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  1. #1
    us
    Oct 2008
    Albuquerque, New Mexico
    Garrett-GTI-2500
    520

    True WWII Story--Let's not forget our Vets.


    The dead chicken was starting to smell.

    After carrying it for several days, 20-year-old Bruce Carr still
    hadn't decided how to cook it . . without the Germans catching him.
    But, as hungry as he was, he couldn't bring himself to eat it. In his
    mind, having no meat was better than eating raw chicken meat, so he
    threw it away.

    Resigning himself to what appeared to be his unavoidable fate, he
    turned in the direction of the nearest German airfield. Even POW's get
    to eat. Sometimes. And aren't they constantly dodging from tree to
    tree . . ditch to culvert.

    He was exhausted !

    He was tired of trying to find cover where there was none. Carr
    hadn't realized that Czechoslovakian forests had no underbrush until, at
    the edge of the farm field, he struggled out of his parachute and
    dragged it into the woods.

    During the times he had been screaming along at treetop level in his
    P-51 ' Angels Playmate,' the forests and fields had been nothing more
    than a green blur behind the Messerchmitts, Focke-Wulfs, trains and
    trucks he . . .

    had in his sights.

    He never expected to find himself a pedestrian . . far behind enemy lines.
    The instant antiaircraft shrapnel ripped into the engine, he knew he
    was in trouble. Serious trouble. Clouds of coolant steam hissing
    through jagged holes in the cowling told Carr he was about to ride the
    silk elevator down to a long walk back to his squadron.

    A very long walk.

    This had not been part of the mission plan. Several years before,
    when 18-year-old Bruce Carr enlisted in the Army, in no way could he
    have imagined himself taking a walking tour of rural Czechoslovakia with
    Germans everywhere around him. When he enlisted, all he could think
    about was flying fighters.

    By the time he had joined the military, Carr already knew how to fly.
    He had been flying as a private pilot since 1939, soloing in a $25
    Piper Cub his father had bought from a disgusted pilot who had left it
    lodged securely in the top of a tree. His instructor had been an
    Auburn, NY, native by the name of ' Johnny ' Bruns.

    " In 1942, after I enlisted, " as Bruce Carr remembers it, ' we went to
    meet our instructors. I was the last cadet left in the assignment room
    and was nervous. Then the door opened and out stepped the man who was
    to be my miitary flight instructor. It was J-o-h-n-n-y Bruns !

    We took a Stearman to an outlying field, doing aerobatics all the way;
    then he got out and soloed me. That was my first flight in the military. "

    The guy I had in advanced training in the AT-6 had just graduated
    himself and didn't know a damned bit more than I did," Carr can't help
    but smile, as he remembers : which meant neither one of us knew
    anything. Zilch ! "

    After three or four hours in the AT-6, they took me and a few others
    aside, told us we were going to fly P-40s and we left for Tipton,
    Georgia. " We got to Tipton, and a lieutenant just back from North
    Africa kneeled on the P-40's wing, showed me where all the levers were,
    made sure I knew how everything worked, then said : ' If you can get it
    started . . go flying,' just like that !

    " I was 19 years old and thought I knew everything. I didn't know
    enough to be scared. They didn't tell us what to do. They just said :
    ' Go fly so I buzzed every cow in that part of the state. Nineteen
    years old and 1,100 horsepower, what did they expect? Then we went
    overseas."

    By today's standards, Carr and that first contingent of pilots
    shipped to England were painfully short of experience. They had so
    little flight time that today, they would barely have their
    civilian pilot's license. Flight training eventually became more formal,
    but in those early days, but had a hint of fatalistic Darwinism : if
    they learned fast enough to survive . . they were ready to move on
    to the next step.

    Including his 40 hours in the P-40 terrorizing Georgia, Carr had less
    than 160 hours flight time when he arrived in England.

    His group in England was to be the pioneering group that would take
    the Mustang into combat, and he clearly remembers his introduction to
    the airplane.

    " I thought I was an old P-40 pilot and the -51B would be no big deal.
    But I was wrong ! I was truly impressed with the airplane. I
    mean REALLY impressed ! It flew like an airplane. I just flew the
    P-40, but in the P-51 I was part of the airplane. And . . it was part
    of me ! There was a world of difference."

    When he first arrived in England, the instructions were, ' This is a
    P-51. Go fly it. Soon, we'll have to form a unit, so go fly." A lot
    of English cows were buzzed. "

    On my first long-range mission, we just kept climbing, and I'd never
    had an airplane above about 10,000 feet before. Then we were at 30,000
    feet and I couldn't ' Angels Playmate ' believe it ! I'd gone to
    church as a kid, and I knew that's where the angels were and that's when
    I named my airplane : 'Angels Playmate.'

    " Then a bunch of Germans roared down through us, and my leader
    immediately dropped tanks and turned hard for home. But I'm not that
    smart. I'm 19 years old and this SOB shoots at me. And I'm not going
    to let him get away with it.

