They Could Hear It
Before They Could See it
By Allen Ostrom
They could hear it before they could see it!
Not all that unusual in those days as the personnel at Station 131
gathered around the tower and scattered hardstands to await the return of the
B-17’s sent out earlier that morning.
First comes the far off rumble and drone of the Cyclones. Then a spec on
the East Anglia horizon. Soon a small cluster indicating the lead squadron.
Finally, the group.
Then the counting. 1-2-3-4-5…..
But that would have been normal. Today was different! It was too early
for the group to return.
“They’re 20 minutes early. Can’t be the 398th.”
They could hear it before they could see it! Something was coming home.
But what?
All eyes turned toward the northeast, aligning with the main runway,
each ground guy and stood-down airman straining to make out this “wail of a
Banshee,” as one called it.
Not like a single B-17 with its characteristic deep roar of the engines
blended with four thrashing propellers. This was a howl! Like a powerful wind
blowing into a huge whistle.
Then it came into view. It WAS a B-17!
Low and pointing her nose at the 6,000 foot runway, it appeared for all
the world to be crawling toward the earth, screaming in protest.
No need for the red flares. All who saw this Fort knew there was death
aboard.
“Look at that nose!” they said as all eyes stared in amazement as this
single, shattered remnant of a once beautiful airplane glided in for an
unrealistic “hot” landing. She took all the runway as the “Banshee” noise
finally abated, and came to an inglorious stop in the mud just beyond the
concrete runway.
Men and machines raced to the now silent and lonely aircraft. The
ambulance and medical staff were there first. The fire truck….ground and air
personnel….jeeps, truck, bikes…..
Out came one of the crew members from the waist door, then another.
Strangely quiet. The scene was almost weird. Men stood by as if in shock, not
knowing whether to sing or cry.
Either would have been acceptable.
The medics quietly made their way to the nose by way of the waist door
as the remainder of the crew began exiting. And to answer the obvious
question, “what happened?”
“What happened?” was easy to see. The nose was a scene of utter
destruction. It was as though some giant aerial can opener had peeled the nose
like an orange, relocating shreads of metal, plexiglass, wires and tubes on
the cockpit windshield and even up to the top turret. The left cheek gun hung
limp, like a broken arm.
One man pointed to the crease in chin turret. No mistaking that mark! A
German 88 anti-aircraft shell had exploded in the lap of the togglier.
This would be George Abbott of Mt. Labanon, PA. He had been a waist
gunner before training to take over the bombardier’s role.
Still in the cockpit, physically and emotionally exhausted, were pilot
Larry deLancey and co-pilot Phil Stahlman.
Navigator Ray LeDoux finally tapped deLancey on the shoulder and
suggested they get out. Engineer turret gunner Ben Ruckel already had made his
way to the waist was exiting along with radio operator Wendell Reed, ball
turret gunner Al Albro, waist gunner Russell Lachman and tail gunner Herbert
Guild.
Stahlman was flying his last scheduled mission as a replacement for
regular co-pilot, Grady Cumbie. The latter had been hospitalized the day
before with an ear problem. Lachman was also a “sub,” filling in for Abbott in
the waist.
DeLancey made it as far as the end of the runway, where he sat down with
knees drawn up, arms crossed and head down. The ordeal was over, and now the
drama was beginning a mental re-play.
Then a strange scene took place.
Group CO Col. Frank P. Hunter had arrived after viewing the landing from
the tower and was about to approach deLancey. He was physically restrained by
flight surgeon Dr. Robert Sweet.
“Colonel, that young man doesn’t want to talk now. When he is ready you
can talk to him, but for now leave him alone.”
Sweet handed pills out to each crew member and told them to go to their
huts and sleep.
No dramatics, no cameras, no interviews. The crew would depart the next
day for “flak leave” to shake off the stress. And then be expected back early
in November. (Just in time to resume “normal” activities on a mission to
Merseburg!)
Mission No. 98 from Nuthampstead had begun at 0400 that morning of
October 15, 1944. It would be Cologne (again), led by CA pilots Robert
Templeman of the 602nd, Frank Schofield of the 601st and Charles Khourie of
the 603rd.
