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In the Footsteps of the Mighty Eighth

A writer searches southern England for traces of a legendary World War II air force.

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  • By John Fleischman
  • Air & Space magazine, March 2007
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A tour of Eighth Air Force history wouldnt be complete without a visit to Duxford which has an operational control tower and Sally B a still-flying B-17. A tour of Eighth Air Force history wouldn't be complete without a visit to Duxford, which has an operational control tower and Sally B, a still-flying B-17.

Alamy; Black & white photographs: national archives; color photographs: john fleischman

Photo Gallery (1/15)

A tour of Eighth Air Force history wouldn

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An American seeking the ghosts of the U.S. Army’s Eighth Air Force in eastern England can get lucky or get lost. I’d found my way to Rattlesden, a tiny village about 80 miles northeast of London, and I’d stopped at the Rattlesden post office and gotten fine directions to a nearby airfield. But within minutes of taking off in my rented car, I was lost. Miles later on a narrow farm lane, I asked the way of a man who’d pulled his car onto the grassy “verge” to let me pass. An abandoned U.S. Army Air Forces airfield? The B-17 base that launched 257 missions and lost 153 aircraft during World War II? Right-hand driver’s window to right-hand driver’s window, he set me straight. I soon went wrong.

The day before, I did find the well-preserved remnants of an Eighth Air Force base at Thorpe Abbotts. It’s between Eye and Diss, not far from Dickleburgh, though I’m not sure I could retrace my route. Fortunately, I’d called ahead and been briefed on the Dickleburgh bypass. The all-volunteer keepers of the Eighth Air Force’s 100th Bomb Group Memorial Museum at Thorpe Abbotts knew I was coming.

Rattlesden and Thorpe Abbotts are in Suffolk, one of five counties that make up the old Saxon kingdom of East Anglia, which juts into the North Sea. Flat, heavily agricultural, and perfectly placed for launching mass formations of propeller-driven, high-altitude heavy bombers deep into German territory, East Anglia was the cannon’s mouth for the U.S. Army’s Eighth Air Force. Sixty years on, it remains the heartland of the Eighth Air Force legend.

The U.S. military presence in the United Kingdom during World War II was immense. Between 1941 and 1945, three million U.S. servicemen and women flowed through Great Britain (with the Yanks taking 50,000 British war brides and a few war grooms in passing). By itself, the U.S. Army Air Forces contributed 500,000 personnel to this “friendly invasion,” with 350,000 of those in the Eighth Air Force alone. Compared with U.S. service personnel in other regions of England, the Eighth Air Force arrived earlier, stayed later, and settled more heavily in East Anglia. In 1944, one in seven residents of Suffolk County was American.

When I pulled up to the 100th Bomb Group Memorial, volunteers Ken Everett and Carol Batley were waiting at the far end. Batley was clutching the heavy metal lariat of keys that it takes to pass through the layers of padlocks, deadbolts, and alarm boxes that guard what remains of the Eighth at Thorpe Abbotts today. Gone are the concrete runways, hardstands, hangars, barracks, mess halls, bomb dumps, fire-fighting ponds, and, of course, big-tail Boeing B-17 bombers. What remains is the control tower, the quartermaster’s store, and a row of rescued and relocated Quonset huts (the British call them Nissen huts). In the old tower and its highly eclectic museum I began to feel what life must have been like for the young Americans who once lived here and for the English people who watched them fly off to battle every morning.

“I was 13 when they came in 1943, just the right age to be fascinated by it all,” says Everett, who points out the house just beyond the vanished perimeter fence where his family was living when the four squadrons of B-17s that made up the 100th Bomb Group began operations from Thorpe Abbotts. He vividly remembers standing outside and watching a shot-up B-17 fly by at rooftop height, popping flares, leaking fuel, and jettisoning gear as it swooped in for an emergency landing. Everett was delighted by the sound and spectacle. “At that age, you don’t appreciate the danger,” he says. Then one afternoon, while cycling home from school, Everett watched a B-17 sail across the road just in front of him, crashing about 300 yards away. Seven of the 10 aboard were killed. He also recalls the day a 100th Bomb Group gunner, standing outside his ball turret, accidentally set off the .50-caliber gun, spraying rounds at the village. “I have this recollection of hearing this sound—bing, bing, bing—overhead,” says Everett. “You weren’t aware that you were threatened until it was over.”

In 1977 Everett was one of the first volunteers that Mike Harvey, another local boy, lured into what seemed a hopeless mission to rescue the Thorpe Abbotts control tower. Harvey had been only seven in 1943, but he too had many memories of the U.S. air crews. Before his death in 1995, Harvey gave his energy and mad dreaming to preserving Thorpe Abbotts. The English farmers who took back their fields after the air station closed in 1945 stored straw for pigs in the derelict tower. The glass house on the tower roof had disappeared. Cracks and water damage were everywhere.

