I believe it was in April 45 that a coincidence
occurred which proved the flying ability of the B-17. We were near
the tower when the group flew over in loose formation and Parm (John
Parmentier) cried out, "There is one without a tail!"
"Whadaya mean without a tail," I said?
"That’s right, Capn, the right horizontal
stabilizer is missing"
"Naw," said Seidal, (Edwin G. Seidal) in his slow
Texas drawal, "there’s one there awright, but it’s the left
stabilizer that’s gone!"
Since the formation was no longer that close, a
friendly argument ensued as to who was correct. It turned out they
both were. We had two planes with one stabilizer broken off
at the fuselage, but on different sides. One of the planes also lost
a sizeable portion of the vertical stabilizer, with the top third
including the Square "D" gone.
I doubt that any other plane before or since
could withstand that type of impact and damage and still fly
hundreds of miles to land safely at its base.
While in Colorado Springs for the dedication of
our Memorial at the Air Force Academy, I recounted this incident to
Russ Madsen. Russ said he not only recalled it, but also was sure he
had pictures of it. Sure enough, he did! With number 514, you can
just see where the tailpiece was attached. It makes you wonder what
the other guy looked like! (The damage was caused by a collision
with German fighters threading their way through our formation.)
I do not remember similar damage either before or
after this twin occurrence. It is a remarkable testimony to our
planes and the skill of our flying crews!
As a footnote, these planes would be combat ready
within a few days, and that must have been a shock to the enemy if
he were counting and checking kills.

