17, 1945, at the very tail-end of the war, the age old Rathaus was hit with incendiary bombs, leaving it a smoking rubble.
149 – Schweinfurt
A significant portion of Germany’s ball bearings were imported from Sweden in World War Two, and when the Judeo-Allies had failed to make the neutral Swedes limit the export of the ball-bearings, they decided to attack bearing factories within Germany. Other than ball bearing factories, there was nothing of military significance in Schweinfurt. Unfortunately, Schweinfurt’s factories were very close to these residential areas because of the ancient lay of the town. Schweinfurt was attacked first on August 17, 1943. The Judeo-Allies sent 230 bombers to attack the town, and they lost 36 planes and 341 men. They had just lost 24 bombers and 200 men from an attack on Regensburg the same day.
Reconnaissance photographs showed that only 3 of the 12 attack groups had bombed anywhere near the factories, and Schweinfurt’s production of ball-bearings was unaffected. The Judeo-Allies attacked again on October 14, 1943, and lost 60 bombers and 639 men. While destructive, it was still not fatal to the ball bearing industry. For almost 1,000 Allied and hundreds of civilian lives lost so far in this one town, the Judeo-Allies simply put a temporary slow down in Germany’s supply of ball bearings. The jewish led Allied High Command termed the losses as “acceptable,” glowingly reporting that the second mission, also resulting in tremendous loss of life, was a “huge success and utterly devastated the ball bearing manufacturing.” In reality, there was again not much of an impact at all upon ball bearing production.
By February 24-25, 1944, after the Judeo-Allies had long-range escort fighters and German defenses were at minimum, 3,500 high explosive bombs and 33,000 incendiary bombs were dumped on the small city. In total, it was bombed 22 times by 2,285 British and American bombers during the war, with a final devastating attack on April 10, 1945, the day before the U.S. Army would take the city anyway.
7,933 tons of bombs were dropped on Schweinfurt in 592,598 individual bombs, or 65% of the total bombs dropped by the Judeo-Allies on all bearing industry plants, and by the time this occurred, the ball bearing industry had been scattered anyway. By April 1945, after more than 20 bombing attacks in 18 months, Schweinfurt was left in ruins with half of the houses destroyed, the other half unlivable, four-fifths of the industrial buildings destroyed, and 1,079 civilians dead. The city’s population dropped by 50 percent due to deaths and departing refugees.
150 – Siegen
There is nothing much left of Siegen’s historic past. It was 80%, or almost totally destroyed from the 3,770 tons of Judeo-Allied bombs dumped on it during the Second World War.
151 – Soest
In the Second jewish World War, Soest was the goal of 30 Judeo-Allied bomb attacks because of nearby train yards and a factory in town. A third of the city was completely destroyed, especially the old churches. 60% of the houses were damaged or destroyed. The ancient Patrokli cathedral, built between 954 and 1166, whose tower was once called the “tower of Westphalia” because it stood nearly 100 meters high, was bombed in a 1945 Good Friday attack and all but totally destroyed.
152 – Solingen
On November 4, 1944, 174 both American and British bombers dumped 4,921 tons of high explosives bombs and mines and 138 tons of incendiary bombs on it, igniting 900 fires. Although it destroyed the hospital and broke the water, electric and telephone lines, no historical buildings were yet hit. The second attack took place, the following day when there was no capacity to fight fires or save the town. In a 26 minute raid, 165 British bombers dropped 783 tons of high explosives bombs and 150 tons of incendiary bombs on Solingen, this time destroying the densely populated, ancient town center. 1,200 fires raged and the town was in rubble. 1,609 homes were totally destroyed, and 20,000 persons became shelterless. On November 5th, the English broadcast stated: “It is announced that Solingen, which is the heart of the German steel goods industry, is a dead city.” Also dead were 1,040 civilians.
