Before you read, let me note, there are some minor date and name inconsistencies. These are of no consequence as they are true and correct in spirit and I will soon make side notes of corrections as needed.
Please enjoy this rare view into the life of a B-24 bomber pilot, 1st Lt. P.W. "Bill" Barker.
Lt. Barker wasn't just any B-24 pilot. He was a pilot who likely knew the crew of the Pistol Pakin Mamma and [according to this memoir] was a friend of my great-uncle (Robert A. Dempster, Jr.).
Lt. Barker co-piloted (under Lt. Runge) during the search mission of the Pistol Pakin Mamma on September 11, 1944. Bill Barker's accounts run parallel to the accounts recorded in the Rene Brabender mission logs, Logs of the Lost [posted Feb. 17, 2011], of the many missions carried out jointly between the 30th & 11th BG's (bombardment groups) of the island hopping 7th Army Air Force.
It is with my sincere gratitude to the Barker family that I present this portion of P. W. Barker's memoir - Flights of Fantasy
Brant Dempster
|
One of the
crews Barker flew with.
Back row -
L to R - John Runge, P.W. "Bill" Barker, John Malloy, Bill Simms
Front row - Jerry George, Otis Andrews, Jerone
Raqinski, Bill Wilson, Hal Tipson, Tom Densan | |
PREFACE
What follows is an excerpt
from my father’s (P. W. “Bill” Barker) memoir entitled “Flights of Fantasy”, which he copyrighted in
1994. My brother and I now own the
copyright, and hereby grant permission, with appropriate attribution, for its
limited, non-commercial use on the website “Liberator Log”. This excerpt has been edited for style,
syntax and punctuation, and the removal of personal anecdotes. Text that appears in italics was directly
quoted from my father’s combat diary that he wrote in long hand from April 1944
through November 1944.
EXCERPT FROM “FLIGHTS OF FANTASY”
“It may be that
our later selves or else our unborn sons will search for meaning in the dust
of long deserted guns.” Donald Bain
Going to the combat zone on detached
service? Am I the first pilot to fly B-24 missions without having first completed a formal
course of training
in bomber operations?
Probably, I thought, telling myself this assignment
was a demotion. Christ, going as a copilot is like going to war in
a taxicab, however, personal feelings will not prevail, I concluded, so get on with it.
I left Bellows and drove to Wheeler Field to
join the 819th Bomb Squadron
(BS), one of three squadrons in the 11th Bomb Group
(BG). Earlier, I flew the B-24
some while I was a test pilot at the Hawaiian Air Depot, so I had a good idea
of what I was getting into.
In early April,
they let me make some B-24 landings
then announced that I had a good command of the B-24, whatever that might mean.
Otherwise I had no scheduled duties. I elected to hang
around the maintenance facilities to learn more about the B-24, called the Liberator, or more affectionately, the Lib and
sometimes dubbed a Boxcar. A version of this Consolidated Aircraft Corporation aircraft
served as the first
flying White House for President Roosevelt.
I used some time to
learn about the survival equipment aboard
the B-24 that included two large life rafts. It also made
good sense to me to report to the Orderly Room
and Squadron Operations just about
every day, but most of the time I had nothing to do.
On short notice, I learned that three
B-24-Js and crews were going to APO 241,
Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands. I was to go along as a casual copilot, casual
meaning I was not assigned to
a crew.
The B-24 in which I was a passenger was but one of
14,000
built
during WWII. We departed Hickam before daylight and headed for Johnston Island, a refueling stop on the way to Kwajalein.
Johnston had a
radio beacon to which
we homed. We arrived
close to our estimated time of arrival.
While on Johnston we marveled at the antics of the gooney birds.
The renowned DC-3 (C-47)
aircraft is
the namesake of these strange
birds that fly but have difficulty getting airborne
or landing. We watched them run
along on the ground, staggering back and
forth before finally spreading wings just before becoming airborne. Then
for a landing,
forgetting to put their feet down,
or not getting them working fast enough to land. The result was often a somersault
after striking the ground, followed by a violent flapping of wings and a
hearty back and forth shaking of the whole body. There were
hundreds, if not thousands of goonies on Johnson Island. I wonder if the goonies
are still there today, along with the Army's $240,000,000 chemical weapons incinerator.
From Johnston Island we continued
a southwesterly course, cruising
at 8,000 feet in CAVU (ceiling and visibility unlimited)
weather. I watched the Navigator make observations of the sun, the only
useful celestial aid in
daytime aerial navigation. He recorded the results of his observations, drawing them
on his navigation chart as speed lines which
he used to calculate our speed over the surface of the water.
Thus, the Navigator estimated how far we had flown, and using drift meter readings, he could tell if we were drifting from the planned course.
Being off course had to be avoided if our destination was to be sighted at or before our ETA. Failure to make landfall before fuel exhaustion
is a sentence to ditching, an unplanned landing on water,
probably resulting in injury or death to all on board.
Aircrews often practiced preparing for
ditching and climbing into a life raft, but B-24 pilots never got to practice water landings.
The
Navigator announced the international dateline over the interphone when we
crossed the 180 degree meridian. We talked about today
becoming tomorrow, but there was nothing like the King Neptune
ceremony conducted on ships crossing the equator at sea.
The vast Pacific Ocean has thousands
of flyspeck islands that
can be more difficult to find than the proverbial needle in
a haystack.
Failure to sight an island destination
with fuel tanks running dry is one of the situations guaranteed to
produce white knuckles. On
this occasion there were no white knuckles. Instead, Kwajalein
appeared in the windshield right on time
causing all of us to stub out our nervous smokes and tease the navigator with jovial taunts about correctly guessing
course corrections along the
way.
Such was his reward for steering us to a safe landing.
|
Kwajalein |
The radar on Kwajalein was on the air so when we came under its surveillance,
we knew we were on a safe approach to the Atoll. After landing on Kwajalein Island, we were
greeted by the Commander of the 11th Bomb
Group while we limbered muscles not used for eight hours.