    " We went round and round. And I'm really mad because he shot at me.
    Childish emotions, in retrospect. He couldn't shake me, but I couldn't
    get on his tail to get any hits either.

    " Before long, we're right down in the trees. I'm shooting, but I'm not
    hitting. I am, however, scaring the hell out of him. But I'm at least as
    excited as he is.

    Then I tell myself to calm down.

    " We're roaring around within a few feet of the ground, and he pulls up
    to go over some trees, so I just pull the trigger and keep it down.

    The gun barrels burned out and one bullet, a tracer, came tumbling out
    and made a great huge arc. It came down and hit him on the left wing
    about where the aileron is. He pulled up, off came the canopy, and he
    jumped out, but too low for the chute to open and the airplane crashed.

    I didn't shoot him down, I scared him to death with one bullet hole in
    his left wing. My first victory wasn't a kill ; it was more of a suicide.

    The rest of his 14 victories were much more conclusive. Being red-hot
    fighter pilot, however, was absolutely no use to him as he lay shivering
    in the Czecho-slovakian forest. He knew he would die if he didn't get
    some food and shelter soon.

    " I knew where the German field was because I'd flown over it, so I
    headed in that direction to surrender. I intended to walk in the main
    gate, but it was late afternoon and, for some reason, I had second
    thoughts and decided to wait in the woods until morning.

    " While I was lying there, I saw a crew working on an FW 190 right at
    the edge of the woods. When they were done, I assumed, just like you
    assume in America, that the thing was all finished. The cowling's on.
    The engine has been run. The fuel truck has been there. It's ready to
    go. Maybe a dumb assumption for a young fellow, but I assumed so.

    So, I got in the airplane and spent the night all hunkered down in the
    cockpit.

    " Before dawn, it got light and I started studying the cockpit. I can't
    read German, so I couldn't decipher dials and I couldn't find the normal
    switches like there were in American airplanes. I kept looking , and
    on the right side was a smooth panel. Under this was a compartment
    with something I would classify as circuit breakers.

    They didn't look like ours, but they weren't regular switches either.

    " I began to think that the Germans were probably no different from the
    Americans in that they would turn off all the switches when finished
    with the airplane. I had no earthly idea what those circuit breakers or
    switches did, but I reversed every one of them. If they were off,
    that would turn them on. When I did that, the gauges showed there was
    electricity on the airplane.

    " I'd seen this metal T-handle on the right side of the cockpit that
    had a word on it that looked enough like ' starter ' for me to think
    that's what it was. But when I pulled it, nothing happened.

    Nothing.

    " But if pulling doesn't work . . you push. And when I did, an inertia
    starter started winding up. I let it go for a while, then pulled on the
    handle and the engine started !

    The sun had yet to make it over the far trees and the air base was
    just waking up, getting ready to go to war. The FW 190 was one of many
    dispersed through-out the woods, and at that time of the morning, the
    sound of the engine must have been heard by many Germans not far away on
    the main base. But even if they heard it, there was no reason for
    alarm. The last thing they expected was one of their fighters taxiing
    out with a weary Mustang pilot at the controls.

    Carr, however, wanted to take no chances.

    " The taxiway came out of the woods and turned right towards where I
    knew the airfield was because I'd watched them land and take off while I
    was in the trees.

    " On the left side of the taxiway, there was a shallow ditch and a space
    where there had been two hangars. The slabs were there, but the
    hangars were gone, and the area around them had been cleaned of all debris.

    " I didn't want to go to the airfield, so I plowed down through the
    ditch and when the airplane started up the other side.



    When the airplane started up . . I shoved the throttle forward and
    took off right between where the two hangars had been.

    At that point, Bruce Carr had no time to look around to see what
    effect the sight of a Focke-Wulf erupting from the trees had on the
    Germans.

    Undoubtedly, they were confused, but not unduly concerned. After all,
    it was probably just one of their maverick pilots doing something
    against the rules.

    They didn't know it was one of OUR maverick pilots doing something
    against the rules.

    Carr had problems more immediate than a bunch of confused Germans. He
    had just pulled off the perfect plane-jacking ; but he knew nothing
    about the airplane, couldn't read the placards and had 200 miles of
    enemy territory to cross.

    At home, there would be hundreds of his friends and fellow warriors,
    all of whom were, at that moment, preparing their guns to shoot at
    airplanes marked with swastikas and crosses-airplanes identical to the
    one Bruce Carr was at that moment flying. But Carr wasn't thinking that
    far ahead.

    First, he had to get there, and that meant learning how to fly the airplane.

    " There were two buttons behind the throttle and three buttons behind
    those two. I wasn't sure what to push, so I pushed one button and
    nothing happened. I pushed the other and the gear started up. As soon as
    I felt it coming up and I cleared the fence at the edge of the German
    field, I took it down little lower and headed for home.

    " All I wanted to do was clear the ground by bout six inches, and
    there was only one throttle position for me . . . full forward !

    " As I headed for home, I pushed one of the other three buttons, and the
    flaps came part way down. I pushed the button next to it, and they came
    up again. So I knew how to get the flaps down.

