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Memphis Belle (aircraft)

The Memphis Belle is a Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress used during the Second World War that inspired the making of two motion pictures: a 1944 documentary film, Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress and the 1990 Hollywood feature film, Memphis Belle. It was one of the first United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) B-17 heavy bombers to complete 25 combat missions, after which the aircrew returned with the bomber to the United States to sell war bonds.[2]

Memphis Belle
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress, Memphis Belle, 324th Bomb Squadron, 91st Bomb Group, 9 June 1943
Type Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress
Manufacturer Boeing Aircraft Company
Construction number 3170[1]
Serial 41-24485
Radio code DF-A
Owners and operators United States Army Air Forces
Status On display
Preserved at National Museum of the United States Air Force

In 2005 restoration began on the Memphis Belle at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio where, since May 2018, it has been on display.[3][4] One of the B-17s used in the 1990 feature film was most recently housed at the National Warplane Museum in Geneseo, New York but is currently undergoing extensive maintenance at the Palm Springs Air Museum in California.[5][6]

Early history edit

 
The crew back from their 25th operational mission. All were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal.

The Memphis Belle, a Boeing-built B-17F-10-BO, manufacturer's serial number 3170, USAAC Serial No. 41-24485, was added to the USAAF inventory on 15 July 1942,[7] and delivered in September 1942 to the 91st Bombardment Group at Dow Field, Bangor, Maine.[8] It deployed to Prestwick, Scotland, on 30 September 1942, moving to a temporary base at RAF Kimbolton on 1 October, and then finally to its permanent base at RAF Bassingbourn, England, on 14 October.[8] Each side of the fuselage bore the unit and aircraft identification markings of a B-17 of the 324th Bomb Squadron (Heavy), with the squadron code "DF" and individual aircraft letter "A".[7][9]

Source of the name edit

The B-17 was named after pilot Robert K. Morgan's sweetheart, Margaret Polk, a resident of Memphis, Tennessee. Morgan originally intended to call the bomber Little One, which was his pet name for Polk. After Morgan and copilot Jim Verinis viewed the feature film Lady for a Night, in which the leading character owns a riverboat named the Memphis Belle, he proposed that name to his aircrew, who agreed to the name by vote.[10] Morgan then contacted George Petty at the offices of Esquire magazine and asked him for a pinup drawing to go with the name, which Petty supplied from the magazine's April 1941 issue.[11]

The 91st's group artist, Corporal Tony Starcer, copied, then transferred the Petty girl artwork to both sides of the forward fuselage, depicting her swimsuit in blue on the aircraft's port side and in red on the starboard side. The nose art later included 25 bomb shapes, one for each mission credit, and eight Nazi swastikas, one for each German aircraft claimed shot down by the crew. Station and crew names were stenciled below station windows on the bomber after its tour of duty was completed.

Crew and combat missions edit

 
Crew of the Memphis Belle, left to right: Tech Sgt Loch, S Sgt Scott, Tech Sgt Hanson, Capt Verinis, Capt. Morgan ; Capt. Leighton, Staff Sgt. Quinlan., Staff Sgt. Nastal; Capt. Vincent Evans and Staff Sgt. Winchell.

The crew for the Memphis Belle was as follows:[12]

  • Pilot: Captain Robert K. Morgan
  • Co-pilot: Captain James A. Verinis
  • Navigator: Captain Charles B. Leighton
  • Bombardier: Captain Vincent B. Evans
  • The First Engineer/Top Turret Gunner: Leviticus "Levy" Dillon
  • The Second Engineer/Top Turret Gunner: Eugene Adkins
  • The Third Engineer/Top Turret Gunner: Harold P. Loch
  • Radio Operator: Robert Hanson
  • Ball Turret Gunner: Cecil Scott
  • Right Waist Gunner: E. Scott Miller
  • Right Waist Gunner: Casmer A "Tony" Nastal
  • Left Waist Gunner: Clarence E. "Bill" Winchell
  • Tail Gunner: John P. Quinlan
  • Crew Chief: Joe Giambrone
  • Mascot: Stuka the Scottish Terrier[13]

Captain Robert K. Morgan's crew flew 25 combat missions with the 324th Bomb Squadron; all but four were in the Memphis Belle. The bomber's 25 combat missions were:

Morgan's crew completed the following missions in B-17s other than the Memphis Belle:

  • 4 February 1943 – Emden, Germany (in B-17 DF-H 41-24515 Jersey Bounce)[21]
  • 26 February 1943 – Wilhelmshaven, Germany (in B-17 41-24515)[22]
  • 5 April 1943 – Antwerp, Belgium (in B-17 41-24480 Bad Penny)[22]
  • 4 May 1943 – Antwerp, Belgium (in B-17 41-24527, The Great Speckled Bird)[23]

The Memphis Belle was flown back to the United States on 8 June 1943 by a composite crew chosen by the Eighth Air Force, airmen who had flown combat aboard; they were led by Capt. Morgan for a 31-city war bond tour. Morgan's original co-pilot was Capt. James A. Verinis, who himself piloted the Memphis Belle for one mission. Verinis was promoted to aircraft commander of another B-17 for his final 16 missions and finished his tour on 13 May. He rejoined Morgan's crew as co-pilot for the flight back to the United States.

