A bomb detonated on the Hochfeld railway bridge in the German city of Duisburg, Westphalia while a Belgian troop train was crossing the bridge, killing eight Belgian soldiers and two German civilians. Forty three others were injured. The bomb was in a toilet of the train itself.
The mayor of Hochfeld and twelve others were arrested as suspects.
A new bridge would be built nearby, using parts of the old bridge structure, being completed in 1927. It was rendered inoperable on May 22, 1944, by an Allied aerial bomb. The Germans in turn would blow the bridge again on May 4, 1945, but the American Army built a temporary structure to repair it on May 8, 1945, which was dubbed the "Victory Bridge".