7 Things You Forgot Happened During World War II

  • Army tank at Castle Itter
Army tank at Castle Itter
Credit: ERIC SCHWAB/ AFP via Getty Images

The biggest, most pivotal events of World War II are cemented in the collective memory  — the D-Day invasion of Normandy, the Battle of Stalingrad, the devastating deployment of atomic bombs. But beyond these headline-grabbers, there are many forgotten or overlooked events that shaped the course of the war, from a quirky yet panic-inducing mishap to a near-disaster that was narrowly avoided. Here are seven lesser-known moments from the Second World War. 

Credit: Nikolai Ignatiev/ Alamy Stock Photo

Germany Was Ambushed by “Night Witches”

Under the cover of night and in airplanes made of plywood and canvas, an all-female Soviet bomber regiment known as the “Night Witches” became an instrumental part of the European theater of World War II. The group, officially named the 588th Night Bomber Regiment, was the brainchild of esteemed Soviet aviator Marina Raskova, sometimes called the “Soviet Amelia Earhart.” Raskova convinced Soviet leaders to allow women in combat roles as the Red Army struggled against the German invasion, and between 1942 and the end of the war in 1945, the Night Witches flew more than 30,000 bombing missions against German forces. 

The planes, each crewed by a pilot and a navigator, flew in groups. The leading aircraft acted as decoys, while the last plane would cut its engine and glide in quiet darkness to the target area before firing. This move gave the group its nickname, the “Nachthexen” — German for “Night Witches” — since the approaching planes sounded like whooshing brooms. Their courageous operations and precise skills earned many of the aviators the title Hero of the Soviet Union, the nation’s highest distinction.

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