MERRY CHRISTMAS 1944 AND AFTER
The Army Air Force Jeep rolled slowly through the mud in the early
morning darkness. It would stop momentarily then move on again through
the area occupied by squad tents of combat crews of the 376th Bomb
Group, a part of the 15th Air Force in southern Italy. They were
scattered over the slope near the blacktop and metal landing strip. As
usual, we would, "sweat it out". We had really hoped to get Christmas
Day off. The day before we had gone on leave to Lecci, home of the 98th
Bomb Group, and the only town of any size near our base at San
Pancrazio. Reluctantly, we had come back early thinking we might be on
another mission this morning.
We had made a trip a few days before over Vienna, one of the two worst
in Europe; "350 guns bearing on you at the target" according to
Intelligence at briefing. We found out they were right as we flew into
a solid black cloud of flack on our bomb run. Two of the group didn't
come out of it, and we felt pretty fortunate; not a scratch on anyone
in our crew even though we counted over 40 holes in our plane after we
landed.
The day after the Vienna mission we were over the "Hell Hole of Linz."
One ship on our right wing disappeared in a ball of smoke and fire. We
always tried to watch for chutes but all I saw was what looked like the
Sperry ball turret and a few pieces of sheet metal. They must have
taken a direct hit in the bomb bay or caught on fire. B24's had a
reputation of blowing up within ten seconds if a fire broke out. On two
other days we had hit Salsburg and Rosenheim. That made it four days in
a row and, one of the crew said, "I believe they are trying to kill us
off."
Then came that Christmas Morning rap on our tent, "Williams crew,
everyone out, briefing at 3, breakfast at 4," We rolled out of our
bunks and into our heated flying suits, gloves, felt boots, helmets and
goggles. The whole unit plugged together and was later plugged into our
turret or position. It was going to be another long haul; 8 hours or
more at high altitude, 20,000 to 30,000 feet, on oxygen, with the
temperature 50 to 60 degrees below zero. All that along with sweating
out fighters and flack would see us returning to base exhausted.
We went to get the word: route to target, the I. P. 's, where to expect
flack, weather, etc. They said we were fortunate this morning. It would
be a "milk run." We were just going as far north as Innsbruck and hit
the Hall Main marshalling railroad yards, "To let those Krauts know
there was still a war going on." We hurried on to breakfast, and then
went to pick up our chest pack parachutes. Some wise guy had a sign
over the counter, "If it don't work, bring it back."
We were soon down to the hard stand checking out a battered and patched
B24 with a big 63 on it's side. We checked out our guns, the bomb load,
and fuel. We then got our flack suits and helmets into our positions
with our chutes nearby. One of the "Ground Grippers" said, "Glad I'm
not going with .you guys this morning." When I asked why, he said,
"That airplane is wore out!" Charley Johnson of Atlanta, our nose
gunner said, "Maybe we will have a White Christmas after all Bart." It
wasn't much to look forward to but was quite possible. I had noticed at
briefing all the blank spaces where crews were erased on the blackboard
due to M.I.A., and had wondered if they would move us up in the line
again, or were we to also become a blank space on the board. The number
one crew had the most missions and hoped to reach 50 and win a trip
back the states.
We finally taxied out onto the runway and took our turn. We had quite a
struggle getting airborne and managed it just at the end of the strip.
I thought then of another crew that didn't manage it just before we
joined the group. Parts of their ship were still scattered around the
area.
We had a hard time keeping up with the rest of the group. D. D. , the
Pilot said on the intercom that we wouldn't make it back with our fuel
load and would probably have to land at Foggia on our return in order
to refuel. He also said he was giving it everything he could to keep
up. We. finally went on oxygen around 12,000 feet, and were soon out
over the Adriatic heading north. We could see the mountains of
Yugoslavia to the east and later spotted a flight of B-
17's ahead of us heading north also. We flew on by them and then swung
inland over the Udine area of Northern Italy. We soon could see the
snowy peaks of the Alps of first Italy, then Austria on our right as we
headed west and north in the general direction of Innsbruck. We made a
number of turns from time to time because we never flew in a direct
line to the target. As usual, we picked up light flack, then moderate,
then heavy as we approached the target. About that time our luck ran
out.