    But that was all I knew.

    " I can't make heads or tails out of any of the instruments. None. I
    can't even figure how to change the prop pitch. But I don't sweat
    that, because props are full forward when you shut down anyway and it
    was running fine.

    This time, it was German cows that were buzzed, although, as he
    streaked cross fields and through the trees only a few feet off the
    ground, that was not the intent. At something over 350 miles an hour
    below tree-top level, he was trying to be a difficult target, but as he
    crossed the lines.

    But he wasn't difficult enough.

    " There was no doubt when I crossed the lines because every SOB and
    his brother who had a .50-caliber machine gun shot at me. It was all
    over the place, and I had no idea which way to go.

    I didn't do much dodging because I was just as likely to fly into
    bullets as around them."

    When he hopped over the last row of trees and found himself crossing
    his own airfield, he pulled up hard to set up for landing. His mind
    was on flying the airplane.

    " I pitched up, pulled the throttle back and punched the buttons I
    knew would put the gear and flaps down. I felt the flaps come down, but
    the gear wasn't doing anything. I came around and pitched up again,
    still punching the button.

    Nothing was happening and I was really frustrated."

    He had been so intent on figuring out his airplane problems, he
    forgot he was putting on a very tempting show for the ground crew.

    " As I started up the last time, I saw our air defense guys ripping the
    tarps off the quad .50s that ringed our field. I hadn't noticed the
    machine guns before.

    But I was sure noticing them right then.

    " I roared around in as tight a pattern as I could fly and chopped the
    throttle. I slid to a halt on the runway and it was a nice belly job,
    if I say so myself. "
    His antics over the runway had drawn quite a crowd, and the airplane
    had barely stopped sliding before there were MPs up on the wings trying
    to drag him out of the airplane by his arms.

    They didn't realize he was still strapped in.
    " I started throwing some good Anglo-Saxon swear words at them, and
    they let loose while I tried to get the seat belt undone, but my hands
    wouldn't work and I couldn't do it. Then they started pulling on me
    again because they still weren't convinced I was an American.

    " I was yelling and hollering.

    Then, suddenly, they let go, and a face drops down into the cockpit in
    front of mine. It was my Group Commander : George R. Bickel.

    " Bickel said, ' Carr, where in the hell have you been , and what have
    you been doing now ? ' Bruce Carr was home and entered the record books
    as the only pilot known to leave on a mission flying a Mustang and
    return flying a Focke-Wulf.

    For several days after the ordeal, he had trouble eating and sleeping,
    but when things again fell into place, he took some of the other pilots
    out to show them the airplane and how it worked.

    One of them pointed out a small handle under the glare shield that he
    hadn't noticed before. When he pulled it, the landing gear unlocked and
    fell out. The handle was a separate, mechanical uplock.

    At least, he had figured out the important things.

    Carr finished the war with 14 aerial victories on 172 missions,
    including three bailouts because of ground fire. He stayed in the
    service, eventually flying 51 missions in Korea in F-86s and 286 in
    Vietnam, flying F-100s. That's an amazing 509 combat missions and
    doesn't include many others during Viet Nam in other aircraft types.

    There is a profile into which almost every one of the breed fits, and
    it is the charter within that profile that makes the pilot a fighter
    pilot . . not the other way around. An make no mistake about it,
    Colonel Bruce Carr was definitely a fighter pilot.

    Stallion 51 Note :

    We are sad to say that Bruce Carr, long time friend and guest of
    Stallion 51, passed away in April of 1998 at the age of 74. We are
    proud to have known this true American hero and fighter pilot.

    Source : Interview by Budd Davisson Editor, Flight Journal [ abridged ]
    Golden Rule Enterprises, LLC
    The Bargin Warehouse
    Dennis M. O'Connor, CEO
    http://www.thebarginwarehouse.com

  2. #2
    Charter Member
    us
    Jan 2005
    Seymour Johnson AFB NC
    Etrac,Vaquero, Cibola, Minlab Excal and a vibra probe 580
    5,293
    2 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting
    Honorable Mentions (2)

    Re: True WWII Story--Let's not forget our Vets.

    Wow... Now he was a true WAR HERO. Amazing read.
    God and country.

  3. #3
    us
    Jan 2009
    San Antonio,Texas
    Minelab Explorer SE
    243

    Re: True WWII Story--Let's not forget our Vets.

    Awsome post.........thank you
    For GOD so loved the WORLD that he gave his only begotten son,that whoever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life.
    John 3:16

  4. #4
    Charter Member
    us
    Apr 2007
    Oklahoma
    Whites, Tesoro, Fisher and Minelab
    2,318

    Re: True WWII Story--Let's not forget our Vets.

    Thank you for the post and I salute a true American hero!

    Desertfox
    Happy Hunting

    Desertfox
    (Paul)

  5. #5
    GL
    GL is offline
    us
    Mar 2008
    South Central, NC
    1,597

    Re: True WWII Story--Let's not forget our Vets.

    Manly.

 

 

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