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Markings for B-17F 1/48

Variant 1

Capt. Thomas E. Murphy crew, Lt. Col. Beirne Lay. Jr., 351st Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Regensburg mission, 17 August 1943, Telergma, Algeria

 

Variant 2

Capt. Thomas E. Murphy crew351st Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb, Thorpe Abbotts, Great Britain, 21 September 1943

 

Piccadilly Lily, an aircraft primarily flown by the crew of Captain Thomas E. Murphy of the 351st Bomb Squadron, is probably the most famous B-17F of the 100th Bomb Group. Her story has been featured in two film projects: the 1949 movie "Twelve O’clock High" and, more recently, the "Masters of the Air" series. The popularity of the first movie was due to screenwriter Beirne Lay, who, on August 17, 1943, with the rank of Lt. Col. and sitting in the co-pilot’s seat of Piccadilly Lily, flew a mission to Regensburg. This was the famous "Double Strike Mission," after which the 100th Bomb Group landed in North Africa. Above all, however, it marked the first of the unit's black days, as they lost 9 of the 21 aircraft involved in the mission. It also earned the unit its first "Distinguished Unit Citation."

The B-17F Piccadilly Lily and Murphy's crew had been flying it combat since the first missions of the 100th BG in the second half of June 1943. During her service, the nature of the insignia changed twice - first the round insignia was replaced by a variant with stripes and red trim, then again when the red trim was obscured by a richer blue. Lily was lost on 8 October 1943 in the raid on Bremen. From the crew of Cpt. Murphy's crew, six men perished. With them, the squadron operations officer, Capt. Alvin L. Barker, who joined the crew at the last minute before taxying for take off.


Lt. William D. Desanders crew, 350th Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, Great Britain, August 1943

 

The B-17F "Alice from Dallas" was one of the original aircraft that moved with the unit to England after completing stateside training. She was the ship of the crew led by Lt. William D. DeSanders of Dallas, Texas, who named this plane after his wife. DeSanders' crew flew with Alice from the beginning of the unit's combat operations in late June 1943 until the mission to Trondheim, Norway, on July 24, 1943, after which the pilot was hospitalized with a type of flu. The rest of the crew flew the very next day on a mission in another B-17F with a replacement pilot and never returned. After heavy flak hits, the aircraft crashed into the North Sea. For the raid on Regensburg on August 17, 1943, when Lt. DeSanders was still hospitalized, Alice was assigned to Lt. Roy F. Claytor. Subsequently, she was one of the victims of the first attack by German fighters before arriving at the target. Of the six ships composing the lower squadron, led by Maj. Gale "Bucky" Cleven, only two remained. In all, the 100th Bomb Group lost nine B-17s that day. Without his original crew, William DeSanders continued his operational tour, which he completed on February 14, 1944, in the B-17G "Alice from Dallas II." Sitting in the other seat in the cockpit with him was commanding pilot John H. "Lucky" Luckadoo. After returning to the U.S., Bill DeSanders lived in Dallas with his wife Alice until his death in 1983.

The B-17F 42-5867 was built in the 30th production block of the F series at the Vega plant in Burbank. In addition to other specifics typical of this production, such as larger national insignia on the fuselage and a low camouflage paint border, it also had one of the evolutionary forms of the cheek gun window installed on the left side. Inscriptions of the aircraft name on both sides were accompanied by a small drawing of a gremlin releasing bombs from a potty. It was a simplified figure from the 350th Bomb Squadron emblem.


Variant 1:

EP-K ”Sunny II“, Capt. Glenn W. Dye crew, 351st Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, Great Britain, September 1943

 

Variant 2:

EP-J „Sunny II“, Lt. George W. Brannan crew, 351st Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, Great Britain, 30 December 1943

 

The crew of Lt. Glenn W. Dye, one of the original 100th Bomb Group crews that moved to England together after stateside training, was the first crew of this unit to complete a tour of 25 operational missions. Their aircraft was designated EP-J and named Sunny, but they lost it on September 3, 1943, when another crew was shot down with her. They named their new B-17, designated EP-K, Sunny II, and finished the tour with her on September 16, 1943. The tour at that time was not completed by the co-pilot, Lt. John H. Luckadoo, who, because of Lt. Dye's team promotion to lead crew, was 4 missions short.

Sunny II was later used by other crews who flew most of her 14 missions, during which she sustained extensive battle damage and not only once returned with wounded aboard. The aircraft's fatal mission was Ludwigshafen on December 30, 1943, when flak over the target knocked out two of her engines. The lone return ended for the crew of Lt. George W. Brannan with an emergency landing on a field near Thorpe Abbotts. Sunny II was destroyed but was able to bring her crew home once again.

