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Zerstörergeschwader 26

Zerstörergeschwader 26 (ZG 26) "Horst Wessel" was a Luftwaffe heavy fighter wing of World War II.

Zerstörergeschwader 26 "Horst Wessel"
Crest of ZG 26
Active1 May 1939– September 1944
Country Nazi Germany
Branch Luftwaffe
TypeHeavy fighter
RoleAir superiority
Offensive counter air
close air support
SizeAir Force Wing
Patron Horst Wessel
EquipmentMesserschmitt Bf 110
Messerschmitt Me 410
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Joachim-Friedrich Huth
Insignia
Identification
symbol
Geschwaderkennung
of 3U

Formed on 1 May 1939, ZG 26 was initially armed with the Messerschmitt Bf 109 single-engine interceptor due to production shortfalls with the Messerschmitt Bf 110 Zerstörer-class aircraft. The wing served on the dormant Western Front during the Phoney War stage in 1939 and 1940. During this phase ZG 26 was equipped with the Bf 110. It formed part of Luftflotte 2 and fought in the Battle of the Netherlands, Battle of Belgium and Battle of France in May and June 1940. The wing continued to operate in the Battle of Britain, albeit in a much reduced role owing to losses.

In 1941 ZG 26 served again with success in the German invasion of Yugoslavia and Battle of Greece and then Battle of Crete in April and May. From June 1941, the bulk of ZG 26 fought on the Eastern Front from Operation Barbarossa which began the war on the Soviet Union. ZG 26 supported Army Group Centre and Army Group North. A group of ZG 26 flew and served in the Battle of the Mediterranean and North African Campaign from January 1941 through to May 1943.

From mid-1943, ZG 26 served and fought against the US Eighth Air Force and Fifteenth Air Force in the Defence of the Reich campaign with moderate success until US long-range fighters made further operations too costly. ZG 26 was disbanded in September 1944 and re-designated a Bf 109-unit, Jagdgeschwader 6.

Formation Edit

Zerstörergeschwader 26 was formed in 1939 from the Jagdgeschwader 134 "Horst Wessel". The Geschwaderstab and I. Gruppe was located in Dortmund, II. Gruppe in Werl and III. Gruppe in Lippstadt.[citation needed] ZG 26 was formally named on 1 May 1939, from ZG 142.[1]

World War II Edit

In 1939 the production of Bf 110s precluded the equipment of Zerstorer wings with the type. The heavy fighter was intended as a long-range fighter escort, air superiority and anti-bomber aircraft weapon. The Zerstörergeschwader adopted the Messerschmitt Bf 109D, single-engine interceptor until the Bf 110 became available.[2] The ZG 26's III gruppe was give temporary Jagdgruppe (fighter group) designations. In the case of III./ZG 26 it was renamed JGr 126. This formally ended during the Phoney War when III./ZG 26 exchanged the Bf 109 for the Bf 110 and reverted to its original identity.[3] On 31 August 1939, Stab. I., and II./ZG 26 were under the command of Luftgau XI at Hannover. Luftgau VI, headquartered at Werl, controlled III./ZG 26.[4]

On 1 September 1939 the German Wehrmacht began the Invasion of Poland beginning World War II in Europe. ZG 26, based in northern and western Germany served in the air defence role during the Phoney War phases of the war. The wing defended the German North Sea coast from incursions by RAF Bomber Command. On 29 September 1939, a No. 144 Squadron RAF Handley-Page Hampden was shot down by Günther Specht.[5] Four were claimed by ZG 26 pilots.[6] The future German ace lost an eye on 3 December in combat with a No. 38 Squadron RAF Wellington.[7][8]

On 6 December ZG 26 incurred one of its first casualties when a Bf 110 from 2./ZG 26 collided with an Avro Anson from No. 209 Squadron RAF 70 miles north of Texel.[9] I./ZG 26 transferred to Stab./ZG 26 from the control of JG 1 on 11 December bring existing groups under the direct control of the command, Stab, staffel (Squadron).[10] On 14 December 1939, 12 Vickers Wellington bombers on an anti-shipping patrol were spotted. Four Bf 110s from 2./ZG 26 at Jever, with support from II./JG 77 Messerschmitt Bf 109s, intercepted and shot down five British bombers. Air Officer Commanding No. 3 Group RAF, Jackie Baldwin, likened the mission to the charge of the light brigade.[11]

Elements of the wing fought at the Battle of the Heligoland Bight, the first named air battle of the war. ZG 26 was unable to intercept. A flight of Bf 110s from ZG 76, led by Hauptmann Wolfgang Falck, claimed four bombers. Falck's fighter was hit and badly damaged. The battle ended daylight sorties by Bomber Command over Germany until late 1944. The defeat forced the British to revise their policy to night bombing, and has been regarded as among the most influential air engagements of the war.[12][13] Bomber Command's shift to night operations led to calls for the expansion of the night fighter force. ZG 26 donated 10 staffel to the formation of IV(Nacht)/JG 2 in December 1939.[14]

On 15 December 1939, I./ZG 26 was based at Lippstadt, under the command of Fliegerkorps I. III./ZG 26 was subordinated to Luftgau XI and Bönninghardt. Stab. and II./ZG 26 remained at Dortmund and Werl respectively under the command of Fliegerkorps IV.[15] Thereafter, the assignment of Stab./ZG 26 is unknown. The units does not appear on the air corps' order of battle on 10 May.[16] On 10 May 1940 II./ZG 26 had moved to Kaarst-Neuss, under the command of Fliegerkorps I.[17] By 5 June 1940 it had been assigned to Fliegerdivision 9. I./ZG 26 was deleted from I Fliegerkorps' order of battle by the 10 May, and its location is not known.[17] The Stab/ZG 26 had all three Bf 110s operational. I./ZG 26 could field only 11 of the 34 Bf 110s it had, while III./ZG 26 reported 30 of 37 aircraft combat ready. II./ZG 26 reported 25 of 35 Bf 110s operational.[18]

Western Europe Edit

On 10 May 1940 Fall Gelb, the Wehrmacht's offensive in Western Europe began beginning the Battle of the Netherlands, Battle of Belgium and Battle of France. ZG 26 was ordered to support the invasion of the Netherlands and Army Group B. With support from JG 26, it could not prevent the Dutch Air Force from downing 11 German bombers on the opening day; one of them was the commanding officer of Kampfgeschwader 4, who became a prisoner of war for several days.[19] The Dutch fighters accounted for 21 German aircraft in total, and flew 87 of the 150 sorties logged on the day. In the battles they lost 25 of their own against JG 26 and ZG 26.[19] The Dutch were reduced to 70 aircraft by the following morning but continued to harass the German air operations and claimed a further 13 German aircraft over the next four days.[19] Battles were fought simultaneously over Belgium. The counter-air operations were successful and Joachim-Friedrich Huth's pilots, with support from JG 26, claimed the majority of the 82 Allied aircraft claimed by Luftflotte 2 over the 11–13 May 1940.[20] Belgian aerial resistance was broken on the first day of operations. A total of 83 Belgian machines–mostly trainers were destroyed.[21] The AéMI flew only 146 sorties in the first six days. Between 16 May and 28 May, the AéMI flew just 77 operations.[22]

The long-range Bf 110s were used in the fighter escort role in the afternoon of 11 May. I./ZG 26 sent 15 of its aircraft to escort 30 Dornier Do 17 bombers from III./KG 76 on a bombing raid to Reims. No. 1 Squadron RAF intercepted them and claimed no fewer than nine Bf 110s. Witnesses on the ground claimed they saw six Bf 110s fall, and later ten wrecks were allegedly found on the ground. In reality, I./ZG 26 reported two losses. Two 1./ZG 26 pilots were captured but neither of the gunners survived.[23] I./ZG 26 was known to have engaged No. 73 Squadron RAF near Poilcourt, for one of the Hawker Hurricanes was reported lost in an action involving it.[24] On 14 May 1940, known as the "day of the fighters", I./ZG 26, 2 staffel reported the loss of two aircraft and crews, both of whom were killed. The group formed part of a bomber escort mission against Laon. The formation overflew Berry-au-Bac airfield at 15,000 feet prompting the resident 1 Squadron to scramble and engage. The action cost the British squadron two pilots killed. III./ZG 26 formed part of the escort for an attack on convoys near Namur. No. 73 Squadron RAF lost one pilot attacking the Bf 110s, while the group engaged Amiot 143 bombers from GB 1/34 or GB II/34 (Groupe de Bombardement ) and accounted for one destroyed. All the remaining bombers were damaged beyond repair.[25] II./ZG 26 supported the defence of the captured bridges at Sedan. Along with III./JG 2, I./JG 53, they shot down seven bombers from 28 sent by 2 Group RAF, and drawn from 21, 107 and 110 Squadrons.[26] ZG 26 is credited with four of the Hurricanes lost that day according to RAF Advanced Air Striking Force casualty lists; three against 1 Squadron and another against 73 Squadron.[27]

 
Bf 110s during the Western campaign, 1940. They probably belong to Zerstörergeschwader 76.

On 15 May ZG 26 and 73 Squadron met in combat again. III./ZG 26 escorted 40 DO 17s of I. and II./KG 3 on a mission over Allied air bases. 73 Squadron intercepted and in the ensuing dogfights, the RAF pilots claimed four Bf 110s for the loss of two Hurricanes. The German pilots filed claims for nine "Moranes" [mistakenly identifying the Hurricanes as French fighters] for the loss of two Bf 110s destroyed and two badly damaged in crash-landings, confirming British claims. Only two Hurricanes were shot down with both pilots surviving. One of the German losses came from 7./ZG 26, one from 8./ZG 26, and two from 9./ZG 26.[28] 5./ZG 26 intercepted a Westland Lysander, 13 Squadron, escorted by Hurricanes from No. 85 Squadron RAF. The German fighters succeeded in attacking from above and shot down three Hurricanes seriously burning one pilot.[29] 5./ZG 26 was left with only three serviceable Bf 110s.[30]

85 Squadron encountered ZG 26 three days later, when six of their Hurricanes, including a section [A Flight] from No. 242 Squadron RAF, and three more from No. 87 Squadron RAF patrolled the Le Cateau quadrant. All three Canadian pilots from 242 A flight and two 85 Squadron pilots were shot down.[31] The battle cost I./ZG 26 three aircraft; one from 2./ZG 26 and two from 3./ZG 26.[31] 85 Squadron suffered one pilot killed, another wounded. One of the Canadians was captured, the others wounded.[32] Later in the day, between Douai and Valenciennes, A flight from No. 111 Squadron RAF and B Flight from No. 253 Squadron RAF encountered nine Bf 110s from I./ZG 26, escorting Heinkel He 111s belonging to I. and II./KG 54, and II./ZG 26, escorting Do 17s from II./KG 76. The Hurricanes shot down one and damaged one of the Dorniers, all from 4./KG 76 while 1./ZG 26 lost one Bf 110 and two others severely damaged protecting them. Two 5./ZG 26 Messerschmitts escorting a Do 17P reconnaissance aircraft failed to protect it from an attack by No. 17 Squadron RAF. The British claimed one of the Bf 110s and reported the other fled upon seeing them.[33] In the afternoon I./ZG 26 and II./JG 26 straffed Vitry airfield as No. 56 Squadron RAF took off to intercept I./KG 54 which bombed the Amiens – Glisy Aerodrome, the main supply base for replacement Hurricanes for the RAF in France. The Bf 110s shot down two killing both pilots including 18-year old Pilot Officer Dillon. One of the group was caught and shot down by No. 3 Squadron RAF[34] Hurricane pilots claimed 32 Bf 110s on this date but only 16 were reported destroyed by the Germans.[35]

On 19 May large air battles occurred over Lille as encircled Allied forces held out. ZG 26 continued in the escort role as the German army reached the English Channel the following morning, cutting off British, Belgian and French forces from the rest of France. A composite force of 111 and 253 Squadron left RAF Hawkinge to patrol Cambrai. After encountering an unidentified Do 17 formation they ran into II./ZG 26 Bf 110s escorting 60 kg 54 He 111 bombers. I. and II./JG 3 were present as the dogfight started. Five Hurricanes were shot down in the fight with Bf 110s and Bf 109s and one damaged by the bombers. It is believed four fell to Bf 109s and three pilots killed. A single 111 Squadron was credited to ZG 26; 111's Squadron Leader John Marlow Thompson survived.[36] Later in the day, KG 54 were operating in the Cambrai sector again covered by I./JG 27 and I./ZG 26. A composite force of 145 and 601 Squadrons intercepted. The latter lost one Hurricane to each German wing and a further damaged by ZG 26.[37] III./ZG 26 flew as fighter escort for KG 3 as it operated against rail and road traffic west of the Seine and Aisne.[38]

On 20 May, the Panzer Divisions of Army Group A reached the Channel. I./ZG 26 was in action against 87 Squadron while escorting Junkers Ju 88s. The British claimed one Bf 110 and another damaged. II./ZG 26 fought to protect Ju 88s from III./LG 1 over Norrent-Fontes against No. 615 Squadron RAF.[39] Hurricane pilots claimed seven Bf 110s on this date. German forces reported the loss of one. Two Ju 88s were lost on 20 May, though British pilots claimed six.[40] 85 Squadron and 615 reported the loss of one Hurricane each in force-landings after combat with I./ZG 26 indicating other engagements on the day.[41] From 21 May, Amiens fell, and Boulogne was threatened. 4 and 13 Squadron remained flying army-cooperation flights between Lille and Saint-Omer. The squadrons lost five between them; I./ZG 26 were responsible for one. ZG 26 operated over the Pas-de-Calais through the day as the British counter-attacked at Arras.[42] On 23 May, a group of the ZG 26 reported only 19 of the 26 Bf 110s operational.[43] During the Battle of Calais, on 24 May, ZG 26, with ZG 76, encountered the Supermarine Spitfire for the first time. No. 92 Squadron RAF lost two Spitfires, while the ZG's reported two losses between them.[44]

From 25 May 1940 ZG 26 was reassigned from Jagdfliegerführer 2 to Fliegerkorps V to provide KG 51 with support.[45] ZG 26 remained in action during the Dunkirk evacuation, and the final phase of the French campaign, Fall Rot. Over 31 May, ZG 26 claimed five Spitfires over Dunkirk.[46] Two Hurricanes were known to have been shot down in combat with Bf 110s. Both No. 229 Squadron RAF pilots survived. A Spitfire from No. 64 Squadron RAF was reported lost in combat with Bf 110s. Its pilot was captured but later died of wounds.[47] On 5 June Stab./ZG 26 was based at Sint-Truiden, I./ZG 26 at Yvrench/Saint Omer, II./ZG 26 at Lille and III./ZG 26 at Arques, Pas-de-Calais.[48] ZG 26 was subordinated to Fliegerkorps I in June and flew in support of German air operations against Operation Aerial. By the end of the French campaign following the Armistice of 22 June 1940, the Zerstörergeschwader 1, 2, 26, 52 and 76 had suffered a combined loss of 32 percent—the worst percentage loss by any German wing type.[49]

Battle of Britain Edit

In July 1940, the Churchill Government rejected Adolf Hitler's offers of a peace settlement. Hitler authorised the planning for Operation Sea Lion, a proposed amphibious landing in the United Kingdom. The Luftwaffe began an air campaign against Channel convoys, beginning the first phase of what became known as the Battle of Britain. The Kanalkampf was designed to draw out RAF Fighter Command and achieve air superiority by defeating it in battle, and by bombing airfields and known supporting facilities; radar stations and factories.