A six-by truck hauled us a short distance to the 26th Squadron billets - canvas
tents with all sides rolled up.
Kwajalein Atoll, one of many in the Pacific, is billed as the largest in the world. The Atoll is one of several that make up the Marshall Islands. Kwajalein Island is but
one among many
smaller
islands surrounding
the lagoon that composes the atoll. It was taken by U.S. Marines and Army units in February of 1944, and
Navy Seabees quickly built a coral airstrip to
accommodate
B-24 aircraft.
In the spring
of 1944 it was equator-hot as the atoll is less than
10 degrees north of the equator. The constant
breezes blowing across the island reminded me
of the rush of air from a hot oven when the door is opened. The breezes
evaporated ever present
perspiration that often reduced it to salty crystals. Dry skin itched and provoked
scratching. Salt water showers
exaggerated the discomfort but liberal use of anything oily
helped to soothe this plague. There were no mosquitos, so mosquito repellant often served this purpose.
Provisions at the mess tent seemed equally life threatening. Canned beef
stew was a rarely appearing delicacy. Mostly, our meat diet was canned spam. There were many
variations imagined by the Mess Sergeant - plain, fried, stewed, baked, breaded; but, nevertheless,
spam. Bread was always dry,
if not stale, but there was plenty of peanut butter
and jelly to overwhelm its lack of taste.
Breakfast was my favorite meal. Not because of the infrequent appearance of powdered eggs. It was the daily presence of pancakes, a butter
substitute and plenty of
syrup. Powdered milk served as a substitute for the real thing, but it was sure
a welcome addition to the potent coffee available 24 hours a day. Circus water
was likewise available for those teen-age
GI’s who relished sweetened water served
in as many colors as
Jacob's coat. Canned fruit was breakfast dessert. Later, I discovered that “lunches” we carried on combat missions
consisted unerringly of bread, peanut butter, jelly, canned orange or pineapple juice,
and occasionally there was a five-pound can of spam for the crew of eight. These munchies
were complemented by ever present coffee.
Thanks again to the
Seabees, we had a ration of fresh water and ice from their water stills and ice plant.
At times, regular food service operations
were not feasible,
so C- or D-rations were issued. C-rations consisted of canned, pre-cooked
foods. Two cans made a meal. One contained
stew or hash, or meat and beans, while a second can contained crackers, sugar, powdered fruit juice or
coffee. A tiny can opener gadget (P-38) came with the C-ration
pack which, for convenience, we kept on our dog-tag chains. The D-ration, a concentrated chocolate
bar, was meant to stave
off hunger.
Laundry facilities
were makeshift. A Seabee invention, the windmill washing machine, was amusing to behold. Wind turned a propeller that caused a wheel to turn, which in turn caused an up and down
motion of an attached pole with a small block of wood that churned water and soap in a 55-gallon steel drum. Clothes dried quickly when hung in the daily breezes.
My squadron-mates were veterans
of pre-invasion
bombardment of Tarawa and Makin, and
other targets in the Gilbert Islands that were taken
by Marines in bloody battles that cost
2,100 lives of American
youth. Thus, they were of a
fraternity in which I was not yet a member. I refused to be a loner even though in the first few days in the squadron I was forced to
pretty much shift for myself. Uninvited, I
thrust myself into "tent meetings" of some of the crews
and hastened the time when they accepted me as one of their kind. During such sessions, I learned that "milk runs" were to be coveted because such missions meant very little, if any, enemy
resistance.
One day, I listened to a bull session about fear. There were plenty of fear-producing situations, I gathered.
A captain claimed, "I've got 17 missions
under my belt and I was scared on
every one of them. I ain't ashamed
of that. "
A lieutenant sitting on a cot next to the captain offered, "My crew only
has six missions. I've been scared, too. Hell, I
was scared many times while learning to fly.
If I don't get scared,
I ain't doing my job.”
Another captain
guessed, "Maybe it depends
on the definition of fear. I figure
you're really scared if you piss your pants or
something like that”.
“Yeah,
irrational behavior is what's bad about being
scared. I'm a psychology major,”
another lieutenant drawled taking a long drag on
a fresh lit cigarette, "I think fear
is a perfectly normal reaction
of threats to life and limb. It's what you do when you're scared.
Fear confessed is no disgrace. Failure to control fear is what' s not acceptable. We all dread making a mistake
attributable to reaction to fear."
By God, I thought, I'm glad to hear
other guys tell about being afraid in combat. Wonder how I'll react?
Well, if the wages of sin increase
we will all be rich.
With the Marshall Islands
secured, Admiral Nimitz decided to neutralize and by-pass the powerful Jap fortress in the Truk Islands and made the
Marianas Islands the next objective
in the island-hopping Pacific
Campaign. Accordingly, the total heavy bombardment effort of the Seventh Bomber Command, that included the 11th and 30th Bomb Groups, was devoted to the neutralization of the Truk Islands.
The
bombing missions against Truk initially encountered searchlight
detection and accurate antiaircraft fire.
The most serious
threat to B-24s came from Jap fighters. During the first
missions against Truk, the Japs used several
types of fighters including
Zeroes, Hamps, Tojos and Zekes.
Their tactics included air bombing with phosphorous bombs to trouble the B-24 Boxcars. Repeated night raids reduced
the searchlight, flak, and fighter threats.
The success of these raids was partially due to the dropping
of ”window”, or metal foil ribbons, to mislead and confuse Jap radar prior to and during bombing runs.
Finally on 14 May 1944, I flew
my first combat mission during the campaign to isolate Truk.
The Group
Commander invited me to go along as an observer
on a mission to bomb Jaluit, a
small island on the southwest end of the Ralik Chain of the
Marshalls not far from Kwaj.
Our B-24 was equipped with radar. Radar bombing was a recent development in the Seventh Air Force, so milk runs were scheduled
to give crews practice with the new equipment.