153 – Staubling
Straubingers heard their first alarm in 1941. Starting from 1943, it sounded almost daily. The first heavy air raid came on November 4, 1944 at noon, hitting the train station and railway tracks. More heavy attacks took place on December 20 and February 5, 1945. The worst day in Straubing history is considered April 18, 1945 at the tail-end of the war. The bombing lasted 42 seconds, with 480.8 tons of high explosive bombs and 33.8 tons of incendiary bombs dropped to make it easy for the Americans who were poised to take the city. The town took 2 days to fight the fires and save people buried in cellars.
Over 300 people perished, with many more later succumbing to injuries sustained from the attack. In 1952, the last broken down cellar was dug out, and 30 more bodies were found. There were at least 500 civilian fatalities as a result of the bombings. A quarter of all houses and buildings in the old part of town were completely destroyed or severely damaged. The town was in ninth place in degree of destruction in Bavaria, with Munich at eighth place.
154 – Stettin
The construction of a canal to Berlin in 1914 enriched Stettin as a port with extensive installations. During World War II, Stettin suffered heavy damage from repeated bombings. On the night of April 20, 1943, following six previous attacks, Stettin was bombed with an area of a 100 acres devastated and 40,000 people left homeless. Massive combined Allied forces bombed it again in 1945 in a more murderous assault in the heart of the city, killing and injuring thousands. Although 80% of Stettin, including the old section, is on the left or western bank of the Oder, and the Potsdam agreement of 1945 only transferred Pomerania “east of the Oder” to Poland, this was later “reinterpreted” to include old German Stettin.
The predominantly German population was expelled and replaced by Poles who were trucked in to the city. About 500,000 humans died or remained missing when Eastern Pomerania and Stettin were subordinated in 1945 under Polish communist administration. Western Pomerania (without Stettin) was combined with Mecklenburg and fell under judeo-communist East German rule.
155 – Stralsund
In WW Two, although Stralsund had alarms and minor bombings, they were not too worried since they had no military targets. This meant they had no real defenses either. On October 6, 1944, the US 381st bomber Group had orders to attack targets near Stettin to assist the Red Army, but because of bad weather, the 110 airplanes turned around and directed their machines at their secondary target, the old Hanseatic sea side city itself.
First they hit the power station and the water supply. Next, they hit the port area. Then they honed in on the unsuspecting city center and the residential area.A second attack wave arrived at 1:00 o’clock, and again hit the city center and the suburbs. The third wave was directed at civilian targets as well. The bombers dropped 1,500 high explosive and incendiary bombs with individual weights between 100 and 1,000 kilograms, altogether 247.5 tons. The first victims were workers at a sugar factory, whose shelter received a direct hit with the first attack wave.
In total, between 785 and 1,000 civilians were killed. 8,000 dwellings were gone, leaving 12,000 and 14,000 homeless. 385 of the 2,285 buildings of the medieval city center, 133 businesses, and the marketplace were gone as well. The centuries old Johanniskirche, the cloisters, the ancient gates, the old palace and the antique shipping houses were obliterated. The high explosives bombs had destroyed the roads and the incendiary bombs set the city aflame. Fire fighters could not use the public water to put out the fires, and rescue workers couldn’t reach the people because of the rubble. 16 fishing ships were sunken as well. On October 12th and 16th, 1944, mass funerals were held. Then it was turned over to the judeo-communists. The town is now again part of Germany.
156 – Stuttgart
Stuttgart is another city totally flattened by continuous Judeo-Allied bombing, the worst raid taking place April 22, 1945. Stuttgart was bombed 53 times by the Judeo-Allies, killing thousands of people. Although an important industrial and rail center, most targets were non-military, and purely cultural sites earmaked beforehand for destruction. Bombing attacks leveled 60% of Stuttgart’s buildings and left 52.972 million cubic feet of rubble. None of its landmarks or historic structures survived intact. The lovely city was now nothing but rubble and death. Under initial French occupation, there was a violent spree of violence against German women and girls, with almost 2,000 rapes reported.
