over Hamburg, 30/31 January 1943 Operation Gomorrah, was a campaign of air raids which began on 24 July 1943 and lasted for eight days and seven nights. It was at the time the heaviest assault in the
history of aerial warfare. The name
Gomorrah comes from that of one of the two Canaanite cities of
Sodom and Gomorrah whose destruction is recorded in the
Bible. Before July 1943, RAF Bomber Command's focus had been on the
Ruhr industrial region which had been the target of
a five-month-long campaign. Operation Gomorrah was carried out by RAF Bomber Command (including
RCAF,
RAAF and
Polish Squadrons) and the
USAAF Eighth Air Force. The British conducted night raids and the USAAF daylight raids. The initial attack on Hamburg included two new introductions to the British planning: they used "Window", later known as
chaff, to confuse the German radar, while the
Pathfinder Force aircraft, which normally kept radio silence, reported the winds they encountered, and this information was processed and relayed to the bomber force navigators.
First RAF raid 24/25 July The first raid on Hamburg was planned for the night of 23 July, but the raid was delayed by one day because of bad weather. Between 21:45 and 23:00 on 24 July 791 bombers took off from their airfields. At 00:57 Pathfinder aircraft, guided only by
H2S radar, started to drop yellow
target indicators and flares. This was followed by others dropping red target indicators visually by the light of the flares.
No. 35 Squadron led the target marking and, thanks to the clear weather and H2S radar, accuracy was good, with markers falling close to the aiming point scattered over five districts. At 01:02 the main force started to bomb; this continued until 01:50 in six waves. Less than half of the bombers dropped their bombs within a radius of the aiming point. Around Hamburg the Germans had lit red decoy fires which caused a hundred bombers to bomb those in error. Still, large areas were set on fire in the five districts marked by the Pathfinders. During the raid a large ()
creepback developed which saved the city centre from catastrophe but caused other districts to the north to be set on fire as well. While some 40,000 firemen were available to tackle fires, control of their resources was damaged when the
telephone exchange caught fire and rubble blocked the passage of fire engines through the city streets; fires were still burning three days later. During the early stages of the raid, some bombs fell on the
Blohm and Voss shipyard, where three
U-boats were destroyed:
U-1011 and
U-1012 were hit on their
slipways and never repaired, and
U-996 sank at the dockside. The local police estimated the number of deaths at 1500.
First USAAF raid 25 July A second daylight raid by the USAAF was conducted on 25 July. 323 aircraft attacked Hamburg,
Kiel and
Warnemünde. 127 aircraft were assigned to bomb the
Blohm and Voss shipyard and the
Klöckner aero-engine factory in Hamburg. On the outward leg of the raid, the formation was attacked by about 30 German fighters. Only two bombers were lost before reaching the target. 90 out of 127
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses reached Hamburg at 16:40. Despite being partly covered in smoke from the previous night bombing, some buildings in the shipyard were hit but the vital U-boat construction slipways were not damaged. The aero-engine factory was completely covered by smoke and secondary targets were bombed instead, including a generating station. Two large liners used as a depot and barracks ship were hit and sunk. German flak damaged 78 aircraft; ten of the damaged bombers that had to leave the formation were finished off by fighters. Over the North Sea on the way back to bases, the formation was attacked by eight night-fighters operating from The Netherlands but they achieved nothing, whilst losing one of their number. Air reconnaissance on 25 July at 18:30 revealed that Hamburg was still covered in smoke from the previous raids, so another attack by the main force of bomber command on Hamburg for that night was cancelled and instead 705 bombers raided
Essen that night. Six
De Havilland Mosquitos of
No. 139 Squadron RAF Light Night Striking Force (LNSF) carried out a nuisance raid in order to keep the city on a state of alert.
