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Here's an eyewitness account, by Capt. Fred Wesche:
"This is a formation of six airplanes. The Japanese were getting ready to mount a large expeditionary force to relieve their garrisons on New Guinea, and the Col. announced [that] it was going to be done in broad daylight, at noontime, as a matter-of-fact, at low altitude, 5000 feet, over the most heavily defended target in the Pacific. Most of us went away shaking our heads. Many of us believed that we wouldn’t come back from it. Granted the importance of the target was very great. No question about that. …all those ships in the harbor and that means a major offensive somewhere along the line . Anyway, we went over the target and all of us got attacked. I was shot up. The airplane was kind of banged up a little bit. We had to break formation over the target to bomb individually and then we were supposed to form up immediately after crossing the target, but no sooner had we dropped our bombs than my tail gunner says, "Hey, there’s somebody in trouble behind us." So we made a turn and looked back and here was an airplane, one of our airplanes, going down, smoking and on fire, not necessarily fire, but smoke anyway, and headed down and obviously headed for a cloud bank with this whole mob of fighters on top of him. There must have been fifteen fighters. Of course, they gang up on a cripple, you know, but he disappeared into a cloud bank and we never saw him again. It turns out it was Capt. Harl Pease. He got the Congressional Medal of Honor. The rest of us came up with the Air Medal, which I’m not complaining about. Anyway, it wasn’t until we got back that I discovered who it was, and then another airplane, one of the other airplanes, went down also, but they recovered him finally. That was Capt. Brandeis' crew. He got part way home, and, I guess, they bailed out and into rubber rafts and they picked him up later. The results of the raid, I’m not sure what it was, whether it was successful or not, but it certainly was a most hair-raising experience to go through. I mean, suddenly, you look ahead of you and see about twenty airplanes all shooting at you at the same time, and then there was flak, anti-aircraft fire, like you wouldn't believe. I thought there was a black cloud over the target but it was smoke from all the flak bursts. We were credited with, at least partial credit, with having shot down a couple of airplanes. On the other hand, when you’re in formation like that, it’s hard to say, everybody shooting at the same airplane, and who actually shot it down. So sometimes, you get double reports. In other words, it sounds like there’s more airplanes shot down than actually were. There was many a case that two guys thought they shot down the different airplanes [and] it was the same airplane. But, anyway, we got back all right. …" Definitions of all right, vary. Here's Capt. Wesche's description of the damage his B-17 received: "A 40-mm antiaircraft shell hit us. They were flying all around but only one hit us, fortunately. It came in right next to the cockpit where the wing joins the fuselage. A few inches farther to the front and it might have taken out the main wing spar, in which case the wing would have come off, so we were fortunate. When the shell went off my ears were ringing. I couldn’t hear anything. The sound from that explosion is tremendous, to say the least. I turned and looked around. Right behind me is the top turret gunner, and here he was laying crumpled at the foot of the turret, so I had to wait till we got clear of the enemy--of course, that was the first item--and I rushed back there and we got a couple of us to get him out of there. He was peppered with shrapnel. He didn’t receive mortal wounds, or anything, but it put him in the hospital. We were without radio, it knocked our radio out, among other things. The whole electrical system went out, as a matter-of-fact." The bombardier was hit with a machinegun bullet from a Zero. The description of the wound: "My navigator calls and said, "Hey, Andy has been hit." So as soon as we got clear of the target and away from enemy fighters I went down into the nose and Andy was lying on the floor. He had two holes through his jacket. I thought it was two bullets. Actually, it was the same bullet [that] went in and out. It didn’t penetrate the pleural cavity, but it did take out the scapula, the shoulder blade. It tore ligaments out on that and he was in considerable pain, of course, and so we made him comfortable, gave him a shot of morphine, and got him home." The injury left the bombardier permanently disabled. Capt. Wesche himself was wounded in the foot by a mg bullet that came through the rudder pedal and struck him in the ball of the foot. It was largely spent so other than a lot of blood, not much harm was done and he was never taken off flight status, although he did hobble around for a few days. FWIW Wesche was the son of a German immigrant, a cabin boy on the White Star line who jumped ship in Nova Scotia at the outbreak of WW1--he didn't want to go back to Germany and end up in the Kaiser's army--and made his way to San Francisco, where Fred was born to an Irish-Italian mother. Chris Mark |
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Will have to pass along to my Dad as he was member of the 19th from Clark
and personal acquaintance of Capt Pease.... May have to post some of Dad's recollections if there is interest (he has been putting them to paper as of late) Regards Mark I would be interested. Was born and grew up in New Hampshire which was Pease' home state so he has always been a hero to me. I have seen a couple of references that mention he and some of his crew were captured and that he behaved in an exemplary manner as a POW until the Japanese made him dig his own grave..... John Dupre' |
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Dad's a New Englander himself with family in Vermont. Went to Univ of Maine
prior to war and as I mentioned was a Clark when they were attacked. He (as he puts it) was one of the lucky ones to get out of the PI!!!! Not so lucky those that had to endure what befell them at the hands of the Japanese. Cheers Mark "JDupre5762" wrote in message ... Will have to pass along to my Dad as he was member of the 19th from Clark and personal acquaintance of Capt Pease.... May have to post some of Dad's recollections if there is interest (he has been putting them to paper as of late) Regards Mark I would be interested. Was born and grew up in New Hampshire which was Pease' home state so he has always been a hero to me. I have seen a couple of references that mention he and some of his crew were captured and that he behaved in an exemplary manner as a POW until the Japanese made him dig his own grave..... John Dupre' |
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