Bluenose Buddies of Bodney (1 Viewer)

PolarBear

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Two pilots of the 352nd Fighter Group, stationed at Bodney, England compare notes after their safe return from an escort mission.

From the 352nd Website:

The 352nd Fighter Group was constituted in Sept 1942 and activated at Bradley Field, CT on October 1, 1942. Two of its squadrons, the 21st (later changed to the 486th) and the 34th (later changed to the 487th) had long combat histories, but like the newly formed 328th, were short on experienced personnel. Early flight training in the P-47 Thunderbolts was at Westover, Trumbell, LaGuardia and Mitchel fields. Most of the enlisted personnel, Det. "A" of the 1st Service Group arrived in January, 1943.

The Group embarked from New York harbor July 1, 1943, arriving in Scotland July 5th and a few days later reached their new base at Bodney, England. Training for combat became intense those next few months.

The Group flew its first combat mission on September 9, 1943, an uneventful sweep out over the North Sea to escort returning B-17s. Some 40 pilots participated in this mission. Although the 352nd had several minor encounters with the enemy in their early missions, it wasn't until November 26th that Major J. C. Meyer, C.O. of the 487th Squadron scored their first victory-an Me-109 attacking the bombers near Gronigen-the first of many victories for the 352nd.

During WWII the 352nd flew 420 missions, 59,387 operational combat hours, destroyed 776 enemy aircraft and had 29 aerial aces. Returning to the U.S. at war's end, the unit was deactivated.

 

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Here is the real P-51 "Sweet and Lovely" and its crew at Bodney, England. It was named after the title of a popular song of the 40s. Pilots often made a correlation between their planes and a female. This is why so much of the nose art was of women.

Lyrics:


Sweet and lovely
Sweeter than the roses in May
Sweet and lovely
Heaven must have sent her my way.
Skies above me
Never were as blue as her eyes;
And she loves me
Who would want a sweeter surprise?
When she nestles in my arms so tenderly
There's a thrill that words cannot express.
In my heart a song of love is taunting me
Melody haunting me.
Sweet and lovely
Sweeter than the roses in May
And she loves me
There is nothing more I can say
 

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Those pictures bring back memories for me. When I was a teenager, I liked to build all sorts of military models. My favorite airplane model was of the P51, I think possibly by Aurora, but I can't be sure. It was so long ago. My uncle bought that kit for me and helped me put it together. He was very into the P51 because that's the plane he flew out of England in WWII. He shot down quite a few german planes and was shot down once himself. His stories fascinated me. I remember well a painting of his P51, zooming through the air with guns blazing. He named the plane "Annie May", after his wife, my aunt. There were quite a number of swastikas painted beneath the cockpit. He was a P51 ace. He is long gone now, but his name was Lieutenant Colonel Robert Ammon.
 
Lieutenant Colonel was actually my uncle's rank when he retired from the Air Force. I think his rank while flying Mustangs in England was Lieutenant and than Captain.
 
Nice Randy. That WWII photo is interesting. I thought rappers with their baseball caps sideways were a 21st century invention, but I see here, in the photo, two precocious ones.:)
 
Thanks for sharing the story Beary. I love this kind of interaction. It is the people and their stories that make this hobby so great.
 

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