Other 25 mission aircraft edit

A B-17E, serial number 41-2489 and nicknamed "Suzy-Q", of the 19th Bombardment Group, was the first USAAF heavy bomber in any theater to complete 25 missions (flown in the Pacific from February to October 1942) and return to the US.[24]

A B-24D Liberator, serial number 41-23728 and nicknamed "Hot Stuff", of the 93rd Bombardment Group, was the first B-24 in the European Theater to complete 25 missions, in February 1943, and reached 31 missions before it was sent back to the US. It crashed in Iceland on 3 May 1943, killing the commander of all United States forces in the European Theater of Operations at the time, Lieutenant General Frank Maxwell Andrews.[24]

Recent research by Mick Hanou, president of the 91st Bombardment Group Memorial Association, and historian Jeff Duford, senior historian at the Air Force Research Laboratory History Office in Dayton, Ohio, and a former curator at the National Museum of the United States Air Force, has confirmed that a B-17F of the 323rd Bombardment Squadron, 91st Bombardment Group, serial number 42-5077 and nicknamed Delta Rebel No. 2, completed 25 credited combat missions on 1 May 1943. Delta Rebel No. 2, was the first B-17 in the European Theater to complete the feat, two weeks before Hell's Angels. Delta Rebel No. 2, was shot down during the 12 August 1943 mission to Gelsenkirchen, Germany, with six of its crew captured as prisoners of war and four killed in action.[25]

A B-17F, serial number 41-24577 and nicknamed Hell's Angels, of the 303rd Bombardment Group, completed 25 combat missions on 13 May 1943.[16][26]

Postwar history edit

In his memoirs, Morgan claimed that during his publicity tour, he flew the Memphis Belle between the Buncombe County Courthouse and the City Hall of Asheville, North Carolina, his home town. Morgan wrote that after leaving a local airport he decided to buzz the town, telling his copilot, Captain Verinis, "I think we'll just drive up over the city and give them a little goodbye salute". Morgan turned the bomber down Patton Avenue, a main thoroughfare, toward downtown Asheville. When he observed the courthouse and the city hall (two tall buildings that are only about 50 ft (20 m) apart) dead ahead, he lowered his left wing in a 60 degree bank and flew between the structures. He wrote that the city hall housed an AAF weather detachment, whose commanding officer allegedly complained immediately to the Pentagon, but was advised by a duty officer that "Major Morgan...has been given permission to buzz by General Henry "Hap" Arnold".[27]

On 23 December 1943, the Memphis Belle, having completed its combat assignment and subsequent stateside war bond drive, was assigned to MacDill Field, Florida. It became a B-17 aircrew and ground crew training aircraft, remaining at MacDill Field until after Victory in Europe Day (VE Day). After VE Day, the aircraft was flown to Altus AAF, Oklahoma for storage and eventual reclamation.[28]

Display in Memphis edit

After the war, the Memphis Belle was saved by the mayor of Memphis, Walter Chandler, from Altus Army Airfield where it had been consigned since 1 August 1945. He arranged for the city of Memphis to buy the B-17 for US$350 (equivalent to $5,923 in 2023).[29][30] It was flown to Memphis in July 1946 and stored until mid-1949, when the bomber was placed on display at the National Guard armory near the city's fairgrounds. It sat out-of-doors into the 1980s, slowly deteriorating from weather and vandalism. Souvenir hunters removed almost all of the interior components. Eventually, no instruments were left in the cockpit, and virtually every removable piece of the B-17's interior had been scavenged, often severing the wiring and control cables in the process.

 
The Memphis Belle on a War Bond campaign at Patterson Field during World War II.

In the early 1970s another mayor donated the historic B-17 back to the custody of the United States Air Force, but they allowed it to remain in Memphis, contingent on it being maintained. Efforts by the locally organized Memphis Belle Memorial Association, Inc. (MBMA) saw the bomber moved to Mud Island in the Mississippi River in 1987 for display in a new pavilion with large tarp cover.[30] It was still open to the elements, however, and prone to weathering. Pigeons nested inside the tarp, and their droppings were constantly needing removal from the bomber. Dissatisfaction with the site led to efforts to create a new museum facility in Shelby County. In the summer of 2003 the Memphis Belle was disassembled and moved to a restoration facility at the former Naval Air Station Memphis in Millington, Tennessee for the work needed. In September 2004, however, the National Museum of the United States Air Force, apparently tiring of the ups-and-downs of the city's attempts to preserve the B-17, indicated that they wanted it back for restoration and eventual display at the museum at Wright-Patterson AFB near Dayton, Ohio. The Memphis Belle-The Final Chapter in Memphis, a documentary film by Ken Axmaker, Jr., focuses on the history of the Belle in Memphis, emphasizing the final days and the volunteers who tried to keep one of the most famous aircraft in the world and another Memphis icon from disappearing.

Move to Dayton edit

 
Memphis Belle during refurbishment in 2011.
 
Memphis Belle after refurbishment was completed in 2018.

On 30 August 2005, the MBMA announced that a consultant that they hired determined that the MBMA would not be able to raise enough money to restore the Belle and otherwise fulfill the Air Force's requirements to keep possession of the bomber. They announced plans to return the B-17 to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB near Dayton, Ohio, after a final exhibition at an airshow in Millington, Tennessee from 30 September–2 October 2005. The Belle arrived safely at the museum in mid-October 2005 and was placed in one of the museum's restoration hangars.

