Flying Coffin WWII Wreck Found

jfreakofkorn

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'Flying Coffin' WWII Wreck Found

'Flying Coffin' WWII Wreck Found : Discovery News


( Photos In Link Provided Above )


A forgotten story of death and survival during wartime has been brought to light after 70 years as local people unearthed the remains of an American World War II aircraft known as the “Flying Coffin.”

Found in the forests of Selva del Lamone, a natural reserve near the town of Farnese, Viterbo, in central Italy, the wreck remains were identified as belonging to the heavy bomber Consolidated B-24 Liberator.

B-24s are recorded as having dropped over 630,000 tons of bombs during World War II and were the most heavily produced American aircraft.

The four-engine aircraft was notorious among aircrews. Officially designated the “Liberator,” the square shaped B-24 could easily turn into a death trap. It was hard to fly with its stiff and heavy controls, and so earned its name by its crews as the “Flying Coffin.”

Liberators had only one exit near the tail, making it almost impossible for the crew to reach the rear from the flight deck when wearing a parachute.

WWII Dogfight Evidence Found in Italy

According to historian Mario Di Sorte, the wreckage fragments found in Selva del Lamone belong to a B-24 ‘H’ model that operated within the 15th Air Force, 454th Bomb Group, 736th Bomb Squadron from San Giovanni, near Foggia in southern Italy.

“We were able to fully reconstruct its last flight, unveiling a drama which involved South African escapees, Italian civilians and U.S. pilots,” Di Sorte told Discovery News.

The B-24H took off from San Giovanni on March 3, 1944 for a bombing mission to Canino airport, south west of Lake Bolsena. It was one of the 277 bombers — all B-17 “Flying Fortress” and B-24 Liberators — taking off from airfields in Puglia to bomb bridges, train stations and airports controlled by the Germans.

The B-24H was part of an 18-bomber formation that dropped some 25 tons of bombs on the Canino airport, where the Focke Wulf 190 fighters led by German Luftwaffe flying ace Erich Honagen operated.

“Weather conditions and clouds prevented accurate bombing. Only half of the bombers actually dropped their loads, in many cases missing the main target area,” Di Sorte said.

Photos: WWII Wreck Reveals Wartime Romance

As two German fighters attacked the B-24H and its 10-man crew led by lieutenant William J. Goodwin Jr., only two men managed to parachute: sergeant gunner Wallace H. Cleveland and sergeant tail gunner John M. Ashby.

They were the only survivors of the “Flying Coffin.”

The B-24H exploded before crashing. It split in three parts, leaving the Italian civilians who came to the crash site with a horrifying scene of death.

“Carbonized bodies were scattered around the wreckage, a body was hanging from a tree with his parachute, while lieutenant William J. Goodwin was seen laying on the ground wearing the oxygen mask with bandages stuffed inside,” Di Sorte said.

Seriously injured, sergeant Cleveland parachuted away from the crash and was captured by the Germans, ending up in a prison camp in Germany.

Sergeant Ashby was helped by the local family Sabatini along with two South African soldiers. They had escaped from a prison camp in Italy and were hiding themselves in caves owned by the Sabatinis.

While Asby was later captured by the Germans, also ending up in a prison camp, the South African soldiers met a terrible fate.

“Bobby” Robert Carter of the South African Engineer Corps and “Alfred” F.J.Crinall of the Rand Light Infantry South African Forces were arrested in the town of Farnese by the Germans on June 4, 1944.

“They were tortured for two days, forced to dig their own pit and then shot dead,” Di Sorte said.

The wreckage fragments will go on display in the Selva del Lamone natural reserve by the end of the year. Along with commemorative panels, they will recount the story of the American and South African soldiers.
 

Treasure_Hunter

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My father was a tail gunner on B-17s with many missions over Germany.....In 1944 they raised the required number of missions to fly from 25 to 30....

Odds of survival of 1st 25 missions were 1 in 4, in other words you had a 75% chance of being killed in the 25 missions....

Good story on B-17s here....
http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/b17.htm
 

aquanut

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I'm glad your Dad made it! Those bombing missions had to be the most dangerous of the war. Did you ever watch the movie "Catch 22"? My Dad joined the Navy in 1938 and was a gunner on the carrier, "Wasp" when it was attacked and sank in the Pacific. Picked up by a destroyer, he was then assigned to the carrier "Yorktown" (The Fighting Lady) for the duration. He hated the ocean from then on and I had to beg him when I was a kid to take me to the shore. I've always loved the ocean! He passed away in 1989...
 

Treasure_Hunter

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Sorry to hear about your father. My parents were divorced when I was 10. My father was hard core military, he ran the house like he ran the squadron so it was not a good time but I did learn the stories about his military experiences... One of my uncles on my mothers side was in army in Philippines when it fell to the Japanese, he was part of the Bataan Death march and almost died, when liberated he barely weighed 100 pounds and he was 6'1". My family thought he was dead because the Japanese did not published his name as a prisoner and the military listed him as missing in action. He died in 2006.

Have another uncle who parachuted behind enemy lines on D Day into Normandy and survived the war. He was in 101 Airborne. He was only 5'6 and maybe 145 pounds, he was someone you didn't mess with but he was a really good man and included me in a lot of outdoor activities like hunting, fishing and camping when my parents divorced. He passed in 2000.
 

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Darren in NC

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Thanks for your stories about your fathers. Their stories are an important part of why we love what we do!
 

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