From my position in the top turret I first noticed that our right
outboard engine was dead, and the prop feathered with a blade missing.
We soon dropped below and behind the formation; another cripple for
German fighters. There was nothing to do but try to fight them off as
we had no fighter escort. Then there was the high scream of a runaway
prop on our right inboard engine. It had to be shut down also and the
ship began to slip into a flat spin. About this time I noticed that we
were losing the left half of our tail assembly, the horizontal
stabilizer was disintegrating, and we were probably on fire. The
intercom was out, but I was slapped on my legs from the flight deck
below. I saw the co-pilot, Don Mitchell, with his chute on heading for
the still open bomb bay.
I checked out also as soon as I could, unhooking electrical, oxygen,
and interphone, and snapping on my chest chute. The gravity force was
really rough as I crawled back, and the last I saw of Williams he was
standing up, fighting the controls, trying to hold the ship steady. He
must have followed me pretty fast though, because when I stopped
tumbling so I could get my chute open, "Old 63" had already exploded in
mid air. Later, as I drifted down, I saw it scattered on the mountain
below.
The trip down by chute was extremely quiet with only the occasional
soft plop of the small pilot chute on top. Lower down I drifted toward
the vertical rock wall of a mountain, and nearly collapsed the chute a
couple of times trying to get away from it. There were no other chutes
visible and I was worried about Williams. Lower down there was a chalet
or house in the timber and deep snow. I landed some distance from it
with the only casualty the dye marker we carried in case we had to
ditch in the sea. It turned the snow in the area a bright orange.
An old gentleman and two children approached, but stopped at a distance
from me until I assured them I had no gun. They came over, and he said
,"kommen, kommen." He and the children then led me to the house.
Inside, I was given a chair and then a shot of Schnapps. The lady of
the house handed me a bowl of Christmas Cookies, and then had me sit at
a table where she gave me a bowl of soup and meat. We tried to converse
with an English-German Dictionary, but about then the police arrived
from the town below. She hid the left over food under a cot just in
time, and as I was going out the door she said, "you Catlic?" I said
yes. Her reply was "Dominus Vobiscum.": God be with you.
I stepped out into the snow and saw the two children again. A young
German soldier was with them. The guard then directed me on down the
slope. Flying boots are lousy skis, but I managed to get down to the
lower elevation without falling. There I was taken to another house
where co-pilot Don Mitchell was waiting. We found the people there
spoke fair English, and were told we might as well give up. They said
the war wouldn't last much longer, and that the border to Switzerland
was so heavily guarded that it would be impossible to go there.
We were then taken further on down the slope to the town where we were
put in a cell in the local jail. We were later visited there by another
guard who needed my gloves, and in spite of an argument, walked out
with them while I got up off of the floor. The cell was unheated and
during the night I held Mitchell's feet between my legs to keep them
from freezing. He had lost his flying boots and was wearing his G.I.
shoes that he had tied to his chute harness. I had lost my shoes with
the delayed chute opening.
We left Rottenburg, and went on by train toward Southern Germany. We
were stopped in route for interrogation. I gave the interrogator my
name, rank, and serial number, as required, but he insisted that I give
him the name of our bomb group or I would be shot as a spy. He also
asked for our tail markings which I also refused. I then asked if he
would answer those questions if he were in my place. This ended it. His
parting remark was, "The reason you people are winning this war is
because you are so damn confused we can't figure out what you are going
to do next." I agreed with him.
