Title: Navigator's Diary: 487th Bombardment Group, B-17 By: Norman K. Andrew - Intro by Bob Holliday Date: 1999-07-27 4917 Flashback:Orig. Multipage Version Hard Copy:Printer Friendly
INTRODUCTION
When Adolph Hitler began his conquest of Europe in 1939, he began to
turn that continent into "Festung Europa"...Fortress Europe. The lone
hold-out against the Third Reich was the island nation of Great
Britain.
In the summer of 1940, the Royal Air Force defeated the Luftwaffe in
"The Battle of Britain" and Britain survived to become the launching
point for the Allied war against the Nazis. Until sufficient forces
could be built up to attack Fortress Europe's walls, the Allies took to
the war on wings, for Hitler had built a fortress without a roof.
Early in 1942, the American 8th Air Force began arriving in
England to help the British with strategic bombing of Nazi
manufacturing, transportation and military targets. The RAF bombed by
night, the 8th by day. Thus began one of the greatest conflicts of
human history...the air war over Europe.
The Eighth Air Force faced a formidable opponent - the
Luftwaffe, with outstanding equipment and training, and more
importantly, they were battle-tested. By the end of the war, the air
battles that involved thousands of bombers and fighters, claimed over
26,000 American lives. This accounted for 10% of all American deaths
during the war. 18,000 airmen were wounded and over 28,000 were shot
down and captured.
One of the many groups of the Eighth Air Force sent to England to
participate in this enormous struggle was the 487th Bombardment Group
(Heavy), The Gentlemen From Hell. This story is dedicated to the airmen and ground crews of that group, and to all who served. This article is reprinted from the web site of the 487th Bombardment Group.
FOREWORD
I was copilot on a B-17 and, since Jack Stanley, our pilot, had more than
average experience, we eventually found ourselves on a lead crew. We led
squadrons, groups, wings, even the entire Third Division once. Naturally,
my navigator, Norman K. Andrew, or Andy as we called him, had to have
superlative skills, and he did. Andy was 28; I was only 22. He was from
Houston, every bit a Texan, and loved to talk about his days in the oil
drilling tool business. Fortunately, I was a good listener.
Andy is no longer with us but recently his daughter Kathy sent me his
original diary in three closely-written volumes. Andy had a broader view
of the air war over Europe than I did. While I flew, or watched
instruments, Andy watched the landmarks, the flak sites, the enemy
fighters, and what was happening to other groups.
I think his diary is
extremely worthwhile as a detailed record of what went on up there. It
demonstrates how difficult it was to coordinate a huge stream of bombers
with their human and explosive loads through weather, enemy action,
mechanical and electronic failures, and human errors, to the targets.
Sometimes we had to turn back without bombing anything; other times we
bombed "targets of opportunity." One way or another we almost always
dropped our bombs.
We were stationed at Lavenham, England, about 35 miles east of
Cambridge. We belonged to the 837th Squadron, 487th Bomb Group, 4th
Wing, 3rd Division of the Eighth Air Force. We arrived as replacements in
July when the older crews were still talking about D-Day, and flew our
first mission in August. Due to the weather there were sometimes weeks
between missions. When we weren't training we found time to explore
London, Cambridge, Bury St. Edmonds, and Lavenham. I have focussed on
the actual missions here.
I was proud to have been part of this action and I am proud to present
Andy's view of it all. He was an unforgettable person.
Bob Holliday
Santa Monica, Calif. , February 1996
NOTES ON ORGANIZATION
A squadron would mount a formation of 13
aircraft; a group had 3 squadrons and would mount 39 aircraft; a wing had
3 groups; a division had a number of wings. The 1st and 3rd divisions
were B-17s; the 2nd division was B-24s. Squadrons flew in a vee
formation with the left one higher and the right one lower than the lead
squadron. It was important to fly a tight formation for maximum
protection from fighters, but a frontal attack with 20mm guns could be
deadly.
The normal B-17 crew was 11 men; lead crews usually carried
more than that, what with Air Leaders, special navigators, and special
bombardiers. Only the lead and deputy lead aircraft carried Norden
bombsights; others toggled their bombs when they saw the lead ship drop
its bombs. The 13th ship in a squadron was "tail-end Charlie," a
vulnerable position.
Lead crews flew fewer total missions because they were the "aiming
points" and were more frequently shot down by flak and fighters. Also,
they flew more practice missions. We were in England for 9 months
compared with an average of 4-5 months for wing crews.
A GLOSSARY OF SORTS
Andy used many abbreviations and technical terms. I have tried to explain
them below.
5/10ths, etc. - fraction of cloud coverage
AFCE - anybody know?
A.F - airfield
Buncher - a beacon of known location
Chaff - aluminum foil to fool radar
CQ - Charge of Quarters, enlisted man who wakes you from a sound sleep
Engine # - Sit in the pilot's seat and count engines from left to right.
Gee Box - Plot your position by homing on a network of beacons. Very
accurate.