ZG 26 was based at multiple locations in northern France. Huth and the Stab./ZG 26 was based at Lille. I./ZG 26, under Hauptmann Wilhelm Macrocki located to Yvrench. II./ZG 26 under the command of Ralph von Rettberg based itself at Crécy-en-Ponthieu while III./ZG 26 based at Barley under Hauptmann Johann Schalk. The wing was returned to Jagdfliegerführer 2, under the command of Luftflotte 2.[50] On 9 July 1940, one day before the officially recognised start of the Battle of Britain, III./ZG 26 were ordered to cover raids against convoys. The vulnerability of Bf 110s to nimble Hurricane and Spitfires necessitated their own protection by Bf 109s. Their charges, He 111s from I./KG 53 and Ju 88s, probably from I. and II./KG 51, lost only aircraft; a He 111. In defending the bombers, the gruppe lost three Bf 110s and another damaged, losing seven airmen as missing in action. Only one pilot survived. The air battle occurred over the Thames Estuary and Folkestone. ZG 26's opponents were from No. 43 Squadron RAF, and No. 151 Squadron RAF. Two No. 43 Squadron Hurricanes were destroyed with the pilots safe, and 151 lost one destroyed in combat and one damaged; one pilot was wounded. The identity of the German fighter unit responsible for each is unknown, but the four were reported shot down. Squadron Leader, No. 43 Squadron, G. C. Lott was wounded in the eyes.[51] The following day, 10 July, the battle opened with heavy air attacks against Convoy Bread. I. and III./ZG 26 and I./JG 3 Bf 109s escorted 26 Do 17s from I./KG 2. No. 74 Squadron RAF engaged and the wing lost one crew and another aircraft damaged. 74 Squadron suffered damage to three Spitfires, while KG 2 lost two bombers and one severely damaged in combat with 111 and No. 32 Squadron RAF.[52]

 
Fueling a Bf 110 of ZG 26, October 1940

On 29 July, Eight Bf 110s from 1. Staffel and three from 2. Staffel/Schnellkampfgeschwader 210 were met near Dunkirk by 30 Bf 110 escorts from ZG 26. The formation set out for the convoys. They were intercepted and attacked by No. 151 Squadron Hurricanes. Two Hurricanes force-landed, the pilots unharmed, an Erpro 210 Bf 110 was damaged and ZG 26 suffered no losses, the attackers claiming hits on a 1,000 GRT and an 8,000 GRT ship.[53] The last actions of the Kanalkampf were fought on 11 August, with a final German attack on convoys Booty, Agent and Arena. Walter Rubensdörffer led ErpGr 210 off the Harwich–Clacton coast at noon GMT. The Germans spotted the ships and began their bombing run against Booty. Rubensdörffer and his Zerstörer were accompanied by eight Do 17s from the specialist 9./KG 2, whose crews were trained for low-level attacks. Twenty Bf 110s from ZG 26 provided high cover for the bombers. The fighters were intercepted by Spitfires from 74 and 85 squadrons while six Hurricanes from No. 17 Squadron attacked. No. 85 Squadron led by Peter Townsend shot down three Bf 110s and the Hurricanes one more; two Bf 110s and three Do 17s were damaged.[54] Rubensdörffer's group attacked and withdrew. It was followed by another raid, designed to catch those fighters already in combat when they were low on fuel and unable to assist. ZG 26 destroyed one Hurricane and damaged another from 17 Squadron killing one pilot. Two pilots from No. 74 Squadron were shot down and killed.[55][56][57][broken footnote]

On 13 August the Luftwaffe initiated Operation Eagle Attack—Adlertag. The morning weather was bad and Hermann Göring ordered a postponement of raids.[58] KG 2 were not informed and took off at 04:50 for their target. ZG 26 were scheduled as their escort, but received the cancellation order. Oberstleutnant Huth took off to warn the Dorniers of the cancellation. Unable to contact the bombers by radio, Huth tried to signal them by flying in front of them and performing aerobatics. Commander of the bomber force, Johannes Fink, ignored him and flew on. The raid was detected but incorrectly plotted causing Fighter Command to miss the unprotected Dorniers.[59] On the 15 August (known as "black Thursday" in the Luftwaffe), ZG 26 did not suffer losses, but the following day the wing reported two losses, one destroyed one damaged, in combat with Spitfires from No. 19 Squadron RAF over Harwich. The damaged fighter belonged to the Stab./ZG 26.[60] The burden of the Zerstörergeschwader 15 August operations fell to ZG 76, which suffered heavy casualties operating from bases in Norway.[61]

 
Messerschmitt Bf 110 under attack from a Spitfire, caught on the latter's gun camera

On 18 August, a date known as The Hardest Day, ZG 26 performed in the combat air patrol role. RAF Biggin Hill and RAF Kenley. KG 1 was to send 60 He 111s to conduct a high-level attack on Biggin Hill. kg 76 was to attack RAF Kenley. kg 76 could muster 48 Do 17s and Ju 88s. Fighter escort was provided by JG 3, JG 26, JG 51, JG 52, JG 54 and ZG 26. The Jagdgeschwader would carry out free-hunting and close escort.[62] ZG 26 and JG 3 were engaged by No. 610, No. 615 and No. 32 Squadrons. No. 615 suffered heavy losses in the battle.[63] ZG 26 were responsible for 12 of the 15 fighters shot down in the battle; nine of which were destroyed.[64] 7./ZG 26 claimed its 30th victory of the war, having suffered only one loss since 1939.[64] The German High Command credited ZG 26 were credited with 51 victories, of the 124 granted to the German fighter units by their command.[64] A maximum of 34 RAF fighters were lost in reality to all causes.[65] ZG 26 reported losses on the day. They were engaged by other fighter squadrons. 56 Squadron was one such unit.[66] In the short and sharp engagement, ZG 26 lost five Bf 110s and another damaged to 56 Squadron.[67] Worse was to follow when No. 54 and No. 501 engaged the Messerschmitts. ZG 26 lost a further two shot down and two damaged to No. 54 Squadron.[68] None of the RAF Squadrons reported any losses in these engagements.[69] ZG 26 lost other machines to No. 151 and 46 Squadrons when they arrived to join the battle.[67]

In the afternoon ZG 26 provided escort for KG 53 bombers bombing RAF North Weald.[70] 13 Hurricanes from 85 Squadron, led by Peter Townsend, struck at the bombers but was blocked by ZG 26. Bf 109s were also present and inconclusive engagements began.[71] No. 85 Squadron accounted for one He 111, but lost a Hurricane to the Bf 110s.[72] KG 53 lost four He 111s destroyed and one damaged. Its personnel losses amounted to 12 dead, two wounded and four prisoners of war. A further five were rescued by British ships, bringing the total number captured to nine.[73] No. 151 Squadron engaged III./ZG 26 but two of the Hurricanes were brought down, including Squadron Leader Eric King directly above the airfield.[74] The low losses of the group in the face of fighter attacks were down to the determination of ZG 26. It cost the unit seven Bf 110s and a further six damaged.[67] According to one source, the total losses of ZG 26 amounted to 12 destroyed and seven damaged throughout the entire day.[67] Another source gives a list of 15 Bf 110s written off: 13 destroyed, two written off and six damaged on 18 August 1940.[75]

The results of the Hardest Day highlighted the vulnerability of Bf 110, which along with the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka, was largely withdrawn from the battle for air superiority for a time The German High Command ordered that the continued use of the Bf 110 necessitated their escort by Bf 109s.[76] On 25 August, in a rare post-18 August foray, ZG 2 made an appearance over England but suffered significant losses.[77] On 6 September ZG 26 was ordered to attack the Brooklands Hawker factory but lost three Bf 110s and their crews when intercepted by 1 Squadron near Kenley.[78] On 11 September, as the Luftwaffe turned to The Blitz, ZG 26 was ordered to provide escort to He 111s from KG 26. The Bf 110s failed to protect their charges, losing five Bf 110s and one damaged from Stab., 1., 2., 4., 6., and 9./ZG 26.[79] Their assailants were from 17, 46 and 73 Squadron.[80] The persistence in using ZG 26 in fighter sweeps cost the wing another two crews on 25 September with two aircraft damaged in combat with 152 and No. 607 Squadron RAF near the Isle of Wight.[81] The following day 70 Bf 110s from ZG 26 flew as escort for KG 55 as it bombed the Spitfire factory at Southampton. Two fighters were lost (from I. and III./ZG 26) in combat with No. 238 Squadron; one of their charges was shot down.[82] On 28 and 29 September ZG 26 flew patrols over Hampshire with support from 60 Bf 109s from JG 2 and JG 53.[83] On 27 September, 30 ZG 26 crews from III./ZG 26 covered KG 55 bombers as they targeted the Bristol factory. Six aircraft were shot down and one damaged in combat with No. 56 and No. 152 Squadrons. Three of the lost machines were from III./ZG 26 and two from II./ZG 26.[84] On 30 September II./ZG 26 flew a combat patrol from Cherbourg to Weymouth, Dorset and shot down five Hurricanes from No. 56 Squadron near Warmwell and damaged two more for the loss of one Bf 110. All six pilots survived.[85]

In October 1940, ZG 26 flew low-level attacks on towns in southern England. On 7 October II. and II./ZG 26 mounted an attack on Yeovil. ZG 26 lost seven aircraft, three from II./ZG 26 and four from III./ZG 26. The losses were inflicted by No. 238 and No. 601 Squadrons and other "Yeovil" defences. One 601 Spitfire was damaged and landed.[86] The Battle of Britain came to an end on 31 October 1940, and Sea Lion was postponed indefinitely.

Eastern Mediterranean and Balkans Edit

ZG 26 relocated to southeast Europe in 1941. III./ZG 26 supported the German invasion of Yugoslavia from 6 April 1941. II./ZG 26 was based at Vrazhdebna, Bulgaria under the command of Fliegerkorps VIII. I./ZG 26 located to Szeged, Hungary under the ad hoc Fliegerfuhrer Arad, under the command of Luftflotte 4.[87] III./ZG 26 had been operating from Sicily, over the besieged island of Malta.[88]

III./ZG 26 carried out strafing attack on Podgorica airfield, destroying two bombers and damaging three belonging to the 81 Independent Grupa at Mostar-Ortijes. The 66 Grupa led by 4 Bombarderska, Colonel Petar Vukcevic, Royal Yugoslav Air Force and 7th Puk bombers were also operating from airfields in the vicinity.[89] Fliegerkorps VIII claimed 60 aircraft on 6 April. II./ZG 26 reported one loss over Skopje.[90] I./ZG 26 supported Operation Retribution, the bombing of Belgrade, and claimed two Yugoslav-flown Bf 109s.[91] In combat with the 6th Puk fighter unit, the group lost five Bf 110s; Yugoslav also accounted for two Do 17s from 8./KG 3.[92]

II./ZG 26 joined Bf 109s from I(J)/LG 2 in battle against the 111 and 112 Eskadrila Hawker Fury fighters led by Captains Vojislav Popovik and Konstantin Jermakov.[93] Jermokov was seen to ram a Bf 110 after exhausting his ammunition. II/ZG 26 lost two crews; the Yugoslavs claimed to have found the body of a Bulgarian Army officer in one of the Bf 110 wrecks. Presumably the officer was assisting the Germans with navigation.[94] German pilots claimed 11 between them. Yugoslav losses are not stated but the 36 Grupa, to which the squadrons belonged, had only two flyable Furies remained air worthy.[94]

Following the swift collapse of the Yugoslav Army, ZG 26 and all its gruppen moved to support the German forces in the Battle of Greece in the fighter and fighter-bomber role.[95] The RAF had sustained heavy losses in the campaign to 20 April. This day was to be its worst. British aerial resistance prompted the Luftwaffe to initiate a sustained attack on airfields in the Athens area.[96] Elements of II./ZG 26 struck at the airfield Menidi, Aetolia-Acarnania airfield on 20 April, a Greek transport, a British courier aircraft and possibly 12 Blenheim bombers from 84, 11 and 211 according to an eyewitness.[97] Records confirm two each destroyed among 11 and 211, while 84 Squadron suffered serious damage to one and another five were damaged.[98]

 
Theodor Rossiwall, ZG 26, 1940. He took part in the "Battle of Athens" in which Pat Pattle was killed.

I./ZG 26 attacked the Hellenic Air Force base Argos, located on the Peloponnesus peninsula to the west of Athens. 40 aircraft of I./ZG 26 commanded and led by Major Mackroki worked over its facilities for upwards of an hour.[99] The action took place on 23 April. The Bf 110s destroyed 13 Hurricanes and trainers from No. 208 Squadron RAF. The Germans claimed 53 in total; almost all the Greek aircraft present were destroyed. Only two RAF Hurricanes remained, plus five that took off as the German raid approached.[100] II./ZG 26 strafed Menidi airfield claiming two aircraft, Hassani and then Megara airstrip claiming four and six destroyed respectively. Amongst those destroyed were six Dornier Do 22s of the Greek 2 Mira. Operations cost the gruppe one aircraft.[89]

ZG 26 supported the rapid advance of ground forces to Athens, where, on 20 April, ZG 26 took part in what has been called the "Battle of Athens". Two of the wing's pilots may have shot down the most successful British Commonwealth pilot of the war, Pat Pattle who was killed.[101][102] II./ZG 26 formed part of an escort force, with Bf 109s from III./JG 77, for approximately 100 Do 17s, and Ju 88s from LG 1. The bombers attacked shipping while ZG 26 loitered strafing targets. In combat with Pattle's squadron, they claimed five. Four Hurricanes were known to have been shot down in combat with Bf 110s. The Hurricane squadron also claimed five Bf 110s but lost two pilots killed. Among the few RAF survivors of the battle still airborne at its end was Pilot Officer Roald Dahl, the future poet and novelist.[103] On 14 May, during te build-up for the Crete landings, I and II/ZG 26 were surprised on their Argos airfield by No. 252 Squadron RAF. The Messerschmitts were lined up wingtip to wingtip and 13 were hit; three destroyed and one damaged.[104]

On 22 May 1941 the final phase of the Greek campaign, the Battle of Crete, began. ZG 26 flew bombing and strafing missions in support of the invasion. Suda Bay and Heraklion airfield were particular targets. On 22 May II./ZG 26 lost two aircraft against these targets and supporting Fallschirmjäger forces.[105] The following day II./ZG 26 assisted 5./JG 77 in attack the British 10th MTB Flotilla which was taking a toll on Axis naval forces. Seven of these Motor Torpedo Boats were destroyed.[106] On 28 May this group, with II/ZG 76, and KG 2, bombed and strafed British positions at Heraklion airfield allowing 900 paratroopers to reinforce the hard-pressed German paratroopers that had survived the disastrous first landing.[107] Among the final actions of the battle, was death of 2./ZG 26 commanding officer Hauptmann Karl Heindorf, who was shot down over Crete on 31 May.[108]

North Africa; Libya and Egypt Edit

In response to the failed Italian invasion of Egypt, Hitler aided Benito Mussolini to prevent a collapse of the Axis powers in the North African Campaign. Operation Compass in 1941 drove out the Italian 10th Army and threatened to destroy Italian forces in Italian Libya. Among the Luftwaffe contingent rushed to Africa was III./ZG 26 along with a single staffel from I./ZG 26, 2./ZG 26. They arrived at airstrips near Castel Benito, Sirte and Marble Arch on 30 January 1941. All of these units came under the command of Gruppenkommandeur Karl Kaschka and his adjutant, Oberleutnant Fritze Schulze-Dickow, who led 8./ZG 26. The group consisted of 7, 8 and 9 staffel. ZG 26 was tasked with supporting elements of StG 1, StG 2 and StG 3 and their Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive-bombers.[109] On 10 February 1941, ZG 26's opponents in Africa amounted to two squadrons; No. 73 Squadron RAF and No. 3 Squadron RAAF. Two days later Erwin Rommel, commander of the German Africa Corps arrived in Tripoli followed by elements of what became the 21st Panzer Division on 14 February. On this date, ZG 26 suffered the first loss in Africa when III Gruppe Bf 110 was shot down and its pilot Unteroffizier Lippski and his gunner captured.[110] A further loss occurred on 15 February, but III./ZG 26 claimed its first success in combat with 3 RAAF on 19 February. The German unit shielded II./StG 2, and at the cost of one Bf 110 and a Ju 87, destroyed two Hurricanes, killing one pilot.[110] With Operation Sonnenblume in the full-swing, III./ZG 26 suffered two casualties on 23 February as Axis forces recaptured Cyrenaica.[111]

7./ZG 26 lost one Bf 110 during the battle of Marsa Brega to 3 RAAF.[112] On 3 April, the 2nd Armoured Division retreated from Antelat, deserting No. 6 Squadron RAF which had arrived in that area. The advance caught the squadron off guard and they retreated to Msus. During the day, 6 squadron ran into a formation of II./StG 2 Ju 87s and eight Bf 110s from III./ZG 26. They claimed three certain and three probable victories against the Ju 87s; only one Ju 87 pilot was killed, and four of the Bf 110s. No German losses are stated, and ZG 26's claims of three Hurricanes cannot be confirmed for 6 Squadron's records were destroyed in the retreat.[113] On 5 April six Bf 110s from ZG 26 strafed an airfield hitting five Bristol Blenheims, a Hurricane and a Lysander. Two of the Blenheim's and the Lysander were unflyable and burned during the retreat.[113]

 
A wrecked Bf 110D from ZG 26, Gazala, December 1941

In early April the frontline consolidated. The 7th Australian Division was landed at Tobruk on 7th and on the 8th the Axis landed the 15th Panzer Division to sustain the drive across Libya and into Egypt. The Allied forces dug in around the port, beginning the Siege of Tobruk. 6 and 73 Squadrons were left in the perimeter of Tobruk, while other Commonwealth units retreated into Egypt. British bomber forces continued long-range support operations; No. 55 Squadron RAF lost a bomber to III./ZG 26 in the process on 8 April.[113] ZG 26 lost two more aircraft and one pilot filled the following day for a single claim, in action with 73 squadron, while a 6 Squadron Hurricane was claimed on 11 April. On 14 April, 70 German aircraft along with support from 18 and 155 Gruppo, Regia Aeronautica, attacked Tobruk. 73 squadron lost one pilot killed against III./ZG 26, but three III./StG 1 crews were shot down and captured. A further attack triggered a battle with 3 RAAF; German records confirm the loss of one ZG 26 crew. ZG 26 were able to account for a No. 45 Squadron RAF Blenheim before Bf 109s from I./JG 27 arrived to carry the burden of fighter operations.[114] On 25 April, III./ZG 26 reported the destruction of one Hurricane but lost Leutnant Oskar Lemcke when he collided with it. No. 274 Squadron RAF lost two pilots missing.[115] In strafing attacks against Tobruk, ZG 26 lost another crew and a further pilot wounded on 1 May.[116] III./ZG 26 supported the defeat of Operation Battleaxe in June 1941, though its pilots claimed a solitary aircraft shot down; on 17 June. The remainder fell to JG 27's Bf 109s.[117]