Here is some of what I recorded in my diary after the mission:
|
"Ferdie" |
“Airplane -"Ferdie"- Takeoff 0715Y, Land 1045Y,
bombing altitude 7,500 feet over target for 20 minutes. All that was visible
to me was a countless number of bomb craters and masses of wreckage absolutely no sign of life except two bursts of
large caliber ack-ack, plus one tracer of
unknown size. Possibly 50% of bombs were on target, ours were strung up the beach with one fire started. Was impressed with
the sound of the exploding bombs, an indescribable whrrrump with great billows
of black smoke and dust. The island was completely shattered; only possible survivors
must have been in heavily reinforced foxholes. My impression: if this is all I have
to fear I’m safe. Have yet
to sweat out heavy
and intense anti-aircraft fire and fighter interception.
My goal of 30 mission s looks
terribly far ahead.”
Flak denotes
anti-aircraft fire. Ack-ack means
the same thing. There were many sizes of projectiles, depending on the weapon that
fired them. At higher altitudes,
say above 15,000 feet, flak appeared as black puffs of
smoke. The shrapnel
accompanying the smoke was not visible, and normally was not heard
inside our aircraft. It is often
said that nothing could be done about flak except to look at it. A single aircraft could make violent turns, climbs and descents attempting
to avoid flak, but such evasive actions were limited when several aircraft
were flying in formation. In either
case, the bomber had to fly straight and level
toward the target long enough for the bombardier and his bomb sight to line up on the target to determine the bomb release point.
The bomb run commenced at a geographical point called initial point, and ended with bomb release and a pre-planned withdrawal.
It was not until 22 May that
I flew another combat mission, this
time with Colonel Anderson, Commander of
the 30th Bomb Group, and Major Lund his Operations Officer.
The target was Wotje, an atoll on the northwest
end
of the Ratak Chain of the Marshalls, fewer than
200 miles from Kwaj. The radar equipped aircraft was a recent arrival in
the
Group. The mission was expected to be a milk
run, much like my first one.
“Very little
opposition. I experienced
no fear, but great anxiety for what I was about to see. The main island of the
atoll was a mass of destruction, riddled like a colander. Not a sign of life and the triangle-shaped airfield was hardly discernible due to numerous bomb
craters and previous damage from bomb blast. The target
had about 8/10s cloud cover, but we maneuvered
around and finally made two practice runs from 5,700 feet.
On our first actual run 20 bombs
were released and each one was on target thanks to radar. Two
bursts of flak
were reported, but I didn’t
see them.”
As we approached Kwaj the Colonel
surprised me with, "Wanna
make the landing?” "Yes Sir!" I never had difficulty landing any aircraft so I made
a
good
landing on this occasion. After landing the Colonel said, "You'll make someone a good copilot. " “Christ, how about first pilot" I muttered to myself.
While Truk continued to be the target of primary
importance, some strikes were made
on Ponape in the Caroline Islands, west of the Marshalls. Some other missions
went against targets on Wake Island,
and Guam and Saipan in the
Mariana s Islands.
On 28 May I flew as an observer with Lt. Allan and his crew, during
which I experienced my first case of white knuckles. The target
was Ponape about 500 miles west southwest of
Kwaj. The bomb load was 40
hundred-pound general purpose bombs to be
dropped from 15,000 feet.
(Note: The crew of the Pistol Pakin Mamma is also on this mission
today. They are flying in their "new plane" the "Pistol
Pakin Mamma" with Lt. Victor Petroff as first pilot.)
“Flew with Lt. Allan (#3 A
Flight).
(Note:
1st Lt. Verne S. Allen on roster - April 1944) Took off and assembled and
proceeded to target. A tropical weather front lay between Kwaj and Ponape. We were cruising at 8,000
feet and entered the front at this altitude.
It was the worst weather I have ever flown in up to this date. The interior of the clouds lit up
the ship and gave it a ghostly appearance, the whiteness dazzled my eyes.
The ship rocked, pitched,
twisted, and groaned on through the relentless turbulence. I grew more tense and for the first time in my life I was really and
truly scared. I had an aching feeling in
my stomach along with a feeling of complete helplessness,
but outside the fury of the storm continued. The sound of rushing air
and the rain pounding on the hull of the aircraft sounded like an air hammer on a
tin roof. I was in the bombardier
compartment taking advantage of
two heaters there. I tried to
busy myself reading “Look Homeward Angel” but found I had aimlessly
thumbed three chapters of which I
remembered nothing. Finally after what seemed an eternity of pain
and terror we broke thru the clouds and began our climb to bombing altitude. We spotted Ponape and maneuvered for the bomb
run. Lead rocked his wings and B
and C Flights turned on their
respective runs. Our
target was the seaplane
installation on Langor Island about a
mile off Ponape. As we started our run, small white bursts of ack-ack were
observed far below. We didn't
worry about these but suddenly huge black bursts appeared directly
ahead and floated by us like
weird gremlins. Bursts appeared above and below. Excitement grew to a climax as the bombardier sang out, “Bombs away." Simultaneously,
we banked and dove but not
before a huge black puff
appeared just outside the pilot's window.
As we circled just
off the target to assemble all flights
we got a good picture of the
other flights in action
and the damage done
by our own bombs which were
strung at about 20 feet
intervals. We destroyed some barracks and one fire was started (oil storage). I didn't observe damage done by other ships. One airplane had to make
a second bomb run – he was lost in a shroud
of black puffs, but emerged unscathed.
There were countless puffs both black
and white smoke appearing like small clouds now that they were spent and wasted as
far as we were concerned.
We could see tiny orange flashes of the ack-ack guns far below and then in a
breathless moment
we breathed relief as the missile burst a safe
distance from us. We returned to Kwaj
without mishap. The penetration of the
front was not as frightening as before.
It’s funny – but I can’t seem to grasp the full realization of war. We no doubt killed men, but I never think of
it in those terms. Regardless of
realization it is true, so along with my comrades, I sweat my remaining
raids. I find that I have yet to
experience fear over the target – due perhaps to my inability to realize
war. I do not hesitate to admit my fear
of weather. God controls my destiny and
I have faith in Him and in all the prayers that are being said for me.”