IP - Initial Point where you start your bomb run
Kts - Knots, nautical miles per hour
Micro-H - Electronic assistance on the bomb run, using beacon
MPI - main point of impact desired
NM - nautical miles
PFF - Pathfinder radar for bombing through overcast
Splasher - a beacon where you gather your squadrons and groups together
RP - rally point where you reassemble squadrons after the bomb run
T/O - take off
V-1 - German pilotless aircraft ("buzz bomb") powered by ramjet which dove on a
signal from an onboard timer
V-2 - German ballistic rocket carrying a ton of explosives
NOTES FROM ANDY'S DIARY
8/9/44 Mission #1
Flew our 1st mission today, 34 to go. They woke us at 1:50 am. Briefing time
3:00 am. So we knew it was pretty sure to be a long one. Had pineapple
juice, fresh egg, hotcakes, sausage, cold cereal, coffee.
Target Schmitt
ball bearing works, Nurnberg. Took off 0715 - left England 0856. Over enemy
coast 0921. Ran into overcast and cloudy weather. Turned back approx. 50
miles southeast of Aachen. Picked a target of opportunity - dropped on lead
ship and leveled the town of St. Vith - in Belgium. Encountered flak at
Liege - moderate. Landed 1220. Logged 5-1/4 hrs.
8/13/44 Mission #2
Woke us up at 5:45 am for mission #2. On the way to breakfast we piled out
of the truck and saw a buzz bomb. It was really moving along - stringing out
flames behind it. It sounded a bit louder then an outboard motor. What a
gliding angle! It hit about a mile and a half from the field.
The briefing
for the mission was the real Army stuff. Gave us series #3 charts and the
"Gee" signals were series #2. Mission was three-ship element bombing behind
the German lines - about 25 miles west of Paris 1 mile south of the Seine.
We went into France between Cherbourg and Bayeaux. We skirted the lines (on
the Allied side). We were lead ship of our element - I was really careful that
we stayed on course. Between St. Lo and Uire there was a 12-ship formation
flying on our left about 8 miles. They plowed right over a flak battery at
Falaise. I was looking right at them when one of the ships got a direct hit
in the right wing. The wing broke off between #3 and #4. Wing fell in flames
- the ship fell in flames, tight spin to the right. No parachutes observed.
Three minutes later another one took a direct hit. All I could see was shiny
bits of aluminum - just a ball of fire. No one had a chance. The formation
did not try evasive action. As near as I could spot the flak it was close to
Falaise.
We turned on the I.P. and made a 15-minute bomb run. Hit a road -
purpose of raid was to interrupt Jerry's supply lines. We dropped 36 100-lb
general purpose bombs. About 20 miles SW of Rouen there were about 12 rocket
bombs. They really leave a trail of smoke. Jack called out 4 planes down in
flames before I saw what he meant. Van Nostrand called 5 parachutes - it was
a high formation that the sun just hit at the right angle.
After the rally
point I called Jack to tack onto a formation. As usual Jack said, "Hell,
Andy, let's go home by ourselves - get there quicker." So we drug into
England with a formation on our tail. I can still see that B-17 in a tight
right spin. I knew they couldn't get out - it was spinning too tight. I'd
rather get a direct hit.
8/24/44 Mission #3
Was awakened at 1:45 this morning by Dick Giles. They were on their way to
briefing. I thought to myself, "Missed us this time." -- but, the CQ woke me
at 2:00 am for 2:30 briefing. So--after a breakfast of canned grapefruit - 2
eggs over easy - bologna (ugh!) - and cereal - and fresh oranges and coffee..
I was well prepared for the shock of the rising curtain (on the mission
route).
Holy Smokes! Whoever planned this one should have given it to the
Russians - it was sure a lot closer to them. Anyway - take-off was 7:45 -
departed Splasher #7 at 9:08, left England and headed for Heligoland at
9:32. Just before Heligoland Dick lost his oxygen and aborted so the deputy
lead took over. Target was a synthetic oil plant at Dresden - secondary, an
airplane assembly plant; last resort an airfield.
It had rained off and on
until take-off. The apron to my flak suit was wet (really frozen stiff at
25,000 ( 25 deg.C). Saw a hell of a lot of flak all along the route but the
nearest to us (except at the target) was approx. 300 yds - they used rockets
- not even close and saw one burst of red flak - the rest was black.
Every town we went by was smoke screened - but Bremen was getting quite a
pasting. They were putting flak all the way up to 30,000 but I observed no
hits.
Ball Turret
We made a very fancy bomb run - evasive action for all but about 3 minutes -
then the bomb bay doors would not open electrically. So Rector cranked them
open.
Then - on bombs away only 1/2 the load dropped, 5 500-lb GPS so Chuck
hit both the salvo and the toggle switches. That did it, but it threw the
other 5 500-lb bombs about 3 sec over the target - approx. 1000 ft. Then
Rector had to hand crank the doors shut while we were making just about a
180 and diving. There were 51 sure guns at the target.
The ride home was
just a ride. Some flak but all of it wild. Back at the base when we landed
we darn near ground-looped. The pin in the tail wheel sheared and we took
off across the infield. To top it off it started raining like the devil and
everybody got wet. There was one ship (B-17-G) that landed at Lavenham that
made it all the way back from Dresden on 2 motors. They had thrown
everything they could out, including the parachutes.