 
Bf 110 carrying twin 900 litre drop tanks with vertical fins, 9 staffel III./ZG 26

On 30 June, while escorting 20 Ju 87s, with 12 Italian fighters and 10 Bf 109s, five ZG 26 Bf 110s were engaged by No. 250 Squadron RAF and two crews were killed. On 11 or 12 another crew was lost in combat with 1 Squadron SAAF. On 21 August 1941, ZG 26 claimed four 2 Squadron SAAF Hurricanes that were seen to crash; Schultz-Dickow claiming the formation leader, in exchange for one crew killed. On 3 September, near Sollum, two Hurricanes from No. 451 Squadron RAF were intercepted by three III./ZG 26 Bf 110s and lost one pilot. III./ZG 26 had now claimed 33 aerial victories since their arrival in Africa.[118] Large air battles took place in the build-up to Operation Crusader, which ultimately relieved Tobruk. On 15 November three III./ZG 26 aircraft were shot down over Allied territory attack airfields. One them was commanding officer Schultze-Dickow. Another Bf 110 piloted by Oberfeldwebel Swoboda landed in the desert to pick him up. During the month the group replenished its establishment and had three staffeln (7, 8 and 9) operating from Derna, Libya at the beginning of Crusader, the latter staffeln returning from Crete.[119]

On 20 November two crews were wounded and three Bf 110s were shot down in combat on 24 November resulting in the capture of two pilots, one from 8 and 9./ZG 26. The latter combat took place against 4 Squadron SAAF and No. 80 Squadron RAF. The following day four Bf 110s and their crews were lost in what was described as a "bad day for the Bf 110s of III./ZG 26."[120] On 4 December, over the Trigh Capuzzo, Sergeant Dodd, 274 Squadron shot down a Bf 110 piloted by Major Karl Kaschka. Oberleutnant Wehmeyer landed alongside the wreck to find the gunner dead and Kaschka dying.[121] On 12 December the group shot down two 12 Squadron SAAF Martin Maryland bombers and a 55 Squadron Blenheim over the sea. However, on 24 December, Kaschka's replacement at III./ZG 26, Hauptmann Thomas Steinberger was lost at sea with another 9./ZG 26 crew on a ferry flight from Crete.[122]

By 31 December 1941, III./ZG 26 had flown 2,962 sorties in North Africa. 483 of these were close air support. They had lost 11 killed, six in accidents, 27 missing, nine captured and 16 wounded.[123] By 16 January 1942, only 7./ZG 26 remained on the frontline in Africa. It possessed eight aircraft, but only four were operational.[124] Twelve days later, on 26 January another crew was lost; one was captured the others died of wounds. On 13 April, in an unusual episode, Bf 110s of 7./ZG 26 landed at an abandoned British airfield [name unspecified] and destroyed the installations after climbing out of their aircraft.[125] Further details in updated sources indicate six 7./ZG 26 Bf 110s escorted Italian Savoia-Marchetti SM.82s to the airfield. While three Bf 110s flew cover, 60 Italian personnel landed and destroyed abandoned fuel and lubrication tanks in an operation lasting until 10:00.[126] ZG 26 engaged in maritime and air escort sorties. On one such operation it lost one of three 7./ZG 26 Bf 110s escorting Junkers Ju 52 transports. They were unable to prevent nine Ju 52s from being shot down by Allied fighters on 12 May. KGrzbV 400 and III./KGrzbV 1 lost four each, KGrzbV1 lost a single transport.[127]

The wing operated in the close air support role in May 1942, losing one on 2nd and 12th, then operating in support of the Battle of Gazala. On 27 May the group claimed two Hurricanes for one crew lost and captured; though their opponents were probably P-40s from 5 Squadron SAAF. ZG 26 lost a further crew killed and another aircraft severely damaged by the end of the day.[128] During April and May 1942, III./ZG 26 began night fighter flights over the desert, claiming one bomber on 29 May 1942 when assisted by search lights. The loss is confirmed through Allied records and likely belonged to 24 Squadron SAAF.[129] On 1 June 1942, 7./ZG 26 attacked motorised vehicles with support from 9./ZG 26. Two of the latter unit lost two Bf 110s while the former lost one crew when a tank it was attacking exploded in front of them. All six men were killed. [130]

Defeat in Africa: From Egypt to Tunisia Edit

 
Bf 110, III./ZG 26 crash-landed near Tobruk, 1941

III./ZG 26's activities from the beginning to end of the Second Battle of El Alamein appear to have been non-notable, for the unit does not appear to have filed any claims in combat or reported any losses. Only one aircraft was abandoned at Berka airfield as the Axis forces retreated from Egypt.[131] III./ZG 26 had been returned to Germany for rest and replenishment. It returned to Africa upon Operation Torch, the Anglo-American landings in Morocco and Algeria. The group was equipped with Bf 110Cs still, and a small number of Ju 88Cs and Do 17Zs.[132] III./ZG 1 followed with the new Messerschmitt Me 210.[132] On 14 November 1942 the group was providing fighter escort to Ju 52 transports from Sicily to Tunis. No. 126 Squadron RAF patrolling from Malta encountered one such formation and a dogfight saw one fighter from each side shot down.[133] Staffeln were also based at Gabes airfield on 29 November, for Lockheed P-38 Lightnings from the 1st Fighter Group based at Youks-les-Bains Airfield, strafed the airfield. The US pilots claimed two Bf 110s in aerial combat—the other being claimed by the 14th Fighter Group.[133] The Run for Tunis prolonged the African campaign. The Allied powers established considerable air power in Algeria and Tunisia by early December 1942.[134] III./ZG 26 began to operate from Sicilian airfields with greater frequency.[135] The Bf 110s were used mainly in the long-range escort role for air transports between Greece, Crete, Sicily and Africa rather than the air superiority role. These operations were carried out at low altitudes.[136] The threat of long-range heavy fighters such as the Bristol Beaufighter was evident on 4/5 December when No. 227 Squadron RAF claimed two transports carrying invaluable ground personnel were shot down over the Strait of Sicily; one belonging to III./ZG 26.[137] The group lost all three Bf 110s escorting 32 Ju 52s on 11 December 1942. Beaufighters from No. 272 Squadron RAF and Spitfires from No. 249 Squadron RAF intercepted. Eight of the transports were claimed and more damaged. The only group success was the shooting down of a Martin Baltimore, No. 69 Squadron RAF.[138] On 22 January 1943 another patrol protecting a convoy engaged B-26 Marauders from the 416th Bombardment Group with JG 53—the latter succeeded in downing two, confirmed by US losses, but the results of ZG 26's involvement are unclear.[139] In action with P-38s of the 82nd Fighter Group and B-26s of the 319th Bombardment Group, ZG 26 lost two crews who intervened to protect freighters and two He 111s that came under attack on 31 January 1943.[140]

ZG 26 continued over-water operations claiming a P-38 on 1 February, losing three crews and one damaged to the US 82nd Fighter Group protecting two tankers from 319th Bomb Group on 3rd. By 28 February 1943, Trapani in Sicily was III./ZG 26's base under the command of Hauptmann Vögel. Amongst the few successes was the action 17 March 1943, when the pilots claimed four or five Bristol Beauforts from No. 272 Squadron RAF. The action involved III./ZG 1 and their Me 210s.[141] Successes for Zerstörer pilots were few in the Mediterranean at this stage. Feldwebel Günther Wegmann was among the few exceptions—a picture showing eight claims on his rudder exists; though the port vertical stabiliser shows visible signs of combat damage via four 20mm cannon shells and a single .303 holes. Wegmann claimed 14 aircraft flying the Bf 110 and Me 410 and became one of the few German jet aces.[142] It is known that the unit remained in Africa until the late stages of the Battle of Tunisia, for a group machine was reported destroyed at Sfax airfield on 30 March 1943.[131] In early April 1943, Operation Flax began, which cut off the air-bridge from Sicily to Tunis. Two crews were shot down on the operation's first day.[143] In combat with 82nd Fighter Group, 95th Squadron P-38s, III./ZG 26 defended Ju 52 transports yet again, losing two. They claimed seven P-38s, but only three US fighters were lost. 15 Ju 52s were claimed by American pilots. The 96th Squadron spotted and engaged the Germans claiming another four but losing one pilot to III./ZG 26.[144] On 16 April III./ZG 26 claimed five B-17 Flying Fortress bombs from the 97th Bombardment Group and possibly another from the 301st Bombardment Group—four were brought down—during an attack on Palermo.[145]

On 13 May 1943 Panzer Army Africa surrendered ending the Tunisian Campaign and the fighting in North Africa. At this time, 965 Allied aircraft had been claimed shot down by the Luftwaffe over Africa between November 1942 and May 1943. III./ZG 26 accounted for "at least 17" of these.[146]

Invasion of the Soviet Union Edit

III./ZG 26 remained in North Africa in June 1941. Stab, I and II./ZG 26 moved to Eastern Europe, still under the command of Fliegerkorps VIII. The wing was under the strategic control of Luftflotte 2.[147]

ZG 26 spearheaded the air strikes against the Red Air Force air bases that opened Operation Barbarossa and started the war on the Eastern Front. 5./ZG 26, led by Johannes von Richthofen, a cousin of Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen [who commanded Fliegerkorps VIII] and Manfred von Richthofen, attacked the air base at Alytus, which had the distinction of becoming the first airfield attacked on 22 June 1941. The Soviet Fighter Aviation Regiment's 15 IAP, attached to the 8th Fighter Division [8 SAD], occupied the base.[148] The Soviet pilots managed to get airborne but did not intercept the Bf 110s, but the Ju 87s of StG 2 and Bf 109s of II./JG 27 which were following up Richthofen's attack.[149] The Soviet bomber regiments were active in the first days and on 29 June they caught and destroyed 10 ZG 26 Bf 110s and II./JG 27 Bf 109s on the ground at Vilnus airfield.[150] Richthofen's own log book recorded 29 combat missions for II./ZG 26 in the first 14 days of July 1941 during the Battle of Smolensk, before it was moved to support Army Group North, under the command of Luftflotte 1.[151]

ZG 26 concentrated in airfield strikes as Army Group North pushed toward Leningrad precipitating a clash with the 5 IAP. 6./ZG 26 reported a loss on 10 August when a MiG-3 belonging to 71 IAP and piloted by Captain Ivan Gorbachyov, rammed one its aircraft.[152] In a notable action on 12 August ZG 26 destroyed 10 to 15 aircraft at Volosovo airfield while the escorting II./JG 54 claimed seven aircraft in combat. On 13 August II./ZG 26 reported one loss over Kingisepp in action with 6 IAP. Commanding officer, JG 54, Hannes Trautloft, believed the ZG 26 attacks were having an impact.[152] 24 Bf 110s from I./ZG 26 straffed Kotly airfield but found only one aircraft and suffered one machine damaged in air combat on 16 August.[153] ZG 26 achieved success against Nizino airfield which housed the 5 IAP on 19 August.[153] For the cost of one Bf 110, Soviet records reported that 20 fighters were destroyed and a further 13 damaged in the attack in contrast to German claims of 40 destroyed.[153] This claim took the total number of claims made by ZG 26 from 22 June 1941, to 191 Soviet aircraft destroyed in the air and 663 on the ground.[153]

On 27 August the Leningrad Front began a full-scale counterattack against the XXXXI Panzer Corps at Mga. ZG 27 fought with the 7 IAK and 5 IAP regiments in "violent aerial clashes."[154] Three Bf 110s were claimed by these fighter units, but German losses are unstated. On 29 August 35 IAP joined the battle and claimed two more Bf 110s. German losses are again unstated.[153] II./ZG 26 supported I./KG 77 and elements of JG 54 and KGr 806 in Operation Beowulf, a seizure of Soviet-held islands in the Baltic. On 6 September ZG 26 attacked the airfield at Kagul and destroyed eight aircraft; the operation was successful.[154] ZG 26 reverted to supporting the Siege of Leningrad in September. On 19 September it supported the largest and most lethal bombing attacks to date as 442 people were killed. The wing reported one crew lost.[155] In late September, ZG 26 was moved back to Luftflotte 2, as part of Fliegerkorps VIII. The wing was ordered to provide close air support for Operation Typhoon, the Battle of Moscow.[156]

The two groups fought in the successful early phase of the battle. On 20 October 1941, I./ZG 26 was ordered to return to Germany and was renamed II./NJG 1 leaving II./ZG 26 and SKG 210 the only Bf 110 units in the Soviet Union. Days later, Luftflotte 2 was ordered to transfer to southern Europe and support the Battle of the Mediterranean.[157] The Moscow offensive failed and was subjected to a large Soviet counter-offensive on 5 December 1941. II./ZG 26 remained on the central sector protecting the Demyansk Pocket.

Defence of the Reich and dissolution Edit

In the late summer and early autumn the ZG wing's joined the RLV forces for the Defence of the Reich operations against the United States Army Air Force, in particularly the Eighth Air Force. The heavy fighter wings had a chequered past. These units had lost gruppen and staffeln to the German night fighter force but were resurrected in the close air support role where the Luftwaffe maintained a measure of control. The Oberkommando der Luftwaffe still regarded the heavy armament of the Bf 110, and the emerging Messerschmitt Me 410, as ideal bomber-destroying weapons in areas free of American long-range fighter escorts. ZG 26, which had lost one group to NJG 1 in 1941, gained II./ZG 26 back through the renaming and assignment of III./ZG 1.[158]

 
Me 410A at RAF Cosford. This machine served with ZG 26 and was captured in Denmark, May 1945. The wing emblem is visible

Hitler favoured the Rheinmetall BK-5 cannon for use in the Me 410 and they equipped II./ZG 26. The recoil and feed mechanisms were not designed for aerial combat, the gun having been designed initially as an anti-tank weapon. The weapon frequently jammed and rarely could a pilot fire off more than a single round before the gun ceased to function. The fighters could carry an additional Werfer-Granate 21 aerial mortar, as could the Bf 109 or Focke-Wulf Fw 190.[158] In addition, II./ZG 26 was placed under the command of Eduard Tratt, regarded as the leading Zerstörer pilot of the war.[159] By the second week in October, 1943, ZG 26 was operating as a three-gruppen wing.[160]

On 10 October 1943, ZG 26 made its first notable interception of an American heavy bomber formation. On this date, Eighth Air Force planners decided to keep the pressure of the Combined Bomber Offensive on the Luftwaffe fighter force. Jagddivision 2 committed 350 fighters in at least 13 Jagd and Zerstörergruppen to defend the day's target, the city of Münster. JG 1 and JG 26 Bf 109s and Fw 190s attacked the 14th Bombardment Wing with success. The 390th Bomb Group, 90th Bomb Group and 100th Bomb Group formations were broken up and suffered heavy losses. The situation allowed Major Karl Boehm-Tettelbach, commanding III./ZG 26, to attack the shattered wing, leading the 3rd Bombardment Division.[161] In total 30 B-17 Flying Fortress bombers were shot down, along with a single P-47 Thunderbolt fighter. The cost was 25 German fighters and 12 airmen killed. Nine were Bf 110s and Me 410s. It was clear that the destroyer wings required protection from American fighter escorts.[162]

In 1944 the long-range USAAF fighter escorts began to appear. In February, Big Week commenced a systematic series of operations against the Luftwaffe's combat units and supporting industry. In a prelude the Eighth Air Force struck at Frankfurt on 11 February.[163] ZG 26 operated as part of Jagddivision 7. II./ZG 26, II./JG 3 and II./JG 11 responded. 606 Allied fighters covered the bomber stream from 13 US Fighter Groups. The bombers were well protected and lost five and three damaged.[164] The ensuing dogfights cost the Luftwaffe 17 killed and 10 wounded.[164] The VIII Fighter Command lost 13 fighters—eight were P-38 Lightnings from the 20th Fighter Group.[164] Just one bomber—the main targets—and 10 fighters were claimed. ZG 26, which were hard pressed, were effectively protected by Bf 109s this time. Nevertheless, in II./ZG 26, which was the only Me 410-equipped group in the Luftwaffe, the pilots still regarded it as a "suicide command."[164]

Big Week began on 20 February, part of the Pointblank directive. German fighter production was targeted. Specifically, those factories producing the Bf 109, Fw 190, Bf 110, Me 410 and Ju 88. The first day proved costly for the German fighter defences. The northern forces of the operation lost only six bombers, and southern force 15 and four damaged. The defending German units lost 44 aircrew killed, 29 wounded and 74 fighters destroyed with 29 damaged.[165] The Zerstörergeschwader suffered severe losses. III./ZG 26 lost 10 killed and seven wounded along with 10 Bf 110s destroyed and three damaged when it was engaged by P-47 Thunderbolts of the 56th Fighter Group while forming up in the van of attack against the southern force.[165]

On 22 February, 799 bombers were dispatched by the Eighth. The 2nd and 3rd Bombardment Divisions were recalled, leaving only 99 bombers from the 1st Bombardment Division to carry out the mission in scattered over Germany. US escorts claimed 59 destroyed seven damaged and 26 probable victories against German fighters for the loss of 11 and one damaged.[166] German losses were 48 single-engine fighters and 16 Zerstörer.[166] III./ZG 26 was the hardest hit, losing four killed, three wounded and eight Bf 110s. II./ZG 26 lost one Me 410. The pilot was group commander Eduard Tratt, was killed. The most successful Zerstörer pilot of the war, he was awarded the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves posthumously.[166]

