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What follows is a brief history of the World War II B-17
bomber crew led by Captain Gerald Brown of Los Angeles California. The
crew was assigned to the 100th Bomb Group (351st Squadron) of the Eighth
Air Force, and flew missions during the period August 1944 to March 1945.
The 100th Bomb Group was located in the East Anglia section of England in
Norfolk County near Diss at a base known as Thorpe Abbotts.
The original crew consisted of:
2d Lt. Gerald Brown, Los Angeles, California -Pilot.
2d Lt. Arthur Jacobson, Seattle, Washington -Co-pilot.
2d Lt. Ralph Bayer, Aberdeen, Washington -Navigator.
2d Lt. Joseph Dye, Washington, D.C. -Bombardier.
Sgt. Walter Peters, Chicago, Illinois -Flight Engineer and Gunner.
Sgt. Gifford D. Vieth, Davenport, Iowa -Radio Operator and Gunner.
Cpl. Roland Douglas, Peru, Indiana -Armorer and Ball Gunner.
Cpl. George Vogiatizis, San Francisco, California -- Asst. Radio Operator
and Waist Gunner.
Cpl. Wayne Page, Merced, California -Asst. Engineer and Waist Gunner.
Cpl. Clarence Kellogg, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma -Tail Gunner.
The Brown crew, which referred to itself as "Brown's Clowns," was assembled at
Ardmore Air Force Base in Oklahoma in April 1944. The crew was relatively
youthful and as a result was the subject of a newspaper story in a base
publication accompanied by a photograph of the crew.
On June 28, 1944, the Brown crew
was dispatched from Kearney, Nebraska to England pursuant to the following
order:
RESTRICTED
HEADQUARTERS 271ST STAGING BASE
KEARNEY ARMY AIR FIELD
KEARNEY, NEBRASKA
370.5-883 (195-S)
June 1944
SUBJECT: Movement Orders.
Heavy Bombardment Crew Number FB-333-CJ-139 To Overseas Destination
TO:
| P | 2nd Lt | (1024) | Gerald Brown | 0763931 |
| CP | 2nd Lt | (1022) | Arthur L. Jacobson | 0768562 |
| N | 2nd Lt | (1034) | Ralph W. Bayer | 0719545 |
| B | 2nd Lt | (1035) | Joseph J Dye | 0752285 |
| E | Sgt | (748) | Walter R. Peters | 36666943 |
| R | Sgt | (757) | Gifford D. Vieth | 17153205 |
| AG | Cpl | (611) | Roland L. Douglas | 35895660 |
| CG | Cpl | (611) | George Vogiatzis | 39038584 |
| CG | Cpl | (611) | Wayne E. Page | 39418943 |
| CG | Cpl | (611) | Clarence S. Kellogg | 38397204 |
1. You are assigned to
Shipment FB-333-CJ, as crew No. Fb-333-CJ-139, and to B-17 airplane
number 42-98017, on aircraft project number 92766-R. You are shipped in
accordance with the provisions of the movement order.
2. You are relieved from
atchd unasgnd 271st AAF Base Unit (SB), this station, and WP via mil acft
and / or rail to Grenier Field, Manchester, New Hampshire, or such other
Air Port of Embarkation as the CG, ATC, may direct, thence to the overseas
destination of Shipment FB-333-CJ. Upon arrival at the Air Port of
Embarkation, control of the above personnel is relinquished to the CG, ATC.
3. This is a PERMANENT
change of station. You not be accompanied by dependents; neither will you
be joined by dependents enroute to or at the Air Port of Embarkation. You
will not discuss this movement except as may be necessary in the
transportation of OFFICIAL business. You will not file safe arrival
telegrams with commercial agencies while enroute and at domestic or
overseas destinations.
4. You will use APO
16209-CJ- (Followed by the numeral ending of your shipment crew number, underlined
in paragraph 1 above), c/o Postmaster, New York, New York. When arrival at
final overseas destination, you will use the mailing address of the troops
at that place. Advise your friends and relatives of you permanent APO by
forwarding a completed V-Mail WD AGO Form 971; also notify the postal
officer of the theater by forwarding a completed WD AGO Form 204.
The crew ferried a B-17 from Kearney to England, making the journey
with overnight or longer stops in Manchester, New Hampshire, Goose Bay,
Labrador, Reykjavik, Iceland, and Prestwick, Scotland. On July 23, 1944
the crew was assigned to the 100th Bomb Group.
The 100th Bomb Group
The 100th Bomb Group was described
in the Foreword by Roger Freeman in the book Century Bombers as follows:
"The 100th Bombardment Group,
Heavy, is probably the best known of all the United States Army Air
Forces combat units of the Second World War, but rather through its
sobriquet The Bloody Hundredth than its official designation. Fame follows
close on infamy and that wartime label for the rumored 'hard luck outfit'
of the 8th Air Force became allied with the image of the legions of Flying
Fortresses fighting their way through the stratosphere against a
determined enemy. For just as the Spitfire and the Battle of Britain has
come to symbolize the Royal Air Force in the 1939-45 conflict, so the
B-17's air battles tend to be the image which later generations of
Americans bring to mind for their own nation's airmen of that war.
"... The Hundredth's combat
history was remarkably eventful. Although the name Bloody Hundredth was
undoubtedly resented by 100th Bomb Group personnel during hostilities, it
has become an appellation of which veterans are proud, indicative now of
the Hundredth's fighting spirit and resilience. A record that has
fascinated many and led a band of English people to turn the Group's
control tower at Thorpe Abbotts airfield into a museum recording that
wartime experience."
In The Mighty Eighth, it is
said : "As no news travels like bad news, the 100th's fortunes were soon
known at other bases where
the Thorpe Abbotts group was often referred to as a 'jinx outfit.' The course of
events was to change the 'a' to 'the' and bring a telling epithet, known
beyond the confines of the Eighth Air Forces." (p.78)
The epithet, of course, was "The Bloody Hundredth."
Corporal George Vogiatizis
The crew which was assembled at
Ardmore and flew to England included two waist gunners, Wayne Page and
George Vogiatizis ("Vogie"). Upon arrival in England, the crew was
informed that the Eighth Air Force had
ordered a reduction in crew sizes to nine, with only one waist gunner per crew.
Accordingly, Vogie was reassigned to the Ninth Air Force, where he flew in
Martin B-26s. Not long afterward, the
Brown crew received word that Vogie had been shot down while on a
mission with the Ninth Air Force, and he was later listed as killed in
action.
The Brown Crew's Missions
Mission 1. August 4, 1944 -
Hamburg, Germany.
Our first mission was against a
synthetic oil production facility outside Hamburg, Germany. We experienced
heavy flak. The entire crew was nervous and excited and thought the name
of the plane to which we were assigned that day was quite appropriate:
"Fools Rush In." There is more to tell about "Fools Rush In" later in this
history -- see the text following the description of our Mission 21.
Mission 2. August 8, 1944 -
Normandy.
Tactical mission in support of British and Canadian troops in Normandy
-- St. Sylvain near Caen, France.
"Over St. Sylvain on August 8, the
Hundredth, led by Jeffrey and Neal P. Scott, flew again in support of the ground forces. The target was the
Headquarters for the
battalions forming the nucleus of the enemy's defense.
"The operation in its larger scope was designed to aid the attempt of the British and
Canadians to crush the hedge-hog defenses of the enemy in the Caen sector, which held up a push to the south.
"The R.A.F. was slated to soften
up five targets for an advance, after which the Eighth Air Force would
attack prior to the final break through." Contrails, p. 84
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