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Personal stories of WW2 mission close calls

Fri Oct 05, 2007 3:33 pm

I was talking to my father a short while ago. He flew Hellcats off the USS Franklin, besides the close call he had on Oct 30, 1944. He was sitting in his Hellcat waiting to take off. His Hellcat was blown forward, prop hit the deck, left wing collapse, he runs off wing and dives into a door in carrier island.

On 30 October 1944, the Franklin was damaged extensively by a Japanese suicide plane east of Samar Island. The plane with a bomb load aboard crashed through the flight deck, igniting planes parked at the after end of the flight deck. The bombs carried forward, detonating among the gassed planes in the hanger and causing fires in the after portion of the flight deck and hangar. The fire spread to the second and third deck spaces. In addition, gas explosions occurred in the hangar, but all fires were extinguished in two and one half hours. Structural damage was extensive to the flight and gallery decks as well as to structures within the hangar.

Besides this close call, he told me his closest call was when he and his wingman were on CAP and got lost way out in the Pacific somewhere, they lost their carrier task force and were on fumes. They both decided to ditch, but at the last minute, they made contact with their carrier. Dad landed on the deck and engine quit. Soiled flight suit.

Another 4 Hellcat CAP and as Dad and his wingman, along with the other two in a 4 ship formation, entered through some broken clouds, his wingman somehow broke formation and clipped the second lead's wing and both tumbled in a fireball. Killing both. My dad to this day wears his belt buckle to the side of his pants as a memorial to his buddy he lost that day. Guess this happened a lot out there.

Dad chased a few enemy aircraft, and actually fired on a few, but he said they were always running away and dad was too far away to really hit anything. He did rocket fire on several airstrips, barges, and a greenhouse loaded with explosives on Saipan that blew up and shattered in a million pieces and beat up his Hellcat quite a bit. But he made it back safe.

Anyway, just wondering if any of you have a relative who flew missions during WW2 and have some personal close calls to share. A story interesting that we rarely hear about. Doesn't have to be combat related.

Mark the Hellcat driver.

Fri Oct 05, 2007 3:48 pm

My great-uncle was also on board the USS Franklin, will have to post his story when I get back from Houston.

Ryan

Fri Oct 05, 2007 11:55 pm

Not so much of a close call, but in my dads log book from WWII, whilst flying anti-submarine patrols out of Pembroke Dock in Wales:

June 3rd. Boring trip up and down English Channel. No enemy contacts.

June 4th. Another boring trip up and down English Channel.

June 6th. Never seen so many ****** ships in my life!

Needle

Sat Oct 06, 2007 12:01 am

My uncle who flew Corsairs was down in the mess hall on the Franklin that day as well when things heated up on the flight deck...

Lynn

Sat Oct 06, 2007 12:15 pm

Click your mouse on http://www.b17sam.com/Sheen.html for story of a close call.

Sat Oct 06, 2007 12:34 pm

What is your uncle's name Lynn? ... I'll ask my dad if he knows him.
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