Tragedy and death appeared quickly and early that day. Templeman and
pilot Bill Scott got the 602nd off at the scheduled 0630 hour, but at
approximately 0645 Khouri and pilot Bill Meyran and their entire crew crashed
on takeoff in the town of Anstey. All were killed. Schofield and Harold
Stallcup followed successfully with the 601st, with deLancey flying on their
left wing in the lead element.
The ride to the target was routine, until the flak started becoming
“unroutinely” accurate.
“We were going through heavy flak on the bomb run,” remembered deLancey.
“I felt the plane begin to lift as the bombs were dropped, then all of a
sudden we were rocked by a violent explosion. My first thought – ‘a bomb
exploded in the bomb bay’ – was immediately discarded as the top of the nose
section peeled back over the cockpit blocking the forward view.”
“It seemed like the whole world exploded in front of us,” added Stahlman.
“The instrument panel all but disintegrated and layers of quilted batting
exploded in a million pieces. It was like a momentary snowstorm in the
cockpit.”
It had been a direct hit in the nose. Killed instantly was the togglier,
Abbott. Navigator LeDoux, only three feet behind Abbott, was knocked
unconscious for a moment, but was miraculously was alive.
Although stunned and bleeding, LeDoux made his way to the cockpit to
find the two pilots struggling to maintain control of an airplane that by all
rights should have been in its death plunge. LeDoux said there was nothing
anyone could do for Abbott, while Ruckel opened the door to the bomb bay and
signaled to the four crewman in the radio room that all was OK – for the time
being.
The blast had torn away the top and much of the sides of the nose.
Depositing enough of the metal on the windshield to make it difficult for
either of the pilots to see.
“The instrument panel was torn loose and all the flight instruments were
inoperative with the exception of the magnetic compass mounted in the panel
above the windshield. And its accuracy was questionable. The radio and
intercom were gone, the oxygen lines broken, and there was a ruptured
hydraulic line under my rudder pedals,” said deLancey.
All this complicated by the sub-zero temperature at 27,000 feet blasting
into the cockpit.
“It was apparent that the damage was severe enough that we could not
continue to fly in formation or at high altitude. My first concern was to
avoid the other aircraft in the formation, and to get clear of the other
planes in case we had to bail out. We eased out of formation, and at the same
time removed our oxygen masks as they were collapsing on our faces as the
tanks were empty.”
At this point the formation continued on its prescribed course for home
– a long, slow turn southeast of Cologne and finally westward.
DeLancey and Stahlman turned left, descending rapidly and hoping, they
were heading west. (And also, not into the gun sights of German fighters.)
Without maps and navigation aids, they had difficulty getting a fix. By this
time they were down to 2,000 feet.
“We finally agreed that we were over Belgium and were flying in a
southwesterly direction,” said the pilot.
“About this time a pair of P-51’s showed up and flew a loose formation
on us across Belgium. I often wondered what they thought as they looked at the
mess up front.”
“We hit the coast right along the Belgium-Holland border, a bit farther
north than we had estimated. Ray said we were just south of Walcheren Island.”
Still in an area of ground fighting, the plane received some small arms
fire. This gesture was returned in kind by Albro, shooting from one of the
waist guns.
“We might have tried for one of the airfields in France, but having no
maps this also was questionable. Besides, the controls and engines seemed to
be OK, so I made the decision to try for home.”
“Once over England, LeDoux soon picked up landmarks and gave me course
corrections taking us directly to Nuthampstead. It was just a great bit of
navigation. Ray just stood there on the flight deck and gave us the headings
from memory.”
Nearing the field, Stahlman let the landing gear down. That was an
assurance. But a check of the hydraulic pump sent another spray of oil to the
cockpit floor. Probably no brakes!
Nevertheless, a flare from Ruckel’s pistol had to announce the “ready or
not” landing. No “downwind leg” and “final approach” this time. Straight in!
“The landing was strictly by guess and feel,” said DeLancey. “Without
instruments, I suspect I came in a little hot. Also, I had to lean to the left
to see straight ahead. The landing was satisfactory, and I had sufficient
braking to slow the plane down some. However, as I neared the taxiway, I could
feel the brakes getting ‘soft’. I felt that losing control and blocking the
taxiway would cause more problems than leaving the plane at the end of the
runway.”