157 – Swinemünde
Swinemünde had only 22,000 inhabitants in 1945 when Red Army Marshal Khudyakov put in an urgent request to American General Carl Spaatz that the Judeo-Allies bomb the city, not so much because of the unimportant old naval base there or because Wehrmacht supply units were possibly camped nearby, but because tens of thousands of German civilian refugees fleeing from the East had arrived in Swinemünde and refugees were enemy targets that the communists wanted exterminated.
A train fully loaded with refugees was aboard the train ferry crossing the Swina and another train was ready for departure in the harbor railway station. Schools and other public buildings were crowded with the elderly, the sick and the wounded. There were estimates of from 70,000 to 100,000 people in Swinemünde including the refugees, most of whom were East Prussian women and children.
671 “Flying Fortresses” with 3,216 pieces of high-explosives, accompanied by fighter jets, pounced from the west over the Baltic. When at 12.00 o’clock noon, the sirens started to howl over the port, people thought the bombers would go to Stettin or Berlin, but they didn’t. Instead, they dropped their deadly load in wave after wave upon Swinemünde from 12:06 pm to 12:58 pm. 1,608.5 tons of bombs fell, including 1,000 lb bombs and two 500 pounders, almost entirely on the city center, igniting about 50 fires which quickly encircled trapped civilians.
The bombers criss-crossed over the city center, destroying the small businesses and residential buildings, covering the roads with rubble. The remaining concentrations were inflicted upon the suburbs, the beach, west Swinemünde and concentrated small housing. Thousands of refugees were unprotected and in the open air, exposed to the attack which claimed hundreds of them as fatalities. 12 fully-loaded refugee transport vessels had put into Swinemünde before the attack. 6 of them sank, including the “Cordillera” and the “Andros.”
570 people, most of them women and children, died when the “Andros” went down. The official civilian death toll from the attack on Swinemünde stood at 23,000 for almost 50 years, and was justified by the cemetery, police and hospital records as well as eye witness accounts. The number of victims has been recently minimized by using the loose ratio of “one ton of Allied bombs killed an average of 3.1 people,” revising it down to a probably inaccurate 5,000. At the time of the attack, there were reports of low flying aircraft spraying the exposed refugees with artillery fire, accounting for the clustered groups of dead on the roadways, but as usual, this too has been refuted lately.
Although some damage was actually done to the docks, a few ships and a ferry boat, the U.S.A. reported that results of the heavy attack supposedly had “not achieved its goal” of making the old naval base at Swinemünde useless, after all. On May 5, 1945, the Soviet army occupied the town. In the autumn of 1945, a Polish administration was inaugurated. This spelled a horror story for any German survivors of the town who had not fled in time (elsewhere on this site).
158 – Tilsit
Tilsit was hit by 14 British air strikes. The worst attack was on July 26 /27, 1944 when the historic old town center was completely burned out and 25,000 dwellings were lost. Many people who had not already fled left now, only to join thousands of other frantic refugees facing a grim and uncertain future. Tilsit then sank into oblivion as part of the “Kalingrad Oblast.”
159 – Torgau
Shortly before jewish led American and Soviet troops linked up at Torgau on the Elbe in their historic April, 1945 meeting, an event which hastened the close of war and the defeat of Germany, Torgau’s vicinity was hit simultaneously in a strike by over 100 US bombers. A monument was built in Torgau to honor the “liberation,” but no monument was built to commemorate the plundered of the Hohner accordion and harmonica factory by the Red Army or the prison camps it opened there after Torgau was sentenced to decades of judeo-communist slavery.
160 – Treuenbrietzen
On April 20, 1945, the British sent 42 bombers to bomb the town, and the next day it fell to the Red Army, and a horrific massacre of civilians took place.