The original co-pilot of Sunny II, Lt. John H. "Lucky" Luckadoo, became the operations officer and commanding pilot of the 351st and later the 350th Bomb Squadron after his crew mates finished. He completed his operational tour in February 1944. Today, at the age of 102, Lucky is one of the last living veterans of the 100th BG and is very active in passing on the legacy of his story, the story of his comrades, and the entire 100th BG to younger generations.


Lt. Robert ”Rosie“ Rosenthal crew, 418th Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Bremen mission, 8 October 1943

 

Starting their missions during the most challenging period in the life of the 100th Bomb Group in early October 1943 was not an ideal beginning for young combat crews. However, when such conditions meet strong character, charisma, and personal determination, a legend can emerge. One of the 100th BG's greatest legends was Robert "Rosie" Rosenthal. They began their operational tour with three combat missions in three days. On the first of these, on October 8, 1943, they took off in their brand new B-17F named Rosie's Riveters for a raid on Bremen. The mission from which 7 aircraft from their unit did not return was a horror for the rookies. They themselves returned with a badly damaged Rosie's Riveters, which, like Rosie's crew, was having a baptism of fire. The next day, characterized by a much quieter mission, they flew a borrowed B-17F "Royal Flush". Another day later, on October 10, 1943, Rosenthal's crew took off in the Royal Flush for Munster. On that day, 12 aircraft from the Bloody Hundredth formation did not return. 12 out of 13! The Royal Flush, with "Rosie" Rosenthal and "Pappy" Lewis at the controls, after an incredible dogfight with German fighters and an endless crawl home, with only two working engines, finally landed on the runway at Thorpe Abbotts to be the only ones to bear witness to the horror over Munster.

That's when the young lawyer from Brooklyn who volunteered for the Army Air Force began to become a legend. As the crew finished their operational tour in early March 1944, Robert Rosenthal volunteered for the second… and later for the third. He later became commander of the 350th BS and then the 418th BS. Rosie was an exceptional pilot and an inspirational leader to many of his men. He flew as a command pilot for the 100th BG and the entire 13th CW. His combat duty ended on 3 February 1945 when he was shot down in a mission to Berlin. With the damaged B-17, he continued eastward in an attempt to get behind the battle lines. After all surviving crew members parachuted out, he abandoned the aircraft as well. Rosie parachuted behind the front lines and, with the help of the Red Army, made his way to the American Embassy in Moscow and then back to England.

After the war, Robert Rosenthal was one of the US investigators at the Nuremberg war crime trials. From the late 1960s until his death in 2007, he was one of the leaders of the Association, later Foundation of the 100th Bomb Group.

In early 1944, after receiving a new B-17G as a lead crew, Rosenthal's team handed over his B-17F Rosie's Riveters to her new users, the crew of Lt. Ross E. McPhee. They renamed it Satcha Lass and were shot down with her on 4 February 1944 during a mission to Frankfurt.


Variant 1:

Maj. Ollen O. Turner. CO of 351st BS, Lt. Jack R. Swartout crew, 351st Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, July 1943

Variant 2:

Lt. Archie J. "Four Mile" Drummond crew, 351st Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, 24 January 1944

 

B-17F 42-3307, later named Skipper, was not among the aircraft the unit moved to Thorpe Abbotts, although it arrived there before the Hundredth began combat flying. Skipper was able to take part in the unit's second combat mission on June 26, 1943. It was chosen as his personal aircraft by the 351st Squadron commander, Maj. Ollen O. Turner. The new B-17 was named after Turner's nickname for his wife, although the nickname soon carried over to Maj. Turner as well.

During August and September, Skipper flew several combat missions under the care of its crew chief, Dewey R. Christopher, and his team. On October 10, 1943, it was assigned to the combat formation for the raid on Munster. Yes, the mission from which Robert Rosenthal returned in the B-17F Royal Flush as the only one of the whole unit. Skipper was saved from certain destruction by a malfunctioning No. 2 engine, which caused its crew to abort and return early.