That consideration was for the rest of the group. Soon three squadrons
of B-17’s would be returning, and they didn’t need a derelict airplane
blocking the way to their respective hardstands.
Stahlman, supremely thankful that his career with the 398th had come to
an end, soon returned home and in due course became a captain with Eastern
Airlines. Retired in 1984, Stahlman said his final Eastern flight “was a bit
more routine” than the one 40 years before.
DeLancey and LeDoux received decorations on December 11, 1944 for their
parts in the October 15 drama. DeLancey was awarded the Silver Star for his
“miraculous feat of flying skill and ability” on behalf of General Doolittle,
CO of the Eighth Air Force. LeDoux for his “extraordinary navigation skill”,
received the Distinguished Flying Cross.
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1st Lt. Lawrence DeLancey's crippled B-17 at
Nuthampstead October 15, 1944 |
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Front View of DeLancey's crippled B-17 at
Nuthampstead October 15, 1944 |
The DeLancey's Crew at the time of the photograph:
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1st Lt. Lawrence M. DeLancey, Pilot
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1st Lt. Phillip H. Stahlman, Co-Pilot
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2nd Lt. Raymond J. LeDoux, Navigator
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S/Sgt. George E. Abbott, Togglier, KIA
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T/Sgt. Benjamin H. Ruckel, Engineer/Top Turret
Gunner;
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T/Sgt. Wendell A. Reed, Radio Operator, Gunner
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T/Sgt. Russell A. Lachman, Waist Gunner
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S/Sgt. Albert Albro, Ball Turret Gunner
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S/Sgt. Herbert D. Guild, Tail Gunner.
Source Information:
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Photo Source: 398th's "Jack's Books"
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Photo Reference: 43-38172-3O-P_19441015_JBka-c
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Photographer: Unknown but probably 398th base
photographer.
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Information compiled by the 398th Web team with
special thanks to Lee Anne Bradley.
The following deLancey 1944 article was
transcribed from the 398th BG Historical Microfilm. Note: due to wartime
security, Nuthampstead is not mentioned, and the route deLancey flew
home is referred to in general terms.
TO: STARS AND STRIPES
FOR GENERAL RELEASE
AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE BOMBER STATION, ENGLAND - After literally losing the
nose of his B-17 Flying Fortress as the result of a direct hit by flak over
Cologne, Germany on October 15, 1944, 1st Lt. Lawrence M. deLancey, 25, of
Corvallis, Oregon returned to England and landed the crew safely at his home
base. Each man walked away from the plane except the togglier, Staff Sergeant
George E. Abbott, Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania, who was killed instantly when the
flak struck.
It was only the combined skill and teamwork of Lt. deLancey and 2nd Lt.
Raymond J. LeDoux, of Mt. Angel, Oregon, navigator, that enabled the plane and
crew to return safely.
“Just after we dropped our bombs and started to turn away from the
target”, Lt. deLancey explained, “a flak burst hit directly in the nose and
blew practically the entire nose section to threads. Part of the nose peeled
back and obstructed my vision and that of my co-pilot, 1st Lt. Phillip H.
Stahlman of Shippenville, Pennsylvania. What little there was left in front of
me looked like a scrap heap. The wind was rushing through. Our feet were
exposed to the open air at nearly 30,000 feet above the ground the temperature
was unbearable.
“There we were in a heavily defended flak area with no nose, and
practically no instruments. The instrument panel was bent toward me as the
result of the impact. My altimeter and magnetic compass were about the only
instruments still operating and I couldn’t depend on their accuracy too well.
Naturally I headed for home immediately. The hit which had killed S/Sgt.
Abbott also knocked Lt. LeDoux back in the catwalk (just below where I was
sitting). Our oxygen system also was out so I descended to a safe altitude.
“Lt. LeDoux who had lost all his instruments and maps in the nose did a
superb piece of navigating to even find England.”
During the route home flak again was encountered but due to evasive
action Lt. deLancey was able to return to friendly territory. Lt. LeDoux
navigated the ship directly to his home field.