Restoration of the Memphis Belle was put near the top of the museum's priorities. In Friends Journal, the magazine of the museum's foundation, director Major General Charles D. Metcalf, USAF (Ret), stated that it might take eight to 10 years to fully restore the bomber.

By the spring of 2009, considerable preparatory work had been accomplished, but the fuselage and wings were still disassembled.[31]

After stripping the paint from the aft fuselage, hundreds of names and personal messages were found scratched in the aluminum skin. It turned out that, during the B-17's war bond tour, people were allowed to leave their marks. Footage of people writing on the bomber can be seen in the documentary film The Cold Blue.

 
The Memphis Belle display, February 2023

In May 2017 the museum announced the goal of completing the restoration and putting the Memphis Belle on display by 17 May 2018, the 75th anniversary of the aircraft completing its 25th mission.[32] On 14 March 2018, the Memphis Belle was moved into the museum's WWII Gallery in a private event and was officially unveiled two months later on 17 May 2018.[4]

Memphis Belle film (1990) edit

 
The B-17 that portrayed Memphis Belle in the 1990 film at the Joint Service Open House at Andrews Air Force Base in 2008.

Five airworthy B-17s were used in the filming of the 1990 British-American war drama Memphis Belle. Two were from the US — B-17G serial number 44-83546 and B-17F serial number 42-29782 — and one from the United Kingdom, B-17G serial number 44-85784. Two French geographic survey B-17Gs were also used: serial number 44-85643 (French civilian registration F-BEEA), which crashed on take-off near the end of filming, and serial number 44-8846 (French civilian registration F-AZDX; The Pink Lady).

The B-17Gs had some sections converted for the film into the B-17F configuration. Serial number 44-83546 was converted by installing a Sperry top turret, early-style tail gunner's compartment, and waist gunner's positions; it also had its chin turret removed. After appearing in the film, the bomber continued to make air show appearances in that configuration. Originally painted with the Warner Bros. film versions of the nose art and markings, this plane (owned by restaurateur David Tallichet until his death in 2007) now carries the historic markings found on the real Memphis Belle. It is currently leased by the National Warplane Museum in Geneseo, New York and was housed there until late 2021 when the plane was shipped to California to undergo extensive maintenance work at the Palm Springs Air Museum where it currently remains.[33][6] It carries civilian registration N3703G and is colloquially known as "the movie Memphis Belle".

Serial number 44-85784 is the last airworthy B-17 in the United Kingdom and is based at the Imperial War Museum Duxford. It is part of the USAAC World War II Memorial Flight and makes dozens of appearances across the United Kingdom and Northern Europe. It is maintained and run by volunteers, relying solely upon donations to keep it restored and flying. It carries UK civilian registration G-BEDF and is known as Sally B.

In addition to the airworthy B-17s used for the taxiing and flying sequences, others were used as background aircraft for scenes shot at the film's airbase; these were not used to portray the Memphis Belle. Serial number 42-29782 is now located at the Museum of Flight, in Seattle, Washington. It carries civilian registration N17W and is now known as the Boeing Bee.

