June 6, 1944. Here's to the memory of those who lost their lives on that fateful day, and to those who made it through the war but are being lost in increasing numbers every day. We can never repay them.
In early 1944 as the buildup to D-Day was gaining momentum, my uncle Myron was a radio operator on a B-24J Liberator stationed out of the Shipdam airfield near the city of Norwich in England. At the end of January they began bombing certain installations on the coast of France that had begun springing up. These turned out to be V-1 (buzz bomb) rocket launching sites, and were easily identifiable by the long rails that guided the missiles on their flight to England. At that time the Nazis had not yet started launching the missiles; they were still building the launchers. But Allied recon planes had seen the installations, and found that no matter where along the coast of France they were located, the rails all pointed directly at London, so it was rather obvious that their purpose was to aim some sort of projectile at the city.
On my uncle's 13th mission at the end of January, they were sent to bomb one of these sites near the French town of LeHavre. The sites were protected by 88mm flak batteries, and at 12,000 feet over the target my uncle's plane took a flak burst outside the right waist gunner's window. This killed the waist gunner instantly, and injured the left waist gunner, tail turret gunner, ball turret gunner, and top turret gunner. Both right side engines were knocked out, and the inboard engine on the right side was jammed solid, so that the pilots couldn't feather the propeller, creating a terrific drag on the right side of the plane. The pilot turned the plane back towards England, trailing smoke and losing altitude.
At their location the English channel was nearly 100 miles wide, and the B-24 did not maintain altitude on just two engines, especially with one dragging propeller. In addition to the engine damage they had lost all hydraulics in the plane, but the B-24 was equipped with a hydraulic accumulator tank for this situation, which would allow the gear to be lowered and one application of the brakes. All across the channel the plane dropped, but they made it to the coast with 150 feet of altitude left. Luck was with them; right on the coast was a Spitfire base. The pilot dropped the gear and set the bomber down, braking as hard as he could on the short runway. The plane went off the end of the strip and crashed to a stop in the revetments at the end of the runway. The wounded were taken off and all survived. My uncle remembers being able to see hydraulic oil, engine oil, and blood still dripping from the bottom of the plane three days later.
It is amazing what those men went through, and at a such a young age. My uncle detailed this story to me in a nine page letter a few years ago, and it is one of my prized posessions, and my only personal family link to World War II. Myron is still alive and well, having survived several more missions before being injured and retired to ground duty, and going back home to Phoenix AZ after the war. He still lives with my Aunt Peggy in Sun City, AZ. Whenever our family goes to visit, we always make a trip to the B-24 exhibit at the Pima Air and Space Museum with Myron.
I love a good war story. Anybody else got one?