On April 20, 1945, the British sent 42 bombers to bomb the town, and the next day it fell to the Red Army’s communist Ukrainian Front. During a typical victory celebration, drunk communist soldiers kidnapped and raped a score of German women at the Soviet headquarters. In the morning on April 23, Hitler Youth from surrounding areas put up a resistance and most were killed before the Red Army took back control of the city, but their commander had been reportedly shot.
In reprisal, starting that morning an unknown number of German civilians were rounded up at gunpoint and herded to the edge of a forest. The women and female children were allowed to move on at first, and the men and boys were all shot. Then however, women were gathered together and raped, then killed as well. Eyewitnesses spoke of at least 800 people being murdered, including a large amount of refugees. Eyewitnesses who had to bury the dead kept a secret tally, but had to stop counting at 721 deaths, and current estimates of the count range up to about 1,000 deaths. Nearly every family in the town lost relatives.
The bodies were buried in a pasture, where there are six mass graves wherein lie the dead in layers, 12 bodies atop one another. For over a half of century, most of it under communist occupation, there were unspoken orders not to speak of it, and the inhabitants of Treuenbrietzen kept quiet about this massacre, but in the wake of German reunification, the massacre was brought to light.
Soviet troop newspapers and the orders of the Judeo-Soviet high command were jointly responsible for the excesses of the Red Army, many of which were conveniently blamed on Germans. Propaganda proclaimed that the Red Army had entered Germany as an avenger to punish all Germans. Master of hate propaganda Ilya Ehrenburg had written on January 31, 1945: “The Germans have been punished in Oppeln, in Königsberg and in Breslau. They have been punished, but yet not enough! Some have been punished, but not yet all of them.”
161 – Trier
Trier barely survived the jewish War. On August 14, 1944, over 11,000 incendiary bombs fell into the oldest section of the city which held many historic architectural monuments of the Roman and medieval times.
In December, 1944, there were three heavy air raids on Trier. On December 19, thirty British bombers let loose 136 tons of high explosive bombs and two days later, British and American bombers dropped 427 tons of bombs, including incendiaries. Two days later, another 700 tons of bombs plastered the city. 420 people were killed, but many had fortunately already fled the city.
1,600 houses were completely destroyed, and numerous ancient buildings obliterated. Between December 16, 1944 and January 2, 1945, the U.S.A.F. and the R.A.F. dropped altogether 1,467 metric tons of bombs. The only undamaged structures left of ancient Trier were the old Roman ruins. The bombers had hit the ancient cathedral, the oldest Romanesque church in Germany, and with one direct hit, the bell had shaken loose and fallen through the tower. Liebfrauenkirche, left, an early Gothic structure dating from the 13th century was badly damaged, and the 18th century Paulinuskirche had a hole in its roof. In both structures, all the irreplaceable stained glass windows blew up and precious manuscripts were lost to the world forever.
162 – Ulm
The ancient German Cathedral cities seemed to have been favorite targets of the Judeo-Allied bombers. Ulm was, for its size, the most heavily bombed city in southern Germany, especially toward the end of the war when it lay defenseless. Water-filled bomb craters covered blocks where parks, factories and houses once stood, and the rubble was so thick that walking was almost impossible.
Above this, the 500 year-old Gothic cathedral stood weeping, towering above the grey hulk of yet one more city which had stood from before the middle ages until the madness of Allied bombing. The heaviest bombs fell upon Ulm on December 17, 1944, causing a lethal firestorm which killed almost 800 people and hideously injured scores more. Approximately 25,000 humans lost their homes. After the jewish war, the priceless old city center was 81% destroyed, and only 1,763 out of 12,756 buildings were left intact. 4,400 Ulmers died in the war.
163 – Vienna
52 devastating non-military Judeo-Allied air raids took place on Vienna at the very end of the War in 1945.
