Posted on 06/13/2011 9:35:42 AM PDT by TSgt
A WWII bomber plane crashed and caught fire near Chicago Monday morning. No one was injured.
Seven people were onboard the plane. Officials say they all walked away from the crash.
The Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress was at airport in Oswego, Illinois, to mark the 67th anniversary of D-Day. The bomber was grounded over the weekend due to mechanical problems and took off from Sugar Grove Airport at 9:30 a.m. The Daily Herald profiled the plane and D-Day event over the weekend.
The restored B-17, called "Liberty Belle," is owned by Liberty Foundation. The plane was at Lunken Airport on June 19, 2010 where the public was invited to fly on it for a fee of $430.
What a sad loss!
I believe that same bomber was kept in one of the maintenance hangars on the Reserve (East) side of Andrews AFB several years ago prior to its annual air show.
Climbed inside and was astounded at how cramped and crowded the interior was behind the flight deck. Yet, it was fun to touch some honest to God history.
The pilot reported an inflight fire shortly after take off. He put it in a field shortly after that as the fire worsened. Great airmanship! Many folks would wait too long in that situation and cost lives.
She was so very beautiful. Thanks for posting that pic.
When I told my daughter she said, “OH NO, I have pictures of Daddy and me when we went to see her.”
It was a beautiful aircraft representing tens or hundreds of thousands of hours of restoration work. Thankfully no one was injured in this terrible accident. However, it would have been the ultimate WWII reenactment to get to see it go down in flames over that European-looking Illinois countryside!
My late uncle flew a B-17 in Europe during the war. His plane was all shot up over Germany, but he limped the aircraft back to his base in England a made a survivable crash landing. My uncle injured his back in the crash landing, and a military doctor told him he would have serious back problems in 20 years. Twenty years later, in the 1960’s, my uncle DID have a lot of back problems, which ended after he had a steel rod placed inside his back.
I saw one of these B-17’s at an air show at the Maine Air National Guard base, part of Bangor International Airport in Maine, in late May of 2000. I stood next to the spot where the plane taxied after it landed, and watched the whole crew disembark.....they were all wearing vintage World War II uniforms and/or flight gear. It was a thrill.
The only upside to this sad crash is the spare parts that will help to keep other B-17’s flying.
She will be missed.
We had a B-17 event here at Centennial this weekend. Sad to see one of the few last remaining B-17s crash.
Some pics of battle damaged B-17’s at this site:
http://www.daveswarbirds.com/b-17/contents.htm
What I really enjoyed about the History Channel program was that for the first time, it explored in depth the strategy of "sacrificing the bombers" to get the German fighters..it's long been one of those thngs best left unsaid..
Oh man, this really sucks! I rode on this plane when it was in the Denver metro area a few years ago. Took pics through its Norden bomb site during my bombing run over the very center of the Denver downtown just a few hundred feet above the skyscrapers! Way cool!
ping
In addition, an elderly gentleman who comes into my store quite often always wears a hat with the number of his squadron. I asked him about it one time and he told me he was a tail gunner on a B-17 that flew out of North Africa and Italy. I looked up his unit (I can't remember the number) and they were specialists in going after naval vessels in the Med and the Adriatic.
As did mine. I was pleased to find a web site which described his crew and plane. He was shot down in January '44 and spent the remainder of the war as a POW. Just three of his crew survived.
I have been on that aircraft a few years back when it stopped over in Amarillo Texas. My girl friday thought I was nuts for buying a ride in it. Best coin I ever spent. A view of history that will always be a good memory.
Stay Safe...
Too bad she was lost in such an inglorious way.
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