Logged 8-1/2 hours - 5:05 on oxygen and traveled 1204 nautical miles not
counting evasive action. On that oxygen - I had to move to the Bomb-Copilot
line so Jack would have enough to get home - landed with the red light on
and 75 pounds on the gauge. So it ends - hope we didn't kill any women or
children with those wild bombs.
8/25/44 Mission #4
Rudely awakened at 4:30 for 5:00 briefing. Looked like a short one - but -
it was sure longer than yesterday's. Left Great Yarmouth at 9:32 and headed
over the North Sea. Right through a stationary front. It really scattered
the formation. We were reforming for 100 miles.
Came over Germany at the
Denmark peninsula about 5 miles left of course. Everything was smooth -
solid undercast - when, with no warning the Flensberg flak batteries opened
up. They must have tracked us for 10 minutes because the first bursts were
right off our left wing in the formation. The plane would jump up about six
inches every time a burst would let go underneath and there were several.
One of the ships got his, jettisoned his bombs and headed home. We got the
hell out of there.
From Flensberg we cut across Kiel Bay to Nykobing on one
of Denmark's islands. Angled across the Baltic Sea and hit Germany again
near Stettine Haff. Two flak batteries took shots at us going by but we were
just out of range. We flew west of Stettine where the flak forced us to fly
4 miles off course - that flak wasn't very well figured out.
Turned on a
6-minute bomb run and hit an experimental airfield (Recklin Field, the
Wright Field of Germany) on the SE shores of the Muritz Sea. Had about 15
flak guns at the target and they were good. One of the boys went down in
flames - the stories vary, from 3 to 9 chutes came out. It was the deputy
lead - 6 officers and 5 enlisted men. We had 7i holes from flak.
Went north
to Nykobing and home the same route as we flew out. Plane out for 4 days.
Logged 9-3/4 hours but only 2-1/4 hours on oxygen. I'll dream of that bomb
run - there were 3 bursts of 3 right across the nose. If that gunner had
loaded just a little slower, he would have had us.
Well, four down and 31 to go. Wasn't quite as scared today as yesterday -
but that's not saying much. Better get some sleep - we're alerted for
tomorrow - if we do it'll be rough - day 3 in a row is rough.
8/26/44 Mission #5
Up at 4:00. Briefing, Plan "B" at 5:00. It sure looked good to look at the
flak map and see Brest for the target. Not Brest itself, but a flak and
coastal battery across the bay.
Nice trip - But - there isn't such a thing as a milk run. We went over the
target at 20,400. There were clouds about 9/10 - but we had a beautiful hole
and about a 1-1/2 minute bomb run. The Air Leader had jumped the gun and
decided to go under the clouds so we didn't drop. Damn it! So we circled
around and came in at 17,400. I could see a battery in Brest winking at us.
The ship jumped about a foot once - but the only flak observed was at 7
o'clock level and close in. Found out later they were shooting grey flak and
it blended with the clouds. Anyway I wish they would do that more often - it
has its psychological advantages. Dropped 38 100-lb GP's. I think we dumped
them in the bay. However someone ahead of us has put a load on the target -
I saw the smoke the first time over.
Logged 7 hours. The best part of it was only 3 hours on oxygen and only 45
minutes carrying that flak suit. My shoulders are really sore from the last
2 long trips. So ends Mission #5. Traveled about 680 NM not counting the 2nd
run. Make it 700 NM.
9/1/44 Mission #6
Up at 2:30 am for 3:45 briefing. However I've had so much sleep the last 3
days that I hardly slept at all.
We are beginning to get some benefit from the occupation of France. We were
scheduled to bomb Mainz, a supply depot. Going over we were behind the
lines. However we ran into some pretty soupy weather. It went up to about
30,000. We circled around and over Paris trying to get through.
Our position
was #3 on the lead element; #1 and #2 were pathfinder ships. We milled
around in the overcast for about 1-1/2 hours. Ships and formations were
everywhere. At one time one formation went right across over us and one went
under. Really gave us a scare. The mission was finally recalled. Two ships,
not from our field, had a mid-air collision - coming around a cumulus
build-up from different directions.
Some of our boys, on the way home,
weren't quite on the ball and went over Le Havre. Got some flak but no
damage. Logged 7 hours. Plus a few more gray hairs. Temperature went to -31C.
(Ed.note: During this break of almost a month we were designated a lead crew
and took some appropriate training. We now had only 30 missions to fly
instead of 35.)
487th Bombardment Group Colors
9/30/44 Mission #7
The mission today was a PFF - but we still flew. Number 2 in the high.
Bombed the marshalling yards at Bielfeld - I think we dropped short. We had
a pilotage bombardier getting his 25th mission in so he can go home. Pretty
sharp boy. We had about 8/10 most of the way - 10/10ths the rest. We had no
flak, no fighters.
Some of the wings coming in behind us went too close to
Munster. Osnobruk tried a few bursts - about 1/2 mile off our right wing.
One of our boys flipped over on his back and tore the wing off of his left
wing man (this was #037, the ship we flew over from the states). Both went
down - must have been prop wash. One ship in the group behind us blew up.