Other aircraft named Memphis Belle edit

 
Air Force Chief of Staff General Ronald Fogleman flying the "Memphis Belle IV" Boeing B-52 Stratofortress.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ AAC training aids publication (July 1943) listed "the ship's" 25 missions. The mission list is crew's, however, not the aircraft's, as it lists missions of 4 February, 26 February, 5 April, and 4 May, which crew flew in other aircraft, and omits missions when others flew the Memphis Belle.
  2. ^ a b c sources disagree on which two of these three missions, Memphis Belle received mission credits
  1. ^ Only Morgan's account supports that he flew the Memphis Belle on this mission. The 303rd BG website states he flew 515 this date, and the 324th dailies do not show him on mission at all.[17]
  2. ^ All references except Morgan show this as the 25th mission of the Memphis Belle. Morgan states that all flights of the Memphis Belle after 15 May were local only, for the purpose of "touchup shots" to complete editing of the film.[20]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Joseph F. Baugher's U.S. military aircraft serials and construction numbers; http://www.joebaugher.com/usaf_bombers/b17_11.html
  2. ^ "B-17 Flying Fortress". United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 2012-07-19. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  3. ^ Barber, Barrie (18 January 2017). . Dayton Daily News. Archived from the original on 2017-01-31. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  4. ^ a b Preuss, Andreas (2018-05-17). "Memphis Belle bomber newly restored and unveiled at US Air Force museum". CNN. Retrieved 2018-05-17.
  5. ^ "Home". nationalwarplanemuseum.com.
  6. ^ a b Aero Vintage Books, B-17G 44-83546 at the Palm Springs Air Museum Update: August 19, 2022, Retrieved Aug. 18, 2023.
  7. ^ a b Havelaar 1995, p. 211.
  8. ^ a b Bishop 1986, p. 133.
  9. ^ Bishop 1986, p. 233.
  10. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, p. 98.
  11. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, p. 99.
  12. ^ Zhou, Jing. "Memphis Belle – Crew". Retrieved 2016-05-27.
  13. ^ "Stuka the Scottish Terrier | American Air Museum in Britain".
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "25 Missions: The Story of the Memphis Belle." Air Fronts. Retrieved: 12 August 2008
  15. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, pp.127, 384 (Mission list).
  16. ^ a b c "Hells Angels vs. Memphis Belle, Historical Information." 303rd Bomb Group Association. Retrieved: 11 August 2008.
  17. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, pp. 178, 384.
  18. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, p. 187.
  19. ^ "1943 dailies of 324th Bomb squadron." 91st Bomb group Association. Retrieved: 11 August 2008.
  20. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, p. 215.
  21. ^ Morgan and Powers, pp. 167, 384.
  22. ^ a b Morgan, pp. 177 and 384.
  23. ^ Morgan and Powers, pp. 196, 385.
  24. ^ a b "Heavy Bomber "Firsts"". National Museum of the United States Air Force™. Retrieved 2024-01-29.
  25. ^ "The Race to 25 Missions: Some of the First 8th Air Force B-17s to Complete 25 Combat Missions". 303rd Bombardment Group Association. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  26. ^ National Museum of the United States Air Force, 25 June 2009. Retrieved: 16 July 2017.
  27. ^ Morgan and Powers 2001, pp. 241–242.
  28. ^ "MacDill Air Force Base once home to famed 'Memphis Belle'".
  29. ^ Bernstein, Mark (November 2008). "Restoration: The Memphis Belle For this famous B-17, surviving 25 missions in World War II was the easy part". Air and Space Magazine. Retrieved 2018-06-05.
  30. ^ a b Finger, Michael (3 December 2013). "The Past, Present, and Future of the Memphis Belle". Memphis Magazine. Retrieved 2018-06-05.
  31. ^ Kern, Chris. "Restoring an Icon: The 'Memphis Belle'."ChrisKern.Net. Retrieved: 12 June 2009.
  32. ^ Stacy, Mitch (May 28, 2017). "Long-Awaited Display of Restored Memphis Belle Set for 2018". Savannah Morning News. Associated Press. Retrieved May 28, 2017.
  33. ^ National Warplane Museum, Retrieved Jul. 18, 2018.
  34. ^ "Picture of 'Memphis Belle II'." marvellouswings.com. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.
  35. ^ Nelowkin, Wolodymir. "Rockwell B-1B Lancer 86-0133." myaviation.net, 3 February 2003. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.
  36. ^ "Picture of 'Memphis Belle II'." marvellouswings.com. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.
  37. ^ Picture of 'Memphis Belle IV'." militaryaircraft. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.
  38. ^ Halford, David. "Picture of 'Memphis Belle V'." lastrefuge.co. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.
  39. ^ Scanlon, M.J. Aviation Photo #1023064 Lockheed C-5A Galaxy (L-500) - USA - Air Force airliners.net, 2006. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.
  40. ^ Derden, Jonathan, "Picture of 'Spirit of Memphis Belle'." airliners.net, 6 November 2003. Retrieved: 1 December 2012.

Bibliography edit

  • Bishop, Cliff T. Fortresses of the Big Triangle First. Bishops Stortford, UK: East Anglia Books, 1986, pp. 133, 135, and 233. ISBN 1-869987-00-4.
  • Freeman, Roger A., The Mighty Eighth War Diary. London: Jane's, 1990, pp. 36, 59. ISBN 0-87938-495-6.
  • Havelaar, Marion H., and Hess, William N. The Ragged Irregulars of Bassingbourn: The 91st Bombardment Group in World War II. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer, 1995, pp. 38–40, 211, 212. ISBN 0-88740-810-9.
  • Morgan, Col. Robert K., Ret., with Ron Powers. The Man Who Flew the Memphis Belle. New York: Dutton, 2001. ISBN 0-525-94610-1.
  • Thompson, Scott A. Final Cut – The Post-War B-17 Flying Fortress: The Survivors, Second edition. Missoula, Missouri: Pictorial Histories Pub. Co., 2000. ISBN 1-57510-077-0.

External links edit

  • Memphis Belle National Museum of the USAF Fact Sheet
  • via Wayback Machine
  • B-17F Memphis Belle Moved to WWII Gallery at dvidshub.net
  • Memphis Belle Memorial Association (former custodian of the Memphis Belle)
  • Restoring an Icon: The Memphis Belle at ChrisKern.Net
  • Memphis Belle 1943 color documentary from inside bombing run over Germany via YouTube