Demolition seemed most likely until Harvey approached the landowner with a plan to restore the tower as a museum commemorating the Eighth’s 100th Bomb Group. The owners gave Harvey a 99-year lease on the tower and a small footprint of land around it. (“We have to return the land in good condition when we finish,” says Everett.) Harvey rounded up other locals with good memories of the Yanks and those with no memories but lots of curiosity, like Ron and Carol Batley, post-war baby boomers. Ron was immediately taken with Harvey’s ideas, but Carol’s first reaction was “You must be crazy.” Then Harvey’s volunteers, including Carol’s husband and her children, descended on the Thorpe Abbotts tower with new glass, paint, and roof tar. Carol soon changed her mind: “If you can’t beat them, you had to join them. But you have to bear in mind that none of us had any experience in keeping a museum.”

An American seeking the ghosts of the U.S. Army’s Eighth Air Force in eastern England can get lucky or get lost. I’d found my way to Rattlesden, a tiny village about 80 miles northeast of London, and I’d stopped at the Rattlesden post office and gotten fine directions to a nearby airfield. But within minutes of taking off in my rented car, I was lost. Miles later on a narrow farm lane, I asked the way of a man who’d pulled his car onto the grassy “verge” to let me pass. An abandoned U.S. Army Air Forces airfield? The B-17 base that launched 257 missions and lost 153 aircraft during World War II? Right-hand driver’s window to right-hand driver’s window, he set me straight. I soon went wrong.

The day before, I did find the well-preserved remnants of an Eighth Air Force base at Thorpe Abbotts. It’s between Eye and Diss, not far from Dickleburgh, though I’m not sure I could retrace my route. Fortunately, I’d called ahead and been briefed on the Dickleburgh bypass. The all-volunteer keepers of the Eighth Air Force’s 100th Bomb Group Memorial Museum at Thorpe Abbotts knew I was coming.

Rattlesden and Thorpe Abbotts are in Suffolk, one of five counties that make up the old Saxon kingdom of East Anglia, which juts into the North Sea. Flat, heavily agricultural, and perfectly placed for launching mass formations of propeller-driven, high-altitude heavy bombers deep into German territory, East Anglia was the cannon’s mouth for the U.S. Army’s Eighth Air Force. Sixty years on, it remains the heartland of the Eighth Air Force legend.

The U.S. military presence in the United Kingdom during World War II was immense. Between 1941 and 1945, three million U.S. servicemen and women flowed through Great Britain (with the Yanks taking 50,000 British war brides and a few war grooms in passing). By itself, the U.S. Army Air Forces contributed 500,000 personnel to this “friendly invasion,” with 350,000 of those in the Eighth Air Force alone. Compared with U.S. service personnel in other regions of England, the Eighth Air Force arrived earlier, stayed later, and settled more heavily in East Anglia. In 1944, one in seven residents of Suffolk County was American.

When I pulled up to the 100th Bomb Group Memorial, volunteers Ken Everett and Carol Batley were waiting at the far end. Batley was clutching the heavy metal lariat of keys that it takes to pass through the layers of padlocks, deadbolts, and alarm boxes that guard what remains of the Eighth at Thorpe Abbotts today. Gone are the concrete runways, hardstands, hangars, barracks, mess halls, bomb dumps, fire-fighting ponds, and, of course, big-tail Boeing B-17 bombers. What remains is the control tower, the quartermaster’s store, and a row of rescued and relocated Quonset huts (the British call them Nissen huts). In the old tower and its highly eclectic museum I began to feel what life must have been like for the young Americans who once lived here and for the English people who watched them fly off to battle every morning.

“I was 13 when they came in 1943, just the right age to be fascinated by it all,” says Everett, who points out the house just beyond the vanished perimeter fence where his family was living when the four squadrons of B-17s that made up the 100th Bomb Group began operations from Thorpe Abbotts. He vividly remembers standing outside and watching a shot-up B-17 fly by at rooftop height, popping flares, leaking fuel, and jettisoning gear as it swooped in for an emergency landing. Everett was delighted by the sound and spectacle. “At that age, you don’t appreciate the danger,” he says. Then one afternoon, while cycling home from school, Everett watched a B-17 sail across the road just in front of him, crashing about 300 yards away. Seven of the 10 aboard were killed. He also recalls the day a 100th Bomb Group gunner, standing outside his ball turret, accidentally set off the .50-caliber gun, spraying rounds at the village. “I have this recollection of hearing this sound—bing, bing, bing—overhead,” says Everett. “You weren’t aware that you were threatened until it was over.”