What a day!
10/2/44 Mission #8
The sergeant woke me up at 2:15 for 3:00 am pre-briefing. For some reason
they did not get me up for Target Study. Target: Primary - A/F north of
Kassel. Secondary - PFF on the marshalling yards in Kassel.
For some reason I had a feeling of confidence all the way through. Slept
soundly for two hours last night. After getting out to the hardstand and
pre-flighting my stuff I lay down in the crew chief's tent and slept for 15
minutes.
T/O 0645. We ran into some light inaccurate flak between Koblenz and Mainz
as we crossed the Rhine. I was working like mad on my guns. Joe put the left
hand gun on the right side and vice versa. I had to change the switches at
25,000 ft and -40C. Was sweating when I finished - too busy to even watch
the flak. The formation was really lousy -- all over the sky. Supposed to
come in on a mag. heading of 116 - came in on 176. Target about 8/10ths
covered. Bombed from 27,400 ft.
On the turn from the target we were carried
by an 80-knot wind over the flak area at Gorringen. Flak at target moderate
- fairly accurate. Flak at G---- light, accurate. At the R.P. I was watching
one B-17 that was circling below us and losing altitude. Obviously hit. The
right wing came off at #4 and the plane caught fire and disintegrated in not
over 10 seconds. One chute observed. Not from our Group. Time of mission
7:45; 4:30 on oxygen. Maximum cold -44C. Easy trip home.
10/22/44 Mission #9
Target study 5:45 am. Target - Munster. It was what the uninitiated call a
milk run - but I still sweat them all out to the target. We led the low
squadron. The mission was strictly PFF - 10/10ths. Had one hole just east of
the Zuider Zee.
Something new was tried today. Two ships carried nothing but
1600 lbs of chaff. They flew above the high squadron and at the I.P. they
took off in a 200 fpm dive with an 8 P-51 escort. When we dropped the flak
was bursting about 8000 ft under us. I had a #27 set Gee box and was able to
pick up the "C" blip all the way. Load was 12 500-lb GPs. We put 6 on the
target; 3 a half second over; and 3 one second over.
11/2/44 Mission #10
Up at 3:30 for 4:30 pre-briefing. Target: Merseberg, Germany, synthetic oil
plant. Third highest priority target in Germany.
Everything was fine until we hit the target area. Instead of a bomb run of
95 magnetic we finally dropped on 194 mag. Toured the Leipzig flak area from
north to south (the long way). Four planes in our immediate vicinity went
down in flames. Quite a rat-race at the target - groups everywhere.
Dick Giles, McDougall, and Remaklus finished 30 today. Dick said that for the
first time he was really scared and wanted to turn out. We were in flak for
12 minutes. It was classified as intense, accurate, barrage type. Evasive
action was no good - it was everywhere and not just a few puffs. After
landing the boys said Big B was a milk run compared to it. The Leipzig area
has 450 guns and I think they had had a chance at us.
Load 10 500-lb GPs. My figures: 874 B-17s over target. 4,370,000 lbs of
bombs. Our escort was 850 P-51s and P-38s. They tangled with the Luftwaffe
at the I.P. at 12:30 - we were over the target. They hit the group behind us
at the R.P at 1330. 19 E/A were shot down over the target - one P-51.
We led the low squadron. What a day! Planes shot up - planes aborting -
planes all over the deck coming home. Coming over the North Sea we saw a
B-17 with no horizontal stabilizer. We had one small hole in our stabilizer.
11/9/44 Mission #11
Up at 2:00 for 3:00 pre-briefing. Target: a honey right behind the lines.
Some forts holding up Gen. Patton. We were group deputy lead. For a while I
thought we were going to lead.
The primary was visual - secondary PFF. We couldn't see the primary until we
were right over it - so we hit the secondary, the marshalling yards at
Saarbrucken, Germany.
We had flak in the high and low squadrons - one ship in the low caught on
fire and blew up. Three chutes seen - 2 were on fire.
11/11/44 Mission #12
The CQ woke Bob and Chuck at 3:50 for target study. Then he woke Jack and me
at 3:55 for 4:30 pre-briefing. Target: marshalling yard just south of
Coblenz, Germany (Oberlaunstein).
We flew deputy group lead until just
before the IP. We then took over the lead for a Micro H bomb run. I called
Whittnell just before the IP to see if he had it. He said yes, then, as we
turned we slid into the Trier flak area. No damage. I got a Gee fix from the
Ruhr chain at Bombs Away. We were right on course and 3-1/2 miles from the
target. Load 11 500-lb GPs.
Called at 4:30. T/O at 0840. Target: marshalling yard at Hamm, in Happy
Valley. Had to do some fancy weaving to get in the bomber stream. They had 3
groups over Buncher #13 at the same time - stacked. We were leading the
487th. We had trouble all the way in over-running the group ahead.
On the
bomb run one lonesome B-17 nearly cut us out. Whitt got Chuck started at 70
deg. when Jack took off 10 deg. to the left. By the time we got back on the
run all the check points had gone by. Chuck dropped on the indices and I got
a Rheims Chain "gee" fix. 2-12 NM short of target on course. Estimated that
we missed the MPI but hit the yards.