Second USAAF raid 26 July On 26 July the USAAF continued its attacks against targets in North-Germany. The same six
bombardment groups that had bombed Hamburg the previous day, were ordered to bomb the same targets. The other bombardment groups attacked the
Conti rubber plant in
Hanover. Due to problems with the formation of the
combat boxes and many early returns, only 54 aircraft bombed Hamburg. There was no cloud nor much smoke from burning buildings, but the Germans managed in time to conceal the harbour with artificial smoke. Again secondary targets were bombed: some buildings on the
Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft U-boat shipyard were hit but no important installations were damaged. The power station in Neuhof was put out of order for one month and deprived Hamburg of 40% of its electricity capacity at a critical moment. All planes bombarded within a minute at 12:00. The German flak managed to damage only two airplanes, which were lost during the homebound journey to England. German fighters concentrated their attacks against the
Hanover raid which lost 22 airplanes. The results of the bombing in Hanover were amplified by the fact that most of the firemen were sent as reinforcement to Hamburg.
Second RAF raid 27/28 July There was no RAF raid by the main force in the night of 26 July; Bomber Command rarely sent out its main force on three consecutive nights. Six Mosquitos of No. 139 Squadron RAF carried out a nuisance strike. On the night of 27 July, shortly before midnight, 787 RAF aircraft74
Vickers Wellingtons, 116
Short Stirlings, 244
Handley Page Halifaxes and 353
Avro Lancastersbombed Hamburg. and up to altitudes in excess of , incinerating more than of the city.
Asphalt streets appeared to burst into flame (in fact, it was the phosphorus from the fire bombs that was burning), and
fuel oil from damaged and destroyed ships, barges and storage tanks spilled into the water of the canals and the harbour, causing them to ignite as well. An estimated 18,474 people died on this night. A large number of those killed were seeking safety in
air raid shelters and cellars. The firestorm consumed the oxygen in the burning city above and the
carbon monoxide poisoned those sheltering below. The furious winds created by the firestorm had the power to sweep people up off the streets like dry leaves. of the city's center were ablaze just 30 minutes after the start of the firestorm.
Third RAF raid 29/30 July Hamburg was only attacked in the night of 28 July by four Mosquitos executing a
nuisance raid, a raid by the main force was impossible because of the smoke of the previous bombardment which would hide target indicators. On 29 July a photo reconnaissance
Spitfire from
No. 542 Squadron RAF reported good weather and no problems with smoke so a third RAF raid was ordered. 777 bombers took off, of which 707 reached Hamburg. There were still fires burning which made visual marking possible, but still the Pathfinders used H2S radar to execute their markings. The Pathfinders missed the aiming point by and marked a district south of the region destroyed in the previous raid. Bombers flew in from the north and because a creepback of developed, the districts
Barmbek and
Wandsbek were very hard hit. Small fires developed easily into large fires as by this time the firefighting effort had collapsed because of the earlier raids. The Germans did not record specific data for this raid, the number of victims is unknown but on this night 370 people died by carbon monoxide poisoning in a large public shelter.
Fourth RAF raid 2/3 August On 30 July Bomber Command was ordered to attack towns in Italy. These raids were cancelled the same day, but too late to mount a raid to Hamburg. A planned raid on 31 July was cancelled due to thunderstorms over the UK. Because of bad weather, the next attack on Hamburg was delayed until 2 August. Despite weather reconnaissance reports about possible storms close to Hamburg, 737 bombers took off. Five bombers were shot down by night fighters over the North Sea. Just before reaching the German coast, the bomber stream met a severe storm which forced many aircraft to abort or to bomb alternative targets.
Cuxhaven,
Bremerhaven,
Bremen,
Wilhelmshaven,
Heligoland and other towns as far as away from Hamburg reported bombs. At least four bombers crashed because of the storm. Only 400 bombers reached Hamburg but as the Pathfinders could not execute an effective marking, most of the bombs fell scattered over the city and its environments. During this raid, the Germans further developed tactics to counter the effects of "Window": a running commentary was broadcasting all available data about the bomber stream. Some night fighters operated independently from ground radar guidance and used this information to search for targets. This tactic would later be further developed into what became known as ''''. Five bombers were shot down by night fighters over the North Sea, eight were destroyed around Hamburg and a further eleven were lost on the homebound journey. Because of the storm, the bomber stream became less concentrated and some bombers lost the protection of "Window" and fell victim to night fighters operating in the
Kammhuber Line. == Overview Operation Gomorrah ==