In 1977 Everett was one of the first volunteers that Mike Harvey, another local boy, lured into what seemed a hopeless mission to rescue the Thorpe Abbotts control tower. Harvey had been only seven in 1943, but he too had many memories of the U.S. air crews. Before his death in 1995, Harvey gave his energy and mad dreaming to preserving Thorpe Abbotts. The English farmers who took back their fields after the air station closed in 1945 stored straw for pigs in the derelict tower. The glass house on the tower roof had disappeared. Cracks and water damage were everywhere.

Demolition seemed most likely until Harvey approached the landowner with a plan to restore the tower as a museum commemorating the Eighth’s 100th Bomb Group. The owners gave Harvey a 99-year lease on the tower and a small footprint of land around it. (“We have to return the land in good condition when we finish,” says Everett.) Harvey rounded up other locals with good memories of the Yanks and those with no memories but lots of curiosity, like Ron and Carol Batley, post-war baby boomers. Ron was immediately taken with Harvey’s ideas, but Carol’s first reaction was “You must be crazy.” Then Harvey’s volunteers, including Carol’s husband and her children, descended on the Thorpe Abbotts tower with new glass, paint, and roof tar. Carol soon changed her mind: “If you can’t beat them, you had to join them. But you have to bear in mind that none of us had any experience in keeping a museum.”

Harvey knew that to get the museum going, he had to get the 100th Bomb Group veterans’ association on his side. In the late 1970s, he began cultivating Harry Crosby, the group’s former navigation officer, and Robert “Rosie” Rosenthal, by then quietly practicing law in the New York City suburbs. Rosenthal had volunteered for two tours with the 100th, flown a series of wrecks to safety, and been shot down twice, the last time over Berlin.

When Crosby and Rosenthal gave the thumbs-up to Harvey’s tower museum at Thorpe Abbotts, attics across the United States opened and out came a flood of artifacts. Rosenthal sent his dress uniform and his formidable array of medals. A bombardier sent the 35 bomb tags he signed for on his 35 missions, all mounted on a map of Germany. Then came flak jackets, a Norden bombsight, a never-opened GI shaving kit, the Boeing name plate off a pilot’s control wheel, a metal rooster “acquired” from a nearby pub, and the key to the 1141st Quartermaster Company’s storeroom at Thorpe Abbotts. Along with the memorabilia came more than 2,000 pictures, bundles of letters home, and a war’s-end telegram to the mother of a 100th Bomb Group POW: “The Secretary of War desires me to inform that your son S/Sgt Affleck, John W., has returned to Military Control.”

Museum volunteers dragged the old fire-fighting pond, recovering a bugle, a virtual market basket of 1940s consumer products (Ipana toothpaste, Brylcreem, Old Spice aftershave, little green Coke bottles), a horseshoe, and a copy of Fulton Sheen’s The Armor of God. The people around Thorpe Abbotts brought in bits and pieces from the 100th Bomb Group that had rained down on the land or were left behind in the outfit’s hasty departure. Locals came bearing U.S. Army-issue office furniture, telephones, tools, stepladders, bomb hoists, aircraft sheet metal, bent propellers, and a gas-attack rattle and all-clear bell complete with a sign warning, “These are not playthings.”

To me, the most amazing artifact was a well-worn Army-issue catcher’s mask that a homeward-bound GI gave to a local schoolboy at war’s end. Combat air crews who survived their mission tours were immediately sent home, but many of the enlisted men who came to Thorpe Abbotts in 1943 were still there in 1945. What’s an English schoolboy to do with an enlisted man’s catcher’s mask? Save it for 50 years, then return it to the Eighth Air Force.

There are at least a dozen other volunteer museums and memorial societies scattered across East Anglia; they too preserve U.S. Army Air Forces sites. Few associations are as active or as well organized as the 100th Bomb Group Memorial, though. Some don’t have towers to guard, and, like volunteer groups everywhere, their enthusiasm and activity ebb and flow. Most volunteer museums are open to visitors only one or two days a month, mostly on Sundays and mostly in summer. The Internet is invaluable in locating them, but luck helps. I got lucky the next day.

I went looking for Rougham, hoping for no more than a peek through the window of the museum there, which is dedicated to the Eighth Air Force’s 94th Bomb Group. My tourist map of old Eighth Air Force fields said that the museum is run by a Rougham Tower Association on an industrial estate just outside the town of Bury St. Edmunds. I spotted the exit for the Rougham Industrial Estate just in time and turned onto a street on which every vertical surface bore a poster announcing that today was the start of the two-day Rougham Airshow. The Rougham tower wasn’t just open, it was jumping. Inside, the association’s self-trained curator, Peter Langdon, gave me a tour of the sandblasted, patched, re-glazed, re-roofed, and repainted tower. Outside, the association chairman, Graham Crabtree, showed me how a proposed highway bypass would shave the corner of the historic zone around the Rougham tower.

