The first large Allied aerial attack on Zadar was carried out on 2 November 1943 by the
USAAF 12th Air Force, during which an orphanage was destroyed, among other buildings. Larger attacks followed on 28 November in which 200 people were killed, and on 16 December and 30 December. These first attacks caused many civilian casualties, but the city continued to function despite the damage. The attack on the 16th was especially harsh, as the shelters at
Voštarnica and at the city's centre were hit, killing between 150 and 200 people. Fifty
American B-25 medium bombers participated in the strikes, dropping 90 tonnes of bombs. Besides these main attacks, the city was bombed to a lesser degree on other days. Through the use of
carpet bombing, entire neighborhood blocks were destroyed. The city centre was hardest hit, especially around the Forum and the
Callelarga street where no buildings were spared. As with other cases of urban bombings the damage was not caused by the initial explosions but the resulting fires, which turned the city into a pile of skeletons of burnt-out houses. Each attack targeted a specific part of the city. On the 16th, the area from the Church of Our Lady of Good Health to across the Callelarga to the Piazza delle Erbe (today's
People's Square) was targeted, while on the 30th the area from the
Riva Nova waterfront to Giuseppe Verdi Theatre was attacked. On 31 December, the city hospital and the majority of the industrial machinery was destroyed. The Luxardo factory (manufacturer of the
Maraschino cherry
liqueur) was set on fire, and the building burned for three days. Attacks which completely ravaged Zadar followed from January to March 1944. On 16 January 1944,
Liberator heavy bombers attacked Zara, losing one bomber but claiming nine
Luftwaffe fighters. However, the number of casualties was much less because the population rendered homeless escaped to the less damaged outskirts (Arbanasi and Stanovi) as well as Zadar's islands. It is estimated that in the spring of 1944, there were fewer than 4,000 civilians left in the city. Even though the industrial plants and piers were crippled, bombing continued throughout of 1944. Thus, the Germans were forced to establish a port in
Zaton near
Nin and
Ražanac. By the summer, the center of Zadar had practically ceased to exist. The majority of houses were completely destroyed and their ruins buried the streets. The city was desolate. The period from June to the beginning of October was not marked by any large attacks, but they resumed in the middle of October as German forces abandoned the city. The worst attacks came on the 25th and 30th of that month when the areas of Arbanasi and Brodarica, Jazina, and the
Riva Nova waterfront were hit. The last attacks came on the 31st on the same day that the forces of the
Yugoslav Partisans entered Zadar. During the attacks, a number of Partisans were killed in the attack by accident. ==Destruction and casualties==