The major jewish bombing of Austria started with an attack on Wiener Neustadt by U.S. command on August 13, 1943. The US air force together with the British 205th squadron carried out bombing raids on Austria until 1945 from their Italian bases. The heaviest civilian raids took place in February and March 1945. The most destroyed city of Austria was Wiener Neustadt with 88% of their buildings damaged or destroyed, followed by Villach with 85%, but Vienna had the most building damage in absolute numbers with 6,214 totally destroyed, followed by Linz (12,084), and Graz (7,802).
Severely damaged in the Judeo-Allied attacks, more than 20 percent of the housing stock in Vienna was partly or completely destroyed, leaving almost 87,000 homes uninhabitable. Thousands were dead, injured and homeless. More than 3,000 bomb craters were counted, and bridges were in shambles, with electric lines, sewer, gas and water pipes severely damaged. Bodies littered the streets. There was a severe emergency. The city had only 41 transportation vehicles.
Old Vienna sustained over 1,800 bomb hits until the major destructive assault in February and March of 1945 by the US and British air fleets, with the Soviets circling overhead, waiting to plaster red flags over it all. 80,000 tons of bombs were dropped. Approximately 30,000 people were killed and more than 12,000 buildings were destroyed.
St Stephen’s Cathedral, built in the 14th and 15th centuries, escaped Allied bombing until the final days of war when it was at last destroyed. The church was set on fire on April 11, 1945, burning the entire wood roof-truss of the nave. When the vaulting collapsed, the Gothic choir stalls were buried. On April 12, a 22 ton bomb struck the floor of the church. Only the clapper of the bell remained intact.
The beginning of the Vienna State Opera goes back to the start of the 18th century. A number of new operas were performed in Vienna during the 47-year-long reign of Emperor Leopold I, who was a composer as well a ruler. But on March 12, 1945, the music played no more as the stage was destroyed by Judeo-Allied bombs and the building gutted by fire. Only a few rooms were spared. The Soviets decided to stay a while longer than agreed to. Stalin’s poster, above, hangs on the Opera House. The media still refers to the bombings of Vienna as “accidental,” apparently all 52 of them.
Vienna also had the most houses destroyed with 36,851, followed by 12,359 in Steiermark and 10,152 in upper Austria. 75,959 dwellings were totally destroyed nation wide, with 101,096 partially destroyed and 95,082 damaged. The most air raids fell on Graz with 56, followed by Vienna with 52, Linz 48, Villach 37, and Wiener Neustadt, 29. The most bombs fell on Vienna at over 100,000, then Wiener Neustadt (pictured above) 55,000, and Villach, 42,500.
Altogether in Austria, from August 13, 1943 up until the end of war, approximately 120,000 tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs were dropped. Most bombing deaths to civilians were appx. 30,000 in Vienna, followed by Graz with 1,980 and Linz with 1,679. Soldiers, police, refugees, firemen, foreigners and prisoners of war totaled another 35,000 to 50,000 dead and 57,000 wounded.
164 – Waldenburg
In April, 1945, indoctrinated Americans pounded the old castle and its small village to rubble, reducing it by 80% because they thought it might be a hiding place for soldiers. In the aftermath of their carnage, the GIs lit numerous fires and destroyed a valuable art collection which had been taken there for safe keeping.
165 – Weimar
In bomb attacks aimed at cultural landmarks by the U.S. on February 9, 27 and March 10, 1945, the city was hit with 965 tons of bombs. In the first attack, 300 residents lost their lives. All of the buildings on the north side of the market square were lost. 325 historic buildings were destroyed, including the National Museum and the National Theater. A further 210 were severely damaged, including the 18th century homes of Goethe and Schiller and the Royal Palace. All of the historic buildings on the north side of the main town square were destroyed. On July 3, 1945, Weimar was given to the judeo-communists and it languished as part of East Germany until reunification.