The climax of the airshow would come the next day, I was told, when a flotilla of warbirds would descend on the Rougham airfield, including Spitfires, a Messerschmitt, a P-51, and a B-17 named Sally B. In the meantime, a World War II-era motor pool was already assembled on the field behind the control tower, ready for my inspection. I marched down a long line of parked U.S. jeeps, half-tons, staff cars, dispatch motorcycles, and an M24 tank. Elsewhere I saw vendors selling hot dogs, replica USAAF patches, model airplane kits, and Glenn Miller’s greatest hits. Straying beyond the day’s theme, other vendors were selling Thai noodles, classic car parts, contemporary war surplus, medieval replica swords, toy trains, helicopter rides, and two chances for £1.50 to ride an “unrideable bike.”
In the afternoon, the Rougham Tower Association would dedicate a new monument to the 94th Bomb Group, using an engine from a 94th B-17 that had spent the last 60 years underwater. In 1944 the engine belonged to Hello Mr. Maier, which had taken off from Rougham, attacked Munich, and ditched in the North Sea on the way back. The entire crew was rescued, but the engine didn’t turn up until 2000, when an English fishing boat snagged it from the bottom of the sea. Its years in the sand had half turned it to stone. The repainted engine and propeller had now been made into the centerpiece of the new monument thanks to the volunteers of the Rougham Tower Association, who have been working since 1993 to save the old control tower from ruin.

Relying on fundraisers, hard work, and a 99-year lease from the supportive landowner, the volunteers have restored the concrete tower’s wartime appearance, repainting the tower a very authentic Army green. The restoration evoked the days when the tower controlled the B-26 Marauders of the 322nd Bomb Group and then the heavy B-17s of the 94th. The volunteers forged ties with U.S. veterans, filling the new tower museum with donated artifacts. They redid the old radar repair shop as a meeting hall and filled restored Quonset huts with the larger Eighth Air Force artifacts that still surface in old barns and new construction sites: a bombardier’s seat, a bomb winch, and a large piece of Little Boy Blue, a B-17 that crashed near Rougham. The piece had been brought in by a man who said he’d been using it for decades to cover his lawnmower.

The Rougham Airshow had something on display last August even rarer than Brylcreem bottles—an Eighth Air Force combat veteran. Wilbur Richardson, a retired music and history teacher from Chino, California, was on hand for the memorial dedication, still able to fit into his USAAF sergeant’s uniform. Richardson first arrived at Rougham in early 1944, as the 21-year-old ball turret gunner on a B-17 named Kismet. He was about to start a 30-mission combat tour. Twenty-nine missions later, Richardson went to London on a 48-hour pass. “By the time I got back to Rougham,” he recalls, “they’d raised it to 35 missions.” On his 30th mission, Richardson was severely wounded by flak over Munich and shipped home.

Last summer, he was making his 15th return to Rougham, looking sharp enough for many more. But the ex-ball turret gunner’s appearance raised a question: What will happen to the Eighth Air Force legend as the flyboys fade away?

Legends are not always fair or even accurate. The U.S. Army deployed other air forces in Europe during World War II. There were two tactical air forces, the Ninth, which was based originally in England, and the Twelfth, which is better remembered as the desert air force after its start in North Africa. The Eighth was not even the only strategic air force. In 1943 the Fifteenth Air Force was set up in Italy to carry out the same kind of high-altitude, long-range strategic bombing that the Eighth was waging from England. These other U.S. Army Air Forces fought valiantly, but the Eighth turned out to be the one that flew into legend.

On these and other issues, the American Air Museum in England is a useful corrective. And it’s not hard to find. It’s at Duxford, just off the M11, between London and Cambridge. The American Air Museum is actually part of the Imperial War Museum, the British equivalent of the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. Inside, I sought the iconic aircraft of the U.S. Army Air Forces. The American Air Museum covers the full range of U.S. flying in Europe, from a SPAD XIII in Eddie Rickenbacker’s 94th Aero Squadron colors to a recently retired SR-71 Blackbird reconnaissance aircraft. But the knots of visitors are always thickest by the signature airplanes of the Eighth Air Force—a green-painted B-17G named Mary Alice and a bare metal B-24M Liberator named Dugan. Hanging from the ceiling was a P-51D Mustang painted with the checkered nose markings of the 78th Fighter Group. I studied a photo of 78th pilots lounging outside the group briefing room, waiting in the late afternoon sun at Duxford to see who didn’t make it home from the day’s mission. I turned from the photo to look out on the Duxford main runway beyond the glass. They waited just out there.