memphis, belle, aircraft, this, article, about, aircraft, other, uses, including, films, about, aircraft, memphis, belle, memphis, belle, boeing, flying, fortress, used, during, second, world, that, inspired, making, motion, pictures, 1944, documentary, film, . This article is about the aircraft For other uses including films about the aircraft see Memphis Belle The Memphis Belle is a Boeing B 17F Flying Fortress used during the Second World War that inspired the making of two motion pictures a 1944 documentary film Memphis Belle A Story of a Flying Fortress and the 1990 Hollywood feature film Memphis Belle It was one of the first United States Army Air Forces USAAF B 17 heavy bombers to complete 25 combat missions after which the aircrew returned with the bomber to the United States to sell war bonds 2 Memphis Belle Boeing B 17F Flying Fortress Memphis Belle 324th Bomb Squadron 91st Bomb Group 9 June 1943 Type Boeing B 17F Flying Fortress Manufacturer Boeing Aircraft Company Construction number 3170 1 Serial 41 24485 Radio code DF A Owners and operators United States Army Air Forces Status On display Preserved at National Museum of the United States Air Force In 2005 restoration began on the Memphis Belle at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson AFB in Dayton Ohio where since May 2018 it has been on display 3 4 One of the B 17s used in the 1990 feature film was most recently housed at the National Warplane Museum in Geneseo New York but is currently undergoing extensive maintenance at the Palm Springs Air Museum in California 5 6 Contents 1 Early history 2 Source of the name 3 Crew and combat missions 4 Other 25 mission aircraft 5 Postwar history 5 1 Display in Memphis 5 2 Move to Dayton 6 Memphis Belle film 1990 7 Other aircraft named Memphis Belle 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly history edit nbsp The crew back from their 25th operational mission All were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal The Memphis Belle a Boeing built B 17F 10 BO manufacturer s serial number 3170 USAAC Serial No 41 24485 was added to the USAAF inventory on 15 July 1942 7 and delivered in September 1942 to the 91st Bombardment Group at Dow Field Bangor Maine 8 It deployed to Prestwick Scotland on 30 September 1942 moving to a temporary base at RAF Kimbolton on 1 October and then finally to its permanent base at RAF Bassingbourn England on 14 October 8 Each side of the fuselage bore the unit and aircraft identification markings of a B 17 of the 324th Bomb Squadron Heavy with the squadron code DF and individual aircraft letter A 7 9 Source of the name editThe B 17 was named after pilot Robert K Morgan s sweetheart Margaret Polk a resident of Memphis Tennessee Morgan originally intended to call the bomber Little One which was his pet name for Polk After Morgan and copilot Jim Verinis viewed the feature film Lady for a Night in which the leading character owns a riverboat named the Memphis Belle he proposed that name to his aircrew who agreed to the name by vote 10 Morgan then contacted George Petty at the offices of Esquire magazine and asked him for a pinup drawing to go with the name which Petty supplied from the magazine s April 1941 issue 11 The 91st s group artist Corporal Tony Starcer copied then transferred the Petty girl artwork to both sides of the forward fuselage depicting her swimsuit in blue on the aircraft s port side and in red on the starboard side The nose art later included 25 bomb shapes one for each mission credit and eight Nazi swastikas one for each German aircraft claimed shot down by the crew Station and crew names were stenciled below station windows on the bomber after its tour of duty was completed Crew and combat missions edit nbsp Crew of the Memphis Belle left to right Tech Sgt Loch S Sgt Scott Tech Sgt Hanson Capt Verinis Capt Morgan Capt Leighton Staff Sgt Quinlan Staff Sgt Nastal Capt Vincent Evans and Staff Sgt Winchell The crew for the Memphis Belle was as follows 12 Pilot Captain Robert K Morgan Co pilot Captain James A Verinis Navigator Captain Charles B Leighton Bombardier Captain Vincent B Evans The First Engineer Top Turret Gunner Leviticus Levy Dillon The Second Engineer Top Turret Gunner Eugene Adkins The Third Engineer Top Turret Gunner Harold P Loch Radio Operator Robert Hanson Ball Turret Gunner Cecil Scott Right Waist Gunner E Scott Miller Right Waist Gunner Casmer A Tony Nastal Left Waist Gunner Clarence E Bill Winchell Tail Gunner John P Quinlan Crew Chief Joe Giambrone Mascot Stuka the Scottish Terrier 13 Captain Robert K Morgan s crew flew 25 combat missions with the 324th Bomb Squadron all but four were in the Memphis Belle The bomber s 25 combat missions were 7 November 1942 Brest France 14 a 9 November 1942 St Nazaire France 14 17 November 1942 St Nazaire France 14 6 December 1942 Lille France 14 20 December 1942 b Romilly sur Seine France 14 15 16 30 December 1942 Lorient France flown by Lt James A Verinis 3 January 1943 St Nazaire France 14 13 January 1943 Lille France 14 23 January 1943 Lorient France 14 14 February 1943 Hamm Germany 14 16 February 1943 St Nazaire France 14 27 February 1943 b Brest France 14 N 1 6 March 1943 Lorient France 14 12 March 1943 Rouen France 14 13 March 1943 Abbeville France 14 22 March 1943 Wilhelmshaven Germany 14 28 March 1943 Rouen France 14 31 March 1943 Rotterdam Netherlands 16 18 19 16 April 1943 Lorient France 14 17 April 1943 Bremen Germany 14 1 May 1943 St Nazaire France 14 13 May 1943 Meaulte France flown by Lt C L Anderson 14 May 1943 Kiel Germany flown by Lt John H Miller 15 May 1943 Wilhelmshaven Germany 14 17 May 1943 Lorient France 14 19 May 1943 b Kiel Germany flown by Lt Anderson N 2 Morgan s crew completed the following missions in B 17s other than the Memphis Belle 4 February 1943 Emden Germany in B 17 DF H 41 24515 Jersey Bounce 21 26 February 1943 Wilhelmshaven Germany in B 17 41 24515 22 5 April 1943 Antwerp Belgium in B 17 41 24480 Bad Penny 