 
Bf 110 piloted by Heinz Vinke shot down by RAF Fighters, shown on a gun camera film. Zerstörer units suffered heavily in 1944

ZG 26 operated on 6 March 1944 in defence of Berlin. The Eighth made a large-scale attack on the city. III./ZG 26, which had been moved to the operational control of Jagddivision 1, assembled over Magdeburg. Led by Major Hans Kogler, it contained seven cannon-armed Bf 110s in third group and 10 Me 410s of II./ZG 26, each armed with four mortars. They were followed by 24 rocket-armed Bf 110s from ZG 76 from Jagddivision 7. 55 Bf 109s from I./JG 33 provided high cover while 10 fighters from JG 302 supported the interception.[167] The ZG 26 pilots were ordered to attack with rockets from head-on, but this proved difficult. American reports show no B-17 was hit by the 41 Zerstörer. They did use their cannon effective and shot down a number of B-17s. 10 were confirmed.[167] However, P-51 Mustang escort fighters from the 4th Fighter Group descended upon them. The Americans remained upsun until Kogler committed his force. The 357th Fighter Group as also present by accident, having missed the rendezvous with the 2nd Bombardment Division and rushed "to the sound of the guns."[167]

The casualty count reached 16 of the 41 Me 410s and Bf 110s engaged along with five Bf 109s and two Fw 190s. The 1st Bombardment Division lost eight bombers to gunfire, three in collisions, and several damaged and dropped out of formation. Four P-51s were lost from the 4th Fighter Group.[167] Highlighting the plight of Zerstorer units further, was the loss of 11 of the 16 III./NJG 5 Bf 110 night fighters with eight pilots killed.[168] the raid cost the Eighth 69 bombers destroyed and six written off, with 11 escorts and three damaged. The American loss rate of 10.2 percent was acceptable at this stage. The Luftwaffe lost 64 fighters (19.2 percent), with eight killed, 36 missing and 23 wounded.[169]

The German Wehrmachtbericht singled out Kogler as the "leader of a Zerstörerverband that especially distinguished itself" despite crippling losses. The heavy fighters had been touted as wonder weapons in their new role as bomber-destroyers, and their extreme vulnerability was kept from Hitler and the German public.[170]

On 23 April no German twin-engine fighters were seen by the American formations despite large-scale raids on Münster and Braunschweig. By month's end, ZG 26 had relocated to Königsberg in East Prussia. III./ZG 26's war diary observed the mission now would be to "battle enemy formations that penetrate east of Berlin without escort."[171] On 9 April 1944 the 3rd Bombardment Group gave ZG 26 such an opportunity when it flew against targets in East Prussia and Poland. I./ZG 26 had been rendered non-operational, III./ZG 26 had been installing rockets for a ground-attack mission on the Eastern Front when the order to scramble came through. 18 Bf 110s got airborne, were unable to find the bombers and landed at an airfield without the appropriate fuel and were out of commission for the rest of the day. Only II./ZG 26 made an attack, claiming three B-17s for the loss of two Me 410s.[172]

On 11 April the 3rd Bombardment Division, with support from 1st and 2nd, flew against six separate targets in central and eastern Germany. The 3rd took the Baltic Sea route, while the other divisions flew the well-trodden path south to the Zuider Zee. 917 bombers and 819 escorts were in the air and the Luftwaffe reacted by sending 432 sorties from 18 fighter, two heavy fighter and two night fighter groups. The spreading of the bomber stream reduced the escort screen's density. The 4th Fighter Group broke up the only attack on the 3rd Division en route to the target, by ZG 26.[173] On the return, II. and III./ZG 26 caught the bombers unescorted. The Me 410 group attacked with rockets to the rear, while III./ZG 26 carried out four frontal attacks with cannons. They claimed 16 bombers—nine were shot down and a tenth landed in Sweden. A second sortie saw ZG 26 run into the 1st Division escorted by the 4th Fighter Group. Eight Me 410s and three Bf 110s, with 16 crew killed, three wounded.[173]

On 12 May 1944 the Eighth struck at targets in the Dresden area. The bomber stream was heavily engaged by JG 11 and JG 27. All 40 Me 410s that were combat ready were dispatched by ZG 26 to Dresden to await developments as the stream neared Frankfurt. ZG 26 was well-placed to intercept bombers heading towards Chemnitz and did so, claiming three B-17s and two Consolidated B-24 Liberator bombers in exchange for four Me 410s and most their crews to return fire.[174] Stab., I., and II./ZG 26 remained isolated in East Prussia as the Invasion of Normandy occurred in June 1944. It was allotted III./JG 300 to escort it in future interceptions, a role to which the latter was unsuited as it operated the Fw 190 heavy fighter variants.[175] On 15 June the pair formed an attack on the 3rd Bombardment Division near Magdeburg. They downed two B-17s for six losses, though they claimed six bombers and two P-51s.[176] III./JG 300 attacked the 492nd Bombardment Group of the 2nd Bombardment Division which had fallen behind, drawing the small group of American escorts nearby and losing 13 fighters.[176] The attack left the 492nd exposed. Repeated front and rear attacks were made by the Me 410s and they destroyed 13 B-24s. The P-51s returned to and ZG 26 lost 12 of the heavy fighters. German pilots claimed 39 bombers and five fighters. In reality, 13 bombers and two fighters were lost.[176]

On 7 July 1944 Leipzig was targeted. The largest formation to attract the fighter escort was the 42 Me 410s of ZG 26 and 37 Bf 109s now operating in III./JG 300. JG 300 attempted to protect the Me 410s but suffered heavily, losing four killed, three wounded and 13 Bf 109s. ZG 26 lost eight, five killed and four wounded while claiming four B-24s. A 4th Fighter Group P-51 collided with an Me 410 and Captain James Morris, commander of the 20th Fighter Group, was shot down by an Me 410.[177] The American Division reported 20 B-24s lost on the mission, the German JG 300 and ZG 26 wings claimed 51 between them—32 by JG 300, which 27 being "confirmed."[178]

The actions were the last major contributions of ZG 26 to the defence of the Reich. On 26 September 1944, III./ZG 26 began plans to convert to the Messerschmitt Me 262. The group became the fight jet fighter unit (JG 7 became the first jet fighter wing). It was renamed III./JG 6. I./ZG 26 followed suite as I./JG 6, as did II./ZG 26 which became II./JG 6. [179]

Commanding officers Edit

  • Oberst Kurt-Bertram von Döring, 1 May 1939 – 14 December 1939
  • Oberstleutnant Joachim-Friedrich Huth, 14 December 1939 – 1 November 1940
  • Oberst Johann Schalk, 1 November 1940 – 29 September 1941
  • Oberstleutnant Karl Boehm-Tettelbach, October 1943 – June 1944
  • Oberstleutnant Johann Kogler, June 1944 – July 1944

I./ZG 26 Edit

II./ZG 26 Edit

  • Major Friedrich Vollbracht, 1 May 1939 – April 1940
  • Hauptmann Ralph von Rettberg, April 1940 – April 1942
  • Hauptmann Eduard Tratt, 11 October 1943 – 22 February 1944

III./ZG 26 Edit

  • Hauptmann Johann Schalk, 1 May 1939 – 1 September 1940
  • Major Karl Kaschka, 1 September 1940 – 4 December 1941 (KIA)
  • Hauptmann Thomas Steinberger, 4 December 1941 – 24 December 1941
  • Hauptmann Georg Christl, 25 December 1941 – 12 July 1943
  • Major Fritz Schulze-Dickow, 12 July 1943 – 11 February 1944
  • Major Johann Kogler, 11 February 1944 – 2 June 1944
  • Hauptmann Werner Thierfelder, 2 June 1944 – 18 July 1944

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Hooton 2007a, p. 78.
  2. ^ Hooton 1994, pp. 170, 176–177.
  3. ^ Hooton 1994, pp. 170, 176–177, 205.
  4. ^ Hooton 1994, p. 282.
  5. ^ Chorley 2005, p. 17.
  6. ^ Shores, Foreman & Ehrengardt 1992, pp. 78.
  7. ^ Shores, Foreman & Ehrengardt 1992, pp. 126–127.
  8. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, pp. 36–37.
  9. ^ Shores, Foreman & Ehrengardt 1992, p. 128.
  10. ^ Shores, Foreman & Ehrengardt 1992, p. 129.
  11. ^ Bowman 2015, p. 31.
  12. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, pp. 37–39.
  13. ^ Holmes 2010, p. 72.
  14. ^ Aders 1978, p. 14.
  15. ^ Hooton 2007b, pp. 18–19.
  16. ^ Hooton 2007b, pp. 45–46.
  17. ^ a b Hooton 2007b, pp. 46–47.
  18. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 11, 13.
  19. ^ a b c Hooton 2007b, p. 48.
  20. ^ Hooton 2007b, p. 56.
  21. ^ Hooton 2007b, p. 52.
  22. ^ Hooton 2007b, p. 53.
  23. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 66–68.
  24. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, p. 79.
  25. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 123–126.
  26. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 132–133.
  27. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, p. 137.
  28. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 141–142.
  29. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 146, 155.
  30. ^ Hooton 2007b, p. 66.
  31. ^ a b Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 201–204.
  32. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 233–234.
  33. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 204–209.
  34. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 218–219, 227.
  35. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, p. 231.
  36. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 263–264.
  37. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 266, 274.
  38. ^ Hooton 2007b, p. 67.
  39. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 281, 293.
  40. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 295–296.
  41. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, p. 297.
  42. ^ Cull, Lander & Weiss 1999, pp. 298–299.
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  47. ^ Franks 1997, pp. 36–37.
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  49. ^ Hooton 2007b, pp. 88, 90.
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  51. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 152–155.
  52. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 156–159.
  53. ^ Saunders 2010, pp. 198–200.
  54. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 227–229.
  55. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 222–226.
  56. ^ Mackay 2000, p. 50.
  57. ^ Shores 1985, p. 46.
  58. ^ Bungay 2000, p. 208.
  59. ^ Bungay 2000, p. 207.
  60. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 265, 273.
  61. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 263–264.
  62. ^ Price 2010, p. 61.
  63. ^ Price 2010, pp. 85–87.
  64. ^ a b c Bergström 2015, p. 141.
  65. ^ Bungay 2000, p. 231.
  66. ^ Price 2010, pp. 108–109.
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  68. ^ Mason 1969, p. 283.
  69. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 281–282.
  70. ^ Price 2010, p. 210.
  71. ^ Price 2010, pp. 215–217.
  72. ^ Price 2010, pp. 220, 222.
  73. ^ Price 2010, pp. 276–277.
  74. ^ Bergström 2015, p. 148.
  75. ^ Mackay 2000, pp. 54–55.
  76. ^ Mason 1969, p. 284.
  77. ^ Mason 1969, p. 303.
  78. ^ Mason 1969, p. 356.
  79. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 380–382.
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  84. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 416–419.
  85. ^ Mason 1969, pp. 423–425.
  86. ^ Mason 1969, p. 436.
  87. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 180.
  88. ^ Mackay 2000, p. 70.
  89. ^ a b Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 286.
  90. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 194.
  91. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 199.
  92. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 200.
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  94. ^ a b Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 181.
  95. ^ Ansel 1972, p. 209.
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  97. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, pp. 264–265.
  98. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 266.
  99. ^ Mackay 2000, p. 71.
  100. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 285.
  101. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 271.
  102. ^ Weal 1999, p. 64.
  103. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, pp. 269–271.
  104. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, p. 329.
  105. ^ Shores, Cull & Malizia 1992, pp. 359–360.
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  109. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 28.
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  111. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 30.
  112. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 31.
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  114. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, pp. 33–34.
  115. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 37.
  116. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 38.
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  118. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, pp. 48–52.
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  123. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 83.
  124. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 88.
  125. ^ Shores & Ring 1969, p. 104.
  126. ^ Shores, Massimello & Guest 2012b, p. 78.
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  148. ^ Bergström 2007a, p. 14.
  149. ^ Bergström 2007a, p. 15.
  150. ^ Bergström 2007a, p. 27.
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Bibliography Edit

  • Ansel, Walter (1972). Hitler and the Middle Sea. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-0224-7.
  • Aders, Gebhard (1978). History of the German Night Fighter Force, 1917–1945. London: Janes. ISBN 0-354-01247-9.
  • Bergström, Christer (2007a). Barbarossa - The Air Battle: July–December 1941. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. ISBN 978-1-85780-270-2.
  • Bergström, Christer (2015). The Battle of Britain: An Epic Conflict Revisited. Oxford, UK: Casemate. ISBN 978-1612-00347-4.
  • Bungay, Stephen (2000). The Most Dangerous Enemy: A History of the Battle of Britain. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-85410-721-3.
  • Bowman, Martin (2015). The Wellington Bomber. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473853508.
  • Caldwell, Donald L.; Muller, Richard R. (2007). The Luftwaffe over Germany: Defense of the Reich. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1-85367-712-0.
  • Chorley, William (2005). Aircraft and crews lost during 1939 - 1940. London: Midland. ISBN 978-0904597851.
  • Cull, Brian; Lander, Bruce; Weiss, Heinrich (1999). Twelve Days in May. London: Grub Street Publishing. ISBN 978-1-902304-12-0.
  • Franks, Norman (2006). Air Battle for Dunkirk, 26 May - 3 June 1940. London: Grub Street. ISBN 1-904943-43-8.
  • Franks, Norman (1997). Royal Air Force Fighter Command Losses of the Second World. Volume 1: Operational losses: Aircraft and crews, 1939–1941. Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85780-055-5.
  • Holmes, Robin (2010). The Battle of the Heligoland Bight, 1939: The Royal Air Force and the Luftwaffe's Baptism of Fire. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-906502-56-0.
  • Hooton, E.R. (1994). Phoenix Triumphant; The Rise and Rise of the Luftwaffe. London: Arms & Armour Press. ISBN 978-1-85409-181-9.
  • Hooton, E.R. (2007a). Luftwaffe at War; Gathering Storm 1933–39: Volume 1. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. ISBN 978-1-903223-71-0.
  • Hooton, E.R. (2007b). Luftwaffe at War; Blitzkrieg in the West: Volume 2. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. ISBN 978-1-85780-272-6.
  • Hooton, E.R. (1999). Eagle in Flames: Defeat of the Luftwaffe. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-1-85409-343-1.
  • James, T; Cox, Sebastian (2000). The Battle of Britain. London: Frank Cass. ISBN 978-0-7146-8149-8.
  • Mackay, Ron (2000). Messerschmitt Bf 110. Wiltshire: The Crowood Press. ISBN 1-86126-313-9.
  • Mason, Francis (1969). Battle Over Britain. London: McWhirter Twins. ISBN 978-0-901928-00-9.
  • Price, Alfred (2010). The Hardest Day: The Battle of Britain: 18 August 1940. London: Haynes Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84425-820-8.
  • Saunders, Andy (2010). Convoy Peewit: August 8, 1940: The First Day of the Battle of Britain?. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-906502-67-6.
  • Shores, Christopher F. (1985). Duel for the Sky: Ten Crucial Battles of World War II. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-7137-1601-6.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Cull, Brian; Malizia, Nicola (1992). Air War for Yugoslavia, Greece and Crete: 1940–41. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-07-6.
  • Shores, Christopher; Foreman, John; Ehrengardt, Chris (1992). Fledgling Eagles (1st ed.). London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-42-7.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Massimello, Giovanni; Guest, Russell (2012b). A History of the Mediterranean Air War, 1940–1945 Volume 2: North African Desert, February 1942 – March 1943. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-909166-12-7.
  • Shores, Christopher; Ring, Hans (1969). Fighters over the Desert. London: Neville Spearman Limited. ISBN 978-0-668-02070-1.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Ring, Hans; Hess, William N. (1975). Fighters Over Tunisia. London: Neville Spearman. ISBN 978-0-85435-210-4.
  • Weal, John (1999). Messerschmitt Bf 110 Zerstörer Aces of World War 2. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85532-753-5.