England is knee deep in history, and wading through it in a search for the Eighth Air Force can take you to unexpected depths. It can lead to All Saints’ Church, in the village of Carleton Rode, which has a glorious stained-glass window commemorating 17 U.S. airmen killed when their two B-24s collided overhead in November 1944. It can lead to pubs like The Swan in Lavenham, where crews from the 487th Bomb Group signed the walls. Sixty years later, the signatures are still there, safe under glass. (The Swan is now part of a swank hotel, its staff and patrons too young to remember the pub’s wartime customers.) Everywhere I went, there was the East Anglia summer sky, a turbulent kaleidoscope of sudden blue, sudden cloud, and sudden squalls.

The rain lifted for the short drive north from Duxford to Cambridge. I exited the highway just west of the university city, into the leafy suburb of Madingley, where I was bound for the Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial, the resting place for 3,812 American servicemen and -women (along with a scattering of U.S. War Department employees, Red Cross workers, Merchant Marine sailors, and one war correspondent) whose bodies were recovered in the United Kingdom during World War II. Another 5,126 are listed on the Wall of the Missing.

The American Cemetery is operated by the U.S. government’s smallest independent overseas agency, the American Battle Monuments Commission. By law, the cemetery’s superintendent and his assistant are American, but the other staffers are local, including cemetery associate Arthur Brookes. No one knows more about the dead and the missing honored at Cambridge than Brookes does. He knows where to find bandleader Glenn Miller on the Wall of the Missing, listed as Major Alton G. Miller, USAAF Band. There is the name of John F. Kennedy’s elder brother, Lieutenant Joseph P. Kennedy, cut in stone among the U.S. Navy missing. Buried here are 17 women, 32 civilians, and someone from every state in the Union, plus the Panama Canal Zone and Puerto Rico. Twenty-four of the burials are unknown.

Brookes says that the American Battle Monuments Commission D-Day cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer in Normandy draws the most visitors—three million a year—but the American Cemetery at Cambridge, which is the only U.S. World War II cemetery in the United Kingdom, still gets 150,000 visitors a year. Roughly 70 percent of the burials drew from the U.S. Army Air Forces, and most of those came from the Eighth Air Force. On the memorial for the missing, however, the percentage of Eighth members is much higher: It was in the nature of the Eighth’s long-distance bombing campaign, says Brookes, that many fell unseen into remote country, coastal waters, or their burning targets below. By war’s end, more than 10,000 Americans had been buried here. In 1945, the U.S. government offered the next of kin of deceased overseas personnel the option of repatriation; about 60 percent accepted.

Yet the buried and the missing at Cambridge represent only a fraction of the Eighth’s 26,000 dead. Approximately 135,000 Eighth personnel flew combat missions. That means an Eighth air crew member had roughly a one-in-five chance of dying. Factor in another 29,500 air crewmen who were shot down, ending up as POWs and internees. Suddenly, the scale of the Eighth’s sacrifice becomes terribly clear.

I walked on, following the curved rows of graves; it is a beautiful place. The design is American—both the architects and the landscape architects were from Boston—but the velvet grass and lush rose gardens are the work of the English climate and English gardeners.

The cemetery is laid out in a great quarter-circle, almost like the shape described by the hands of a clock reading three o’clock. Along the hour hand runs the Wall of the Missing, the names cut in Portland sandstone. Along the minute hand runs an avenue of trees. The rows of graves sweep in arcs between them. The white marble crosses and stars of David are washed every month. When the inscriptions become weathered, the stones are replaced.

The combat air crew buried here are those who came home mortally wounded, crashed on English soil, or whose bodies were recovered from the sea. Here also lie Eighth Air Force ordnance handlers killed in bomb-loading accidents. Here too are the Eighth’s postal clerks, company bakers, and Women’s Army Corps members, dead of infections, car crashes, V-bombs, and natural causes. The headstones make no distinctions.

I had brought, from the museum at Thorpe Abbotts, the name of Sergeant George J. Brassell, 418th Bomb Squadron, 10th Bomb Group, who is buried in Section F, Row 3, Grave 108. His airplane, a flak-damaged B-17 named Dorhelcia, went down in the North Sea on December 22, 1943. Brassell’s body was the only one to wash ashore. The other nine crew members are remembered on the Wall of the Missing.

Brookes told me that when family members visit or request a photo of the stone, the staff presses wet sand gathered from Omaha Beach in Normandy into the inscription to make visible the name, rank, unit, date of death, and home state. The harmless sand is left in place. The rain carries it softly away.


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Comments (28)

Very interesting. I live in Urbana, Ohio where at the local Grimes Field, a group of veterans and airplane enthusiasts are restoring a B17 B Model Bomber to be put in flying condition in a museum at the field. Roddy

Posted by Richard C Rademacher on April 3,2008 | 04:48 PM

Sounds like 12 OClock High all over again

keeping memories Alive are very good

thanks

art

Posted by ARTHUR MCKINLEY on May 17,2008 | 11:51 PM

Not mentioned in this article is another pub with a strong connection to the Eighth Air Force: The Eagle on Bene't Street in central Cambridge. The ceiling of the back room of this pub has many graffiti in candle-soot from RAF and USAAF pilots who spent off-duty time there.