22 4 May 1943 Antwerp Belgium in B 17 41 24527 The Great Speckled Bird 23 The Memphis Belle was flown back to the United States on 8 June 1943 by a composite crew chosen by the Eighth Air Force airmen who had flown combat aboard they were led by Capt Morgan for a 31 city war bond tour Morgan s original co pilot was Capt James A Verinis who himself piloted the Memphis Belle for one mission Verinis was promoted to aircraft commander of another B 17 for his final 16 missions and finished his tour on 13 May He rejoined Morgan s crew as co pilot for the flight back to the United States Other 25 mission aircraft editA B 17E serial number 41 2489 and nicknamed Suzy Q of the 19th Bombardment Group was the first USAAF heavy bomber in any theater to complete 25 missions flown in the Pacific from February to October 1942 and return to the US 24 A B 24D Liberator serial number 41 23728 and nicknamed Hot Stuff of the 93rd Bombardment Group was the first B 24 in the European Theater to complete 25 missions in February 1943 and reached 31 missions before it was sent back to the US It crashed in Iceland on 3 May 1943 killing the commander of all United States forces in the European Theater of Operations at the time Lieutenant General Frank Maxwell Andrews 24 Recent research by Mick Hanou president of the 91st Bombardment Group Memorial Association and historian Jeff Duford senior historian at the Air Force Research Laboratory History Office in Dayton Ohio and a former curator at the National Museum of the United States Air Force has confirmed that a B 17F of the 323rd Bombardment Squadron 91st Bombardment Group serial number 42 5077 and nicknamed Delta Rebel No 2 completed 25 credited combat missions on 1 May 1943 Delta Rebel No 2 was the first B 17 in the European Theater to complete the feat two weeks before Hell s Angels Delta Rebel No 2 was shot down during the 12 August 1943 mission to Gelsenkirchen Germany with six of its crew captured as prisoners of war and four killed in action 25 A B 17F serial number 41 24577 and nicknamed Hell s Angels of the 303rd Bombardment Group completed 25 combat missions on 13 May 1943 16 26 Postwar history editIn his memoirs Morgan claimed that during his publicity tour he flew the Memphis Belle between the Buncombe County Courthouse and the City Hall of Asheville North Carolina his home town Morgan wrote that after leaving a local airport he decided to buzz the town telling his copilot Captain Verinis I think we ll just drive up over the city and give them a little goodbye salute Morgan turned the bomber down Patton Avenue a main thoroughfare toward downtown Asheville When he observed the courthouse and the city hall two tall buildings that are only about 50 ft 20 m apart dead ahead he lowered his left wing in a 60 degree bank and flew between the structures He wrote that the city hall housed an AAF weather detachment whose commanding officer allegedly complained immediately to the Pentagon but was advised by a duty officer that Major Morgan has been given permission to buzz by General Henry Hap Arnold 27 On 23 December 1943 the Memphis Belle having completed its combat assignment and subsequent stateside war bond drive was assigned to MacDill Field Florida It became a B 17 aircrew and ground crew training aircraft remaining at MacDill Field until after Victory in Europe Day VE Day After VE Day the aircraft was flown to Altus AAF Oklahoma for storage and eventual reclamation 28 Display in Memphis edit After the war the Memphis Belle was saved by the mayor of Memphis Walter Chandler from Altus Army Airfield where it had been consigned since 1 August 1945 He arranged for the city of Memphis to buy the B 17 for US 350 equivalent to 5 923 in 2023 29 30 It was flown to Memphis in July 1946 and stored until mid 1949 when the bomber was placed on display at the National Guard armory near the city s fairgrounds It sat out of doors into the 1980s slowly deteriorating from weather and vandalism Souvenir hunters removed almost all of the interior components Eventually no instruments were left in the cockpit and virtually every removable piece of the B 17 s interior had been scavenged often severing the wiring and control cables in the process nbsp The Memphis Belle on a War Bond campaign at Patterson Field during World War II In the early 1970s another mayor donated the historic B 17 back to the custody of the United States Air Force but they allowed it to remain in Memphis contingent on it being maintained Efforts by the locally organized Memphis Belle Memorial Association Inc MBMA saw the bomber moved to Mud Island in the Mississippi River in 1987 for display in a new pavilion with large tarp cover 30 It was still open to the elements however and prone to weathering Pigeons nested inside the tarp and their droppings were constantly needing removal from the bomber Dissatisfaction with the site led to efforts to create a new museum facility in Shelby County In the summer of 2003 the Memphis Belle was disassembled and moved to a restoration facility at the former Naval Air Station Memphis in Millington Tennessee for the work needed In September 2004 however the National Museum of the United States Air Force apparently tiring of the ups and downs of the city s attempts to preserve the B 17 indicated that they wanted it back for restoration and eventual display at the museum at Wright Patterson AFB near Dayton Ohio The Memphis Belle The Final Chapter in Memphis a documentary film by Ken Axmaker Jr focuses on the history of the Belle in Memphis emphasizing the final days and the volunteers who tried to keep one of the most famous aircraft in the world and another Memphis icon from disappearing Move to Dayton edit nbsp Memphis Belle during refurbishment in 2011 nbsp Memphis Belle after refurbishment was completed in 2018 On 30 August 2005 the MBMA announced that a consultant that they hired determined that the MBMA would not be able to raise enough money to restore the