On 30 May I was transferred from the 11th Bomb Group to the 30th Bomb Group and assigned
to the 38th Squadron. The transfer
caused me to change tents.
I stuffed my four cotton khaki uniforms, underwear and socks, two flight caps, some handkerchiefs, and a pair of
oxford shoes into my Government Issue B-4 bag, which today would qualify as
a hang-up bag. I hung mine on the tent center pole along with my class-A cotton garrison cap.
The latter, dubbed "fifty-mission" cap, because it was worn without a grommet and became more wrinkled and soiled as one's number of missions mounted. I also took my A-3 bag which was issued to carry flight
gear flight suits and
boots, A-2 jacket, (a men's wear
fad in 1990 known
as a bomber jacket) heavy
leather, sheepskin lined
jacket and pants, woolen electric heated shirt and pants
(plugged into electrical outlets at each crew station)
an oxygen mask, gloves, a flak vest, and a flak helmet. A straps-and-buckle, brown leather brief case, for carrying maps and mission briefing notes and logs and my diary,
completed my baggage.
The
Squadron Commander, Louis Lamb, greeted me, "Barker,
I’m glad to have you
in our squadron. We know you are a good pilot
and will have your own crew when you
get some mission s under your belt,
but for the time being you
are assigned as copilot on Second Lieutenant John Runge's
crew. The crew is fresh from the States
and needs a strong copilot replacement.
I know it's awkward since you're
a First Lieutenant, but I think you understand and can handle it.
Anyway, rank among lieutenants is like virtue among whores. Besides, you'll get to fly more
missions which is what you said you wanted. "
I took Major
Lamb at his word. He was unsmiling during the one-sided
conversation, but somehow
I got the feeling that I was
welcome and accepted as a contributing member of his squadron.
"Wake up, lieutenant," a voice from the four a.m. darkness accompanied the shaking of my cot, then moved on
to other cots with
the same message. I pulled on a flight suit, snatched a towel from the tent center pole, and
stumbled to the latrine for
morning toilet that did not include a shave. Then the crew
assembled at a table
in the mess tent for breakfast.
I skipped
the reconstituted eggs and milk, dark brown toast
and unmeltable butter, and went for hot cakes, syrup and coffee. There
wasn't much small talk, we all wondered about the upcoming mission details. None of us guessed the target for the day.
|
Wake Island |
Afterwards, it was still dark when six B-24 crews assembled in the briefing tent. A blue line on a large map of the Central Pacific
indicated we were going to hit Wake Island.
(Note: May 31, 1944 - Plane "Come Closer" #42-72973 - First pilot 2nd Lt.
J.A. Runge. Also: the mission reports show #42-72989 "Pistol Pakin
Mamma" with Lt. Petroff on this mission.
The mission briefing
included a weather forecast for
our route, target and bombing altitude and other standard bits of information about radio
frequencies, ordnance load, and
formation tactics over the target.
Since alternate landing
strips were non-existent,
all briefings customarily
included a review of emergency ditching
procedures in case one or more of us got shot up or ran out of gas.
Everyone sighed with relief when the briefing officer guessed there would be no Jap fighter
aircraft to contend with. The date posted on the briefing sheets, called "flimsies," handed to us included the date 31 May. I usually memorized the important
things to remember,
as did most other crew members. We synchronized our watches, the Chaplain prayed, and the Group Commander's, "good luck, gentlemen” ended the
briefing.
On the way out of the briefing tent, we all drew escape kits that included
silk maps and a compass small enough to swallow should we be captured. Then we threw our flight bags on a
GI truck and climbed on for the ride to the flight line. We stored
our gear aboard our assigned aircraft and made sure
the ground crew had delivered our flight rations and first aid kits. Earlier, medical
kits were left aboard the aircraft between mission s, but too often someone stole the morphine
out of them, so the crews began locking them up.
We are all on board at engine start time.
The flight engineer switches up the putt-putt motor for ground power
supply. Then one by one, the props
turn, the engines belch smoke and roar to
life. The bomb bay doors grind closed,
and we taxi into single file with five other libs on this
mission.
The lead plane rolls exactly
at 0730. We are second
and follow at
0731.
After takeoff
the six Libs circled the field once to
gather the formation into two three-ship
flights before heading for Wake Island 600 miles
north of Kwaj. Wake had been by-passed and was being kept neutralized by frequent aerial attacks. In our bomb bay were three 2,000 pound airburst bombs set
to release from 13,500 feet. Bombing from that altitude meant we would not be donning heated
clothing, and that we would be on oxygen for less than an hour.
“The trip to the target was uneventful.
The last raid on Wake resulted
in the loss of one B-24 so we expected the worst. I seemed to wonder more about my fate than on
previous missions. The flak at first was
below us, but they got our altitude and blazed away.
Bursts directly ahead just
outside my window caused me
to throw up my arms for protection a
futile reflex action. I
remember laughing at myself. In all several bursts,
appearing like shattered skeet clay pigeons, came startlingly close and we had
a small hit on the vertical
stabilizer. All three bombs were on
target. We did mild evasive action in formation before
and after the bomb run. Returned
to Base safe and sound. This
marked my first mission as a crew
member. Copilots
rarely do much and I'm no exception; did a little flying as well as read all the meters , adjust power settings and raise and lower landing gear and flaps for
takeoff and landing.”
Eniwetok Atoll
is about
400 miles northwest
of Kwajalein. It was secured by Army troops. Then Navy Seabees quickly built a crushed coral airstrip from which B-24s
could strike Jap air and naval
|
Eniwetok Atoll |
bases
at Truk, a heavily fortified Jap stronghold
700 miles northwest of Kwaj that was sometimes referred to as the Gibraltar of
the Pacific.
From March through early June of 1944, B-24s of the Seventh Air Force,
still based on Kwajalein, staged through Eniwetok
for nightly assaults on Truk.
The missions I flew took off from Kwaj, flew to Eniwetok and took on a full load of fuel
that enabled us to fly the 1,400-mile, 10-hour
round trip. Many of the Truk missions were launched from Eniwetok
after dark.