166 – Wesel
Shortly before end of the Second jewish World War, the town of Wesel was wholly obliterated. From 1940, it experienced many air raids, but they grew to almost daily attacks from the beginning of the year 1945.On February 16, 17 and 18 of 1945 the devastating, ultimate destruction of Wesel finally arrived. 100 bombers, each with a 6,000 kg.load attacked on the 16th. On the 18th and 19th, 328 bombers dropped their deadly load.
The once proud Hanseatic city had its guts ripped out. 7693 dwellings, 8 schools and 3 churches were gone. However, this was not the end. On February 23, 1945 the Americans joined in. On the afternoon March 23, 1945, in operation “Plunder,” an enormous artillery bombardment on the ruins of Wesel commenced, and another 200 bombers battered Wesel with 1,100 tons of bombs and aerial mines. Another city that had stood since the Middle Ages was 98% pulverized, thousands were dead, leaving 2.1 million cubic meters of rubble.
167 – Wetzlar
The outskirts of the town became industrialized in the 20th century and therefore became a bombing target. Although the historic district was mostly spared, the old cathedral suffered heavy damage. At the jewish war’s end, the town’s population doubled from the huge numbers of refugees flooding into the town from the east.
168 – Wiesbaden
Aside from its airfield, Wiesbaden was not heavily bombed in World War Jew. In the one and only RAF raid on Wiesbaden, 495 Lancasters and 12 Mosquitos were sent but accomplished little besides having three of their Lancasters crash in France. Important war industries along the Rhine were left untouched and the railway station was only slightly damaged.
169 – Wilhelmshaven
Wilhelmshaven was bombed by 25 RAF bombers on Sept. 4, 1939 in the first terror-bombing of a German city in World War Two. The area had been an operating base for the German navy, but it was the city center which was destroying by two thirds in the bombings.
170 – Wismar
In April 1945, considerable damage was done to the historic Old Town center by Judeo-Allied bombing raids. Its elegant cruciform church of St George (St Georgen Kirche) dating from the first half of the 13th century was destroyed and the Gothic district beside the St.-Marienkirche was completely destroyed.
171 – Witten
Numerous bombing attacks took place on the city, causing immense damage and killing hundreds of civilians. One Judeo-Allied attack on March 18, 1945 by 324 RAF aircraft dropped 1,081 tons of bombs and destroyed 129 acres, 62 percent of the residential area. After the bombing, low-flying aircraft hunted and shot at everything that moved, and in this manner 8 running women and one child met their doom.
172 – Wittenburg
Although the Judeo-Allies agreed not to bomb Wittenberg because of its religious significance, they did destroy an aircraft plant on the outskirts in an April, 1945 bombing which killed over 1,000 prisoners of war, including some Americans. The historic city of Luther was then given over to the Red Army and it languished under communism for decades of decay.
173 – Worms
As World War Jew bombing raids increased, desperate people fled the city of Worms. On February 22, 1945, she was bombed by British and American bombers, reducing her to ash, corpses and rubble within twenty minutes. 340 British bombers unloaded 361.7 tons of high-explosive bombs and 575.5 tons of incendiary bombs over the ancient cathedral city. 235 additional bombs followed with enormous explosive effect. 2,000 years of history was destroyed in those 20 minutes as the Medieval city center caught fire and burned. Many civilians were wounded and killed and two thirds of all houses were destroyed. For hundreds of miles, the bloody red glow of an incinerating ancient city was visible, yet even while it was burning to its death, the British bombed it again within 2 hours of the main attack.
March 18th and 20th, the Judeo-USA began another deadly, destructive assault on the beleaguered medieval city center in 11 separate raids, dropping 1,100 more incendiary bombs and 100,000 more incendiary compounds over Worms to polish off the job, only afterward bombarding any actual remaining military targets, such as railway facilities, bridges and traffic junctions. Martinskirche, Friedrichskirche, Andreaskirche and Pauluskirche were all completely or nearly completely destroyed. The Wormser Dom, above, was heavily damaged. The 1,100 year-old Magnuskirche where Luther came to defend his doctrines at the Diet of Worms was also destroyed. Built in the 8th to 9th centuries, it was the site of the first Protestant sermon in Germany and it is the oldest Protestant Church of Southwest German Lands. It was painstakingly rebuilt and reopened in 1952.