Although the plane was off balance without any nose section, without any
brakes (there was no hydraulic pressure left), and with obstructed vision, Lt.
deLancey made a beautiful landing to the complete amazement of all personnel
at this field who still are wondering how the feat was accomplished.
The other members
of the crew include:
- Technical Sergeant Benjamin H. Ruckel, Roscoe, California, engineer
top turret gunner;
- Technical Sergeant Wendell A. Reed, Shelby, Michigan, radio
operator gunner;
- Technical Sergeant Russell A. Lachman, Rockport, Mass., waist
gunner;
- Staff Sergeant Albert Albro, Antioch, California, ball turret
gunner and
- Staff Sergeant Herbert D. Guild, Bronx, New York, tail gunner.
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Lt DeLancey's Crew - 601st Squadron - 15 November
1944 |
Back Row (viewer's left to right):
1.1st Lt. Lawrence DeLancey, Pilot
2.2nd Lt. Grady Cumby, Co-Pilot
3.Overlaid Oval: S/Sgt. George E. Abbott, Waist Gunner (but was
cross-trained as togglier and was killed in that position on 15 October
1944 when a German anti-aircraft shell creased the chin turret and
filleted the nose and cockpit)
4.2nd Lt. Michael Patrick Ryan, Bombardier
5.1st Lt. Raymond J. Ledoux, Navigator
Front Row (viewer's left to right):
1.probably T/Sgt. Benjamin H. Rickel, Engineer
2.probably S/Sgt. Albert Albro, Ball Turret
3.probably T/Sgt. Wendell Reed, Radio
4.probably S/Sgt. Herbert D. Guild, Tail Gunner
Men in the front row are:
•T/Sgt. Benjamin H. Rickel, Engineer
•T/Sgt. Wendell Reed, Radio
•S/Sgt. Albert Albro, Ball Turret
•S/Sgt. Herbert D. Guild, Tail Gunner
Over the years we went from not knowing who the men in the front row were
to highly probable for each. Helping this process was using the sergeant
patches to identify the T/Sgt's as Front Row No. 1 and No. 3 from left and
the S/Sgt's as Front Row No. 2 and No. 4. Although we believe the Front
Row is identified correctly, we are not completely sure.
Missing from Photo:
1.1st Lt. Phillip H. Stahlman, Co-Pilot who flew as co-pilot on 15 October
1944 but was not a part of the DeLancey crew.
Comments:
1.The above photo was taken exactly a month after the mishap in which
their colleague S/Sgt. George E. Abbott was killed in action.
2.That mission was 398th Mission No. 97, Cologne, Germany, 15 October 1944
3.On this mission the Delancey crew flew in the Lead/High/Low Group
4.Aircraft flown on 15 October 1944 : 43-38172 3O-P Lovely Julie. It was
salvaged at Nuthampstead 15th October 1944 and is not the aircraft in the
photo.
5.Aircraft in photo: Unknown
6.Photo Date: 15 November 1944
7.Photo Location: Nuthampstead
8.Other Photo Reference No. A9179
9.Information compiled by UK Friends of the 398th, with thanks to Phil
Stahlman, Elaine Jurs and a big effort by Jon Bernard, especially in his
efforts to narrow down who was who in the front row and to Fred Boyne for
his identification of Wendell Reed.
10.If you would like to add information about this photograph, please
contact our Crew Photos Coordinator. Please mention the title and
photograph date.
Notes:
1.S/Sgt. George E. Abbott was killed in action on 15 October 1944. His
photo was overlaid on the 15 November 1944 DeLancey crew photo to honor
him. See the Remembrances Section article: It Was a Fortress Coming Home
by Allen Ostrom.
2.The togglier position was in the nose acting as a bombardier the whole
mission. His role was not only to toggle the bombs (as a bombardier) but
also to fire the chin turret guns. The navigator had his own (cheek) guns.
Therefore, on this particular mission, it is thought that S/Sgt. George E.
Abbott was in the nose the whole time of the mission and not in one of the
waist gun positions.
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From Stars & Stripes
October 20, 1944 |
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News From The Air Force |
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