Night time takeoffs
from Eniwetok demanded utmost pilot skill. The entire island was blacked out in deference to the possible Jap submarine threat. We used no lights for take off except
for one lone, tiny, hooded blue light two miles away at the far end of
the takeoff runway. The light remained in
view during takeoff if the aircraft continued straight down the runway.
The pilot stared
at the distant light, kept the aircraft on track, while the copilot monitored
everything inside the cockpit and reported
"max power set," followed by
airspeed readings and acknowledging and complying with pilot commands like, "gear up. " I flew two
such missions to Truk
on the nights of 4 and 5 June.
“This was my first night mission, in fact my first night flight
for over a year. Our target
was the airfield on Moen
Island In the Truk Atoll. We staged
from Eniwetok, took off at 2330 and joined
formation as number 2 in B Flight. We reached
the reef at approximately 0345
and turned on bomb run, diving to release altitude and gaining
airspeed to 185mph.
Out of the night came, "The tail turret is on fire the
ship is going to blow up, get
me out of here, salvo the bombs.
Immediately, Lt . Sims
salvoed the bombs. They burst
with a big flash lighting up the night sky. In the meantime, I had whipped off my oxygen mask
and started to the rear of
the plane to fight the fire. The navigator seemed nonchalant and I began to think my nerves had gotten the best of me and I misunderstood the interphone,
so I sat back down and
looked out the window.
The back of the plane was lit up
as if
a search light was
on us. The belly
turret gunner put the fire out with a fire extinguisher and
helped the tail turret gunner out of his damaged
turret. Having salvoed the bombs, we dived for a course
home.
Searchlights were stabbing the night
and bomb flashes could be seen. As we turned
for home we looked for protective clouds. I noticed a single-engine ship just off our wing. He didn't
attack, just did silly maneuvers. As we rounded a cloud, a big ship joined our
wing, but I think it
was one of our own. We dived into
the cloud and lost him.
The return flight was uneventful. This was my first mission to the mighty bastion of Truk. I was worried. To be shot down over
Truk is curtains, period.”
On 28 June,
I volunteered to fly copilot with Lt. Gene Sinclair [sic] (Lt. Eugene C. St.Clair, flying unnamed B-24 #42-100282) and
crew. Their regular copilot was grounded.
During the mission briefing,
I realized this would
be the largest raid I had experienced. Two squadrons, each with nine aircraft, were going to bomb targets at Truk. (target was S. Moen airfield, Truk Islands. 6 B-24 J's. Each plane carried 6 x 1000 lb. bombs)
“We took off at the crack of
dawn and proceeded to target. The weather was sour looking on the way out, but we managed
to dodge most of it.
The big Liberators struggled up to 20,000 feet
with engines throbbing in labor. All hands
were alert. Fighter interception
was expected. I was to see my first Zero. Our bomb run from outside
the reef to Moen Island, was nine
minutes long. [A
bomber is most vulnerable during the straight and level flight just before bomb release. It is a time when everyone has white knuckles]. If the Japs couldn't get our altitude and course in that
length of time they could never hit us. The long bomb run caused more than usual anxiety. Little black puffs seemed to surround us but none of
them was effective. "Bombs away"
and then a diving turn off target joining other flights and a second
squadron.
Just before
the second squadron joined us a voice came
over the interphone, “Bandits high at twelve o'clock.”
I got my first glimpse of an enemy fighter, a
graceful and speedy looking craft.
There were two of them,
looking very beautiful in the morning sky.
Suddenly one banked steeply
and dove at our
formation. As he came on our level he
rolled over with his belly to us and flipped a phosphorous bomb. The bomb burst about 50 yards ahead of
us doing no damage. A beautiful
picture their bombs make, a
white smoke pall with hundreds of streamers protruding like tentacles on an octopus.
In the meantime the fighter remaining above had built up courage
enough to attack. He came
diving in with all guns blazing. He too rolled over
and flipped a
bomb, but missed his mark. Our gunners fired at their would-be killer, but all their lead was slightly behind the Zero, possibly some hits,
but no visible damage to him, neither
did he hit us. The Zeroes then fiddled around the formation
and made some half-hearted passes but never came in close.
The interception on
a similar mission on 7 July began with C Flight's bomb run.
(Plane - Come Closer
#42-72973 - Pilot Lt. Runge )
The Japs dropped two bombs that
missed all aircraft, then made several
attacks and damaged two of our Libs. One of
the Zeroes caught up to A Flight
and proceeded to attack from
three o'clock high. Again, they didn't
hit us and our gunners returned
the compliment. The return from the
first mission was uneventful, but on the second we ran
into a weather front and had a rough ride home.
I am more scared of
the weather than anything the Japs have to offer.”
My next three missions were similar to previous
Truk missions. Target continued to be Moen Airstrip and anti-aircraft guns
located there. One was a daylight raid and the other a night
mission. Encountered no flak but saw
five searchlights. Practically all Truk missions required 9 to 10
hours flying time. Most of the time the bomb load was either six
1,000-pound General Purpose (GP) bombs, or
twelve 500-pound GPs. Bomb release altitudes varied for target
or tactical reasons. We were more accurate bombing
with radar at any altitude, but
we usually remained at 14,000 feet or higher to avoid
small arms AA. Lower altitude
missions were easier on crew comforts because long periods of time at higher
altitudes required continuous
and fatiguing use of oxygen.
Meanwhile, back on the ground, when work
was done and the mini-issues of Time and
Newsweek had been closely read, there were other means of whiling away the hours between missions. I spent lots of time playing cards. The most popular
gambling game was one called Hearts. At a nickel
a heart, one could lose as much as 65 cents per deal;
or win 65 cents from each of the other players
in the game if the winner captured all 13 hearts;
or varying amounts depending
upon how many hearts each of
'the players had when all hearts were played. I was lucky at this
particular game and seldom lost any money. Sometimes,
I won as much as $50 in an afternoon. Along with being lucky enough to be alive, my luck with cards
continued.
Anytime was “short-snorter" time.
