Mission 809
- Reveille
- 03:45
- Stations
- 07:00
- Takeoff
- 08:00
- Form-Up
- 06:45
- Time Over Target
- 09:30
- Return Time
- 15:45
- Distance
- 1,000 nmi
- Fuel Aboard
- 2,500 gal
- Fuel Consumed
- 2,000 gal
- Cloud En-Route to Target
- Heavy stratus (8/10) — most of the sky covered by a low, flat cloud layer.
- Air Temp at Altitude
- -42 °F
- Lowest Temp
- -42 °F
- Wind Speed
- 51 kt
- Wind Direction
- 350°
- Bombing Altitude
- 22,500 ft
- Bombing Run Heading
- 170° True
- Forming Altitude
- 14,000 ft
- Fighter Cover
- 3 P-51, 1 P-47 groups
- Bombing Accuracy
- Bombs jettisoned — target not reached
Intense flak at the Belgian coast struck the outboard engine, which could not be feathered and ran away
Each ship that lifted off, and the men aboard her.
▸ 4 ships carrying your selectionLetter suffix reads 'H'. Serial partially illegible; digit after '2' unclear.
Lead aircraft; CA Dillon (448) — Command Pilot designation
Letter suffix unclear; OCR reads '[?]'
Letter suffix unclear; OCR reads '[?]'
Letter suffix reads 'S'.
Letter suffix reads 'A'.
Letter suffix reads 'B'.
Letter suffix reads 'N'.
Letter suffix reads 'E'. Note 'DID NOT T.O.' appears beside several crew entries, suggesting this aircraft did not take off.
Letter suffix reads 'I'.
Letter suffix unclear in OCR.
The January 28th mission briefed for Osnabrück, with the pilot assigned as deputy lead for the 330th. Takeoff was in dense fog. The crew could make out two runway edge lights. The ground crew, standing 400 feet from the control tower, couldn't see it. Horizontal visibility was less than 400 feet. The interval between takeoffs was stretched to one minute instead of the usual thirty seconds. They got off the ground safely, formed up, and headed toward Germany. As they crossed the continental coast, flak batteries opened up. The left outboard engine caught fire and began to run away. Engine RPM climbed past the instrument limit of 3,200 and kept going. The left outboard was the worst engine to lose; the torque of all four engines was carried on that wing, and the propeller froze in full fine pitch, the blades flat to the airstream, creating extreme drag. They were at 20,000 feet. Three minutes later they were at 17,000. They contacted Air-Sea Rescue for permission to salvo the bombs. Clearance came in three minutes. A low cloud layer sat a few hundred feet above the water. ASR found them an airstrip on the water's edge. Every minute or so the pilot counted to five over the radio; from that and radar bearings, ASR directed a British aircraft toward them. Within five minutes a P-47 appeared off the left window, flaps down, flying formation. The British pilot gave the circle sign and said on the radio he was taking them in. It went smoothly until they hit cloud at 2,000 feet. The bulletproof glass, two inches thick, fogged immediately as the air shifted from dry cold to warm and wet, then began to build ice. Forward visibility was gone. Through the side window the pilot could still see the P-47. The airfield tower broke in: the main runway was blocked by a crashed B-24. They were to land crosswind on another runway. Wheels and flaps went down and they held position on the P-47's wing. The aircraft came down onto the runway and slid off onto her belly. The crew walked away with a few bruises. A staff car took the pilot to the commanding officer, where he was thoroughly dressed down for blocking the runway. The ground crew later found fifteen places where ice had torn chunks from the aircraft. Mission records logged the target variously as Osnabrück and an oil refinery at Dortmund. Four aircraft were lost. The crew received mission credit.