Our next stop was a German Air Base near Aibling. We all managed to get
there together except for Cliff Faith of Cincinnati. He came in last,
and looked as though he felt pretty low. We saw him first and said, "Hi
Cliff'. Boy, what a change! He said he had been told we all went down
with the ship. He had seen it explode after he bailed out, and thought
the worst. While at Aibling some German pilots visited us, they were
friendly and one said Roosevelt could stick the whole R.A.F. in one
pocket. They said our P-38's were bad news but that they didn't stand a
chance against our p-51's. They took off fast when a guard came. We
were finally given some food, a slice of rye bread, which we tried on
some birds outside our cell. They wouldn't touch it, but we later
wished many times that we had kept it.
We finally boarded another train and headed north. In one town air raid
sirens cut loose and we had to get out and run. Two of us carried the
bombardier who had broken his ankle. We looked, and here came a single
P-51, low, down the tracks spraying bullets. Then he pulled up and
dumped a bomb on the station we had just left, thus delaying our
journey on north. Finally under way we saw a lot of "window" hanging in
the trees: aluminum foil air crews dropped to confuse the radar of
anti-aircraft guns. We also saw the destruction of the cities along the
route. Often, especially in Frankfurt there were areas where there was
only rubble with an occasional standing wall section. It was impossible
to tell where the streets were.We finally boarded another train and
headed north. In one town air raid sirens cut loose and we had to get
out and run. Two of us carried the bombardier who had broken his ankle.
We looked, and here came a single P-51, low, down the tracks spraying
bullets. Then he pulled up and dumped a bomb on the station we had just
left, thus delaying our journey on north. Finally under way we saw a
lot of "window" hanging in the trees: aluminum foil air crews dropped
to confuse the radar of anti-aircraft guns. We also saw the destruction
of the cities along the route. Often, especially in Frankfurt there
were areas where there was only rubble with an occasional standing wall
section. It was impossible to tell where the streets were.
Eventually we arrived at a large distribution area, Dulag Luft. There
were a lot of POW's there. Some were in sad shape particularly a number
of burn victims with noses, and ears, burned off. We met a crew from
the 98th Bomb Group there, and they wanted to know what took us so
long. Their Pilot Williams and our Pilot Williams had gone through
Cadets together. We spent a few days there and were told what to
expect. One day we watched a flight of P-47's dive bomb and strafe a
German train a couple of miles from the camp. It burned and blew up all
afternoon. At first we started to cheer but the Colonel in charge
yelled, "Keep your damned mouths shut, the guards just might open up on
you!" This particular Colonel had been flying a "Jug" (P-47) and got so
low strafing a German air base he curled his prop tips on their runway.
The enlisted men of our crew were sent back down to Stalag Luft #17, at
Nuremburg, and were put in unheated barracks. We slept on the floor and
wore anything we could add to try and keep warm. It was our longest
stay in one camp. We had temporary visitors at one time: Infantry that
were captured at the Battle of the Bulge. They separated Air Crews and
Infantry most of the time and we believed they liked us the least.
At Stalag Luft #17, We were on a slow starvation diet; a small portion
of soup twice a day, and a slice of sour rye bread. We called the soup,
"Green Death". It was made of cabbage leaves with no salt, and usually
had small white worms in it. Sometimes on Sunday, we got Pea Soup with
Beetles. Our daily intake was under 900 calories: not enough to sustain
human life, so we were told. Most of us had dysentery and became pretty
weak. My thighs shrunk down to become smaller than my knees. Sleeping
at night was rough. In any position your bones seemed to cut through
your skin.
Eventually we arrived at a large distribution area, Dulag Luft. There
were a lot of POW's there. Some were in sad shape particularly a number
of burn victims with noses, and ears, burned off. We met a crew from
the 98th Bomb Group there, and they wanted to know what took us so
long. Their Pilot Williams and our Pilot Williams had gone through
Cadets together. We spent a few days there and were told what to
expect. One day we watched a flight of P-47's dive bomb and strafe a
German train a couple of miles from the camp. It burned and blew up all
afternoon. At first we started to cheer but the Colonel in charge
yelled, "Keep your damned mouths shut, the guards just might open up on
you!" This particular Colonel had been flying a "Jug" (P-47) and got so
low strafing a German air base he curled his prop tips on their runway.