Posted by Nicolai Plum on May 18,2008 | 05:32 PM

Read the book "The Mighty Eighth" by Roger Freeman...Great history of the Eight Air Force

Posted by Jim Lane on May 19,2008 | 11:26 PM

If you can find it; there is a book titled "One Last Look" by Philip Kaplan & Rex Alan Smith. Printed in 1983, it is a look at 8th Air Force Bomber bases in England.

Posted by Bill Bosma on August 4,2008 | 07:44 PM

Where could I look to find out details of an American piotet from the 8th Army Air force who served in Leicestershire during WW11? EDITORS' REPLY: Try the U.S. Air Force Association.

Posted by Stefanie Charlesworth on January 18,2009 | 01:15 PM

Most enlightening. To whom it may concern------I have the obit of the last surviving crew member of the B-17--One O Clock Jump---obit found in Columbus Dispatch newspaper. thanks Bill Zimmerman

Posted by Bill Zimmerman on April 21,2009 | 04:49 PM

Hello: I was stationed at Snetterton Heath 8th airforce base in 42--43 and wonder if there is anything left of the old place? The 96th bomb grp. In Suffolk. Sure would like to visit same but am 86 now and probably won't make it. Thanks so very much. Married an English girl, (VERY BEAUTIFUL) who passed away from cancer after 31 years. God bless. Dave Saalfeld Major USAF Ret.

Posted by Dave Saalfeld Major USAF Ret on June 13,2009 | 05:26 PM

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_Snetterton_Heath
Major Dave,

Here is your answer!

I wonder if you ever came across this little book HERE WE ARE TOGETHER by Robert S Arbib Jr. about the presence of the American military in East Anglia in particular and the relationships between the country folk and the GIs in this lovely corner of England that time had almost passed by until the Yanks arrived! A conservationist and ornithologist he pased away in 1987 after writing several books. It will resonate!
You could get it through interlibrary loan here in US I imagine and I found a very old copy online to purchase.
I wonder where you lovely bride was from? My family roots are firmly in East Anglia a few miles from Duxford, Cambs, and the book was suggested by a cousin just discovered who lives in Sudbury, Suffolk, when I was doing long distance family history from California. Being a child who was born in late May 1940 in Lincolnshire I well remember the sound of the Lancasters, Spitfires etc taking off from RAF Digby, nearby and from RAF Waddington and RAF Scampton of Dam Busters fame - due to be closed, I understand. One Lancaster still flies from Lincs for special occassions. I also remember the Luftwaffe dumping their surplus bombs to lighten the load back over the North Sea, after the devastating raids on Coventry and the Industrial Heart of England. My dad's farm fields were littered with bomb craters and as kids we were warned never to pick up those lethal silver papers also dropped which would blow off a hand or worse if picked up. Years ago, my widowed mum and i did a nostalgic tour through East Anglia and being the gal who made it good in CA, I splurged on rooms at The Swan in Lavenham where all the GIs had left their signatures. It's still a lovely part of jolly old England, steeped in history from long before your GI invasion so beautifully described in the book, occurred! Judy
judydalbert@cox.net

Posted by judy d'Albert on August 9,2009 | 02:37 PM

Great story. I was at Duxford last Oct and Had a fantastic time, I came to see their armor collection and was blown away by all the air craft they have aquired I read On a Wing and a Prayer just recently and was again ready to get back to England What a history extravaganza that country is!! God bless all who gave their all to the cause of freedom.

Posted by craig A Stevens on September 12,2009 | 02:38 AM

I am a student of history, especially WWII and the Air force stationed in England. However, I cannot find a map of eastern England showing the bases there. Is there any way that you can help me to locate one? Thanks. Johnny Matthews

Posted by Johnny Matthews on November 19,2009 | 10:31 AM

Would like some info on Wilbur Richarson as he witnessed the tragic accident the Miss Donna Mae. Why you may ask? My uncle--my father's brother--we know was aboard the Donna Mae that day and died. We believe he was the tailgunner; his name SSGT Willard Christensen. Also are there any photos of the Donna Mae crew and of the plane itself. Does Wilbur Richarson have a phone number or an email address. Your help would be appreciated.

Posted by Mike Christensen on December 2,2009 | 07:37 AM

Great Story and photos. I have relived my father's experiences while writing his book, For This Marvelous Country.