Further reading Edit

  • Aubusson, Charles (December 1999). "Le III/Zerstörer Geschwader 26 dans la Campagne d'Afrique (1941/1943)" [III/ZG 26 in the North African Campaign (1941–1943)]. Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et Son Histoire (in French) (81): 7–17. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Bergström, Christer; Mikhailov, Andrey (2001). Black Cross / Red Star: Air War Over the Eastern Front, Volume II, Resurgence January–June 1942. Pacifica Military History. ISBN 978-0-935553-51-2.
  • Bergström, Christer (2007b). Stalingrad — The Air Battle: November 1942 – February 1943. London: Chevron/Ian Allan. ISBN 978-1-85780-276-4.
  • Claasen, Adam R. A. (2001). Hitler's Northern War: The Luftwaffe's Ill-Fated Campaign, 1940–1945. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-1050-1.
  • de Zeng, H.L.; Stankey, D.G.; Creek, E.J. (2007). Bomber Units of the Luftwaffe 1933–1945; A Reference Source, Volume 1. Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85780-279-5.
  • de Zeng, H.L.; Stankey, D.G.; Creek, E.J. (2009). Dive-Bomber and Ground-Attack Units of the Luftwaffe, 1933–1945: A Reference Source, Vol. 1. Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-1-9065-3708-1.
  • Hayward, Joel (Summer 1997). "The German use of air power at Kharkov, May 1942". Air Power History. 44 (2).
  • Hayward, Joel (2001). Stopped at Stalingrad: The Luftwaffe and Hitler's Defeat in the East 1942-1943. London: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-1146-1.
  • Holland, James (2003). Fortress Malta: An Island Under Siege, 1940–1943. London: Miramax Books. ISBN 978-1-4013-5186-1.
  • Jackson, Robert (1974). Air War Over France, 1939-1940. London: Ian Allan. ISBN 978-0-7110-0510-5.
  • Muller, Richard (1992). The German Air War in Russia, 1941-1945. Baltimore: The Nautical & Aviation Publishing Company of America. ISBN 1-877853-13-5.
  • North, Richard (2012). The Many Not The Few: The Stolen History of the Battle of Britain. London: Continuum. ISBN 978-1-4411-3151-5.
  • Saunders, Andy (2013). Stuka Attack! The Dive-Bombing Assault on England During the Battle of Britain. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-908117-35-9.
  • Shores, Christopher; Cull, Brian; Malizia, Nicola (1987). The Hurricane Years (1st ed.). London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-06-9.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Massimello, Giovanni; Guest, Russell (2012a). A History of the Mediterranean Air War 1940–1945: North Africa: Volume One, June 1940 – February 1942. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-9081-17076.