Everyone had a “short-snorter” - paper money autographed by friends and
strangers
alike. "Short-snorters"
were popular conversation
pieces in aircraft cockpits, dining halls, hotel
bars, shared taxis, and tents everywhere.
My keepsake “short-snorter” is a
one-dollar bill that I separated into two halves during a poker game on Saipan. Even though a dollar bill is paper thin, one can be
separated into two razor-thin bills; one with the face side of the original and
the other with the back side that makes a blank uncolored side on each of the two halves. My
|
Back
side of "Bill" Barker's short snorter - missions |
"short-snorter" lists the targets I bombed in addition to the autographs
of many friends. I
claim it is one of a
kind. How the “short-snorter " came
to be a WWII fad escapes my memory, but it was a fad like
all fads: it suddenly appeared and just as suddenly, disappeared.
Navy Seabees occupied another
island in the Kwajalein Atoll and we
got in the habit of going over there
in an Army amphibious vehicle to visit the
well-provisioned canteen. The habit was short lived; the Navy caught on and invited us off their island. We were forever envious of the "good life" the Navy lived with all their home-like
creature comforts.
One day we got the word the Marines were vacating Majuro, a nearby island they had captured and then used to rest up for
other assaults. A B-24 flew over there, landed, and the crew liberated
a couple hundred cases of
beer abandoned by the unfortunate Marines. A couple of hours at altitude in the bomb bay of a
B-24 did not get the beer ice
cold, but that didn’t deter the guzzling that occurred when the cool cans were passed among those in the crowd that gathered in response to the Control Tower rumor that a plane-load of beer was
inbound. The one-can-to-a-man ration
wasn’t enough
to
produce
a
"buzz,”
but the treat broke the tedium of round-the-clock labor.
Beer and liquor were scarce except for the shots of espiritus
frumenti – a foul-tasting 100 proof bourbon the Flight
Surgeon prescribed for
medicinal purposes after each bombing mission. Some months each officer was rationed one fifth of booze that most of us shared with enlisted
crew members and the aircraft crew chief. There was no village pub to visit and no officers club - a
quiet time was had by all.
The Marshallese people that survived
the pre-invasion bombardment of their islands lived on
islands not entirely occupied by our military
units. The 38th BS “adopted" a Marshallese young man named Ato Raponi who was best described as a "house boy.” We took
him to Saipan with us and he worked for the
squadron until the squadron returned
to Hawaii in March of 1945.
Ato was flown home to his native Island
of Nanumea by a 38th BS crew. The last I heard in 1986, he was living there
with his family.
During my first few combat missions,
I apparently became superstitious
because I wrote this in a letter to Mom and Dad on 22 July:
“I always wear
the same boots and socks, the same flying suit, the silly little ball cap, and I have a
little flute I play when I'm not too busy.”
I did launder my clothing from time to time else I would
have smelled like
a fertilizer salesman.
During the remainder of July, I participated in four more strikes
against Truk, marking my tenth time over that target.
“Fighters continue to intercept. They number from five to twelve and are not aggressive. I had occasion
to look down
the barrels of six machine guns, but
we were not hit. They scored hits on
one ship he blew up and three
crew members bailed out.
The fighters strafed the
parachutes. Another ship had the copilot and navigator wounded. The navigator had seven pieces of flak in his
fanny. One mission found us floundering around in a snow storm at 20,000
feet!
The nose gunner made snow balls.
One mission saw all ships hit but ours! The most accurate I've ever seen Jap flak, a Jap Betty apparently reported our altitude. Most excitement came from fighters
especially on mission #13 when they attacked in pairs.
Our firing at long range discouraged them so no attacks were pressed on our flight. However, they shot up one Lib,
and we got one of them. It wasn't
a flamer just a spin from
16,000 feet! The pilot bailed out and
everyone tried to strafe him, attempted
revenge for strafing our unfortunate crews. We suffered no losses or damage.
The next mission arrived over Truk at
dusk, completely surprising the Japs. Flak was
practically nil.”
Most of us were surprised early one morning
when we were told to be in
a formation of airmen scheduled to receive awards.
In mid-morning some 50 of us assembled on a portion of the aircraft
parking ramp. We looked less than tidy in our wrinkled
khaki. We needed haircuts but our
shoes were shined. There was no band but Old Glory
and Unit Colors wafted in a gentle breeze as a jeep, sprouting the flag of a Two-Star
General, stopped in front of our formation. When
he stepped out of the jeep I recognized General Robert W. Douglas, the Commander of Seventh Air Force who was my boss when I
was assigned to Seventh Fighter Command Headquarters.
I grinned and stiffened when he approached me. As he pinned an Air
Medal on my shirt, he smiled and said, "Well, Barker,
I see you're getting what you said you wanted. Two Air
Medals today, others and a Distinguished Flying Cross
in the offing. How do you like flying bombers ?"
|
Lt.
Barker's first Distinguished Flying Cross - Kwajalein - July 1944 |
"It's not as much fun as flying fighters, Sir, but I'm contributing to the war effort, getting scared, and
surviving."
"Congratulations," he said as he nodded his head before moving on to the next in
line.
Seventh Air Force B-24s moved to Saipan the second week of August to be within striking distance
of the Bonin Islands,
800 miles further north toward Japan. Two of the
islands, Iwo Jima and Chichi Jima
were Jap strongholds posing aerial threats to continued progress toward assaults on the Jap homeland.
“A new target at last! From our new Saipan Base (Aslito), took off at 8 a.m.
arriving at target (Iwo Jima) about
noon. The island was small
(someone said 250 acres with a little
mountain
on one end [Suribachi, famed
for the dramatic raising of the
U.S. Flag by U.S. Marines]. We unloaded
our bombs smack on
target amid a storm of
flak like never before. There were
numerous aircraft on the ground.
We destroyed a number of
them there, and only five Zeroes took off to intercept.
This time they were even less aggressive than the little bastards at Truk.”