Posted by Caro Rose Offutt on January 13,2010 | 11:38 PM

im desperately looking for the painting of B 17 s flying low at night crossing the english channel and surprising the hell out of a fishing boat...any ideas?...e mail me candybushpilot@yahoo.com

Posted by candy sheeran on August 27,2010 | 08:23 AM

Cambridge was my home city where I was educated and grew up, my parents extended great hospitality to the American boys in WW11. On a Sunday evening I would go to Benediction at my Catholic Church, and afterwards there was dancing to records and refreshments in the church hall, and on a Saturday I would go dancing to a lovely ballroom caled The Dorothy. My parents were very strict but I was allowed to go dancing as long as Itook the boys home my brother was a young lieutenant in the Royal Artillery, fighting in the jungles of Burma. I still remember going to a dance at an air base 10 miles outside Cambridge with a young capt. called Gene Smith, and I remember ayoung lieutenant whose name was Robert E Cox with whom I remember dancing at The Dorothy. At about 11pm each night I would hear the throbbing of the engines of the planes as they flew over our house , and would jump out of bed to try to count them, and would do the same on their return in the early hours of the morning. These were very sad years for many young men who gave their lives for us, but I remember them with great fondness and gratitude. I would so love to write to one of these wonderful USAAF VETERANS, the boys I knew were such young gentlemen, so easy to get along with.Diane

Posted by Diane Nancarrow maiden name was Tozer on January 24,2011 | 01:32 PM

Hello again Diane: Just received and email from you this morning. Thanks. Sent you a letter off also. I noticed my comment of a couple years ago above. I'm still here at 88 years and the memories of my 96th bomb grp are still with me. Lost a lot of buddies over there but can't think of a better place to rest in peace than in the old English countryside. God bless everyone. Dave Saalfeld Major USAF Ret

Posted by Dave Saalfeld on April 19,2011 | 04:52 PM

Dad (Eugene White) was in the 8th & 9th US Army Air Corp. HATED heights (I inherited that) so had no end of fun dive bombing while he set high-speed aerial recon cameras to take pix there in England, outside Oxford. He then developed the film & printed the pix that the unit of English WRENS studied for shadows: if it's this wide/long, this is what they are camoflaging to plan bombing runs. My guess is more pix were taken during the bombing to ensure they got it all. He then went to the Continent where he worked a portable darkroom back of the Battle of the Bulge, took pix at a captured V-1 production plant & then what they found during the Liberation of Buchenwald Concentration Camp. No war bride though; Mom was already waiting at home but my younger brother & I had to wait for War's end to be born.

Dad had many fond memories of England & the English. He commented that he knew lots of the English he worked with were excentric but didn't know then they were the geniuses cracking the codes, etc.

Thanks so much for all this info!!! Keep the letters coming! Kitty =^..^=

Posted by Kitty White Wilson on May 28,2011 | 10:50 PM

I have always had an interest in WW2 and especially the Americans that were here during that time.
I was born and lived my childhood near to the city of Leicester and my village "backed" onto an old but still used aerodrome, still with one of it's T2 hangers.
This place was built for the D-Day landings and housed C47's for dropping the 82nd Airborne on that historic day.
Later in my life Passing a memorial near to Corby in Northants, I stopped and read it's inscription, in honour to the 401st BG (H). I was walked over and into the old control tower (now sadley demolished), where I had the most atmospheric feelings and connecting feelings.
From this point I decided to visit ALL the bases of the Mighty 8th to see what remained of these once electrically and emotionally charged places of excitement and fear that those young brave men endured.
Since these times, I have lived adjacent to RAF Molesworth (303rd BG(H) "Hell's Angel's) and now next to Peterborough business airfield which once home the 457th BG(H).
I am totally consumed by the bravery and dedication of these young men so far from home who came to help save the world.
I am proud to tell any English people who like to "Bash the Yanks" for their policies in todays world of troubles and who follow ignorantly like sheep just because they haven't the mind to discover the truth that lies behind the history, to visit Madingley, the cemetry near to Cambridge.
People here might start to take a different view of America and it's policies and especially it's citizens.
I for one am very Pro American and appreciate all that your great country has done in the past and continues to for the peace of this world.
God bless America and her people now, past and forever!

Posted by Chris Ward on November 1,2011 | 05:34 PM

My Uncle Sonny (Horace Ray "Sonny" Kemble) flew from here, a tailgunner on "Sparky", named for the radioman on his plane who was killed in March 1944. Uncle Sonny was here from Dec. 1943 to just after D-Day (his last mission). His picture, along with his crew are dispalyed in the museum, along with a leather flight jacket displaying their aircraft name. I also had the good fortune of meeeting Owen "Cowboy" Roane, one of the ledgends of the Bloody 100th.

