"Night Witches" (German: Nachthexen; Russian: ?????? ??????, Nochnye Vedmy) was a World War II German nickname for the women military aviators of the 588th Night Bomber Regiment, known later as the 46th "Taman" Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment, of the Soviet Air Forces. Though women were initially barred from combat, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin issued an order on October 8, 1941 to deploy three women's air force units, including the 588th regiment. The regiment, formed by Major Marina Raskova and led by Major Yevdokia Bershanskaya, was made up primarily of women volunteers in their late teens and early twenties.
Video Night Witches
History and tactics
The regiment flew harassment bombing and precision bombing missions against the German military from 1942 until the end of the war. At its largest, it had 40 two-person crews. The regiment flew over 23,000 missions, dropping over 3,000 tons of bombs and 26,000 incendiary shells. It was the most highly decorated female unit in the Soviet Air Force, with many pilots having flown over 800 missions by the end of the war and twenty-three having been awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union title. Thirty-two of its members died in the war.
The regiment flew in wood-and-canvas Polikarpov U-2 biplanes, a 1928 design intended for use as training aircraft (hence its original uchebnyy designation prefix of "U-") and for crop dusting, which also had a special U-2LNB version for the sort of night harassment attack missions flown by the 588th, and to this day remains the most-produced wood-airframed biplane in aviation history. The planes could carry only six bombs at a time, so eight or more missions per night were often necessary. Although the aircraft were obsolete and slow, the pilots made daring use of their exceptional maneuverability; they had the advantage of having a maximum speed that was lower than the stall speed of both the Messerschmitt Bf 109 and the Focke-Wulf Fw 190, as a result, German pilots found them very difficult to shoot down with the exception of one German fighter ace, Josef Kociok, who grounded the regiment for an entire night after shooting down four of its planes in one night.
An attack technique of the night bombers was to idle the engine near the target and glide to the bomb release point, with only wind noise left to reveal their location. German soldiers likened the sound to broomsticks and named the pilots "Night Witches." Due to the weight of the bombs and the low altitude of flight, the pilots carried no parachutes until 1944.
When the regiment was deployed to the war-front in June 1942, the 588th Night Bomber Regiment was within the 4th Air Army on the Southern Front. In February 1943, the regiment was honored with the Guards designation and reorganization to the 46th Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment into the 325th Night Bomber Aviation Division, 4th Air Army, 2nd Belorussian Front; in October 1943 it became the 46th "Taman" Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment. "Taman" referred to the unit's involvement in Novorossiysk-Taman operations on the Taman Peninsula during 1943.
Maps Night Witches
Timeline and operations
Members of the regiment were deployed from the Engels Military Aviation School to the Southern Front as part of the 218th Division of the 4th Air Army on 23 May 1942, where they arrived on 27 May.
- 12 June 1942: The regiment's baptism by fire took place on the Southern front in bombings of river crossings on the Mius, Severny Donets, and Don rivers as well as roads in the Sal steppes and Stavropol suburbs.
- August-December 1942: In the Battle of the Caucasus, the regiment defended the city of Vladikavkaz as well as bombing enemy equipment and troops in Digora, Mozdok, and Prokhladnaya.
- January 1943: Assisted in the breakthrough of enemy defensive lines on the Terek River as well as offensive operations against ground troops in the Kuban River valley and Stavropol.
- March - September 1943: Assisted in the breakthrough of the Kuban bridgehead and the liberation of Novorossiysk.
- April - July 1943: Participated in the campaign of aerial warfare over Kuban.
- November 1943 - May 1944: Provided air support to ground troops in the Kerch-Eltigen Operation as part of the Crimean Offensive and in the city of Sevastopol.
- June-July 1944: Bombed enemy fortifications along the Pronya River, helping to take control of Bia?ystok, Cherven, Minsk, and Mogilev in Byelorussia.
- August 1944: Operations over Poland in campaigns to expel the Germans from the cities of Augustów, Warsaw, and Ostro??ka.
- January 1945: Participated in the East Prussian Offensive.
- March 1945: Participated in offensives over Gdynia and Gdansk.
- April - May 1945: Assisted in the Vistula-Oder Offensive.