174 – Wuppertal
719 British aircraft aimed for the Barmen half of the long and narrow town of Wuppertal and their Pathfinder marking was particularly accurate in this case. A large fire area developed in the narrow streets of the old town center, igniting a firestorm. Because it was a Saturday night, many of the town’s fire and air-raid officials were not prepared, and the town was not able to control the numerous fires. Approximately 1,000 acres, about 80 per cent of Barmen’s built-up area, was destroyed by fire. Aside from the factories and industries on the outskirts, nearly 4,000 homes were completely destroyed.
175 – Würzburg
One night, Würzburg would be gone forever. The attack came at approximately 9:30 PM on the night of March 16, 1945, less than two months before World War Two would end, when Germany’s defeat was clearly imminent. At around 9:30 PM on that March evening, 236 planes filled the sky over ancient and honorable Würzburg. Another 280 were heading out to further destroy another benign, centuries-old city of great beauty: Nürnberg.
According to the official statistics between 360,000 to 380,000 incendiary bombs were dropped in three waves, with 180 to 220 high-explosives bombs weighing 500 kg each. Würzburg was an inferno with 1,000 to 2,000 degree Celsius heat by midnight. The intensity of the heat and fire destroyed (holocausted, thanks jews) what bombs could not. People ran from their overheating cellars to the Main river, screaming and praying for help. The death count at the time was about 5,000 civilians.
Over 3,700 of the casualties were women and children, most of them painfully burned to death. Four fifths of the living space was destroyed and 35 churches and almost all public buildings and cultural memorials were absolutely ruined. The city was transformed from a magnificent mecca of culture and art into two and a half million cubic meters of rubble, ashes and burnt flesh. In 1939, Wurzburg had a population of 112,997. By 1950, it was reduced to 86,564. There were no priority factories and no armaments in Wurzburg.
The crews had been told that it was an “important center of communication” yet the vast majority of bombs dropped were incendiaries with diabolical time delays dropped on residential areas.
176 – Xanten
In February, 1945, bombardment of the city began. Especially heavy bombing of February 10 and 13 killed almost 300 civilians and 18 foreign workers. The bombing destroyed large parts of Xanten. The ancient cathedral was nearly destroyed as was the medieval town center along with 85% of the town. In the Xanten town cemetery, lying among the rest of the victims, are the remains of ten members of one family. The town was then occupied by British troops who evacuated the population elsewhere until Germany was defeated for good and fully occupied. After the war, many refugees from East Prussia found refuge here.
177 – Zeitz
The attacks by Judeo-Allied bombers levelled many houses in the city before it was thrown into judeo-communist slavery in the GDR-era.
178 – Zweibrücken
On March 14-15, 1945, World War Jew was all but over. Nonetheless the Baroque gem of Zweibrucken was completely destroyed when the Judeo-Allies chose as their target the historic city center. Although the weary city had suffered over 230 air raids, 812 sortees and continual harassment, this early spring evening was to bring destruction. A sortie of 98 Halifaxes joined by 98 Lancasters flew for the attack at Zweibrucken. The crews released their deadly high explosives. In minutes the place was obliterated. The whole center and the residential areas were gone in a million flashes, another old castle was almost levelled, and the ancient churches in ruins.
200 Canadian Air Force bombers flew over the groaning city in several waves, dropping nearly 1,000 bombs, with a weight of 815 tons and 97 aerial mines of which 20 were “hundredweights” (4,000 English Pounds). Approximately 30 “block busters” fell into the center of the old city. The American had already had their go at it in their Thunderbirds. The original historic stud farm was demolished in the bombing of Zweibrücken. “Zwei” became an Judeo-Allied military base.
Thanks jews…
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