Posted by Claude S. "Pete" Pope on January 7,2012 | 12:27 AM

My Mom was one of the war brides. My Dad was a Communications Specialist with the Mighty Eighth. Unfortunately, my knowledge of how they met or anything is limited. His name was Otto Gempp, her name Agnes Fennelly. It would be my hope that anyone who knew him or her would contact me! My Mom was in the Land Army. We have pictures of them in Saffron Walden. And apparently my Dad lived with a family for a time who continued to write to him after he and my Mom were married. Oh I wish I had those letters now. I'm so sorry he died before I could have found out more about those times. My husband, a history major, would have loved talking to him.

Posted by Lois Gempp Syrek on February 11,2012 | 03:36 PM

Great article! Visit

www.happywarriors.co.uk

to learn about my film project: B-24 Liberators, Me262 jet fighters and one of the most fascinating photographs of WWII.

Posted by Evan Thomas on April 23,2012 | 03:40 PM

My Father Wesley G. Eatchel was a ball and tail gunner on a B17 in the 398th bomb group located at Nuthampstead England. Doe's anyone know if there is anything left at his base? Google Earth still shows where the runways used to be. He was there the last 3 months of the war in 1945. He is a noted Poet and has had many of his poems read at reunions and printed the the 8th AF magazine and in his 398th news magazine. He lives in SLC Utah and will be 88 this Feb.

Posted by Brad Eatchel on November 13,2012 | 12:14 PM

I enjoyed the article. Rattlesden is easy to find if you have a GPS. We found it last Christmas while in Cambridge. My father was stationed there for 2 years or so during the war, with the 447th BG. Upon arrival, seeing the tower I had viewed so many times on the Rattlesden Gliding Club web site, as well as on the 447th BG web site, but seeing it in-person, gave me chills and brought tears to my eyes.

We were fortunate to have met the club members who were there, awaiting our arrival. Roger Watts, the farmer of over 400 acres surrounding the old base, even sold me a book on the 447th BG and gave us a tour of the old base, with many of its old buildings still standing, including one of the 3 hangers, which I drove our rental car into, to experience the size of it. We even drove on the old main runway, which is in very good condition for being so old, and my wife and daughter played airplane on it while I tearfully recorded it on a short video.

It was a memorable day and I can say that in the silence of a rainy, foggy day a few days before Christmas of 2011, I heard the roar of those Wright-engined B-17s and saw the thousands of men at work, preparing for a mission.

I want to go again and experience a flight in a glider and see the air show at IWM Duxford. I am sure the friendly British people will once again make the experience memorable and tearful for those who did so much for the world.

Posted by Nick Gough on December 14,2012 | 08:39 AM

Hi,
Does anyone remember or have information on Sgt John J Hyland, who served in the 8th Air Fforce, 710th Bomber Squadron, 447th Bomber Group Heavy, who died in a crash on take off on 1st January 1945? He would, I believe, have been my grandfather.

Posted by Vince on December 20,2012 | 09:26 AM

I posted a comment in 2011 asking for a pen friend. I lived in cambridge in WWII. My home city was surrounded by air bases and my parents were so happy to receive the American pilots into our home. I did hear from a Major Dave a few times and I hope he is well. Still, I am writing to ask for pen friends. If there are any veterans wishing to be a pen friend, please write. With all good wishes to all the brave Americans who were our wonderful allies in WWII.

Diane Nacarrow [ maiden name was tozer].



dianan [at] treasurehomes [dot] co [dot] uk

Posted by diane nancarrow [ nee tozer] on January 28,2013 | 01:17 PM

Some where in Felixstowe in 1945 my dad freank burkhardt had reltionship with mum i am the son just looking to locat my dad mission impossible mum has gone and she would not tell me anything about him just his name. im getting on now and would love to find his grave and say a few words to him regards Trevor little Australia. email twotone8888@hotmail.com

Posted by Trevor Little on February 5,2013 | 05:02 AM

My brother was a navigator in B-17's, with the 8th Air Force during WWII.

I have been trying to find out what bomb group he might have been in, and where he might have been stationed in England.

I have a record of his 32 missions, listing where, number of hours during flight etc. but can find no record of where he might have been stationed.

I am taking a trip to England in June, and am hoping to get to East Anglia.

Any help would be appreciated.

Posted by M. Armstrong on April 12,2013 | 12:05 PM

Hi all - my elder sister Marion Parker married a GI named Wilson from the 8th Air Force in Saffron Walden I think in 1945 or 1946 - her married name being Marion Wilson. I'm 79 now, so my sister would now be in her late 80's. I know they lived in Dallas for a while and had a son who was an officer with the Dallas Police Department. I have tried various avenues to trace or contact my sister, with no success. Does anyone perhaps know, or could suggest any way I could try to trace her ? My direct email is wood33pecker@aol.com Thank you,all.

Posted by Les Parker on May 8,2013 | 07:08 AM

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