On January 24, 1944, the 100th Bombardment Group headed for Frankfurt. Skipper took its place in the formation, with the crew of Lt. Archie J. Drummond aboard. Shortly after takeoff, at an altitude of 700 feet, they were blinded by the sharp landing lights of a B-24 taking off from another nearby base. Since the B-24 pilots apparently did not see the B-17 in front of them, Lt. Drummond pushed the heavy, bomb-laden aircraft to the ground in an attempt to avoid a collision. Skipper thus avoided the Liberator in a right descending turn, but at the same time came dangerously close to the ground. As he leveled off, he caught his left wing on the roof of a farm building about 15 miles from the base. The gasoline from the punctured tanks turned the aircraft into a flaming torch. The machine flew through a small forest and landed in a field beyond. The impact with the ground threw the bombardier, Lt. Maurice G. Zetlen, through the Perspex nose. He succumbed to his injuries at the scene. Miraculously, the rest of the crew managed to crawl out themselves from the burning aircraft. The Skipper, however, was destroyed where it landed.


crews of Lt. Sumner H. Reeder, Lt. Henry M. Henington, 349th Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, early 1944

 

The fate of the B-17F 42-5957, nicknamed Horny II, and its crews was very turbulent. It returned from its first mission on September 6, 1943, with a dead co-pilot on board and a seriously wounded pilot, bombardier, and navigator. On a mission to Stuttgart that day, this B-17 was flown by the crew of Lt. Sumner H. Reeder. Despite the badly damaged aircraft, he managed to return to England. For this feat, he was awarded the DSC.

The aircraft was repaired and assigned to the crew of Lt. Henry M. Henington. Their very first mission with this ship was a raid on Bremen on October 8, 1943, one of the worst days for the Bloody Hundredth. Horny II again returned from the mission with only two working engines. Henington's crew completed its operational tour of 25 missions in late 1943, flying a large portion of them in this aircraft. The last mission of Henington's team took place on December 31, 1943. The target was Paris, and Horny II returned again with only two working engines and with flat landing gear tires.

By early May 1944, Horny II was close to becoming the first B-17 from the 8th Air Force to fly 50 missions. This impending record was ruined by an electrical discharge that caused the gasoline cleaning the aircraft on the hardstand to burst into flames. All that remained of Horny II was charred wreckage. However, in its 49 missions, it was a reliable airplane for its crews, always managing to bring them home despite considerable damage.


Variant 1:

crews of Lt. Loren C. Van Steenis and Lt. John S. Giles, Jr, 350th Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, April 1944

Variant 2:

Lt. Albert E. Trommer crew, 350th Bomb Squadron, 100th Bomb Group, Thorpe Abbotts, July 1944

 

Perhaps no other B-17F in the 100th BG was wrapped in as many legends as this aircraft. It was surrounded by the recurring number 13. Some of these legends were real, some fictional, but Hard Luck’s status as an exceptional aircraft is indisputable. The aircraft had the last two digits of its s/n "13" and arrived in England on August 19, 1943. Legend says it was a Friday 13th, and was flown to England by Lt. Don Mitchell’s crew, No. 13. This is no longer considered true. Anyway, Mitchell's crew did fly with Hard Luck on their first combat mission and several more thereafter. The Hard Luck's hard stand was to be the one with the number 13, and the 100th Bombardment Group was part of the 13th Combat Wing. Other men that flew this aircraft included Lt. Loren C. Van Steenis' crew, which is primarily associated with this aircraft. They flew 17 missions with Hard Luck.

One cannot write about Hard Luck without mentioning her ground crew chief, the distinctive M/Sgt. Glenn M. "Zip" Myers, to whom (among others) the aircraft owed its long combat career. Toward the end of 1943 and into the winter of 1944, other crews flew this aircraft, including those of Randall T. Chadwick, John M. Shelly, and especially John S. Giles, who flew 8 missions with her. After the mission on May 8, 1944, the aircraft had a long "wellness" break. Hard Luck received a new glass nose, waist windows closures, and a new type of top turret from a cannibalized B-17G. All four engines were overhauled. In fact, this aircraft became the 8th Air Force's record holder after flying 50 combat missions with the original engines and turbochargers with which she was flown across the ocean in the summer of 1943.

After repairs, she returned to combat duty on July 8, 1944, with the crew of Lt. Albert E. Trommer, which was on their third combat mission and became Hard Luck's primary user for the remainder of her existence. In addition to training flights, they flew 8 combat missions together during July 1944. On August 14, 1944, Hard Luck flew her 62nd mission, this time with the crew of Lt. Donald E. Cielewich. The target was Ludwigshafen. There, the aircraft was fatally hit by flak. The crew dropped the bombs, and the aircraft headed for the ground in a wide turn. Before this B-17 impacted the ground, she allowed all the men aboard to leave the aircraft with parachutes. Hard Luck was thus the last B-17F to fly combat with the 100th BG.

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