Friends,
I bought 2 of the 3 lots of these WWII e-bay photos mostly taken at MacDill that I would like to share with you all. I think that they are personal copies of the base photographer since there are all 3x5 contact prints with typical Army margin notes with no local photo store stamps on the back.
This first set is not at MacDill but of a fatal accident at Great Falls, MT of a 383rd BG ship out of Geiger Field, WA when two of the engines failed. They almost made it, but 7 men died and 4 others were seriously injure as noted in Tony Mireles book “Fatal Army Air Forces Aviation Accidents in the United States, 1941-1945 Vol. 1” The price was high.



This set is at MacDill as note by the notation “MCD RTU” for MacDill Replacement Training Unit on these and the rest of photographs. This accident is listed in AviationArchaeology.com data base for the noted date as Category 4 damage (major damage for depot repair decision) in a TACMF (Taxiing ACcident due to Mechanical Fail) accident.
Does not look like a taxiing accident to me! It hid the ground hard! What do you all think?



This next set of the taxiing accident of 42-5273 is, for some reason, listed 4 days later than what is noted on photographs.







This one may not be accident for there is no listing at all for MacDill on the date noted on the photo or in the week following . The National Insignia looks like it still has the red boarder from the previous summer of 1943. Maybe some ship being scraped?

AviationArchaeology.com data base list this accident one day later than the photo as a TACNU probably some kind of taxiing accident. What section of a B-17 has been photograph I don’t know?

The notation on this last photo says it all about Victor-Three. The 325th AAF BU is now being call a CCTS, Combat Crew Training Station, rather than a RTU, Replacement Training Unit, for morale purposes.

Any comments or correction are welcome.
All the best to you all
Tom Michel