Belle and otherwise fulfill the Air Force s requirements to keep possession of the bomber They announced plans to return the B 17 to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson AFB near Dayton Ohio after a final exhibition at an airshow in Millington Tennessee from 30 September 2 October 2005 The Belle arrived safely at the museum in mid October 2005 and was placed in one of the museum s restoration hangars Restoration of the Memphis Belle was put near the top of the museum s priorities In Friends Journal the magazine of the museum s foundation director Major General Charles D Metcalf USAF Ret stated that it might take eight to 10 years to fully restore the bomber By the spring of 2009 considerable preparatory work had been accomplished but the fuselage and wings were still disassembled 31 After stripping the paint from the aft fuselage hundreds of names and personal messages were found scratched in the aluminum skin It turned out that during the B 17 s war bond tour people were allowed to leave their marks Footage of people writing on the bomber can be seen in the documentary film The Cold Blue nbsp The Memphis Belle display February 2023 In May 2017 the museum announced the goal of completing the restoration and putting the Memphis Belle on display by 17 May 2018 the 75th anniversary of the aircraft completing its 25th mission 32 On 14 March 2018 the Memphis Belle was moved into the museum s WWII Gallery in a private event and was officially unveiled two months later on 17 May 2018 4 Memphis Belle film 1990 editMain article Memphis Belle film nbsp The B 17 that portrayed Memphis Belle in the 1990 film at the Joint Service Open House at Andrews Air Force Base in 2008 Five airworthy B 17s were used in the filming of the 1990 British American war drama Memphis Belle Two were from the US B 17G serial number 44 83546 and B 17F serial number 42 29782 and one from the United Kingdom B 17G serial number 44 85784 Two French geographic survey B 17Gs were also used serial number 44 85643 French civilian registration F BEEA which crashed on take off near the end of filming and serial number 44 8846 French civilian registration F AZDX The Pink Lady The B 17Gs had some sections converted for the film into the B 17F configuration Serial number 44 83546 was converted by installing a Sperry top turret early style tail gunner s compartment and waist gunner s positions it also had its chin turret removed After appearing in the film the bomber continued to make air show appearances in that configuration Originally painted with the Warner Bros film versions of the nose art and markings this plane owned by restaurateur David Tallichet until his death in 2007 now carries the historic markings found on the real Memphis Belle It is currently leased by the National Warplane Museum in Geneseo New York and was housed there until late 2021 when the plane was shipped to California to undergo extensive maintenance work at the Palm Springs Air Museum where it currently remains 33 6 It carries civilian registration N3703G and is colloquially known as the movie Memphis Belle Serial number 44 85784 is the last airworthy B 17 in the United Kingdom and is based at the Imperial War Museum Duxford It is part of the USAAC World War II Memorial Flight and makes dozens of appearances across the United Kingdom and Northern Europe It is maintained and run by volunteers relying solely upon donations to keep it restored and flying It carries UK civilian registration G BEDF and is known as Sally B In addition to the airworthy B 17s used for the taxiing and flying sequences others were used as background aircraft for scenes shot at the film s airbase these were not used to portray the Memphis Belle Serial number 42 29782 is now located at the Museum of Flight in Seattle Washington It carries civilian registration N17W and is now known as the Boeing Bee Other aircraft named Memphis Belle edit nbsp Air Force Chief of Staff General Ronald Fogleman flying the Memphis Belle IV Boeing B 52 Stratofortress A Republic F 105D Thunderchief AF Ser No 60 0504 from 357th Tactical Fighter Squadron of the 355th Tactical Fighter Wing based at Takhli Royal Thai Air Base during the Vietnam War was named Memphis Belle II in honor of the original B 17F The aircraft claimed two MiG 17 kills in addition to numerous bombing missions and was the last F 105 to fly It is currently preserved at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton Ohio It was donated in April 1990 34 A Rockwell B 1B Lancer AF Ser No 86 0133 was named Memphis Belle In 1996 Colonel Robert K Morgan pilot of the original Memphis Belle received the opportunity to fly in this aircraft while it served with the Georgia Air National Guard s 116th Bomb Wing at Robins AFB Georgia 35 A General Dynamics FB 111A Aardvark AF Ser No 68 0267 was also nicknamed Memphis Belle II for a period during the 1980s It is currently located at the Strategic Air Command Museum located in Ashland Nebraska 36 Two Boeing B 52 Stratofortresses have carried the name Memphis Belle B 52G AF Ser No 59 2594 was named Memphis Belle III and took part in the 1991 Gulf War That aircraft was retired from active service as the B 52G was phased out of USAF service and sent to the AMARC at Davis Monthan AFB Arizona in October 1992 The first B 52H AF Ser No 60 0001 was named Memphis Belle IV and is currently assigned to the 2nd Bomb Wing at Barksdale Air Force Base Louisiana having seen action in both Iraq and Afghanistan in support of Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom 37 A McDonnell Douglas F 15E AF Ser No 89 0485 from the 336th Fighter Squadron 4th Fighter Wing flew with the nose art Memphis Belle III during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003 A Lockheed C 141 Starlifter AF Ser No 67 0024 became the Memphis Belle V It was transferred to the AMARC inventory upon the retirement of all C 141s from active service in the U S Air Force to include the Air Force