Upon completion
of 15 combat missions, crew members
were entitled to Rest and Recreation
(R&R) leaves in Hawaii. Accordingly, on 11 August I flew as a
passenger on a CB-24 to Honolulu.
|
The Chambermaid's Crash landing Saipan Isl., Sept. 11, 1944.
Pistol Pakin Mamma was lost this day also over Marcus Island. | |
|
During September 1944, the 30th Bomb Group flew the first four-squadron combat mission s in its history. On 3 September
41 airplanes struck Iwo Jima in a daylight
raid, dropping 92 tons of bombs with 74% in
the target area. During the
month of September, the Group shot down 12 Jap fighters and destroyed eight on
the ground. Our losses were
six Libs destroyed, three crews missing in action, and two wounded. One crew
ditched (Dottie Anne) among a surface-borne naval task force and spent several days at sea as guests aboard a U.S. Navy
destroyer. One of the Libs was rammed by a Jap fighter, a forerunner of the kamikaze attacks occurring later when U.S. Forces were operating closer to
the Japanese homeland. Another severely
crippled Lib (The Chambermaid) crash landed
on home base with wounded aboard.
Except for the wounded,
the crew survived practically unscathed,
but the aircraft was completely destroyed.
I
participated in the 3 September
maximum effort raid on Iwo with a crew headed by Bob Straley (Straley piloted "Stormy Weather"),
a guy skinnier and shorter than me.
He was a feisty little bastard propped up with
cushions so his feet could reach the rudder
pedals.
(Note: Pistol Pakin Mamma was on this September 3, mission. It was the
"crews" 25th mission on that day.)
“Carried 500 pound GPs. Take off around
0800,
land approx. 1800. No unusual excitement to target. At target there was a black could of flak, but ineffective. We enjoyed the fruits of excellent
bombing. The exciting thing of this mission Lt. Dodd (another pilot in the 38th with whom I had flown) lost #1 engine as we neared
target and turned for Base.
As we were returning we received
his radio call that he was losing
altitude fast and preparing to ditch.
We spread out and proceeded to overtake him.
Hoped to locate him by homing but no soap. In the meantime,
he reached a surface borne task force and bailed out. My good friends, McBride, Swenson and Miller described their reactions to the emergency. Interesting to note their thoughts - themselves, wives and family.
The engineer was
lost by drowning – unable to get free from 'chute in water. All had
this difficulty. Were immediately rescued by destroyers – spent two days afloat with the Navy. P.S. Larges
t single raid by 30th BG. Four
squadrons – 41 planes dropping over 100 tons on Iwo Jima.
(Note: The ditching of "Dottie Anne" T/Sgt Richard L. Williams - Engineer/top turret gunner drowned in his chute.)
Next morning,
4 September 1944, I was
copilot on a reconnaissance mission searching for enemy shipping around the islands of Yap
and Wolea. These islands,
on the western and northern approaches to the Palaus,
at the western
end of the Caroline
Islands chain, were invaded at Peleliu
Island where Marine Corps units met heavy resistance. It took two months to destroy the Japanese stronghold there. We sighted no shipping. Our bombs missed a target of opportunity, an ammo dump at Yap. The crew that day had a Chinese Bombardier, Willie
Wong, and a tail gunner,
Corporal Kee Chiong.
Another mission
to Iwo on 6 September encountered a flak-blackened sky, none of it effective. My diary remarks on the
good weather and complains about poor flight rations -- juices, bread, cheese and water cooled by
altitude.
My twentieth mission
was another visit to Iwo.
“I sweated furiously on the eve of
this mission for some unknown reason. The previous flights to Iwo for me had been "easy." After dodging through some foul weather, we reached
Minima Rock and leveled off
at 19,000! We had just turned on
the bomb run, losing altitude to 18,000, when
someone gave out with
“five
Zekes, low, at one o'clock!” I was
startled to have interception
that soon. In a moment
the five fighters were attacking
viciously from the hindquarter both sides of our formation. In the meantime bomb
doors opened and
we steadied for the release. But the fighters had other ideas-
one had begun a pass from two o'clock high, as he neared the formation he rolled over on his back and poured a stream of lead into our formation - our gunners were
"right on” and the Zeke began to smoke in a
sea of incendiary bullets. He broke away in a vertical
dive, trailing smoke
and later broke into three
pieces all enveloped by flame and
finally crashed into the sea.
On
the other side an attack was
being pressed by the Japs.
From above he went into a vertical dive and
concentrated on A
Flight. #3 aircraft was hit and severely damaged along with
three of the crew. This unfortunate Nip met an untimely death when
a hail of bullets from our fifties exploded him like a clay
pigeon. And another was shot down from
a pass on the rear of our
formation. These Sons of Tojo were really eager, coming
in close enough to be measured in feet. Our bombs were unleashed in a black storm of flak. 80% on target
good considering! #3 aircraft in A Flight lost engine controls and
instruments. We slowed to 140mph and escorted
the wounded Lib back to Base. He made a crash landing (Lt. Core) and completely demolished
the aircraft. This
was doubly risky after dark. Only
one wheel and minimum control.
Miraculously all escaped alive and unharmed except those already wounded. Lot of blood lost.
We flew through the edge of a typhoon, luckily not too rough. Allison
and the 342nd ran ahead after bombs away and paid the price of
not sticking together. Three men on
one of the aircraft
were killed outright
. Three other ships lost
engines and one crash landed at Base. It is highly probable this could have been prevented had the leader practiced mutual support
. This marked a more vicious resistance. The Zekes attacked determinedly and came in to point blank
range. They lose but so do we!
Here's hoping our raids are larger for bet
ter chances of
survival.”
Iwo was
scheduled for invasion and capture to deny the Japanese an airbase near the Marianas. We intended to use the airbase there as
a fighter base. Long
range P-51s later moved in there
and provided escort for B-29s attacking Japan.
Another mission
to Iwo on 14 September turned out to be a milk run. The weather was good
and nothing unexpected happened. Flak was heavy but inaccurate, only one airplane
was slightly damaged. Then another mission on 19 September:
“A new
target for a change.
