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    The Terrifying Fall of B-17G Flying Fortress ‘Wee Willie’ Over Germany

    By Clare Fitzgerald,

    9 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3VvF2N_0unW0ayB00

    As the Second World War approached its conclusion, the Allies intensified their strategic bombing campaigns against Germany to cripple its industrial power and erode civilian morale. On April 8, 1945, the US Army Air Forces' Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress named Wee Willie suffered a disaster during one of these missions. The bomber was struck by enemy anti-aircraft fire, and the harrowing damage was vividly documented in a sequence of photographs.

    Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4NOOcu_0unW0ayB00
    Nose art on the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie . (Photo Credit: Roger Freeman Collection / American Air Museum / Imperial War Museums CC BY-NC 3.0)

    Wee Willie - B-17G-15-B0, serial number 42-31333 - marked the 302nd B-17G Flying Fortress to roll off the assembly line at Boeing Airplane Company's Plant 2 in Seattle, Washington. The heavy bomber was delivered to the US Army Air Forces in Cheyenne, Wyoming in October 1943, before being transported to RAF Bassingbourn in Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom.

    Upon reaching the UK, Wee Willie was assigned to the 322nd Bombardment Squadron (Heavy), 91st Bombardment Group (Heavy), 1st Air Division, 8th Air Force.

    At the time of its loss, the bomber was the longest-serving aircraft within the 91st and was one of the very last to be lost to enemy action before the German surrender .

    Preparing to bomb German railroad facilities

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0pTHNk_0unW0ayB00
    Combat crew of the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie . (Photo Credit: Al_Skiff / Fold3 / American Air Museum / Imperial War Museums CC BY-NC 3.0)

    On April 8, 1945, the B-17G Wee Willie took off from Air Force Station 121 at RAF Bassingbourn on what was either its 128th or 129th mission, with conflicting sources. 1st Lt. Robert E. Fuller of the US Army Air Forces (USAAF) led the mission, accompanied by combat crew members Sgt. Le Moyne Miller, 2nd Lt. Woodrow A. Lien, Staff Sgt. James D. Houtchens, Tech. Sgt. Francis J. McCarthy, Staff Sgt. Ralf J. Leffelman, Staff Sgt. Wylie McNatt Jr., and Staff Sgt. William H. Cassiday.

    Operating as part of the 332nd Bombardment Squadron (Heavy), they were part of a 73-bomber group tasked with bombing the repair facilities at the railroad marshaling yards in Stendal, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Despite overcast conditions, the aircraft used H2S ground search radar to pinpoint their targets while navigating through moderate anti-aircraft fire from below.

    Downing of the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1IXCCp_0unW0ayB00
    Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie falling apart after a direct hit by German flak , April 1945. (Photo Credit: Roger Freeman Collection / American Air Museum / Imperial War Museums CC BY-NC 3.0)

    During the mission, German anti-aircraft fire caused minor damage to 13 Allied bombers and severe damage to four others. Out of the 73 aircraft involved, only two were completely lost, including the B-17G Wee Willie , which was hit directly by an 88 mm flak shell between its #2 engine and bomb bay, leading to an abrupt vertical drop.

    An eyewitness described the scene: "The fuselage was on fire and when it had dropped approximately 5,000 feet [1,524 meters] the left wing fell off. It continued down and when the fuselage was about 3,000 feet [914.4 meters] from the ground it exploded and then exploded again when it hit the ground."

    Wee Willie had a crew of nine, but only Lt. Fuller survived. He was reportedly thrown from the cockpit by the initial explosion, deployed his parachute, and landed safely. Sadly, he was captured by German forces shortly after landing, and the details of his later fate are unknown.

    The entire event was recorded on film by an automatic strike camera mounted on another B-17, capturing footage from the release of the first bombs until the camera reached the end of its film.

    Loss of the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Times A-Wastin'

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=36CC7X_0unW0ayB00
    Combat crew of the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress Times A-Wastin' . (Photo Credit: Roger Freeman Collection / American Air Museum / Imperial War Museums CC BY-NC 3.0)

    The second bomber lost during the air raid was the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Times A-Wastin' , a B-17G-50-B0 with the serial number 42-102504. It belonged to the 401st Bombardment Group (Heavy), and was piloted by Lt. Peter Pastras.

    The aircraft's demise was witnessed by Lt. Mike Fodroci, a navigator serving aboard another B-17. According to Fodroci, Times A-Wastin' sustained hits from German flak in its open bomb bay, leading to the suspected immediate death of Pastras.

    "The ship pulled up and veered to the right, climbing directly over our ship," he recalled . "Captain Shelby put our ship into a dive so steep that I was thrown up against the astro hatch of the ceiling of the nose - seems I hung there for a brief second or two. I also observed that a bad fire was burning on the aircraft's forward bomb bay area and that the co-pilot was trying to climb out of the small window with his back pack on. Somehow, we saw three chutes emerge from #504 as she spun toward the earth."

    Of the occupants of Times A-Wastin' , all but two perished. The survivors, radio operator Bob A. Smith and flight engineer/top turret gunner Lyle Jones, met a fate akin to Lt. Fuller's, being captured as prisoners of war (POWs) by the Germans.

    Despite the loss of two bombers, the mission was deemed a success

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3iJu06_0unW0ayB00
    Left wing of the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie passing over the fuselage after it disconnected from the aircraft after a direct hit by German flak , April 1945. (Photo Credit: U.S. Air Force / Al_Skiff / This Day In Aviation / American Air Museum / Imperial War Museums CC BY-NC 3.0)

    Despite the loss of the B-17Gs Wee Willie and Times A-Wastin' during the Stendal raid, the mission was a success. As reported by the 322nd Bombardment Squadron (Heavy), the bombs successfully hit their intended targets at the railroad marshaling yards.

    More from us: What Is the Real Story Behind WWII's Famous Crying Child-Soldier Photograph?

    The April photos have immortalized the memory of Wee Willie . To many people, the depiction of the B-17G with its left wing severed still stands as among the most remarkable images from World War II, illustrating the danger Allied soldiers faced as they battled for victory against Germany.

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