zerstörergeschwader, horst, wessel, luftwaffe, heavy, fighter, wing, world, horst, wessel, crest, 26active1, 1939, september, 1944country, nazi, germanybranch, luftwaffetypeheavy, fighterroleair, superiorityoffensive, counter, airclose, supportsizeair, force, . Zerstorergeschwader 26 ZG 26 Horst Wessel was a Luftwaffe heavy fighter wing of World War II Zerstorergeschwader 26 Horst Wessel Crest of ZG 26Active1 May 1939 September 1944Country Nazi GermanyBranch LuftwaffeTypeHeavy fighterRoleAir superiorityOffensive counter airclose air supportSizeAir Force WingPatronHorst WesselEquipmentMesserschmitt Bf 110Messerschmitt Me 410EngagementsWorld War IICommandersNotablecommandersJoachim Friedrich HuthInsigniaIdentificationsymbolGeschwaderkennungof 3U Formed on 1 May 1939 ZG 26 was initially armed with the Messerschmitt Bf 109 single engine interceptor due to production shortfalls with the Messerschmitt Bf 110 Zerstorer class aircraft The wing served on the dormant Western Front during the Phoney War stage in 1939 and 1940 During this phase ZG 26 was equipped with the Bf 110 It formed part of Luftflotte 2 and fought in the Battle of the Netherlands Battle of Belgium and Battle of France in May and June 1940 The wing continued to operate in the Battle of Britain albeit in a much reduced role owing to losses In 1941 ZG 26 served again with success in the German invasion of Yugoslavia and Battle of Greece and then Battle of Crete in April and May From June 1941 the bulk of ZG 26 fought on the Eastern Front from Operation Barbarossa which began the war on the Soviet Union ZG 26 supported Army Group Centre and Army Group North A group of ZG 26 flew and served in the Battle of the Mediterranean and North African Campaign from January 1941 through to May 1943 From mid 1943 ZG 26 served and fought against the US Eighth Air Force and Fifteenth Air Force in the Defence of the Reich campaign with moderate success until US long range fighters made further operations too costly ZG 26 was disbanded in September 1944 and re designated a Bf 109 unit Jagdgeschwader 6 Contents 1 Formation 2 World War II 2 1 Western Europe 2 2 Battle of Britain 2 3 Eastern Mediterranean and Balkans 2 4 North Africa Libya and Egypt 2 5 Defeat in Africa From Egypt to Tunisia 2 6 Invasion of the Soviet Union 2 7 Defence of the Reich and dissolution 3 Commanding officers 3 1 I ZG 26 3 2 II ZG 26 3 3 III ZG 26 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Bibliography 5 Further readingFormation EditZerstorergeschwader 26 was formed in 1939 from the Jagdgeschwader 134 Horst Wessel The Geschwaderstab and I Gruppe was located in Dortmund II Gruppe in Werl and III Gruppe in Lippstadt citation needed ZG 26 was formally named on 1 May 1939 from ZG 142 1 World War II EditIn 1939 the production of Bf 110s precluded the equipment of Zerstorer wings with the type The heavy fighter was intended as a long range fighter escort air superiority and anti bomber aircraft weapon The Zerstorergeschwader adopted the Messerschmitt Bf 109D single engine interceptor until the Bf 110 became available 2 The ZG 26 s III gruppe was give temporary Jagdgruppe fighter group designations In the case of III ZG 26 it was renamed JGr 126 This formally ended during the Phoney War when III ZG 26 exchanged the Bf 109 for the Bf 110 and reverted to its original identity 3 On 31 August 1939 Stab I and II ZG 26 were under the command of Luftgau XI at Hannover Luftgau VI headquartered at Werl controlled III ZG 26 4 On 1 September 1939 the German Wehrmacht began the Invasion of Poland beginning World War II in Europe ZG 26 based in northern and western Germany served in the air defence role during the Phoney War phases of the war The wing defended the German North Sea coast from incursions by RAF Bomber Command On 29 September 1939 a No 144 Squadron RAF Handley Page Hampden was shot down by Gunther Specht 5 Four were claimed by ZG 26 pilots 6 The future German ace lost an eye on 3 December in combat with a No 38 Squadron RAF Wellington 7 8 On 6 December ZG 26 incurred one of its first casualties when a Bf 110 from 2 ZG 26 collided with an Avro Anson from No 209 Squadron RAF 70 miles north of Texel 9 I ZG 26 transferred to Stab ZG 26 from the control of JG 1 on 11 December bring existing groups under the direct control of the command Stab staffel Squadron 10 On 14 December 1939 12 Vickers Wellington bombers on an anti shipping patrol were spotted Four Bf 110s from 2 ZG 26 at Jever with support from II JG 77 Messerschmitt Bf 109s intercepted and shot down five British bombers Air Officer Commanding No 3 Group RAF Jackie Baldwin likened the mission to the charge of the light brigade 11 Elements of the wing fought at the Battle of the Heligoland Bight the first named air battle of the war ZG 26 was unable to intercept A flight of Bf 110s from ZG 76 led by Hauptmann Wolfgang Falck claimed four bombers Falck s fighter was hit and badly damaged The battle ended daylight sorties by Bomber Command over Germany until late 1944 The defeat forced the British to revise their policy to night bombing and has been regarded as among the most influential air engagements of the war 12 13 Bomber Command s shift to night operations led to calls for the expansion of the night fighter force ZG 26 donated 10 staffel to the formation of IV Nacht JG 2 in December 1939 14 On 15 December 1939 I ZG 26 was based at Lippstadt under the command of Fliegerkorps I III ZG 26 was subordinated to Luftgau XI and Bonninghardt Stab and II ZG 26 remained at Dortmund and Werl respectively under the command of Fliegerkorps IV 15 Thereafter the assignment of Stab ZG 26 is unknown The units does not appear on the air corps order of battle on 10 May 16 On 10 May 1940 II ZG 26 had moved to Kaarst Neuss under the command of Fliegerkorps I 17 By 5 June 1940 it had been assigned to Fliegerdivision 9 I ZG 26 was deleted from I Fliegerkorps order of battle by the 10 May and its location is not known 17 The Stab ZG 26 had all three Bf 110s operational I ZG 26 could field only 11 of the 34 Bf 110s it had while III ZG 26 reported 30 of 37 aircraft combat ready II ZG 26 reported 25 of 35 Bf 110s operational 18 Western Europe Edit On 10 May 1940 Fall Gelb the Wehrmacht s offensive in Western Europe began beginning the Battle of the Netherlands Battle of Belgium and Battle of France ZG 26 was ordered to support the invasion of the Netherlands and Army Group B With support from JG 26 it could not prevent the Dutch Air Force from downing 11 German bombers on the opening day one of them was the commanding officer of Kampfgeschwader 4 who became a prisoner of war for several days 19 The Dutch fighters accounted for 21 German aircraft in total and flew 87 of the 150 sorties logged on the day In the battles they lost 25 of their own against JG 26 and ZG 26 19 The Dutch were reduced to 70 aircraft by the following morning but continued to harass the German air operations and claimed a further 13 German aircraft over the next four days 19 Battles were fought simultaneously over Belgium The counter air operations were successful and Joachim Friedrich Huth s pilots with support from JG 26 claimed the majority of the 82 Allied aircraft claimed by Luftflotte 2 over the 11 13 May 1940 20 Belgian aerial resistance was broken on the first day of operations A total of 83 Belgian machines mostly trainers were destroyed 21 The AeMI flew only 146 sorties in the first six days Between 16 May and 28 May the AeMI flew just 77 operations 22 The long range Bf 110s were used in the fighter escort role in the afternoon of 11 May I ZG 26 sent 15 of its aircraft to escort 30 Dornier Do 17 bombers from III KG 76 on a bombing raid to Reims No 1 Squadron RAF intercepted them and claimed no fewer than nine Bf 110s Witnesses on the ground claimed they saw six Bf 110s fall and later ten wrecks were allegedly found on the ground In reality I ZG 26 reported two losses Two 1 ZG 26 pilots were captured but neither of the gunners survived 23 I ZG 26 was known to have engaged No 73 Squadron RAF near Poilcourt for one of the Hawker Hurricanes was reported lost in an action involving it 24 On 14 May 1940 known as the day of the fighters I ZG 26 2 staffel reported the loss of two aircraft and crews both of whom were killed The group formed part of a bomber escort mission against Laon The formation overflew Berry au Bac airfield at 15 000 feet prompting the resident 1 Squadron to scramble and engage The action cost the British squadron two pilots killed III ZG 26 formed part of the escort for an attack on convoys near Namur No 73 Squadron RAF lost one pilot attacking the Bf 110s while the group engaged Amiot 143 bombers from GB 1 34 or GB II 34 Groupe de Bombardement and accounted for one destroyed All the remaining bombers were damaged beyond repair 25 II ZG 26 supported the defence of the captured bridges at Sedan Along with III JG 2 I JG 53 they shot down seven bombers from 28 sent by 2 Group RAF and drawn from 21 107 and 110 Squadrons 26 ZG 26 is credited with four of the Hurricanes lost that day according to RAF Advanced Air Striking Force casualty lists three against 1 Squadron and another against 73 Squadron 27 nbsp Bf 110s during the Western campaign 1940 They probably belong to Zerstorergeschwader 76 On 15 May ZG 26 and 73 Squadron met in combat again III ZG 26 escorted 40 DO 17s of I and II KG 3 on a mission over Allied air bases 73 Squadron intercepted and in the ensuing dogfights the RAF pilots claimed four Bf 110s for the loss of two Hurricanes The German pilots filed claims for nine Moranes mistakenly identifying the Hurricanes as French fighters for the loss of two Bf 110s destroyed and two badly damaged in crash landings confirming British claims Only two Hurricanes were shot down with both pilots surviving One of the German losses came from 7 ZG 26 one from 8 ZG 26 and two from 9 ZG 26 28 5 ZG 26 intercepted a Westland Lysander 13 Squadron escorted by Hurricanes from No 85 Squadron RAF The German fighters succeeded in attacking from above and shot down three Hurricanes seriously burning one pilot 29 5 ZG 26 was left with only three serviceable Bf 110s 30 85 Squadron encountered ZG 26 three days later when six of their Hurricanes including a section A Flight from No 242 Squadron RAF and three more from No 87 Squadron RAF patrolled the Le Cateau quadrant All three Canadian pilots from 242 A flight and two 85 Squadron pilots were shot down 31 The battle cost I ZG 26 three aircraft one from 2 ZG 26 and two from 3 ZG 26 31 85 Squadron suffered one pilot killed another wounded One of the Canadians was captured the others wounded 32 Later in the day between Douai and Valenciennes A flight from No 111 Squadron RAF and B Flight from No 253 Squadron RAF encountered nine Bf 110s from I ZG 26 escorting Heinkel He 111s belonging to I and II KG 54 and II ZG 26 escorting Do 17s from II KG 76 The Hurricanes shot down one and damaged one of the Dorniers all from 4 KG 76 while 1 ZG 26 lost one Bf 110 and two others severely damaged protecting them Two 5 ZG 26 Messerschmitts escorting a Do 17P reconnaissance aircraft failed to protect it from an attack by No 17 Squadron RAF The British claimed one of the Bf 110s and reported the other fled upon seeing them 33 In the afternoon I ZG 26 and II JG 26 straffed Vitry airfield as No 56 Squadron RAF took off to intercept I KG 54 which bombed the Amiens Glisy Aerodrome the main supply base for replacement Hurricanes for the RAF in France The Bf 110s shot down two killing both pilots including 18 year old Pilot Officer Dillon One of the group was caught and shot down by No 3 Squadron RAF 34 Hurricane pilots claimed 32 Bf 110s on this date but only 16 were reported destroyed by the Germans 35 On 19 May large air battles occurred over Lille as encircled Allied forces held out ZG 26 continued in the escort role as the German army reached the English Channel the following morning cutting off British Belgian and French forces from the rest of France A composite force of 111 and 253 Squadron left RAF Hawkinge to patrol Cambrai After encountering an unidentified Do 17 formation they ran into II ZG 26 Bf 110s escorting 60 kg 54 He 111 bombers I and II JG 3 were present as the dogfight started Five Hurricanes were shot down in the fight with Bf 110s and Bf 109s and one damaged by the bombers It is believed four fell to Bf 109s and three pilots killed A single 111 Squadron was credited to ZG 26 111 s Squadron Leader John Marlow Thompson survived 36 Later in the day KG 54 were operating in the Cambrai sector again covered by I JG 27 and I ZG 26 A composite force of 145 and 601 Squadrons intercepted The latter lost one Hurricane to each German wing and a further damaged by ZG 26 37 III ZG 26 flew as fighter escort for KG 3 as it operated against rail and road traffic west of the Seine and Aisne 38 On 20 May the Panzer Divisions of Army Group A reached the Channel I ZG 26 was in action against 87 Squadron while escorting Junkers Ju 88s The British claimed one Bf 110 and another damaged II ZG 26 fought to protect Ju 88s from III LG 1 over Norrent Fontes against No 615 Squadron RAF 39 Hurricane pilots claimed seven Bf 110s on this date German forces reported the loss of one Two Ju 88s were lost on 20 May though British pilots claimed six 40 85 Squadron and 615 reported the loss of one Hurricane each in force landings after combat with I ZG 26 indicating other engagements on the day 41 From 21 May Amiens fell and Boulogne was threatened 4 and 13 Squadron remained flying army cooperation flights between Lille and Saint Omer The squadrons lost five between them I ZG 26 were responsible for one ZG 26 operated over the Pas de Calais through the day as the British counter attacked at Arras 42 On 23 May a group of the ZG 26 reported only 19 of the 26 Bf 110s operational 43 During the Battle of Calais on 24 May ZG 26 with ZG 76 encountered the Supermarine Spitfire for the first time No 92 Squadron RAF lost two Spitfires while the ZG s reported two losses between them 44 From 25 May 1940 ZG 26 was reassigned from Jagdfliegerfuhrer 2 to Fliegerkorps V to provide KG 51 with support 45 ZG 26 remained in action during the Dunkirk evacuation and the final phase of the French campaign Fall Rot Over 31 May ZG 26 claimed five Spitfires over Dunkirk 46 Two Hurricanes were known to have been shot down in combat with Bf 110s Both No 229 Squadron RAF pilots survived A Spitfire from No 64 Squadron RAF was reported lost in combat with Bf 110s Its pilot was captured but later died of wounds 47 On 5 June Stab ZG 26 was based at Sint Truiden I ZG 26 at Yvrench Saint Omer II ZG 26 at Lille and III ZG 26 at Arques Pas de Calais 48 ZG 26 was subordinated to Fliegerkorps I in June and flew in support of German air operations against Operation Aerial By the end of the French campaign following the Armistice of 22 June 1940 the Zerstorergeschwader 1 2 26 52 and 76 had suffered a combined loss of 32 percent the worst percentage loss by any German wing type 49 Battle of Britain Edit In July 1940 the Churchill Government rejected Adolf Hitler s offers of a peace settlement Hitler authorised the planning for Operation Sea Lion a proposed amphibious landing in the United Kingdom The Luftwaffe began an air campaign against Channel convoys beginning the first phase of what became known as the Battle of Britain The Kanalkampf was designed to draw out RAF Fighter Command and achieve air superiority by defeating it in battle and by bombing airfields and known supporting facilities radar stations and factories ZG 26 was based at multiple locations in northern France Huth and the Stab ZG 26 was based at Lille I ZG 26 under Hauptmann Wilhelm Macrocki located to Yvrench II ZG 26 under the command of Ralph von Rettberg based itself at Crecy en Ponthieu while III ZG 26 based at Barley under Hauptmann Johann Schalk The wing was returned to Jagdfliegerfuhrer 2 under the command of Luftflotte 2 50 On 9 July 1940 one day before the officially recognised start of the Battle of Britain III ZG 26 were ordered to cover raids against convoys The vulnerability of Bf 110s to nimble Hurricane and Spitfires necessitated their own protection by Bf 109s Their charges He 111s from I KG 53 and Ju 88s probably from I and II KG 51 lost only aircraft a He 111 In defending the bombers the gruppe lost three Bf 110s and another damaged losing seven airmen as missing in action Only one pilot survived The air battle occurred over the Thames Estuary and Folkestone ZG 26 s opponents were from No 43 Squadron RAF and No 151 Squadron RAF Two No 43 Squadron Hurricanes were destroyed with the pilots safe and 151 lost one destroyed in combat and one damaged one pilot was wounded The identity of the German fighter unit responsible for each is unknown but the four were reported shot down Squadron Leader No 43 Squadron G C Lott was wounded in the eyes 51 The following day 10 July the battle opened with heavy air attacks against Convoy Bread I and III ZG 26 and I JG 3 Bf 109s escorted 26 Do 17s from I KG 2 No 74 Squadron RAF engaged and the wing lost one crew and another aircraft damaged 74 Squadron suffered damage to three Spitfires while KG 2 lost two bombers and one severely damaged in combat with 111 and No 32 Squadron RAF 52 nbsp Fueling a Bf 110 of ZG 26 October 1940On 29 July Eight Bf 110s from 1 Staffel and three from 2 Staffel Schnellkampfgeschwader 210 were met near Dunkirk by 30 Bf 110 escorts from ZG 26 The formation set out for the convoys They were intercepted and attacked by No 151 Squadron Hurricanes Two Hurricanes force landed the pilots unharmed an Erpro 210 Bf 110 was damaged and ZG 26 suffered no losses the attackers claiming hits on a 1 000 GRT and an 8 000 GRT ship 53 The last actions of the Kanalkampf were fought on 11 August with a final German attack on convoys Booty Agent and Arena Walter Rubensdorffer led ErpGr 210 off the Harwich Clacton coast at noon GMT The Germans spotted the ships and began their bombing run against Booty Rubensdorffer and his Zerstorer were accompanied by eight Do 17s from the specialist 9 KG 2 whose crews were trained for low level attacks Twenty Bf 110s from ZG 26 provided high cover for the bombers The fighters were intercepted by Spitfires from 74 and 85 squadrons while six Hurricanes from No 17 Squadron attacked No 85 Squadron led by Peter Townsend shot down three Bf 110s and the Hurricanes one more two Bf 110s and three Do 17s were damaged 54 Rubensdorffer s group attacked and withdrew It was followed by another raid designed to catch those fighters already in combat when they were low on fuel and unable to assist ZG 26 destroyed one Hurricane and damaged another from 17 Squadron killing one pilot Two pilots from No 74 Squadron were shot down and killed 55 56 57 broken footnote On 13 August the Luftwaffe initiated Operation Eagle Attack Adlertag The morning weather was bad and Hermann Goring ordered a postponement of raids 58 KG 2 were not informed and took off at 04 50 for their target ZG 26 were scheduled as their escort but received the cancellation order Oberstleutnant Huth took off to warn the Dorniers of the cancellation Unable to contact the bombers by radio Huth tried to signal them by flying in front of them and performing aerobatics Commander of the bomber force Johannes Fink ignored him and flew on The raid was detected but incorrectly plotted causing Fighter Command to miss the unprotected Dorniers 59 On the 15 August known as black Thursday in the Luftwaffe ZG 26 did not suffer losses but the following day the wing reported two losses one destroyed one damaged in combat with Spitfires from No 19 Squadron RAF over Harwich The damaged fighter belonged to the Stab ZG 26 60 The burden of the Zerstorergeschwader 15 August operations fell to ZG 76 which suffered heavy casualties operating from bases in Norway 61 nbsp Messerschmitt Bf 110 under attack from a Spitfire caught on the latter s gun cameraOn 18 August a date known as The Hardest Day ZG 26 performed in the combat air patrol role RAF Biggin Hill and RAF Kenley KG 1 was to send 60 He 111s to conduct a high level attack on Biggin Hill kg 76 was to attack RAF Kenley kg 76 could muster 48 Do 17s and Ju 88s Fighter escort was provided by JG 3 JG 26 JG 51 JG 52 JG 54 and ZG 26 The Jagdgeschwader would carry out free hunting and close escort 62 ZG 26 and JG 3 were engaged by No 610 No 615 and No 32 Squadrons No 615 suffered heavy losses in the battle 63 ZG 26 were responsible for 12 of the 15 fighters shot down in the battle nine of which were destroyed 64 7 ZG 26 claimed its 30th victory of the war having suffered only one loss since 1939 64 The German High Command credited ZG 26 were credited with 51 victories of the 124 granted to the German fighter units by their command 64 A maximum of 34 RAF fighters were lost in reality to all causes 65 ZG 26 reported losses on the day They were engaged by other fighter squadrons 56 Squadron was one such unit 66 In the short and sharp engagement ZG 26 lost five Bf 110s and another damaged to 56 Squadron 67 Worse was to follow when No 54 and No 501 engaged the Messerschmitts ZG 26 lost a further two shot down and two damaged to No 54 Squadron 68 None of the RAF Squadrons reported any losses in these engagements 69 ZG 26 lost other machines to No 151 and 46 Squadrons when they arrived to join the battle 67 In the afternoon ZG 26 provided escort for KG 53 bombers bombing RAF North Weald 70 13 Hurricanes from 85 Squadron led by Peter Townsend struck at the bombers but was blocked by ZG 26 Bf 109s were also present and inconclusive engagements began 71 No 85 Squadron accounted for one He 111 but lost a Hurricane to the Bf 110s 72 KG 53 lost four He 111s destroyed and one damaged Its personnel losses amounted to 12 dead two wounded and four prisoners of war A further five were rescued by British ships bringing the total number captured to nine 73 No 151 Squadron engaged III ZG 26 but two of the Hurricanes were brought down including Squadron Leader Eric King directly above the airfield 74 The low losses of the group in the face of fighter attacks were down to the determination of ZG 26 It cost the unit seven Bf 110s and a further six damaged 67 According to one source the total losses of ZG 26 amounted to 12 destroyed and seven damaged throughout the entire day 67 Another source gives a list of 15 Bf 110s written off 13 destroyed two written off and six damaged on 18 August 1940 75 The results of the Hardest Day highlighted the vulnerability of Bf 110 which along with the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka was largely withdrawn from the battle for air superiority for a time The German High Command ordered that the continued use of the Bf 110 necessitated their escort by Bf 109s 76 On 25 August in a rare post 18 August foray ZG 2 made an appearance over England but suffered significant losses 77 On 6 September ZG 26 was ordered to attack the Brooklands Hawker factory but lost three Bf 110s and their crews when intercepted by 1 Squadron near Kenley 78 On 11 September as the Luftwaffe turned to The Blitz ZG 26 was ordered to provide escort to He 111s from KG 26 The Bf 110s failed to protect their charges losing five Bf 110s and one damaged from Stab 1 2 4 6 and 9 ZG 26 79 Their assailants were from 17 46 and 73 Squadron 80 The persistence in using ZG 26 in fighter sweeps cost the wing another two crews on 25 September with two aircraft damaged in combat with 152 and No 607 Squadron RAF near the Isle of Wight 81 The following day 70 Bf 110s from ZG 26 flew as escort for KG 55 as it bombed the Spitfire factory at Southampton Two fighters were lost from I and III ZG 26 in combat with No 238 Squadron one of their charges was shot down 82 On 28 and 29 September ZG 26 flew patrols over Hampshire with support from 60 Bf 109s from JG 2 and JG 53 83 On 27 September 30 ZG 26 crews from III ZG 26 covered KG 55 bombers as they targeted the Bristol factory Six aircraft were shot down and one damaged in combat with No 56 and No 152 Squadrons Three of the lost machines were from III ZG 26 and two from II ZG 26 84 On 30 September II ZG 26 flew a combat patrol from Cherbourg to Weymouth Dorset and shot down five Hurricanes from No 56 Squadron near