Other squadrons had ventured
to the Bonins proper before
but this was our first foray in this
vicinity. The Navy did a good job up there. The
seaplane base and airfield
has no airplanes and the flak is meager and inaccurate. Shipping was priority target. We went in at 19,000
feet and left one of four vessels burning. If the vessels had been out of the
harbor we would have used a masthead
attack! No damage to our planes. Flew past Iwo on the way but no interference. Pretty well neutralized north of Saipan now.”
A very good friend of mine, Roy [sic] Dempster (Robert Dempster) and his crew took off on a search
for enemy shipping in the vicinity of Marcus Island, about 700 miles
northeast of Saipan. They "got
it," that is they never
returned from a search
mission.
On 25 September
my diary records:
|
The Search Plan - To Marcus from Saipan |
“The first grey streak of dawn found 12 Libs roaring into
the sunrise. Theirs was a mission of
mercy. The day before Dempster had flown
to Marcus for recon, and for unknown reasons failed to return. We had organized a parallel search to cover a
15-mile lane from Base to Marcus. Two
hours on course heard a report from Navy Scout, "Survivors in ocean
.” We homed on his M.O.s and arrived on
scene in an hour. Crew reported four men
in water. We flew low and slow to drop
raft noting a school of sharks near
victims. Turning and making another pass
revealed disappearance of survivors.
Sharks! Navy amphib did not land
soon enough and after 24 hours in the sea, the boys were in no condition to
swim to and board a raft. What had been
this crew’s fate? The typhoon that was
lurking on their course? Enemy action
? Pilotage ? God only knows.”
(Note: September 11, 1944, Robert A. Dempster, Jr. and crew of the
Pistol Pakin Mamma were hit by enemy fire and exploded in midair off Marcus Island. An account of the incident is given by Lt.
Richard M. Smith, Navigator and sole survivor of the Pistol Pakin Mamma crew -
A letter for the lost)
On 30 Sept
and 1 October the Squadron Operations Officer, Bob Valentine, flew with me on a local
flight to determine my fitness to be an Aircraft Commander. He was
satisfied with my handling
of the aircraft and recommended the Squadron
Commander, Louie Lamb, certify me
a fully qualified B-24 Aircrew Commander.
Next day I took off with a minimum crew to slow time two new engines on a B-24. The navigator
suggested we fly down to Guam and
take a look at all the Navy activity there. We did, and
after a circuit of the island flew over the airfield. The runway looked long
and smooth but when we landed our landing gear rolled
across a narrow, open ditch.
"Christ, Barker, you've damaged the landing gear!" I told myself.
I sent the
Flight Engineer out to inspect the gear and he reported no apparent damage.
After landing back on Saipan we logged two landings in
the Form One, and told the Crew Chief
about the jolt we felt when
we crossed a ditch across the
runway at Guam. As far as I know this was the only B-24 to
land on Guam during WWII. The incident cost the Crew Chief extra work. He jacked
the Lib up and checked and rechecked landing gear retraction.
I was among
300 members of the 30th
BG stricken with dengue fever, a sometimes fatal tropical disease. My fever rose to 104 degrees as I lay on a cot of pain for over a week. My entire body ached and my physical strength declined along with my morale. I didn't need any prodding to take my quinine and handfuls of aspirin. At times I thought I was going to die, but my thoughts of Flo, and of loved ones
way back in Kentucky moved me to survive. I often fondled my St. Christopher medal and prayed for relief. It can't be my time, I kept telling
myself. Sure enough it wasn't. Two
weeks later I was back in good health.
During October,
B-29 Super Fortresses and P-51 Mustangs began arriving on Saipan
and Tinian. These new arrivals
on Saipan and Tinian began preparation s to assault
the Japanese Homeland. The B-24 mission was usurped. I guessed the B-24s and crews,
along with supporting elements would soon return to Hawaii or the States for retraining
in another aircraft. Pursuant to my guess I passed the word that I
was ready to return to an assignment
in Hawaii.
Orders assigning me to Headquarters Army Air Forces Pacific
Ocean Area (AAFPOA) were received at 30th Bomb Group in early
November. I flew my last flight with the 38th Bomb Squadron on 6
November 1944. The flight was logged as
a training flight, less than two hours duration. Two days later I boarded
a CB-24 bound for Hawaii. We landed at Kwajalein
for fuel and overnight crew
rest. Next morning we continued on to Johnston Island and spent the
night there before continuing to Hickam, arriving there on the morning of 10 November.
POST SCRIPT
On his August 1944 R&R to
Honolulu, my mother and father got engaged, and were married on November 26,
1944 after his return from his combat tour with the 38th Bomb
Squadron. My mother, my grandparents and
my mother’s grandparents were direct descendants of British and Portuguese
immigrants to the then Sandwich Islands, which later became the Territory of
Hawaii. My mother and her family
witnessed the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. But that’s another story.
The reference to Lt. Sims
salvoing bombs on early June 1944 night missions most likely occurred on the
aircraft named “Come Closer” which most likely was flown by John Runge. My father’s crew picture shows him as well as
John Runge and Bill Sims. The navigator
was most likely John Malloy.
On my father’s 20th
mission to Iwo Jima, he references escorting Lt. Core’s damaged aircraft back
to Saipan. This aircraft was lost on
crash landing (most likely “The Chambermaid”).
The bombing conditions during this raid were apparently very dangerous,
with both extreme flak and lots of Zeros.
I have attached my father’s
crew picture and pictures of his “short-snorters”. I can make out signatures of the following
individuals: Paul W. Barker (my father),
John Stowe Barker, Dave Zimmerman, Ross P. Holland, John A. Runge, Richard E.
McBride, Frederick C. Dodd, Les Goldberg, Jerry Miatech, W. E. “Bill” Rule, Vic
Sorrell, George P. Wehr, Bob Farmer and Howard G. Miller. Help in identifying other signatures would be
greatly appreciated.
My father’s combat diary
identifies the following named aircraft that were part of the 38th
BS complement and on which he flew missions:
“Dottie Anne”, “Come Closer”, and “Fools Paradise”.