Bloody Skies: A 15th AAF B-17 Combat Crew: How They Lived and Died

Bloody Skies: A 15th AAF B-17 Combat Crew: How They Lived and Died image
ISBN-10:

1881325067

ISBN-13:

9781881325062

Edition: First Edition
Released: Jan 01, 1993
Publisher: Yucca Tree Press
Format: Hardcover, 424 pages
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Description:

Much has been written about the U.S. Army Air Corps in World War II, but the contributions of each aircrew member to that effort have been largely neglected. Also, the importance of the unity of the crew has not been sufficiently emphasized.

BLOODY SKIES is the story of a Fifteenth Air Force, Second Bomb Group (H), Twentieth Squadron, B-17 crew that often flew the notorious "Old Flak Holes," and how they learned to respect and trust each other. Training made them cohesive, crisis and tragedy bonded them.

They arrived at Amendola, Italy, on the day their entire squadron, the Twentieth, and others of the Second Bomb Group, had been wiped out by the Luftwaffe. That legacy was their introduction to war.

Through McGuuire and Hadley the reader will watch these enthusiastic, bright-eyed, cocky boys lose that brightness and confidence. when fatigue and weariness became so overpowering and seem to go deep into the bones, it is only their pride in themselves, their crew, and their country that keeps them returning to the skies to face another day of that dreaded flak and German fighters. There appeared to be no way to survive.

In the midst of the horrors of aerial combat, they can still find humor living in the 'Amendola Ritz,' compassion for those innocent victims of every war--the children, marvel in the early morning song of a bird, and enjoy the historical sights of Rome.

These ten men, from the economic, cultural, and geographic spectrum of 1940s America, were representative of the best their country had to offer. They vehemently deny any claim to hero status. The Soldier's Prayer was their credo:

Let me fight well today, O Lord,

Let me do nothing to bring shame or disgrace on my

family, my comrades, my unit, my country.

Let me conduct myself in such a manner that there

is no dishonor.

Let me not be wasted, but if I die, let me die like

a soldier should.


























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