In late 1943, the
22d Antisubmarine Squadron of the
Eighth Air Force was disbanded at
RAF Alconbury and its aircraft used to form the
36th and
406th Bombardment Squadrons under the 482nd bomb group. After some shuffling of commands, these two squadrons were placed under the provisional
801st Bomb Group at
RAF Tempsford at the beginning of 1944 and the first "Carpetbagger" missions were carried out at 5 January by this unit under the control of
General "Wild Bill" Donovan's Office of Strategic Services (OSS). The last Tempsford sortie is registered as of 15 March 1944. In 5 April 1944, the group was moved to
RAF Harrington (Station 179), (and the first 17 sorties done) a more secluded and thus more secure airbase. A month later, in advance of the expected invasion of Europe, it was expanded to four squadrons to increase its capabilities and to pick up workload from
RAF Bomber Command; the two new squadrons were the
788th and
850th Bombardment Squadrons. The Group had already adopted the nickname of "Carpetbaggers" from its original operational codename. In August 1944, the group dropped the "Provisional" status and absorbed the names of the
492d Bombardment Group from
RAF North Pickenham, which had stood down after severe losses in its initial operations but stayed at Harrington; its squadrons became the 856th, 857th, 858th and 859th Bomb Squadrons. From January 1944 to the end of the war, the Group, in liaison with the British
Special Operations Executive and later the Special Forces Headquarters (SFHQ) in London, dropped spies and supplies to the resistance forces of France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway.During a hiatus in operations from mid-September 1944 to the end of 1944, the Group ferried gasoline to depots on the Continent for two weeks to supply advancing Allied armies, then three squadrons went into training for night bombing operations, whilst the 856th participated in the return of Allied airmen on the Continent who had either evaded capture or had walked out of Switzerland after that country relaxed its internment practices. This exercise was carried out mostly in
Douglas C-47 Skytrains assigned to the group originally for insertion operations during the previous summer. In December 1944, the 859th was sent on Detached Service with the
Fifteenth Air Force in the
Mediterranean Theater of Operations with the
2641st Special Group (Provisional) at Brindisi, Italy. The 856th Bomb Squadron, after completing the personnel recovery mission, resumed Carpetbagger operations on a limited basis during the bad weather of the winter of 1945, while the remaining two squadrons (the 857th and 858th) participated in medium altitude bombing from late December 1944 through March 1945. In the spring of 1945, Carpetbagger operations resumed but not to the extent of the previous year. The 857th was detached and sent to
RAF Bassingbourn (
91st Bomb Group) at the end of March 1945, while the 856th and 858th dropped small numbers of agents and sabotage teams into the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway and Germany. Operations came to an end at Harrington at the end of April 1945, though a few special OSS missions, such as returning dignitaries to formerly occupied countries, carried on until the Group disbanded and returned to the United States in early July 1945. ==Operations==