The enlisted men of our crew were sent back down to Stalag Luft #17, at
Nuremburg, and were put in unheated barracks. We slept on the floor and
wore anything we could add to try and keep warm. It was our longest
stay in one camp. We had temporary visitors at one time: Infantry that
were captured at the Battle of the Bulge. They separated Air Crews and
Infantry most of the time and we believed they liked us the least.
At Stalag Luft #17, We were on a slow starvation diet; a small portion
of soup twice a day, and a slice of sour rye bread. We called the soup,
"Green Death". It was made of cabbage leaves with no salt, and usually
had small white worms in it. Sometimes on Sunday, we got Pea Soup with
Beetles. Our daily intake was under 900 calories: not enough to sustain
human life, so we were told. Most of us had dysentery and became pretty
weak. My thighs shrunk down to become smaller than my knees. Sleeping
at night was rough. In any position your bones seemed to cut through
your skin.
A big day came! We finally got some Red Cross Food Parcels. I had 17
men in my group to divide the parcel with. I had to walk a block to get
it. Then I had to get help to carry it back, even though it weighed
only 5 or 10 pounds. The most valuable thing in the parcels was the one
pound box of raisins. We counted them and put them in ITequal piles. I
made my share last a week. I ate one at a time, only a few each day,
and chewed them as long as possible. There was also a one pound box of
powdered milk and cigarettes. The cigarettes were green with mold, but
we smoked them anyway.
We added to our diet by drinking warm water heated by slivers of wood
and pieces of grass in a tin can sitting on three rocks. We also ate
pieces of grass when they came up. One day there was a bomb raid on
Nuremburg: 24's and 17's. We saw some coming down in flames and watched
for parachutes. We had to stay inside because so much flack was coming
down from above. One Airman parachuted into our compound. After the
raid our soup improved. They brought in bones of a horse. The recipe
included everything, even the hooves and the hair around them.
The slivers we used to heat our "Kriege Brew" (water) were usually from
a board ripped off the "Wash House" at night and tossed through a
window. The guards would come in on the run, but when they arrived we
would all be laying around talking; the board already in splinters and
hidden.
Every morning we had "Appel": roll call. It was, "Raus mit! los! los!"
We would line up in rows five deep and they would start counting. The
guys in back would change places and when they got to their row they
would raise H— and start over. We would say to each other, "Them Krauts
can't even count." Then we would do it again. It would often take an
hour or more and we would get pretty cold.
Inside the barbed wire entanglements around the compound at six feet
was a single strand of wire. If you touched it they would shoot you. We
used to walk near it, and stare at the guard. When he stopped, we would
stop. We wouldn't say a single word, but the guard would have plenty of
words for us. He was always unhappy about it.
We had Australians, Canadians, and English flying personnel in our
compound with Russians next to us. We got alone good with them too, and
it was always, "Hi Comrade!" We heard they would take their "Stiffs,"
(dead bodies) out to roll call so they could be counted, and they could
get extra rations. I tunneled under the entanglements into their area
one night between search light sweeps. I didn't accomplish anything but
one guy gave me an inlaid cigarette holder which I kept for years.
The war progressed and we had to leave Nuremburg. Those too weak to
walk were going by train. I decided to walk. Too many men in our
compound who couldn't make it out to morning roll call in the past were
carried out of our compound, and we never saw them again. We also had
seen what was happening to German trains, and understood as well a good
reason for our short rations. We had their transportation crippled.
Over 1,000 locomotives were destroyed by the 15th Air Force fighters in
one year along with freight cars, trucks, etc.
