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2nd Lt. Eugene T. Jensen

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2nd Lt. Eugene T. Jensen's Crew (left to right)
T/Sgt James K. Roberts (ROG), Lt. John C. Gonda (NAV), Lt. Eugene T. Jensen (P),
Lt. Richard R. Ayesh, (BOM) Lt. James J. Millett (CP), S/Sgt Joseph W. Latiolait (WG),
S/Sgt Henry R. Sublett (TG) T/Sgt Floyd E. Thomasson (TTE).
S/Sgt Robert L. Bird (BTG) is not pictured - 100th BG Photo Archives
 

2nd Lt Eugene T. Jensen P CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
2nd Lt James J. Millett, Jr. CP CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
F/O John C. Gonda, Jr NAV CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
2nd Lt Richard R. Ayesh BOM CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
T/Sgt James K. Roberts ROG CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
T/Sgt Floyd E. Thomasson TTE CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
S/Sgt Robert L. Bird BTG CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
S/Sgt Joseph W. Latiolait WG CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)
S/Sgt Elmer H. Adams WG NOC -- Removed at crew reduction
S/Sgt Henry R. Sublett TG CPT 8-Mar-45 Langendreer, Giessen, MY (ST)

349th Sqdn. Crew joined the 100th 23 Sep 44

DIARY OF LT RICHARD AYESH

Mission #33
March 4, 1945
MISSION: ME 262 component plant at Kempton (Primary)
Ulm marshalling yard (Secondary)
LOAD: 6,500# G.P. RDX 6,500# Incendiary Clusters
GAS:  2600 Gals
BOMB ALT: 23,000

Plan was to take off here and go over singularly and we were to assemble at 20,000 ft 60 miles this side of the lines near Trier.  We were #2 of the lead Low Sqd.  Crossing the channel we saw lots of tracers which we later learned was enemy aircraft firing at different ships.  Earlier in the nite 70 German raiders had strafed and bombed East Anglia.  They did no damage nor caused
any casualties.

We flew in the soup all the way.  After forming we went into target Ulm M/Y.  Heavy  dense persistent contrails and the dense weather obscured everything.  We could barley see the other planes in our formation and nearly lost them several times.  Some of the Groups were recalled because of the bad weather.  We bombed Ulm, saw no flak.

Take off 0600 and landed 1500.  Learned later the Jerries killed a couple of people.

Mission #34
March 8, 1945
MISSION: Langendreer (Rhur Valley)
LOAD: 14 ea 500# G.P. RDX
GAS: 2600 Gals
BOMB ALT:  24,000 ft

Our target was a coking plant between Dortmund and Essen that produced Benzol.  We had 10/10 cloud cover all the way.  Briefed at 0730 and took off at 1000.  We were #2 in the lead of the High Sq. We had no fighter escort.  Encountered meager flak.  One bomb exploded just after it cleared the bomb bay of one of our ships and we got a few pieces of shrapnel in the ship.
Route in over the Zeider Zee and out by Koblenz.

This was a good mission to finish up on, which if just what I did.


"SOMETHING I WILL NEVER FORGET"

Eugene T. Jensen of the 349th writes about the 100th’s first encounter with the Me-262, 8th Mar 1945. Article published in the Arizona Republic & The Phoenix Gazette on January 6th, 1997.

In 1942, I surrendered my farm-based draft exemption and enlisted in the Army Air Force Cadet Corps. In February of 1944 I graduated from flight school with the coveted silver wings of a pilot

Graduation was followed by training as B-17 crew member, and eventual assignment to a bomber group (the 100th), part of the 8th Air Force, flying out of England. Nothing out of the ordinary, except the inevitable accidents that were a part of air crew training. Death and an empty bunk simply became a part of our lives.

History now proclaims that the war in Europe was drawing to a close in late 1944 when I joined the 100th. But the German Army and Air Force was not then aware of this development. We had lost or damaged aircraft on almost every mission. We lost 12 out 36 aircraft on a single mission on the last day of 1944.

Nature contributed the worst weather in a century. Takeoffs with overloaded aircraft under zero visibility were routine. Flying formation through dense cloud covers was exhausting and perilous. The returns to base in a sky crowded with thousands of aircraft flying in instruments became an airborne lottery. Who would have the next midair collision? Death was still a constant companion, but no one seemed much concerned.

The development and deployment of a super fighter by the German Air Force had been rumored but air crew had not been briefed on the profile or performance characteristics of the air craft.

So it was on March 3rd, 1945, that the 100th was chosen to lead the entire 8th Air Force, perhaps 1,000 bombers, on a mission to destroy one of the remaining truck factories.

My squadron, the 349th, was to fly the lead in the 100th, and three of us were to fly well ahead of the bombers stream to spread "chaff" (metalized strips) that confused anti-aircraft radar. At the briefing we were told it was essential that we deploy the chaff. It was predicted we would be a prime target for the German Air Force, so we were to have an escort squadron of P-51 fighters.

It was a beautiful day! Clear, frigid and not a cloud in sight. There was only one P-51 in sight and it was far away, unusual for an escort aircraft. Behind us the 8th Air Force bomber stream stretched for miles.

As we watched our lone P-51 evolved into an aircraft unlike anything we had ever seen. No propeller!

As we watched it made a tight high-speed circle, coming in from behind our little formation of three bombers. It became evident that we were to have a new and unpleasant experience. The pilots of the three aircraft abandoned the "chaff" formation and pulled in close together to give us maximum firepower, wingtips only a few feet apart.

Our gunners were fooled by the speed of the aircraft, and despite our massed firepower, we did no apparent damage. The jet flew through our already tight formation so close that we could see the pilot, the rivets in the aircraft skin and the 20mm cannon firing.

The wing of our lead aircraft was cut free from the rest of the aircraft almost as if by a giant chain saw, and the aircraft began it’s lethal tumble to earth. We saw no parachutes.

We were then over the target, our supply of chaff had been over-boarded, and I thought it prudent to seek the relative safety of the main bomber stream. Unfortunately, this maneuver brought us under the lead formation just as their bomb bay doors opened. – which meant we were only seconds from bomb release. It was quite clear that we were in the wrong place at exactly the wrong time. our luck continued and we avoided the rain of bombs by seconds. Seconds that seemed like hours.

When we returned to base we were interviewed by an Air Force General.

I had never seen, let alone talked to a General-Grade Officer.. I had the impression that we were one of the first air crews to experience combat with a jet aircraft. (something I remember whenever I hear a jet from nearby Luke Air Force Base). As a First Lieutenant, I think I was more frightened by the General than the jet fighter. Such is war.

My final mission, the 35th, was flown on March 8th, 1945. I was very ill, really unable to fly the aircraft, but we wanted to do the trip and get it over so the crew could go home. When we returned, I was transferred immediately to the station hospital – the first in series of Military Hospitals that would lead to Camp Carson, Colorado.

On that same day, March 8th, a young nurse in St. Paul, Minn., half a world away, joined the Army Nurse Corps. She was assigned to a hospital in Colorado Springs, where I was to be a patient.

We had our 51st wedding anniversary a few days ago. You might say we lived happily ever after.

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