10 Osaka MarchAugust 1945 10000 killed A total number of 274 American B29 heavy bomber airplanes attacked Osaka on the first night Napalm and incendiary cluster bombs were aimed at civilian ID: 227241
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Slide1
Top 10 Devastating Bombings in WWII Slide2
10. Osaka (March-August 1945) – 10,000 killed
A total number of 274 American B-29 heavy bomber airplanes attacked Osaka on the first night.
Napalm and incendiary cluster
bombs were aimed at civilian housing by the low-flying bombersSlide3
9. Kassel (February 1942-March 1945) – 10,000 killed
The city was targeted heavily, largely because of its important military-industrial sites: the
Fieseler
aircraft plant, Henschel tank-making facilities, railway works and engine works were all based there.Slide4
8. Darmstadt (September 1943-February 1944) – 12,300 killed
Bombers intentionally spread their bombs over as wide an area as possible, targeting the medieval city center where the houses were constructed from wood.Slide5
7. Pforzheim (April 1944-March 1945) – 21,200 killed
The inner city areas were more or less completely depopulated and the town ravaged as a result of explosions and deadly burning phosphorus materials.Slide6
6.
Swinoujscie
(12 March 1945) – 5,000-23,000 killed
Following the end of the war, Swinoujscie – formerly known by its German name of SwinemŸnde – was repopulated by Poles, and has remained part of Poland ever since.Slide7
5. London (September 1940-May 1941) – 20,000 people killed
The London Blitz – from the German word “blitzkrieg,” meaning “lightning war” – is, for British citizens, at least, the scene of some of the defining images of the Second World War. Slide8
4. Berlin (1940-1945) – 20,000-50,000 killed
The German capital endured a prolonged period of strategic bombing that lasted for almost the entire duration of the war.Slide9
3. Dresden (October 1944-April 1945) – 25,000 killed
Dresden, Germany’s seventh biggest city at the time of the Second World War, and an extremely important industrial
centre
, experienced one of the most severe bombing campaigns seen anywhere up to that point in time.Slide10
2. Hamburg (September 1939-April 1945) – 42,600 killed
In total, 9,000 tons of bombs were dropped in an operation of such scale and force that mainland Europe had never seen the like of it before – nor has indeed since.Slide11
Around 1,700 tons of bombs fell on the city, destroying an estimated 286,358 buildings – made largely of wood and paper – and killing an estimated 100,000 citizens or more in the resulting firestorms.
1. Tokyo (November 1944-August 1945) – 100,000-plus killed