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Returning from the Oldenburg mission, the crew
of B-17G #42-97214 (GD-C) "Carolina Queen" was unable
to lower its landing gear due to a structural failure of the landing
gear motor.
Landing a B-17 without its gear lowered is a
problem because of the Sperry ball turret, which would prevent a
smooth belly landing. For emergencies such as this, crews were supposed
to carry special tools to drop ball turret. However, on this April
day, the Bond crew did not have those tools on board and the story
of how they got them, unfastened the ball turret, and made a successful
landing became an article for the Public Relations Officer and was
picked up in state side papers and by "Stars and Stripes".
How it all started
- this is the statement of the pilot, Leslie Bond, taken from Accident
Report No. 44-4-8-520.
The Engineering Officer, Capt Edgar C. Kurner
added the following: "Investigation revealed shaft had sheared
on retracting motor clutch housing. Unsatisfactory Report has been
submitted on design of landing gear motor shaft. Damage to aircraft
was negligible."
Lt.
Col. Conway S. Hall (534th BS C.O.) tells how after the first attempt
he landed to get a longer rope and an aircraft capable of flying
better formation with the B-17. The aircraft he returned in was
B-17E #41-9043 "Little Rock-ette". This aircraft was used
as the group's auxiliary aircraft, it was stripped of armor and
weapons. Without the excess weight, it was quite fast. The aircraft
is shown here. The nose and engine nacelles were painted red with
a red stripe that runs along the fuselage past the wings and terminates
near the waist.
Lt.
Col. Hall also tells how he flew in formation 50 feet above and
slightly ahead of the "Carolina Queen" while someone else
lowered the bag of tools. "I instructed the pilot [Lt. Bond]
to keep looking straight ahead during this maneuver and not to look
at me. Afterwards, we made sure every aircraft in the squadron had
those tools aboard!"
Which aircraft was first flown seems to be in
question. Lt. Bond and other sources indicate it was a Douglas A-20
Havoc, but Col. Hall recalled at the 1999 Houston Reunion that it
was a Vultee A-35 that he had "liberated". Both aircraft
were auxiliary birds at Ridgewell. To his credit these events did
take place 56 years ago. I intend to interview him again to gather
more of his recollections.
This picture of Conway Hall was taken at the
381st BGMA 1999 Reunion in Houston, Texas.

Douglas A-20 Havoc (Boston to the Brits) at Ridgewell

Vultee A-31/A-35 Vengeance at Ridgewell
From Neal Clyman's hometown paper in Bloomfield,
Iowa.
...Lt. Col. Hall, Little Rock, Ark., took off
in another Fortress with the required tools and a rope to drop them
into the hatch of the disabled bomber circling the field. The first
try failed because the rope was too short. Sgt. Clyman got hold
of it once, but it nearly jerked him out of the "Carolina Queen."
The
next time, Hall used a three hundred foot rope and weighted the
tools with a sandbag. Clyman, tying himself to his own bomber, hooked
the tools while another gunner cut the rope with a knife.
The pilot of the crippled Fortress then flew
the plane out over the North sea and the ball turret was dropped,
which then permitted the "Carolina Queen," to make a successful
crash landing.
"Snagging those tools was just like threading
a needle in midair," members of the Fortress crew agreed.
"Mr. And Mrs. Clyman first learned of their son's
heroic exploit from a radio broadcast which was also heard by several
other Bloomfield acquaintances of the local airman. Accounts of
the episode involving Sergeant Clyman have also appeared in several
newspapers throughout the nation."
Dropping the Ball Turret in Flight (taken from
the B-17 technical orders)
When preparing to bring the B-17 in for an emergency
wheels-up landing it is desirable to drop the ball turret in order
to minimize damage to the fuselage when it hits the ground.
It is both safer and easier to release only
the ball itself, leaving the supporting yoke intact. Only 2 tools--a
crescent wrench and a hammer--are needed to do the job. Two men
can accomplish it in approximately 20 minutes.
(1)
Turn the guns aft and down.
(2) Remove the azimuth gear case by taking out
four bolts which hold it.
(3) Remove the safety retaining hooks with a
socket wrench if available, or by breaking them off with a hammer.
(4) If there is time, disconnect the electrical
plug and the oxygen line.
(5) Drop the turret by removing the twelve yoke
connection nuts. The turret may land up on the fire cut-off cam,
but a swift kick from the aft side of the ball will dislodge it.
NOTE: If time permits, salvage the computing
sight before dropping the turret. Removal of the sight may add approximately
20 minutes to the time, making total time necessary for the operation
about 40 minutes.
To remove the sight, disconnect the three flexible
drive cables at the left, right and far sides of the sight. Disconnect
the electrical plug. Free the sight by removing the sight retaining
rod.
Remember these 3 rules for making emergency landings
to minimize structural damage:
1. When landing the B-17 with wheels retracted,
drop the ball turret.
2. When belly-landing a B-17 in which a chin
turret is installed, retract the tailwheel also.
3. With 3/4 flaps down.
The AAF version titled "Better Late Than Never"
is quoted here:
51925 USAF - BETTER LATE THAN NEVER - Five hours
after the other ships in the group had returned from a bombing mission
over Oldenberg, Germany, April 8, 1944, the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress
"Carolina Queen" pilot[ed] by Lt. Leslie A. Bond of Chickasha, Okla.,
came sliding home in a flawless belly landing. Unable to lower the
ship’s wheels to normal landing position, Lt. Bond was compelled
to circle about until what is believed to be the first successful
tool-passing job in the ATO was accomplished. Lt. Col. Conway S.
Hall of North Little Rock, Ark., deputy group commander, piloted
the Fortress from which special tools used to jettison "Carolina
Queen’s" ball turret, were passed by cable to a crewman standing
in the radio hatch of the latter ship. Patterned after the successful
aerial refueling stunts of the old endurance fliers the wartime
version was enacted. With tools so unusually provided "Carolina
Queen" ball turret was able to be loosened and finally dropped over
the English Channel. Lt. Bond returned to base and brought his ship
in for a perfect landing, made easier on both pilot and plane by
absence of obstructing fuselage straining under turret. Only damage
was bent propeller and skinned under-carriage and it will be in
the air very shortly.






Front row (L-R):
1) Lt. Col. Conway S. Hall (534th
BS CO, eventual CO of 381st BG - not a crew member), 2)
2nd Lt Leslie A. Bond - pilot, 3)
2nd Lt. Gerald O. Hilton - bombardier, 4)
S/Sgt. Anthony A. Caserta - ball turret gunner.
Back row (L-R):
5) S/Sgt Neal V. Clyman - engineer
& top turret gunner, 6) S/Sgt.
William R. Jones Jr. - radio operator holding a white bag, 7)
2nd Lt. Charles E. Brumback - navigator, 8)
Sgt. Robert K. Batchelder - tail gunner, 9)
Sgt. Earl Ornduff - right waist gunner, 10)
Sgt. A.C. Derrington - left waist gunner, 11)
2nd. Lt. Wilbur M. Mason - co-pilot.
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