I know she and some other veterans of the 8/1/43 Ploesti Raid came home for promotional tours. I quick Google search didn't turn up any information about her ultimate fate, but I assume once the tour was done she was either scrapped, or reassigned to a Stateside training unit (and eventually scrapped.) In any case, it doesn't appear she survived the war. I've often wondered why a relatively anonymous B-24 was chosen for preservation by the USAF Museum. I would have thought that a veteran of Ploesti or one with a higher mission tally would have been considered more desirable from a historic perspective (many internet references incorrectly claim that the "Strawberry B****" is a veteran of the Ploesti raid, but she didn't enter service until the following month.)
Interestingly, "The Squaw's" nose art was "sanitized" for the home front. These days, most people would probably find the somewhat racially insensitive name more offensive than the nudity.
From B24bestweb.com:
Quote:
The name The SQUAW, on the starboard (right) side, was retained throughout it's combat tour. The original Squaw art work was changed to reflect a more wholesome looking Squaw, for viewing by the people back home.
In the spring of 1943, in compliance with a "Snow White Squadron" directive, the figure of the dwarf Sleepy was painted on the port ( left) side. When The Squaw finished combat and was sent home on a war effort tour, the Sleepy nose art was removed and replaced with a large Mediterranean (MTO) map of the combat area depicting it's sorties.
"This was the artwork she carried in combat

And this was the artwork applied for her War Bond tour