11/26/44 Mission #13
Saw one plane down in flames at RP. The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Divisions used the
same corridors coming out. Never saw so many planes in my life.
The field socked in 15 minutes after we landed.
11/27/44 Mission #14
Was really surprised to be awakened at 4:45 am for 5:30 pre-briefing. It was
a micro-H run on the marshalling yard at Bingen, Germany - on the Rhine.
Looked like a milk run but there was quite a bit of battle damage from flak.
Kramer was leading the group. They had their bombsight, electrical system,
and oxygen shot out. Aborted at the target.
We led home, but only got credit
for a squadron lead. I was sure glad to get the lead - we were really
skirting three flak areas. We are due to lead the low tomorrow if it's PFF.
Saw two V-2s taking off for London - they were still within 10 deg. of
vertical when they passed out of sight at at least 55 to 60,000 ft.
Traveling from 500 to 800 mph.
Rough! Target: Merseberg. We were flying deputy lead. Had a fighter escort
of 26 groups. Estimates ranged from 850 to 1250 planes. We went in south of
Coblenz and right through the Luftwaffe's back yard and out the front yard.
Right over the IP (after they had over-shot) the lead told us to take over
for the bomb run for a visual run. Then they held the lead for about 80
miles and we couldn't get in.
Then - this hot (?) pilotage navigator we had
didn't have a map to help Chuck. I grabbed one and gave it to him and he was
just in Chuck's way. Chuck had to set up the AFCE.
Also - the 100th Group
were going in abreast of us about 1/2 mile right. The smoke screen was in
full swing and the flak was everywhere. Chuck couldn't pick up the Leund
refinery through it - so we bombed a refinery (?) vicinity of Zeist. After
landing the Air Leader tried to say he called for a PFF run. What a mess!
We lost Kursran - direct hit in #3 - flamer and blew up. The 100th Group
lost 3 or 4.
12/11/44 Mission #16
Milk run - grade A all the way. Target: Marshalling yard at Giessen,
Germany. We led the high. Had quite a time assembling - had to go
higher to get out of the soup. On the bomb run we were briefed to go
through the Coblenz and the Limburg flak.
So, of course, the bomber stream overshot the IP. Went right
over Limburg. They shot at the group ahead but not us. After the target
we played along the edge of the Frankfurt flak, no shots close. We were
supposed to go over Paris at 10,000 ft on the way home - but weather
didn't permit. Came over Belgium at 20,.000 to top the clouds. Peeled
off over Splasher #u and came home. Visibility about 500 yds.
12.24.44 (Our narrow escape)
The boys had a mission today. We were scheduled to lead the low
- but were taken off. The boys led the 8th Air Force today - Harriman
led. Were hit by fighters over the lines - lost nine ships, including
Reed, who took our place in low lead. Lost 3 lead ships, so we'll
probably be up for tomorrow.
12/28/44 Mission #17
Woke up at 3:30 am - when the CQ came after Chuck and Bob. Laid
there with a toothache until 4:30 when he came in for Jack and me.
Nice mission. Primary: a marshalling yard, visual. Secondary:
Coblenz marshalling yard. From Brussels east there was a solid
undercast topped at about 15,000. So we hit Coblenz, Germany. Tactical
ground support. My Gee box picked up and controlled the Ruhr Chain -
but wouldn't make sense. Guess Runstedt's counter offensive must be
pretty close to Liege. Used the Rheims Chain from the IP on in.
Four burst of flak observed - way down and behind, probably
shooting our chaff. I think we threw the bombs east of the river. Got a
Gee fix at bombs away that fell in the SE part of Coblenz - so did Whit
with an Hxx fix. The target was in NW part of town.
12/31/44 Mission #18
A very rough day! Hamburg-visual. The CQ woke me at 2:45 - I
thought it was Politz for sure. Target: oil refinery Hamburg. Took off
and assembled in the dark. We had to switch planes at the last minute -
late take-off.
Went out over the North Sea. About 60 miles out I told Jack we
were 8 miles right of course. 150 miles out I called the Air Leader -
we were leading the low - and told him we were 20 miles right of course
and about to run into the Frisian Islands. The lead claimed that he
knew where we were - so - a few minutes later we had several flak
bursts about 500 ft off the right wing. As we passed Heligoland the
clouds cleared off and we could see Hamburg 60 miles away. Went down
the bomb run drifting over 30 deg.
Chuck changed heading near the target so he would be able to kill the
drift. He did - only 245 deg. We had a wind at 15 deg., 110 kts. Due to
prop wash the fore and aft bubble was clear forward. We came the
closest of our squadrons and we missed by 1500 yds. The flak was
moderate to intense and accurate as hell. One of our ships had 60 holes
in it. Tonight there are only 8 ships available for tomorrow. After the
rally point 6 FW-190s hit the group right behind us. They got 3 B-17s.
Two flamers and one spinner.
Our ground speed from Hamburg to the coast out was 74 knots.
Boy! Did we sweat that out! The Cuxhauca corridor has been shut off -
but we had no flak. This one ran Merseburg a close second.