We headed south slowly. Some had blankets, and we would pair up and try
to keep warmer at night. If they were available we slept on branches to
keep off the damp ground. On occasions, when we heard planes coming we
used anything we could find to spell out POW. It was a long walk but we
finally arrived in Moosburg. It was very crowded there, and I read
afterward that there were over 25,000 prisoners from several of the
Allied countries.
The first night after arrival, I heard a board rip off the latrine, so
I hurried out to get my share. The next morning there was only a
foundation, and the guards were walking around shaking their heads. I
heard one say, "Der shisen haus is kaput!"
I had teamed with Gene Brillhart of Perryton, Texas. He had been in the
9th Air Force and was the only survivor of his crew. The others were
shot coming down in their chutes. He landed safely and survived by
hiding under some brush for four days until a German military
detachment came by. One day, shortly before we were liberated, we were
making a Kriege Brew with a small can of water. Bullets and even shells
were coming pretty close. Others yelled at us to take cover. Gene
finally looked up bleary eyed and said, "They gettin kind of close
ain't they George." We couldn't stand the idea of giving up our portion
of the Kreige Brew so neither of us moved.
Then, on the last day of April, the 3rd. Armored Division arrived. A
tank knocked down some of the barbed wire and the guards threw down
their guns. They said, "Deutchland is Kaput!" We thought at last we
would get some food. An officer got up on the roof of one of the
buildings and said we would all be on our way home in one to two weeks,
either by air or hospital ship. He was sadly misinformed. A couple of
days after that I picked up a piece of orange peel out of the mud and
ate it.
In a week we left for a German Air Base where some C-47's flew us to
Rheims France. We were there for a week or so, and then went to Camp
Lucky Strike on the Northern French Coast. Every day we lined up for
egg nog. It may have been good, but the thick white coating on my
tongue made everything tasteless.
Days and weeks went by, we were told the War was still on with Japan !
! !, and to just, "be patient." One airman from the 8th Air Force,
Homer Miller from Iowa talked me into hitchhiking a ride to England on
a B-17 mail plane so he could check on his old outfit. We had some
money from the Red Cross at Lucky Strike so we took off. We found his
old Bomb Group, and got a couple of escape maps for souvenirs. I still
have mine. We took a quick trip to Edinburg, Scotland before returning
to London. We also visited an Ex-POW British pilot named Ronnie
Streatfield, in Kent. On our return again to London, we met a sailor
from Millers home town. We asked if he was going back to the States
soon. He said, "Sure!" He said to come up to Northampton in a couple of
days and he would get us on board his ship.
We were there in plenty of time, but Miller's friend hadn't told us his
ship was an LST! It started rolling the minute it pulled away from the
dock, and was very slow. It's top speed I was told was four knots. One
time in the Atlantic, in a rough sea I asked a sailor how fast we were
going. He said, "Right now we are losing ground." It took 27 days to
get to Newport News, Virginia.
The Navy was good to us though, and they kept their ship spotless. They
were even painting and chipping paint on calm days. One big problem we
had for the whole trip was holding our mess kit with one hand so it
wouldn't slide off on the floor, while we ate with the other hand. We
were able to pay them back for their good treatment one night when the
Injectors on the Diesel engine went on the Fritz. My Ex-POW airman
Mend, Homer, was a Diesel Mechanic back in Iowa before the War. He
overhauled the injectors and had the engine going by morning.
The Army at Newport News wanted to know who we were. We said we were
"RAMPS": Recovered Allied Military Prisoners. They then wanted to see
our paper work. We had none, but they fixed us up with leave papers
after filling out some affidavits. We caught a bus out from Newport
News, and I was able to hitch hike the last 200 miles from Omaha after
arriving there.
Nebraska hadn't changed much, and was very different from Germany,
which by the way must have once been a beautiful country. It probably
is again today. I hope so.
"Bill" Barton
Authored some time around 1968 at Lancaster, CA
Submitted by Lloyd A.
Marshall- good friend and neighbor to "Bill" Barton
|