- 15 October 1945: The regiment was disbanded following the end of the war and service members were demobilized.
Sorties
Throughout the course of the war the regiment accumulated approximately 23,672 sorties in combat, including in the following battles:
- Battle of the Caucasus - 2,920 sorties
- Kuban, Taman, Novorossiysk - 4623 sorties
- Crimean Offensive - 6,140 sorties
- Belarus Offensive - 400 sorties
- Poland Offensive - 5,421 sorties
- German Offensive - 2,000 sorties
In total the regiment collectively accumulated 28,676 flight hours, dropped over 3,000 tons of bombs and over 26,000 incendiary shells, damaging or completely destroying 17 river crossings, nine railways, two railway stations, 26 warehouses, 12 fuel depots, 176 armored cars, 86 firing points, and 11 searchlights. In addition to bombings the unit performed 155 supply drops of food and ammunition to Soviet forces.
Servicemembers
In total, 261 people served in the regiment, of which 32 died of various causes including plane crashes, combat deaths and tuberculosis in addition to 28 aircraft written off.
- Leadership
- Yevdokia Bershanskaya - Regiment Commander
- Serafima Amosova - Deputy Regiment Commander
- Yevdokia Rachkevich - Commissar
- Maria Fortus and later Irina Rakobolskaya - Chief of Staff
- Valentina Stupina and later Khiuaz Dospanova - Head of Communications
- Heroes of the Soviet Union, Russia, and Kazakhstan
Twenty-three personnel from the regiment were awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union, two were awarded Hero of the Russian Federation, and one was awarded Hero of Kazakhstan.
Other women's regiments
On October 8, 1941, Order number 0099 specified the creation of three women's squadrons--all personnel from technicians to pilots would be entirely composed of women. The other two regiments were the 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment, which used Yak-1 fighters, and the 587th Bomber Aviation Regiment, which used twin engine Pe-2 dive bombers. Later the unit received the Guards designation and reorganized as the 125th Guards Dive Bomber Regiment.
Although all three regiments had been planned to have women exclusively, none would remain an all-women regiment. The 586th and 588th Regiments employed male mechanics, the 586th because no women had received training to work on the Yakovlev fighter planes before the war. The 586th's woman commander, Major Tamara Aleksandrovna Kazarinova, was replaced by a man, Major Aleksandr Vasilievich Gridnev, in October 1942. The 587th Regiment was originally under the command of Marina Raskova, but after her death in 1942, a male commanding officer, Major Valentin Vasilievich Markov, replaced her. The 587th's Petlyakov Pe-2 dive bombers also required a tall person to operate the top rear machine gun, but not enough women recruited were tall enough, requiring some men to join the aircrews as radio operator and tail gunner. The 588th Regiment's staff driver and searchlight operatives were also male.
In media
Film and television depictions
- In 1981, a Soviet feature-length film called Night Witches In The Sky (? ???? ?????? ??????) was directed by Yevgenia Zhigulenko, Hero of the Soviet Union, and one of the members of the regiment.
- In 2001, a UK-Russian co-production starring Malcolm McDowell, Sophie Marceau and Anna Friel was due to be made, but failed to get backing from an American studio.
- In 2013 two different productions were released. First came a short animation called The Night Witch commemorating Nadezhda Popova -- who had died earlier that year -- was commissioned in collaboration with The New York Times Magazine's The Lives They Lived issue, and directed by Alison Klayman. Secondly, a Russian TV series titled Night Swallows was produced and distributed. There was also an announcement in the same year of a feature film to be written by Gregory Allen Howard and financed by the grandson of Boris Yeltsin, but there have been no updates since the initial announcement.
Media references
- The Night Witches had appeared in the long-running British comic strip Johnny Red, created by Tom Tully and Joe Colquhoun for the Battle Picture Weekly. Writer Garth Ennis, a childhood fan of the strip, would later write a three-part comic book mini-series called Battlefields: The Night Witches.
- Another comic where the Night Witches appeared is "The Grand Duke" by Yann and Romain Hugault (Archaia Entertainment, 2012.)
