27 March 1945 A.D. Nazis Launch Last of Their V-2s
27 March 1945 A.D. Nazis Launch Last of Their V-2s
Editors. “German launch last of their V-2s.” History. 2009. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/germans-launch-last-of-their-v-2s. Accessed 26 Mar 2015.
On this day, in a last-ditch effort to
deploy their remaining V-2 missiles against the Allies, the Germans launch
their long-range rockets from their only remaining launch site, in the
Netherlands. Almost 200 civilians in England and Belgium were added to the V-2
casualty toll.
German scientists had been working on
the development of a long-range missile since the 1930s. In October 3, 1942,
victory was achieved with the successful trial launch of the V-2, a 12-ton
rocket capable of carrying a one-ton warhead. The missile, fired from
Peenemunde, an island off Germany’s Baltic coast, traveled 118 miles in that
first test.
The brainchild of rocket scientist
Wernher von Braun, the V-2 was unique in several ways. First, it was virtually
impossible to intercept. Upon launching, the missile rises six miles vertically;
it then proceeds on an arced course, cutting off its own fuel according to the
range desired. The missile then tips over and falls on its target at a speed of
almost 4,000 mph. It hits with such force that the missile burrows itself into
the ground several feet before exploding. The V-2 had the potential of flying a
distance of 200 miles, and the launch pads were portable, making them
impossible to detect before firing.
The first launches as part of an
offensive occurred on September 6, 1944, when two missiles were fired at Paris.
On September 8, two more were fired at England, which would be followed by over
1,100 more during the next six months. On March 27, 1945, taking advantage of
their one remaining V-2 launch site, near The Hague, the Germans fired their
V-2s for the last time. At 7 a.m., London awoke to a blast-one of the bombs had
landed on a block of flats at Valance Road, killing 134 people. Twenty-seven
Belgian civilians were killed in Antwerp when another of the rockets landed
there. And that afternoon, one more V-2 landed in Kent, England, causing the
very last British civilian casualty of the war.
By the end of the war,
more than 2,700 Brits had died because of the rocket attacks, as well as
another 4,483 deaths in Belgium. After the war, both the United States and the
Soviet Union captured samples of the rockets for reproduction. Having proved so
extraordinarily deadly during the war, the V-2 became the precursor of the
Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM) of the postwar era.
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