1/3/45 Mission #19
What a long day! Up at 3:00 am. Target: Marshalling yard at
Aschaffenburg, Germany, - PFF. Our new C.O. Colonel Martin rode with
us. WE led the low. And finally, I really got some help from Lt.
Wilkinson, pilotage navigator. It was solid 10/10ths all the way so he
ran the Gee box. I plotted the fixes and had time to really navigate. I
also gave Whit a workout on his Mickey set when we ran out of range of
the Rheims Chain.
It was a long drawn-out mission - but an easy one. Entered
France at Calais and skirted the Belgium-France border to the Rhine
just north of Saarbourg. Turned north to the target just 23 miles SE of
Frankfurt. The only flak we had was 4 bursts from Stuttgart and that
was about a mile off our right wing. The lead didn't drop on the
primary but hit the secondary - marshalling yards at Pforzheim,
Germany. They almost ran us into the Heidelberg flak. I took the low
way to the left and rejoined them after they bombed. Milk run - only
eleven, maybe ten to go.
The Colonel told us it was nice navigating and the pilotage
navigator (27 missions) told Jack that I was the best he had ever
ridden with. Bashful, aren't I?
1/7/45 Mission #20
Another day closer to home. Up at 4:00 am. Target: Primary a
railroad viaduct, visual. Secondary Paderborn marshalling yards, PFF.
So - of course it was 10/10ths and we hit the secondary. Went right
over Bliesfeld and no flak. Only flak we saw was a groups ahead who
crowded the Dutch corridor on the southern side. A three-gun battery
put up about 40-50 rounds. No hits. We led the group. Had to come all
the way home at 20,000 because of clouds.
1/14/45 Mission #21
Up at 2:45 for pre-briefing. What a target! Magdeburg - on the route in
we feinted at Berlin, cut back between Berlin and Brandenburg - over
Magdeburg synthetic oil refinery - by Hanover, Dummer Lake, Zuider Zee,
and out over the Hook of Holland. We were leading the low. Went over
the North Sea route, in west of Neumunster, north of Hamburg, and aimed
at Berlin.
About 50 miles past Hamburg I saw 4 P-51s drop their tanks and
peel off. One strafed a railroad, couldn't see the other 3. About a
minute after they went down the Luftwaffe jumped the 390th flying 2
minutes ahead of us. They got all nine of the low squadron in about a 3
minute fight.
Not 15 minutes after that scramble was over about 30 FW-190s
queued up about a half mile off our right wing. Before they could start
in the P-51s hit them. Just before we turned north of Brandenburg they
hit the 590th high squadron. I could see the 20 mm shells bursting
throughout the formation. Four B-17s went down. In the two attacks I
saw about 12 fighters go down, couldn't tell whether they were 51s or
190s.
Our high lead lagged behind just before Brandenburg. He never
came back - it is supposed that the fighters got him. When last seen he
was behind us at about 18,000 ft. and in the target area. At the IP our
lead bombardier lost himself and took off toward Leipzig instead of
Magdeburg. I thought the Air Leader had decided to bomb the secondary -
but, after making a 180 we lined out on about a nine mile bomb run. Our
group bombardier, Al Fillipane - riding with us - took the course as
okay and killed his rate on the terrain. Result - we dropped east of
the Elbe River. The high hit part of the target. The smoke screen was
heavy.
Meanwhile the high squadron, with the #3 man leading, hadn't
caught up. So they avoided the flak and joined us at the RP. The flak
was intense and accurate - hit our #2 engine, right outside my window.
We also had 6 hits in the wings and tail. We had to feather #2 on the
bomb run.
About 15 minutes after, #4 started running rough and smoking.
Our Air Leader thought it was about to catch on fire. Jack opened the
cowl flaps and cut it back. We held the lead - otherwise we never would
have kept up. I kept a course to Brussels available in case we needed
it. The high squadron dropped on the marshalling yard at Osmabruck. At
the Dutch coast we headed for home and had to feather #4.
1/16/45 Mission #22
The CQ came in at 3:00 - but I was awake. Target: Dessau,
Germany. What a Cook's Tour it was. In over Holland and the Zuider Zee
- north of Hanover and Magdeburg. Target: East of Leipzig -
Schweinfurt. Over the Rhine River at Strasbourg. At this point we had
our only flak - it was one gun (?) at the front lines. The bomber
stream was about 5 miles wide and he had so many targets he couldn't
make up his mind. Finally hit a ship, wounded two men. Returned to base
- but was diverted to a RAF field at Fenningway 120 miles north. We
started running out of gas at Peterborough so we came down. Landed at
Glatton.
Led the group today. Off the ground 9:05. Traveled over 1400 miles over 5 countries.
1/18/45 Mission #23
Was I surprised this morning! The CQ woke me at 2:45 for target
study. I had him check his list 3 times to be sure he was right.
Target: Kaiserslautern, Germany. There were 3 groups of us in the 4th
wing going. They scrubbed the 1st, 2nd, and all of the 3rd divisions
but us. At briefing they told us we would probably be diverted.