Warmwell and damaged two more for the loss of one Bf 110 All six pilots survived 85 In October 1940 ZG 26 flew low level attacks on towns in southern England On 7 October II and II ZG 26 mounted an attack on Yeovil ZG 26 lost seven aircraft three from II ZG 26 and four from III ZG 26 The losses were inflicted by No 238 and No 601 Squadrons and other Yeovil defences One 601 Spitfire was damaged and landed 86 The Battle of Britain came to an end on 31 October 1940 and Sea Lion was postponed indefinitely Eastern Mediterranean and Balkans Edit ZG 26 relocated to southeast Europe in 1941 III ZG 26 supported the German invasion of Yugoslavia from 6 April 1941 II ZG 26 was based at Vrazhdebna Bulgaria under the command of Fliegerkorps VIII I ZG 26 located to Szeged Hungary under the ad hoc Fliegerfuhrer Arad under the command of Luftflotte 4 87 III ZG 26 had been operating from Sicily over the besieged island of Malta 88 III ZG 26 carried out strafing attack on Podgorica airfield destroying two bombers and damaging three belonging to the 81 Independent Grupa at Mostar Ortijes The 66 Grupa led by 4 Bombarderska Colonel Petar Vukcevic Royal Yugoslav Air Force and 7th Puk bombers were also operating from airfields in the vicinity 89 Fliegerkorps VIII claimed 60 aircraft on 6 April II ZG 26 reported one loss over Skopje 90 I ZG 26 supported Operation Retribution the bombing of Belgrade and claimed two Yugoslav flown Bf 109s 91 In combat with the 6th Puk fighter unit the group lost five Bf 110s Yugoslav also accounted for two Do 17s from 8 KG 3 92 II ZG 26 joined Bf 109s from I J LG 2 in battle against the 111 and 112 Eskadrila Hawker Fury fighters led by Captains Vojislav Popovik and Konstantin Jermakov 93 Jermokov was seen to ram a Bf 110 after exhausting his ammunition II ZG 26 lost two crews the Yugoslavs claimed to have found the body of a Bulgarian Army officer in one of the Bf 110 wrecks Presumably the officer was assisting the Germans with navigation 94 German pilots claimed 11 between them Yugoslav losses are not stated but the 36 Grupa to which the squadrons belonged had only two flyable Furies remained air worthy 94 Following the swift collapse of the Yugoslav Army ZG 26 and all its gruppen moved to support the German forces in the Battle of Greece in the fighter and fighter bomber role 95 The RAF had sustained heavy losses in the campaign to 20 April This day was to be its worst British aerial resistance prompted the Luftwaffe to initiate a sustained attack on airfields in the Athens area 96 Elements of II ZG 26 struck at the airfield Menidi Aetolia Acarnania airfield on 20 April a Greek transport a British courier aircraft and possibly 12 Blenheim bombers from 84 11 and 211 according to an eyewitness 97 Records confirm two each destroyed among 11 and 211 while 84 Squadron suffered serious damage to one and another five were damaged 98 nbsp Theodor Rossiwall ZG 26 1940 He took part in the Battle of Athens in which Pat Pattle was killed I ZG 26 attacked the Hellenic Air Force base Argos located on the Peloponnesus peninsula to the west of Athens 40 aircraft of I ZG 26 commanded and led by Major Mackroki worked over its facilities for upwards of an hour 99 The action took place on 23 April The Bf 110s destroyed 13 Hurricanes and trainers from No 208 Squadron RAF The Germans claimed 53 in total almost all the Greek aircraft present were destroyed Only two RAF Hurricanes remained plus five that took off as the German raid approached 100 II ZG 26 strafed Menidi airfield claiming two aircraft Hassani and then Megara airstrip claiming four and six destroyed respectively Amongst those destroyed were six Dornier Do 22s of the Greek 2 Mira Operations cost the gruppe one aircraft 89 ZG 26 supported the rapid advance of ground forces to Athens where on 20 April ZG 26 took part in what has been called the Battle of Athens Two of the wing s pilots may have shot down the most successful British Commonwealth pilot of the war Pat Pattle who was killed 101 102 II ZG 26 formed part of an escort force with Bf 109s from III JG 77 for approximately 100 Do 17s and Ju 88s from LG 1 The bombers attacked shipping while ZG 26 loitered strafing targets In combat with Pattle s squadron they claimed five Four Hurricanes were known to have been shot down in combat with Bf 110s The Hurricane squadron also claimed five Bf 110s but lost two pilots killed Among the few RAF survivors of the battle still airborne at its end was Pilot Officer Roald Dahl the future poet and novelist 103 On 14 May during te build up for the Crete landings I and II ZG 26 were surprised on their Argos airfield by No 252 Squadron RAF The Messerschmitts were lined up wingtip to wingtip and 13 were hit three destroyed and one damaged 104 On 22 May 1941 the final phase of the Greek campaign the Battle of Crete began ZG 26 flew bombing and strafing missions in support of the invasion Suda Bay and Heraklion airfield were particular targets On 22 May II ZG 26 lost two aircraft against these targets and supporting Fallschirmjager forces 105 The following day II ZG 26 assisted 5 JG 77 in attack the British 10th MTB Flotilla which was taking a toll on Axis naval forces Seven of these Motor Torpedo Boats were destroyed 106 On 28 May this group with II ZG 76 and KG 2 bombed and strafed British positions at Heraklion airfield allowing 900 paratroopers to reinforce the hard pressed German paratroopers that had survived the disastrous first landing 107 Among the final actions of the battle was death of 2 ZG 26 commanding officer Hauptmann Karl Heindorf who was shot down over Crete on 31 May 108 North Africa Libya and Egypt Edit In response to the failed Italian invasion of Egypt Hitler aided Benito Mussolini to prevent a collapse of the Axis powers in the North African Campaign Operation Compass in 1941 drove out the Italian 10th Army and threatened to destroy Italian forces in Italian Libya Among the Luftwaffe contingent rushed to Africa was III ZG 26 along with a single staffel from I ZG 26 2 ZG 26 They arrived at airstrips near Castel Benito Sirte and Marble Arch on 30 January 1941 All of these units came under the command of Gruppenkommandeur Karl Kaschka and his adjutant Oberleutnant Fritze Schulze Dickow who led 8 ZG 26 The group consisted of 7 8 and 9 staffel ZG 26 was tasked with supporting elements of StG 1 StG 2 and StG 3 and their Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers 109 On 10 February 1941 ZG 26 s opponents in Africa amounted to two squadrons No 73 Squadron RAF and No 3 Squadron RAAF Two days later Erwin Rommel commander of the German Africa Corps arrived in Tripoli followed by elements of what became the 21st Panzer Division on 14 February On this date ZG 26 suffered the first loss in Africa when III Gruppe Bf 110 was shot down and its pilot Unteroffizier Lippski and his gunner captured 110 A further loss occurred on 15 February but III ZG 26 claimed its first success in combat with 3 RAAF on 19 February The German unit shielded II StG 2 and at the cost of one Bf 110 and a Ju 87 destroyed two Hurricanes killing one pilot 110 With Operation Sonnenblume in the full swing III ZG 26 suffered two casualties on 23 February as Axis forces recaptured Cyrenaica 111 7 ZG 26 lost one Bf 110 during the battle of Marsa Brega to 3 RAAF 112 On 3 April the 2nd Armoured Division retreated from Antelat deserting No 6 Squadron RAF which had arrived in that area The advance caught the squadron off guard and they retreated to Msus During the day 6 squadron ran into a formation of II StG 2 Ju 87s and eight Bf 110s from III ZG 26 They claimed three certain and three probable victories against the Ju 87s only one Ju 87 pilot was killed and four of the Bf 110s No German losses are stated and ZG 26 s claims of three Hurricanes cannot be confirmed for 6 Squadron s records were destroyed in the retreat 113 On 5 April six Bf 110s from ZG 26 strafed an airfield hitting five Bristol Blenheims a Hurricane and a Lysander Two of the Blenheim s and the Lysander were unflyable and burned during the retreat 113 nbsp A wrecked Bf 110D from ZG 26 Gazala December 1941In early April the frontline consolidated The 7th Australian Division was landed at Tobruk on 7th and on the 8th the Axis landed the 15th Panzer Division to sustain the drive across Libya and into Egypt The Allied forces dug in around the port beginning the Siege of Tobruk 6 and 73 Squadrons were left in the perimeter of Tobruk while other Commonwealth units retreated into Egypt British bomber forces continued long range support operations No 55 Squadron RAF lost a bomber to III ZG 26 in the process on 8 April 113 ZG 26 lost two more aircraft and one pilot filled the following day for a single claim in action with 73 squadron while a 6 Squadron Hurricane was claimed on 11 April On 14 April 70 German aircraft along with support from 18 and 155 Gruppo Regia Aeronautica attacked Tobruk 73 squadron lost one pilot killed against III ZG 26 but three III StG 1 crews were shot down and captured A further attack triggered a battle with 3 RAAF German records confirm the loss of one ZG 26 crew ZG 26 were able to account for a No 45 Squadron RAF Blenheim before Bf 109s from I JG 27 arrived to carry the burden of fighter operations 114 On 25 April III ZG 26 reported the destruction of one Hurricane but lost Leutnant Oskar Lemcke when he collided with it No 274 Squadron RAF lost two pilots missing 115 In strafing attacks against Tobruk ZG 26 lost another crew and a further pilot wounded on 1 May 116 III ZG 26 supported the defeat of Operation Battleaxe in June 1941 though its pilots claimed a solitary aircraft shot down on 17 June The remainder fell to JG 27 s Bf 109s 117 nbsp Bf 110 carrying twin 900 litre drop tanks with vertical fins 9 staffel III ZG 26On 30 June while escorting 20 Ju 87s with 12 Italian fighters and 10 Bf 109s five ZG 26 Bf 110s were engaged by No 250 Squadron RAF and two crews were killed On 11 or 12 another crew was lost in combat with 1 Squadron SAAF On 21 August 1941 ZG 26 claimed four 2 Squadron SAAF Hurricanes that were seen to crash Schultz Dickow claiming the formation leader in exchange for one crew killed On 3 September near Sollum two Hurricanes from No 451 Squadron RAF were intercepted by three III ZG 26 Bf 110s and lost one pilot III ZG 26 had now claimed 33 aerial victories since their arrival in Africa 118 Large air battles took place in the build up to Operation Crusader which ultimately relieved Tobruk On 15 November three III ZG 26 aircraft were shot down over Allied territory attack airfields One them was commanding officer Schultze Dickow Another Bf 110 piloted by Oberfeldwebel Swoboda landed in the desert to pick him up During the month the group replenished its establishment and had three staffeln 7 8 and 9 operating from Derna Libya at the beginning of Crusader the latter staffeln returning from Crete 119 On 20 November two crews were wounded and three Bf 110s were shot down in combat on 24 November resulting in the capture of two pilots one from 8 and 9 ZG 26 The latter combat took place against 4 Squadron SAAF and No 80 Squadron RAF The following day four Bf 110s and their crews were lost in what was described as a bad day for the Bf 110s of III ZG 26 120 On 4 December over the Trigh Capuzzo Sergeant Dodd 274 Squadron shot down a Bf 110 piloted by Major Karl Kaschka Oberleutnant Wehmeyer landed alongside the wreck to find the gunner dead and Kaschka dying 121 On 12 December the group shot down two 12 Squadron SAAF Martin Maryland bombers and a 55 Squadron Blenheim over the sea However on 24 December Kaschka s replacement at III ZG 26 Hauptmann Thomas Steinberger was lost at sea with another 9 ZG 26 crew on a ferry flight from Crete 122 By 31 December 1941 III ZG 26 had flown 2 962 sorties in North Africa 483 of these were close air support They had lost 11 killed six in accidents 27 missing nine captured and 16 wounded 123 By 16 January 1942 only 7 ZG 26 remained on the frontline in Africa It possessed eight aircraft but only four were operational 124 Twelve days later on 26 January another crew was lost one was captured the others died of wounds On 13 April in an unusual episode Bf 110s of 7 ZG 26 landed at an abandoned British airfield name unspecified and destroyed the installations after climbing out of their aircraft 125 Further details in updated sources indicate six 7 ZG 26 Bf 110s escorted Italian Savoia Marchetti SM 82s to the airfield While three Bf 110s flew cover 60 Italian personnel landed and destroyed abandoned fuel and lubrication tanks in an operation lasting until 10 00 126 ZG 26 engaged in maritime and air escort sorties On one such operation it lost one of three 7 ZG 26 Bf 110s escorting Junkers Ju 52 transports They were unable to prevent nine Ju 52s from being shot down by Allied fighters on 12 May KGrzbV 400 and III KGrzbV 1 lost four each KGrzbV1 lost a single transport 127 The wing operated in the close air support role in May 1942 losing one on 2nd and 12th then operating in support of the Battle of Gazala On 27 May the group claimed two Hurricanes for one crew lost and captured though their opponents were probably P 40s from 5 Squadron SAAF ZG 26 lost a further crew killed and another aircraft severely damaged by the end of the day 128 During April and May 1942 III ZG 26 began night fighter flights over the desert claiming one bomber on 29 May 1942 when assisted by search lights The loss is confirmed through Allied records and likely belonged to 24 Squadron SAAF 129 On 1 June 1942 7 ZG 26 attacked motorised vehicles with support from 9 ZG 26 Two of the latter unit lost two Bf 110s while the former lost one crew when a tank it was attacking exploded in front of them All six men were killed 130 Defeat in Africa From Egypt to Tunisia Edit nbsp Bf 110 III ZG 26 crash landed near Tobruk 1941III ZG 26 s activities from the beginning to end of the Second Battle of El Alamein appear to have been non notable for the unit does not appear to have filed any claims in combat or reported any losses Only one aircraft was abandoned at Berka airfield as the Axis forces retreated from Egypt 131 III ZG 26 had been returned to Germany for rest and replenishment It returned to Africa upon Operation Torch the Anglo American landings in Morocco and Algeria The group was equipped with Bf 110Cs still and a small number of Ju 88Cs and Do 17Zs 132 III ZG 1 followed with the new Messerschmitt Me 210 132 On 14 November 1942 the group was providing fighter escort to Ju 52 transports from Sicily to Tunis No 126 Squadron RAF patrolling from Malta encountered one such formation and a dogfight saw one fighter from each side shot down 133 Staffeln were also based at Gabes airfield on 29 November for Lockheed P 38 Lightnings from the 1st Fighter Group based at Youks les Bains Airfield strafed the airfield The US pilots claimed two Bf 110s in aerial combat the other being claimed by the 14th Fighter Group 133 The Run for Tunis prolonged the African campaign The Allied powers established considerable air power in Algeria and Tunisia by early December 1942 134 III ZG 26 began to operate from Sicilian airfields with greater frequency 135 The Bf 110s were used mainly in the long range escort role for air transports between Greece Crete Sicily and Africa rather than the air superiority role These operations were carried out at low altitudes 136 The threat of long range heavy fighters such as the Bristol Beaufighter was evident on 4 5 December when No 227 Squadron RAF claimed two transports carrying invaluable ground personnel were shot down over the Strait of Sicily one belonging to III ZG 26 137 The group lost all three Bf 110s escorting 32 Ju 52s on 11 December 1942 Beaufighters from No 272 Squadron RAF and Spitfires from No 249 Squadron RAF intercepted Eight of the transports were claimed and more damaged The only group success was the shooting down of a Martin Baltimore No 69 Squadron RAF 138 On 22 January 1943 another patrol protecting a convoy engaged B 26 Marauders from the 416th Bombardment Group with JG 53 the latter succeeded in downing two confirmed by US losses but the results of ZG 26 s involvement are unclear 139 In action with P 38s of the 82nd Fighter Group and B 26s of the 319th Bombardment Group ZG 26 lost two crews who intervened to protect freighters and two He 111s that came under attack on 31 January 1943 140 ZG 26 continued over water operations claiming a P 38 on 1 February losing three crews and one damaged to the US 82nd Fighter Group protecting two tankers from 319th Bomb Group on 3rd By 28 February 1943 Trapani in Sicily was III ZG 26 s base under the command of Hauptmann Vogel Amongst the few successes was the action 17 March 1943 when the pilots claimed four or five Bristol Beauforts from No 272 Squadron RAF The action involved III ZG 1 and their Me 210s 141 Successes for Zerstorer pilots were few in the Mediterranean at this stage Feldwebel Gunther Wegmann was among the few exceptions a picture showing eight claims on his rudder exists though the port vertical stabiliser shows visible signs of combat damage via four 20mm cannon shells and a single 303 holes Wegmann claimed 14 aircraft flying the Bf 110 and Me 410 and became one of the few German jet aces 142 It is known that the unit remained in Africa until the late stages of the Battle of Tunisia for a group machine was reported destroyed at Sfax airfield on 30 March 1943 131 In early April 1943 Operation Flax began which cut off the air bridge from Sicily to Tunis Two crews were shot down on the operation s first day 143 In combat with 82nd Fighter Group 95th Squadron P 38s III ZG 26 defended Ju 52 transports yet again losing two They claimed seven P 38s but only three US fighters were lost 15 Ju 52s were claimed by American pilots The 96th Squadron spotted and engaged the Germans claiming another four but losing one pilot to III ZG 26 144 On 16 April III ZG 26 claimed five B 17 Flying Fortress bombs from the 97th Bombardment Group and possibly another from the 301st Bombardment Group four were brought down during an attack on Palermo 145 On 13 May 1943 Panzer Army Africa surrendered ending the Tunisian Campaign and the fighting in North Africa At this time 965 Allied aircraft had been claimed shot down by the Luftwaffe over Africa between November 1942 and May 1943 III ZG 26 accounted for at least 17 of these 146 Invasion of the Soviet Union Edit III ZG 26 remained in North Africa in June 1941 Stab I and II ZG 26 moved to Eastern Europe still under the command of Fliegerkorps VIII The wing was under the strategic control of Luftflotte 2 147 ZG 26 spearheaded the air strikes against the Red Air Force air bases that opened Operation Barbarossa and started the war on the Eastern Front 5 ZG 26 led by Johannes von Richthofen a cousin of Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen who commanded Fliegerkorps VIII and Manfred von Richthofen attacked the air base at Alytus which had the distinction of becoming the first airfield attacked on 22 June 1941 The Soviet Fighter Aviation Regiment s 15 IAP attached to the 8th Fighter Division 8 SAD occupied the base 148 The Soviet pilots managed to get airborne but did not intercept the Bf 110s but the Ju 87s of StG 2 and Bf 109s of II JG 27 which were following up Richthofen s attack 149 The Soviet bomber regiments were active in the first days and on 29 June they caught and destroyed 10 ZG 26 Bf 110s and II JG 27 Bf 109s on the ground at Vilnus airfield 150 Richthofen s own log book recorded 29 combat missions for II ZG 26 in the first 14 days of July 1941 during the Battle of Smolensk before it was moved to support Army Group North under the command of Luftflotte 1 151 ZG 26 concentrated in airfield strikes as Army Group North pushed toward Leningrad precipitating a clash with the 5 IAP 6 ZG 26 reported a loss on 10 August when a MiG 3 belonging to 71 IAP and piloted by Captain Ivan Gorbachyov rammed one its aircraft 152 In a notable action on 12 August ZG 26 destroyed 10 to 15 aircraft at Volosovo airfield while the escorting II JG 54 claimed seven aircraft in combat On 13 August II ZG 26 reported one loss over Kingisepp in action with 6 IAP Commanding officer JG 54 Hannes Trautloft believed the ZG 26 attacks were having an impact 152 24 Bf 110s from I ZG 26 straffed Kotly airfield but found only one aircraft and suffered one machine damaged in air combat on 16 August 153 ZG 26 achieved success against Nizino airfield which housed the 5 IAP on 19 August 153 For the cost of one Bf 110 Soviet records reported that 20 fighters were destroyed and a further 13 damaged in the attack in contrast to German claims of 40 destroyed 153 This claim took the total number of claims made by ZG 26 from 22 June 1941 to 191 Soviet aircraft destroyed in the air and 663 on the ground 153 On 27 August the Leningrad Front began a full scale counterattack against the XXXXI Panzer Corps at Mga ZG 27 fought with the 7 IAK and 5 IAP regiments in violent aerial clashes 154 Three Bf 110s were claimed by these fighter units but German losses are unstated On 29 August 35 IAP joined the battle and claimed two more Bf 110s German losses are again unstated 153 II ZG 26 supported I KG 77 and elements of JG 54 and KGr 806 in Operation Beowulf a seizure of Soviet held islands in the Baltic On 6 September ZG 26 attacked the airfield at Kagul and destroyed eight aircraft the operation was successful 154 ZG 26 reverted to supporting the Siege of Leningrad in September On 19 September it supported the largest and most lethal bombing attacks to date as 442 people were killed The wing reported one crew lost 155 In late September ZG 26 was moved back to Luftflotte 2 as part of Fliegerkorps VIII The wing was ordered to provide close air support for Operation Typhoon the Battle of Moscow 156 The two groups fought in the successful early phase of the battle On 20 October 1941 I ZG 26 was ordered to return to Germany and was renamed II NJG 1 leaving II ZG 26 and SKG 210 the only Bf 110 units in the Soviet Union Days later Luftflotte 2 was ordered to transfer to southern Europe and support the Battle of the Mediterranean 157 The Moscow offensive failed and was subjected to a large Soviet counter offensive on 5 December 1941 II ZG 26 remained on the central sector protecting the Demyansk Pocket Defence of the Reich and dissolution Edit In the late summer and early autumn the ZG wing s joined the RLV forces for the Defence of the Reich operations against the United States Army Air Force in particularly the Eighth Air Force The heavy fighter wings had a chequered past These units had lost gruppen and staffeln to the German night fighter force but were resurrected in the close air support role where the Luftwaffe maintained a measure of control The Oberkommando der Luftwaffe still regarded the heavy armament of the Bf 110 and the emerging Messerschmitt Me 410 as ideal bomber destroying weapons in areas free of American long range fighter escorts ZG 26 which had lost one group to NJG 1 in 1941 gained II ZG 26 back through the renaming and assignment of III ZG 1 158 nbsp Me 410A at RAF Cosford This machine served with ZG 26 and was captured in Denmark May 1945 The wing emblem is visibleHitler favoured the Rheinmetall BK 5 cannon for use in the Me 410 and they equipped II ZG 26 The recoil and feed mechanisms were not designed for aerial combat the gun having been designed initially as an anti tank weapon The weapon frequently jammed and rarely could a pilot fire off more than a single round before the gun ceased to function The fighters could carry an additional Werfer Granate 21 aerial mortar as could the Bf 109 or Focke Wulf Fw 190 158 In addition II ZG 26 was placed under the command of Eduard Tratt regarded as the leading Zerstorer pilot of the war 159 By the second week in October 1943 ZG 26 was operating as a three gruppen wing 160 On 10 October 1943 ZG 26 made its first notable interception of an American heavy bomber formation On this date Eighth Air Force planners decided to keep the pressure of the Combined Bomber Offensive on the Luftwaffe fighter force Jagddivision 2 committed 350 fighters in at least 13 Jagd and Zerstorergruppen to defend the day s target the