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On 5 January 1945, a U.S. Air Force B17 targeting Hamburg was hit by German anti-aircraft fire.Forced to return, it crashed in the field. The crew escaped unhurt.
On 5 January 1945, at 1.06pm, in the skies over Europe, an American B-17 bomber, valiantly taking off from the British base at Great Ashfield, embarked on a crucial bombing mission aimed at the German town of Heilbronn. The chill in the air and the hum of the engines revealed the magnitude of the task ahead for the crew of Lieutenant Carl Hamilton, co-pilot Lieutenant James W. Smith, navigator Lieutenant John R. Jones, bombardier Sergeant Walter B.Jones, radio operator and gunner Sergeant Charles D. Terry, back gunner Sergeant Robert L. Johnson, and belly gunner Sergeant George W. Reed.
However, a few minutes before reaching its objective, fate decided otherwise. The fearsome German D.C.A. fire hit the aircraft, forcing it to turn around. As it inexorably lost altitude, another burst of enemy fire targeted it near the German-Belgian border.
In a dangerous ballet with the capricious weather, the plane, engulfed in fog, began a precipitous descent. It crash-landed in a snow-covered meadow near Bonnerue, Belgium. Miraculously, the seven crew members emerged unscathed from this unexpected ordeal.
The aircraft, although scarred by three hits to its engines, became the subject of a frenzy of activity by local residents. Fuel was recovered, and parts of the aircraft were carefully dismantled.
Today, a humble stake marks the site of this forced landing, a reminder of the B-17's incredible fate.
This incursion into enemy territory, followed by the miraculous landing, bears witness to the heroic challenges faced by bomber pilots during the Second World War. These perilous missions were marked by moments of intense danger, when luck and bravery combined in an aerial dance over the battlefields.
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