At the target we (the low) and the high dropped first run. It
was supposed to be cat and mouse - but the cat beacon did not have the
code sheet delay. We dropped PFF and I had a Gee fix just 2-1/2 miles
short of the marshalling yards. The Air Leader with us wanted to circle
the RP while the lead squadron made a second run. Bandits had been
reported in the area and there was no flak at the target - so I said,
Hell no - make a 2nd run with the high and lead. Then he told me the
high had dropped so we went back over France and waited for them.
On the way back we were diverted to Laon Couvron Airfield,
France. The soup was from 11,000 down to the ground. We made individual
letdowns. What a nightmare! Couvron was full so we landed at Laon
Ataise A/F. The ground pounders were betting even money that at least
one B-17 would crash - but no one did.
1/21/45 Mission #24
Here we go again! Target: Primary, Micro-H on an armored vehicle
works. Secondary, PFF on the marshalling yards - both in Mannheim,
Germany. The 487th did not put up a group of our own. We led a squadron
with Rattlesden (low).
Formed at 12,000 and the weather caught us. Couldn't climb fast
enough to keep out of it. So we took off on our own to avoid any planes
in the clouds. Six of our wing men went home when they became separated
from us. We left England on our own and headed across France for
Strassbourg. The contrails were dense, persistent - really hard to even
see our own squadron.
Our Air Leader really got worried about us being by ourselves. Jack and
I had to argue like the devil before he saw the light on the bomb run.
He wanted to bomb in group formation with just anyone. We wanted to
take our 7 plane squadron in by ourselves on account of Whitt is really
an expert on PFF (couldn't bomb Micro-H - too far from the beacons).
Then - on the bomb run the bombsight froze up, due to lack of
precautions by our visiting bombardier, and Whitt dropped the bombs,
aimed PFF at the center of Mannheim.
Temperature at 27,000 was -65F and my left boot went out. Stamped my foot for 5 hours to keep it warm.
2/6/45 Mission #25
I wonder if there is any weather in which they don't fly in the ETO? Up
at 2:00 again this morning. Target: Hold your hat! The Bohlen Synthetic
Oil Refinery. Right in the center of the Merseburg-Lutz-Kendorf-Ziest
areas. But - visual only. Dresden, secondary and Chemnitz, last resort.
We led the high. Took off in the dark, as usual, at 0705.
Supposed to assemble at 17,500. Clouds finally forced us down to 7,000.
Went in over Holland. Toured over every flak area between here and the
target. Bohlen was 10/10ths - Dresden had cover to about 30,000 - so we
hit Chemnitz PFF - two divisions - 1st and 3rd. The 2nd hit Magdeburg.
After leaving the target we received word not to try to come
home the northern way but to go south. About that time the lead's
Mickey went out and our VHF was out. So the low took over and we went
right over Schweinfurt (no flak).
After wandering around near Stuttgart we took off across the
Rhine between Karlesruhe and Mannheim. Got some meager inaccurate front
line flak. Let down all the way across Luxembourg, Belgium and France.
Crossed the channel at 200 ft. The base had no ceiling and we sort of
felt our way in. After landing we watched the boys come in. Like to
scared us to death! Finally one went off the end of the runway. Three
crews landed on the Continent and one crew bailed out by Beachy Head.
10-1/2 hours today. Flew over 7 countries - England, Holland, Germany, Czechoslavakia, France, Luxembourg, and Belgium.
2/9/45 Mission #26
Looks like they are trying to finish us up on the rough ones.
Today's primary was Bohlen, visual only. That's what is saving us
lately, that visual only. Secondary: Weimar, PFF or visual. So we
bombed Weimar marshalling yard and small arms plant. We really
plastered it! We went in the Coblenz-Frankfurt corridor. No flak -
surprise!
Just north of Frankfurt six Me 262s jumped us but they didn't
get a shot. One came across in front of us from 2 o'clock high to 8
o'clock low with a P-51 right on his tail. Rector had him in his sights
but couldn't fire because of the P-51. That fellow was rugged - he
circled around and tried again for a pass. Went right through the
formation - but by then he had 5 P-51s after him and they weren't
losing any ground either. I was too interested to be scared. At Hamburg
and Magdeburg I was so scared I couldn't swallow - but today I was
wishing to hell I had my guns back in or at least my camera.
We went on to the target. Feb. 6th we flew right over Weimar and didn't
get any flak - it was 10/10ths. Today was about 5/10ths and they had a
three gun battery. What sharpshooters! Went in at 26,000 feet and lost
two ships. One went down at the target - lost a wing. The other one
might have made France. Our pictures showed a perfect strike - one bomb
went right in the building that was the MPI - and we were dropping
RDK's too.
2/16/45 Mission #27
Really surprised this morning. We were not up to fly at 9:00
last night. But the CQ woke me at 5:30. He tried at 5:00 and I didn't
wake up. 10:30 take off. Target: Hamm marshalling yard. We flew the low
on Rougham. Bombing was supposed to be visual - cat and mouse -
Micro-H. Flak was moderate and accurate. No. 3 ship in the lead blew
up.
