Night Witches

Chopstick

Verified Estrogen Brigade
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Joined
Aug 25, 2006
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5,533
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Sixburgh
No, not me. Ive never heard of this before and found it amazing. Plywood and canvas? That sounds like a scout project not an actual piece of weaponry.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/15/w...popova-ww-ii-night-witch-dies-at-91.html?_r=0

The Nazis called them “Night Witches” because the whooshing noise their plywood and canvas airplanes made reminded the Germans of the sound of a witch’s broomstick.
The Russian women who piloted those planes, onetime crop dusters, took it as a compliment. In 30,000 missions over four years, they dumped 23,000 tons of bombs on the German invaders, ultimately helping to chase them back to Berlin. Any German pilot who downed a “witch” was awarded an Iron Cross.

These young heroines, all volunteers and most in their teens and early 20s, became legends of World War II but are now largely forgotten. Flying only in the dark, they had no parachutes, guns, radios or radar, only maps and compasses. If hit by tracer bullets, their planes would burn like sheets of paper.
 
Plywood and canvas was not unusual for aircraft back then. Even the Mosquito and Hawker Hurricane of WWII fame used wood and/ or canvas for major portions of the aircraft. The Hurricane accounted for the majority of air-to-air victories during the Battle of Britain and the Mossie is legendary.
 
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