As the Second World War approached its conclusion, the Allies intensified their strategic bombing efforts against Germany, targeting its industrial infrastructure and undermining civilian morale. On April 8, 1945, during one of these missions, the US Army Air Forces’ Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress, known as Wee Willie, encountered catastrophe. The bomber was struck by enemy anti-aircraft fire, and the resulting destruction was powerfully captured in a gripping series of photographs.
Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie
Wee Willie – B-17G-15-B0, serial number 42-31333 – marked the 302nd B-17G Flying Fortress to roll off the assembly line at Boeing Airplane Company’s Plant 2 in Seattle, Washington. The heavy bomber was delivered to the US Army Air Forces in Cheyenne, Wyoming in October 1943, before being transported to RAF Bassingbourn in Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom.
Upon reaching the UK, Wee Willie was assigned to the 322nd Bombardment Squadron (Heavy), 91st Bombardment Group (Heavy), 1st Air Division, 8th Air Force.
At the time of its loss, the bomber was the longest-serving aircraft within the 91st and was one of the very last to be lost to enemy action before the German surrender.
Preparing to bomb German railroad facilities
Downing of the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Wee Willie
During the mission, German anti-aircraft fire caused minor damage to 13 Allied bombers and inflicted serious damage on four others. Out of the 73 aircraft involved, only two were completely lost, one of which was the B-17G Wee Willie. Wee Willie sustained a direct hit from an 88 mm flak shell between its #2 engine and bomb bay, sending it into a vertical dive.
An eyewitness recounted the scene: “The fuselage was on fire and when it had dropped approximately 5,000 feet [1,524 meters] the left wing fell off. It continued down and when the fuselage was about 3,000 feet [914.4 meters] from the ground it exploded and then exploded again when it hit the ground.”
Wee Willie had a crew of nine, with Lt. Fuller as the only survivor. It was reported that he was thrown from the cockpit by the initial explosion, deployed his parachute, and landed safely. Unfortunately, he was captured by German forces soon after landing, and his fate after the incident remains unknown.
The entire event was captured on film by an automatic strike camera mounted on another B-17, which recorded from the release of the first bombs until the film ran out.
Loss of the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Times A-Wastin’
Lt. Mike Fodroci, a navigator on another B-17, witnessed the aircraft’s destruction. Fodroci reported that Times A-Wastin’ was hit by German flak in its exposed bomb bay, which likely resulted in Pastras’s immediate death.
“The ship pulled up and veered to the right, climbing directly over our ship,” he recalled. “Captain Shelby put our ship into a dive so steep that I was thrown up against the astro hatch of the ceiling of the nose – seems I hung there for a brief second or two. I also observed that a bad fire was burning on the aircraft’s forward bomb bay area and that the co-pilot was trying to climb out of the small window with his back pack on. Somehow, we saw three chutes emerge from #504 as she spun toward the earth.”
Out of those on board Times A-Wastin’, only two survived. Radio operator Bob A. Smith and flight engineer/top turret gunner Lyle Jones were captured by the Germans and shared a fate similar to Lt. Fuller’s, becoming prisoners of war (POWs).
Despite the loss of two bombers, the mission was deemed a success
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