city of Munster JG 1 and JG 26 Bf 109s and Fw 190s attacked the 14th Bombardment Wing with success The 390th Bomb Group 90th Bomb Group and 100th Bomb Group formations were broken up and suffered heavy losses The situation allowed Major Karl Boehm Tettelbach commanding III ZG 26 to attack the shattered wing leading the 3rd Bombardment Division 161 In total 30 B 17 Flying Fortress bombers were shot down along with a single P 47 Thunderbolt fighter The cost was 25 German fighters and 12 airmen killed Nine were Bf 110s and Me 410s It was clear that the destroyer wings required protection from American fighter escorts 162 In 1944 the long range USAAF fighter escorts began to appear In February Big Week commenced a systematic series of operations against the Luftwaffe s combat units and supporting industry In a prelude the Eighth Air Force struck at Frankfurt on 11 February 163 ZG 26 operated as part of Jagddivision 7 II ZG 26 II JG 3 and II JG 11 responded 606 Allied fighters covered the bomber stream from 13 US Fighter Groups The bombers were well protected and lost five and three damaged 164 The ensuing dogfights cost the Luftwaffe 17 killed and 10 wounded 164 The VIII Fighter Command lost 13 fighters eight were P 38 Lightnings from the 20th Fighter Group 164 Just one bomber the main targets and 10 fighters were claimed ZG 26 which were hard pressed were effectively protected by Bf 109s this time Nevertheless in II ZG 26 which was the only Me 410 equipped group in the Luftwaffe the pilots still regarded it as a suicide command 164 Big Week began on 20 February part of the Pointblank directive German fighter production was targeted Specifically those factories producing the Bf 109 Fw 190 Bf 110 Me 410 and Ju 88 The first day proved costly for the German fighter defences The northern forces of the operation lost only six bombers and southern force 15 and four damaged The defending German units lost 44 aircrew killed 29 wounded and 74 fighters destroyed with 29 damaged 165 The Zerstorergeschwader suffered severe losses III ZG 26 lost 10 killed and seven wounded along with 10 Bf 110s destroyed and three damaged when it was engaged by P 47 Thunderbolts of the 56th Fighter Group while forming up in the van of attack against the southern force 165 On 22 February 799 bombers were dispatched by the Eighth The 2nd and 3rd Bombardment Divisions were recalled leaving only 99 bombers from the 1st Bombardment Division to carry out the mission in scattered over Germany US escorts claimed 59 destroyed seven damaged and 26 probable victories against German fighters for the loss of 11 and one damaged 166 German losses were 48 single engine fighters and 16 Zerstorer 166 III ZG 26 was the hardest hit losing four killed three wounded and eight Bf 110s II ZG 26 lost one Me 410 The pilot was group commander Eduard Tratt was killed The most successful Zerstorer pilot of the war he was awarded the Knight s Cross with Oak Leaves posthumously 166 nbsp Bf 110 piloted by Heinz Vinke shot down by RAF Fighters shown on a gun camera film Zerstorer units suffered heavily in 1944ZG 26 operated on 6 March 1944 in defence of Berlin The Eighth made a large scale attack on the city III ZG 26 which had been moved to the operational control of Jagddivision 1 assembled over Magdeburg Led by Major Hans Kogler it contained seven cannon armed Bf 110s in third group and 10 Me 410s of II ZG 26 each armed with four mortars They were followed by 24 rocket armed Bf 110s from ZG 76 from Jagddivision 7 55 Bf 109s from I JG 33 provided high cover while 10 fighters from JG 302 supported the interception 167 The ZG 26 pilots were ordered to attack with rockets from head on but this proved difficult American reports show no B 17 was hit by the 41 Zerstorer They did use their cannon effective and shot down a number of B 17s 10 were confirmed 167 However P 51 Mustang escort fighters from the 4th Fighter Group descended upon them The Americans remained upsun until Kogler committed his force The 357th Fighter Group as also present by accident having missed the rendezvous with the 2nd Bombardment Division and rushed to the sound of the guns 167 The casualty count reached 16 of the 41 Me 410s and Bf 110s engaged along with five Bf 109s and two Fw 190s The 1st Bombardment Division lost eight bombers to gunfire three in collisions and several damaged and dropped out of formation Four P 51s were lost from the 4th Fighter Group 167 Highlighting the plight of Zerstorer units further was the loss of 11 of the 16 III NJG 5 Bf 110 night fighters with eight pilots killed 168 the raid cost the Eighth 69 bombers destroyed and six written off with 11 escorts and three damaged The American loss rate of 10 2 percent was acceptable at this stage The Luftwaffe lost 64 fighters 19 2 percent with eight killed 36 missing and 23 wounded 169 The German Wehrmachtbericht singled out Kogler as the leader of a Zerstorerverband that especially distinguished itself despite crippling losses The heavy fighters had been touted as wonder weapons in their new role as bomber destroyers and their extreme vulnerability was kept from Hitler and the German public 170 On 23 April no German twin engine fighters were seen by the American formations despite large scale raids on Munster and Braunschweig By month s end ZG 26 had relocated to Konigsberg in East Prussia III ZG 26 s war diary observed the mission now would be to battle enemy formations that penetrate east of Berlin without escort 171 On 9 April 1944 the 3rd Bombardment Group gave ZG 26 such an opportunity when it flew against targets in East Prussia and Poland I ZG 26 had been rendered non operational III ZG 26 had been installing rockets for a ground attack mission on the Eastern Front when the order to scramble came through 18 Bf 110s got airborne were unable to find the bombers and landed at an airfield without the appropriate fuel and were out of commission for the rest of the day Only II ZG 26 made an attack claiming three B 17s for the loss of two Me 410s 172 On 11 April the 3rd Bombardment Division with support from 1st and 2nd flew against six separate targets in central and eastern Germany The 3rd took the Baltic Sea route while the other divisions flew the well trodden path south to the Zuider Zee 917 bombers and 819 escorts were in the air and the Luftwaffe reacted by sending 432 sorties from 18 fighter two heavy fighter and two night fighter groups The spreading of the bomber stream reduced the escort screen s density The 4th Fighter Group broke up the only attack on the 3rd Division en route to the target by ZG 26 173 On the return II and III ZG 26 caught the bombers unescorted The Me 410 group attacked with rockets to the rear while III ZG 26 carried out four frontal attacks with cannons They claimed 16 bombers nine were shot down and a tenth landed in Sweden A second sortie saw ZG 26 run into the 1st Division escorted by the 4th Fighter Group Eight Me 410s and three Bf 110s with 16 crew killed three wounded 173 On 12 May 1944 the Eighth struck at targets in the Dresden area The bomber stream was heavily engaged by JG 11 and JG 27 All 40 Me 410s that were combat ready were dispatched by ZG 26 to Dresden to await developments as the stream neared Frankfurt ZG 26 was well placed to intercept bombers heading towards Chemnitz and did so claiming three B 17s and two Consolidated B 24 Liberator bombers in exchange for four Me 410s and most their crews to return fire 174 Stab I and II ZG 26 remained isolated in East Prussia as the Invasion of Normandy occurred in June 1944 It was allotted III JG 300 to escort it in future interceptions a role to which the latter was unsuited as it operated the Fw 190 heavy fighter variants 175 On 15 June the pair formed an attack on the 3rd Bombardment Division near Magdeburg They downed two B 17s for six losses though they claimed six bombers and two P 51s 176 III JG 300 attacked the 492nd Bombardment Group of the 2nd Bombardment Division which had fallen behind drawing the small group of American escorts nearby and losing 13 fighters 176 The attack left the 492nd exposed Repeated front and rear attacks were made by the Me 410s and they destroyed 13 B 24s The P 51s returned to and ZG 26 lost 12 of the heavy fighters German pilots claimed 39 bombers and five fighters In reality 13 bombers and two fighters were lost 176 On 7 July 1944 Leipzig was targeted The largest formation to attract the fighter escort was the 42 Me 410s of ZG 26 and 37 Bf 109s now operating in III JG 300 JG 300 attempted to protect the Me 410s but suffered heavily losing four killed three wounded and 13 Bf 109s ZG 26 lost eight five killed and four wounded while claiming four B 24s A 4th Fighter Group P 51 collided with an Me 410 and Captain James Morris commander of the 20th Fighter Group was shot down by an Me 410 177 The American Division reported 20 B 24s lost on the mission the German JG 300 and ZG 26 wings claimed 51 between them 32 by JG 300 which 27 being confirmed 178 The actions were the last major contributions of ZG 26 to the defence of the Reich On 26 September 1944 III ZG 26 began plans to convert to the Messerschmitt Me 262 The group became the fight jet fighter unit JG 7 became the first jet fighter wing It was renamed III JG 6 I ZG 26 followed suite as I JG 6 as did II ZG 26 which became II JG 6 179 Commanding officers EditOberst Kurt Bertram von Doring 1 May 1939 14 December 1939 Oberstleutnant Joachim Friedrich Huth 14 December 1939 1 November 1940 Oberst Johann Schalk 1 November 1940 29 September 1941 Oberstleutnant Karl Boehm Tettelbach October 1943 June 1944 Oberstleutnant Johann Kogler June 1944 July 1944I ZG 26 Edit Hauptmann Karl Kaschka 1 February 1939 January 1940 Hauptmann Wilhelm Makrocki 27 January 1940 21 May 1941 Hauptmann Herbert Kaminski May 1941 1941 Hauptmann Wilhelm Spies 27 January 1942II ZG 26 Edit Major Friedrich Vollbracht 1 May 1939 April 1940 Hauptmann Ralph von Rettberg April 1940 April 1942 Hauptmann Eduard Tratt 11 October 1943 22 February 1944III ZG 26 Edit Hauptmann Johann Schalk 1 May 1939 1 September 1940 Major Karl Kaschka 1 September 1940 4 December 1941 KIA Hauptmann Thomas Steinberger 4 December 1941 24 December 1941 Hauptmann Georg Christl 25 December 1941 12 July 1943 Major Fritz Schulze Dickow 12 July 1943 11 February 1944 Major Johann Kogler 11 February 1944 2 June 1944 Hauptmann Werner Thierfelder 2 June 1944 18 July 1944References EditCitations Edit Hooton 2007a p 78 Hooton 1994 pp 170 176 177 Hooton 1994 pp 170 176 177 205 Hooton 1994 p 282 Chorley 2005 p 17 Shores Foreman amp Ehrengardt 1992 pp 78 Shores Foreman amp Ehrengardt 1992 pp 126 127 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 36 37 Shores Foreman amp Ehrengardt 1992 p 128 Shores Foreman amp Ehrengardt 1992 p 129 Bowman 2015 p 31 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 37 39 Holmes 2010 p 72 Aders 1978 p 14 Hooton 2007b pp 18 19 Hooton 2007b pp 45 46 a b Hooton 2007b pp 46 47 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 11 13 a b c Hooton 2007b p 48 Hooton 2007b p 56 Hooton 2007b p 52 Hooton 2007b p 53 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 66 68 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 p 79 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 123 126 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 132 133 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 p 137 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 141 142 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 146 155 Hooton 2007b p 66 a b Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 201 204 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 233 234 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 204 209 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 218 219 227 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 p 231 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 263 264 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 266 274 Hooton 2007b p 67 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 281 293 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 295 296 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 p 297 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 pp 298 299 Hooton 2007b p 69 Cull Lander amp Weiss 1999 p 316 Hooton 2007b p 71 Franks 2006 p 188 Franks 1997 pp 36 37 Hooton 2007b pp 79 80 Hooton 2007b pp 88 90 Mason 1969 p 593 Mason 1969 pp 152 155 Mason 1969 pp 156 159 Saunders 2010 pp 198 200 Mason 1969 pp 227 229 Mason 1969 pp 222 226 Mackay 2000 p 50 Shores 1985 p 46 Bungay 2000 p 208 Bungay 2000 p 207 Mason 1969 pp 265 273 Mason 1969 pp 263 264 Price 2010 p 61 Price 2010 pp 85 87 a b c Bergstrom 2015 p 141 Bungay 2000 p 231 Price 2010 pp 108 109 a b c d Mason 1969 pp 282 283 Mason 1969 p 283 Mason 1969 pp 281 282 Price 2010 p 210 Price 2010 pp 215 217 Price 2010 pp 220 222 Price 2010 pp 276 277 Bergstrom 2015 p 148 Mackay 2000 pp 54 55 Mason 1969 p 284 Mason 1969 p 303 Mason 1969 p 356 Mason 1969 pp 380 382 Mason 1969 p 382 Mason 1969 p 412 Mason 1969 pp 413 415 James amp Cox 2000 p 286 Mason 1969 pp 416 419 Mason 1969 pp 423 425 Mason 1969 p 436 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 180 Mackay 2000 p 70 a b Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 286 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 194 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 199 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 200 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 pp 179 181 a b Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 181 Ansel 1972 p 209 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 265 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 pp 264 265 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 266 Mackay 2000 p 71 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 285 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 271 Weal 1999 p 64 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 pp 269 271 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 329 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 pp 359 360 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 364 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 389 Shores Cull amp Malizia 1992 p 399 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 28 a b Shores amp Ring 1969 p 29 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 30 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 31 a b c Shores amp Ring 1969 p 33 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 33 34 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 37 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 38 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 43 45 46 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 48 52 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 60 63 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 64 68 69 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 72 73 Shores amp Ring 1969 pp 77 82 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 83 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 88 Shores amp Ring 1969 p 104 Shores Massimello amp Guest 2012b p 78 Shores Massimello amp Guest 2012b pp 209 212 Shores Massimello amp Guest 2012b pp 86 90 103 105 Shores Massimello amp Guest 2012b pp 110 111 Shores Massimello amp Guest 2012b pp 120 121 a b Shores Massimello amp Guest 2012b pp 389 432 a b Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 10 a b Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 54 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 80 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 82 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 88 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 94 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 99 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 pp 144 170 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 184 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 pp 185 187 190 228 250 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 pp 252 391 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 290 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 pp 305 306 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 pp 318 319 Shores Ring amp Hess 1975 p 436 Hooton 1999 p 302 Bergstrom 2007a p 14 Bergstrom 2007a p 15 Bergstrom 2007a p 27 Bergstrom 2007a p 50 a b Bergstrom 2007a p 58 a b c d e Bergstrom 2007a p 59 a b Bergstrom 2007a p 61 Bergstrom 2007a p 86 Bergstrom 2007a p 89 Bergstrom 2007a p 93 a b Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 105 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 90 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 137 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 132 133 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 134 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 154 155 a b c d Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 155 a b Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 156 a b c Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 158 159 a b c d Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 170 171 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 172 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 172 173 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 173 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 178 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 182 a b Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 182 183 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 197 198 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 209 a b c Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 212 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 215 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 217 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 pp 223 236 Bibliography Edit Ansel Walter 1972 Hitler and the Middle Sea Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0224 7 Aders Gebhard 1978 History of the German Night Fighter Force 1917 1945 London Janes ISBN 0 354 01247 9 Bergstrom Christer 2007a Barbarossa The Air Battle July December 1941 London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 85780 270 2 Bergstrom Christer 2015 The Battle of Britain An Epic Conflict Revisited Oxford UK Casemate ISBN 978 1612 00347 4 Bungay Stephen 2000 The Most Dangerous Enemy A History of the Battle of Britain London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 85410 721 3 Bowman Martin 2015 The Wellington Bomber Barnsley Pen and Sword ISBN 9781473853508 Caldwell Donald L Muller Richard R 2007 The Luftwaffe over Germany Defense of the Reich London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 712 0 Chorley William 2005 Aircraft and crews lost during 1939 1940 London Midland ISBN 978 0904597851 Cull Brian Lander Bruce Weiss Heinrich 1999 Twelve Days in May London Grub Street Publishing ISBN 978 1 902304 12 0 Franks Norman 2006 Air Battle for Dunkirk 26 May 3 June 1940 London Grub Street ISBN 1 904943 43 8 Franks Norman 1997 Royal Air Force Fighter Command Losses of the Second World Volume 1 Operational losses Aircraft and crews 1939 1941 Leicester UK Midland Publishing ISBN 978 1 85780 055 5 Holmes Robin 2010 The Battle of the Heligoland Bight 1939 The Royal Air Force and the Luftwaffe s Baptism of Fire London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 906502 56 0 Hooton E R 1994 Phoenix Triumphant The Rise and Rise of the Luftwaffe London Arms amp Armour Press ISBN 978 1 85409 181 9 Hooton E R 2007a Luftwaffe at War Gathering Storm 1933 39 Volume 1 London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 903223 71 0 Hooton E R 2007b Luftwaffe at War Blitzkrieg in the West Volume 2 London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 85780 272 6 Hooton E R 1999 Eagle in Flames Defeat of the Luftwaffe Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 1 85409 343 1 James T Cox Sebastian 2000 The Battle of Britain London Frank Cass ISBN 978 0 7146 8149 8 Mackay Ron 2000 Messerschmitt Bf 110 Wiltshire The Crowood Press ISBN 1 86126 313 9 Mason Francis 1969 Battle Over Britain London McWhirter Twins ISBN 978 0 901928 00 9 Price Alfred 2010 The Hardest Day The Battle of Britain 18 August 1940 London Haynes Publishing ISBN 978 1 84425 820 8 Saunders Andy 2010 Convoy Peewit August 8 1940 The First Day of the Battle of Britain London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 906502 67 6 Shores Christopher F 1985 Duel for the Sky Ten Crucial Battles of World War II London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 7137 1601 6 Shores Christopher F Cull Brian Malizia Nicola 1992 Air War for Yugoslavia Greece and Crete 1940 41 London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 07 6 Shores Christopher Foreman John Ehrengardt Chris 1992 Fledgling Eagles 1st ed London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 42 7 Shores Christopher F Massimello Giovanni Guest Russell 2012b A History of the Mediterranean Air War 1940 1945 Volume 2 North African Desert February 1942 March 1943 London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 909166 12 7 Shores Christopher Ring Hans 1969 Fighters over the Desert London Neville Spearman Limited ISBN 978 0 668 02070 1 Shores Christopher F Ring Hans Hess William N 1975 Fighters Over Tunisia London Neville Spearman ISBN 978 0 85435 210 4 Weal John 1999 Messerschmitt Bf 110 Zerstorer Aces of World War 2 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 753 5 Further reading EditAubusson Charles December 1999 Le III Zerstorer Geschwader 26 dans la Campagne d Afrique 1941 1943 III ZG 26 in the North African Campaign 1941 1943 Avions Toute l Aeronautique et Son Histoire in French 81 7 17 ISSN 1243 8650 Bergstrom Christer Mikhailov Andrey 2001 Black Cross Red Star Air War Over the Eastern Front Volume II Resurgence January June 1942 Pacifica Military History ISBN 978 0 935553 51 2 Bergstrom Christer 2007b Stalingrad The Air Battle November 1942 February 1943 London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 85780 276 4 Claasen Adam R A 2001 Hitler s Northern War The Luftwaffe s Ill Fated Campaign 1940 1945 Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1050 1 de Zeng H L Stankey D G Creek E J 2007 Bomber Units of the Luftwaffe 1933 1945 A Reference Source Volume 1 Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 1 85780 279 5 de Zeng H L Stankey D G Creek E J 2009 Dive Bomber and Ground Attack Units of the Luftwaffe 1933 1945 A Reference Source Vol 1 Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 1 9065 3708 1 Hayward Joel Summer 1997 The German use of air power at Kharkov May 1942 Air Power History 44 2 Hayward Joel 2001 Stopped at Stalingrad The Luftwaffe and Hitler s Defeat in the East 1942 1943 London University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1146 1 Holland James 2003 Fortress Malta An Island Under Siege 1940 1943 London Miramax Books ISBN 978 1 4013 5186 1 Jackson Robert 1974 Air War Over France 1939 1940 London Ian Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 0510 5 Muller Richard 1992 The German Air War in Russia 1941 1945 Baltimore The Nautical amp Aviation Publishing Company of America ISBN 1 877853 13 5 North Richard 2012 The Many Not The Few The Stolen History of the Battle of Britain London Continuum ISBN 978 1 4411 3151 5 Saunders Andy 2013 Stuka Attack The Dive Bombing Assault on England During the Battle of Britain London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 908117 35 9 Shores Christopher Cull Brian Malizia Nicola 1987 The Hurricane Years 1st ed London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 06 9 Shores Christopher F Massimello Giovanni Guest Russell 2012a A History of the Mediterranean Air War 1940 1945 North Africa Volume One June 1940 February 1942 London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 9081 17076 Portals nbsp Aviation nbsp Military of Germany nbsp World War IIZerstorergeschwader 26 at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zerstorergeschwader 26 amp oldid 1163898741, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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