We were bombing in 6-ship sections. Went in PFF and Al dropped
visual at the last minute. Really hit the target, too - a beautiful
hit. Just before bombs away we were spread all over Germany and bandits
were reported in the area. To top it off I hadn't seen a P-51 all the
way in. The section behind us told us later that the flak was tracking
us all the way in and out - bursting right behind us. One went off
right over the nose. It was between us and the sun and really blacked
the nose out for a while.
Came back to the field and couldn't see it until we were about 150 feet over the runway.
2/22/45 Mission #28
Up at 2:00 am. Target: Cheb, Czechoslovakia. Marshalling yards.
Bombing to be from 12,000 feet. Led the Group. Assembled and flew about
half way over Belgium at 6,000 feet. Crossed the Rhine south of
Strasbourg. Good view of the Alps - about 40 miles away. Descended to
12,000 and hit clouds.
The bomber stream was all over southern Germany. We went to the
IP. The primary and secondary were covered. So we wandered around
Nurnberg. Jack wanted to bomb it from 16,000 but - we bombed the last
resort from 19,000 - PFF. Crossed into France. As soon as I got Jack on
course for Osrend I went back to the waist and went to sleep. I really
had a headache.
2/24/45 Mission #29
Up at 1:30 am. Target: Sub pens at Bremen, Germany. Supposedly about as
rough as Hamburg. We were leading the group with an Air Leader aboard.
Take off was 6:00 - but was delayed 2 hours. I laid down on the cement
floor at Engineering and really slept. Last night I "sweated" this one
out - only slept about a half hour.
Instead of a wing assembly line - we all hit Buncher 23 and on
to Southwold. I hit B.23 30 seconds early but there were two task
forces ganged up and we could not find the "C" group that we were
flying "D" on. So I hit Southwold 30 seconds early - still Eberhart was
frantically calling with no results. On across the North Sea to the
hook of Holland. I made it minute late.
Finally, over the Zuider Zee, the Air Leader called that he
had picked up Charlie - so we swung in the bomber stream. It turned out
that it wasn't even our wing - but Task Force #2. By the time I
convinced the Air Leader - we had overshot the pre-IP about 5 miles. So
we cut across to the IP and hit it on the head.
Made a PFF bomb run. Metro was 90 deg. off on their wind.
Instead of 264 knots ground speed we went over Bremen at 190 kts at
26,000 ft. I only saw 2 bursts of flak just after bombs away. The flak
was moderate to intense and accurate. It was bursting under and behind
us. On the way home one ship from another group toggled on Quakenbruck.
His 500-lb GPs fell short- only one hit the marshalling yards and his
IBs lit in a field.
Major Eberhart complimented me twice. Once in front of the
Colonel, and once at the critique, while I was reviewing the mission. I
didn't say a word about his end of it.
Jack and Whitt finished up today so we buzzed the field shooting every
kind of flare we had, except red-red. Darn near put one in the 72,000
gallon gasoline dump.
2/25/45 Mission #30 Graduation Day!!
Almost ashamed to finish up on this one. Except that our primary
was visual only. Munich - PFF and the weather was briefed to be 6/10ths
plus. Also we were given a diversion base in France.
What a trip! I rode the bomb aimer's seat. Clouds were 9/10th
to Strasbourg. Then 3/10 to 5/10. Had some light accurate front line
flak. Twelve o'clock, close in at Riegel. Had clouds over the bomb run
- but I picked up the target about 15 miles out. Finally Rusty saw it.
All 3 squadrons put their bombs right on the MPI. Results - good to
excellent. The target was an underground oil depot on the south banks
of the Danube - just west of Neuburg. On the way in we wandered off
course and nipped Switzerland and Austria. I really had an easy day
today.
Note on the last mission flown by the 487th bombardment group. For further information see 487th. Quote:
"From the last mission on 10-Apr-1945 noted above, I'd like to share an extraordinary photograph."
"On that mission with the bomb drop made, the group had turned back
towards England. They were attacked by Luftwaffe aircraft, and
specifically "Forever Amber" was attacked from 6 or 7 o'clock low by an
ME-262. For those unfamiliar with that aircraft it was the worlds first
operational jet, which could speed through a formation of the slower
bombers with deadly results."
"The result of the attack was the fatal wounding of "Forever
Amber". The tail gunner, Ed DeLachica was killed in this attack but the
remainder of the crew bailed out. Another plane in the formation
snapped this picture and a few others of the dying plane."
"My Dad discovered this and other photos while looking through
declassified photos at the end of the war. Evidently base personnel
were invited to look through the photos before they were scrapped. What
a find!" Click HERE to see the photograph.
"Please consider joining the 487th Bomb Group Auxiliary. We're a group
of people interested in the 487th. We try to get out 2 newsletters per
year, in which a variety of information is shared by 487th crew, their
families and friends. Stories are also shared on how the restoration of
the tower at Lavenham is going. The family who owned and still owns the
land on which the group was based is serious about keeping the memory
of this era alive and with the help of several organizations is working
to restore the tower, and turn it into a museum."
For more military history related articles see our Military History Index. For more on the coming B17 simulation from Microprose/Wayward design see our Air Combat Previews Index.