- 'Operation Nachthexen', a story in Commando issue 4599 (May 2013), was reputedly the first time a woman was the lead character in a story in this publication. The addition of two further stories, 'Witch Hunt' (4616, July 2013) and 'Warrior's Return' (4635, September 2013) produced the 'Nachthexen Saga' trilogy. All three stories were written by Mac MacDonald and illustrated by Carlos Pino. The protagonist is named Yana Belinky.
- Jason Morningstar's Night Witches is a tabletop role-playing game (Bully Pulpit Games, 2015).
- Red Sisters, Black Skies is an 18 player live action role-playing game run at the 2017 Phenomenon Role-playing Convention in Canberra based on Jason Morningstar's Night Witches. The game was held for two sessions and involved social interactions between night raids over 3 days. The "GM" Melody won the best new designer award.
- In 2017, Big Finish Productions, an audio drama company who produce official Doctor Who plays, released The Night Witches, a historical adventure written by Roland Moore, and featuring the Second Doctor.
- The Swedish Power metal band Sabaton, famous for their war-themed material, have a song called "Night Witches" based on the regiment.
- The Dutch death metal band Hail of Bullets have a song called "Nachthexen".
- Varvara Sidorovna, a recurring character in novels and comics in the Rivers of London series by Ben Aaronovitch, is a literal witch (or a "magical practitioner") who used to be a member of the Night Witches. Although she is around ninety years old at the time the series take place (early 21st century), her aging reversed sometime in 1966 and she now looks like a young woman.
- Lieutenant Ludmila Gorbunova from Worldwar by Harry Turtledove is a member of the Night Witches.
- The British prog-rock band Wolf People have a song called "Night Witch".
- The novel called "Night Witches" by Kathryn Lasky.
See also
- 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment, the women's fighter regiment founded by Marina Raskova.
- 125th Guards Dive Bomber Regiment, another women's bomber regiment founded by Raskova.
- 1077th Anti-Aircraft Regiment, a Soviet regiment that fought in the Battle of Stalingrad composed predominantly of young women volunteers
- Central Women's Sniper Training School, a Soviet all-female sniper academy in WWII
- Washing Machine Charlie, the term for Japanese night harassment aircraft during WW II's Guadalcanal Campaign and later.
References
Bibliography
- Cottam, Kazimiera Janina (1998). Women in War and Resistance: Selected Biographies of Soviet Women Soldiers. Newburyport, MA: Focus Publishing/R. Pullins Co. ISBN 1-58510-160-5.
- Cruz, Alberto (2013). Las brujas de la noche. El 46 Regimiento Taman de aviadoras soviéticas en la II Guerra Mundial (in Spanish). La Caída. ISBN 9788461662296.
- Milanetti, Gian Piero (2013). Soviet Airwomen of the Great Patriotic War: A pictorial history. Istituto Bibliografico Napoleone, Rome, Italy. ISBN 9788875651466.
- Milanetti, Gian Piero (2011). Le Streghe della Notte: La storia non detta delle eroiche ragazze-pilota dell'Unione Sovietica nella Grande Guerra Patriottica (in Italian). Istituto Bibliografico Napoleone, Roma, Italia. ISBN 88-7565-100-0.
- Pennington, Reina (1997). Wings, Women, and War: Soviet Airwomen in World War II Combat. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-1554-7.
- Sakaida, Henry (2003). Heroines of the Soviet Union: 1941-45. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-598-3.
Further reading
- Dixon, Robyn (May 10, 2001). "Day of Glory for USSR's Night Witches". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
- Wright, Mike (1998). What they didn't teach you about World War II. Novato, California: Presido. ISBN 978-0-89141-649-4.
External links
- Duncan, Phyllis-Anne (2014). "Russian Women Pilots". avstop.com. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
- "The Night Witches - Russian Combat Pilots of World War Two". h2g2. June 21, 2015. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
- "The photographies of 46th GNBAP planes and pilotesses". February 16, 2018. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
- Iken, Katja (November 16, 2009). "Stalins Himmelstürmerinnen" [Stalin's sky stormers]. Spiegel Online (in German). Hamburg: SpiegelNet GmbH. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
- Dowdy, Linda (2008). "The Night Witches: The True Story of an Incredible Group of Women". Seize the Sky. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
Source of the article : Wikipedia