Reserve and the Air National Guard 38 A Lockheed C 5 Galaxy AF Ser No 69 0025 was named the Memphis Belle X was assigned to the 164th Airlift Wing of the Tennessee Air National Guard at Memphis Air National Guard Base 39 A Boeing C 17 Globemaster III AF Ser No 93 0600 is named the Memphis Belle XI assigned currently to the 164th Airlift Wing of the Tennessee Air National Guard at Memphis Air National Guard Base Pinnacle Airlines first Bombardier CRJ N8390A is named Spirit of Memphis Belle 40 See also editVeterans Museum Halls Tennessee Strategic bombing during World War II Memphis Belle Memorial Alberto Vargas The Cold BlueNotes edit AAC training aids publication July 1943 listed the ship s 25 missions The mission list is crew s however not the aircraft s as it lists missions of 4 February 26 February 5 April and 4 May which crew flew in other aircraft and omits missions when others flew the Memphis Belle a b c sources disagree on which two of these three missions Memphis Belle received mission credits Only Morgan s account supports that he flew the Memphis Belle on this mission The 303rd BG website states he flew 515 this date and the 324th dailies do not show him on mission at all 17 All references except Morgan show this as the 25th mission of the Memphis Belle Morgan states that all flights of the Memphis Belle after 15 May were local only for the purpose of touchup shots to complete editing of the film 20 References editCitations edit Joseph F Baugher s U S military aircraft serials and construction numbers http www joebaugher com usaf bombers b17 11 html B 17 Flying Fortress United States Air Force Archived from the original on 2012 07 19 Retrieved 30 July 2011 Barber Barrie 18 January 2017 Memphis Belle to go on display at Air Force Museum in 2018 Dayton Daily News Archived from the original on 2017 01 31 Retrieved 18 January 2017 a b Preuss Andreas 2018 05 17 Memphis Belle bomber newly restored and unveiled at US Air Force museum CNN Retrieved 2018 05 17 Home nationalwarplanemuseum com a b Aero Vintage Books B 17G 44 83546 at the Palm Springs Air Museum Update August 19 2022 Retrieved Aug 18 2023 a b Havelaar 1995 p 211 a b Bishop 1986 p 133 Bishop 1986 p 233 Morgan and Powers 2001 p 98 Morgan and Powers 2001 p 99 Zhou Jing Memphis Belle Crew Retrieved 2016 05 27 Stuka the Scottish Terrier American Air Museum in Britain a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u 25 Missions The Story of the Memphis Belle Air Fronts Retrieved 12 August 2008 Morgan and Powers 2001 pp 127 384 Mission list a b c Hells Angels vs Memphis Belle Historical Information 303rd Bomb Group Association Retrieved 11 August 2008 Morgan and Powers 2001 pp 178 384 Morgan and Powers 2001 p 187 1943 dailies of 324th Bomb squadron 91st Bomb group Association Retrieved 11 August 2008 Morgan and Powers 2001 p 215 Morgan and Powers pp 167 384 a b Morgan pp 177 and 384 Morgan and Powers pp 196 385 a b Heavy Bomber Firsts National Museum of the United States Air Force Retrieved 2024 01 29 The Race to 25 Missions Some of the First 8th Air Force B 17s to Complete 25 Combat Missions 303rd Bombardment Group Association Retrieved March 6 2024 Boeing B 17F 25 BO Hell s Angels National Museum of the United States Air Force 25 June 2009 Retrieved 16 July 2017 Morgan and Powers 2001 pp 241 242 MacDill Air Force Base once home to famed Memphis Belle Bernstein Mark November 2008 Restoration The Memphis Belle For this famous B 17 surviving 25 missions in World War II was the easy part Air and Space Magazine Retrieved 2018 06 05 a b Finger Michael 3 December 2013 The Past Present and Future of the Memphis Belle Memphis Magazine Retrieved 2018 06 05 Kern Chris Restoring an Icon The Memphis Belle ChrisKern Net Retrieved 12 June 2009 Stacy Mitch May 28 2017 Long Awaited Display of Restored Memphis Belle Set for 2018 Savannah Morning News Associated Press Retrieved May 28 2017 National Warplane Museum Retrieved Jul 18 2018 Picture of Memphis Belle II marvellouswings com Retrieved 1 December 2012 Nelowkin Wolodymir Rockwell B 1B Lancer 86 0133 myaviation net 3 February 2003 Retrieved 1 December 2012 Picture of Memphis Belle II marvellouswings com Retrieved 1 December 2012 Picture of Memphis Belle IV militaryaircraft Retrieved 1 December 2012 Halford David Picture of Memphis Belle V lastrefuge co Retrieved 1 December 2012 Scanlon M J Aviation Photo 1023064 Lockheed C 5A Galaxy L 500 USA Air Force airliners net 2006 Retrieved 1 December 2012 Derden Jonathan Picture of Spirit of Memphis Belle airliners net 6 November 2003 Retrieved 1 December 2012 Bibliography edit Bishop Cliff T Fortresses of the Big Triangle First Bishops Stortford UK East Anglia Books 1986 pp 133 135 and 233 ISBN 1 869987 00 4 Freeman Roger A The Mighty Eighth War Diary London Jane s 1990 pp 36 59 ISBN 0 87938 495 6 Havelaar Marion H and Hess William N The Ragged Irregulars of Bassingbourn The 91st Bombardment Group in World War II Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer 1995 pp 38 40 211 212 ISBN 0 88740 810 9 Morgan Col Robert K Ret with Ron Powers The Man Who Flew the Memphis Belle New York Dutton 2001 ISBN 0 525 94610 1 Thompson Scott A Final Cut The Post War B 17 Flying Fortress The Survivors Second edition Missoula Missouri Pictorial Histories Pub Co 2000 ISBN 1 57510 077 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Memphis Belle B 17F Memphis Belle National Museum of the USAF Fact Sheet Memphis Belle National Museum of the USAF FAQ via Wayback Machine B 17F Memphis Belle Moved to WWII Gallery at dvidshub net Memphis Belle Memorial Association former custodian of the Memphis Belle Restoring an Icon The Memphis Belle at ChrisKern Net Memphis Belle 1943 color documentary from inside bombing run over Germany via YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Memphis Belle aircraft amp oldid 1216804248 Namesake, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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