Papua New Guinea abounds with the reminders of the waste of war,
but most of the relics have been stripped or salvaged for their
worth as scrap. Such a complete aeroplane is unique, a genuine historical
treasure trove.
The Flying Fortress was a big bomber. Powered by four 1200 horsepower
engines, the B17 was 74' long, with a wingspan of 103 ', and weighed
over 20 tons. Thirteen machine guns jutted from her turrets and
gunports to protect her crew of ten men.
B17 number 41-24521 was rolled out of Boeing's Seattle factory
one humid day in July of 1942, and 6 weeks later she joined the
43 Bomb Group, based in northern Australia. The 43rd was part of
the 5th Air Force, which had been formed to provide the aerial support
for General Douglas MacArthur's return to the Philippines and the
defeat of the Japanese Empire, but in September 1942 Japanese forces
were within 30 miles of Port Moresby, the last major Allied position
in New Guinea. The 5th Air Force was holding a desperate holding
action.
Fate had chosen 41-24521 to be more than just one of over 12000
Flying Fortresses built for the U.S. Army Air Forces. The brand
new bomber was assigned to Capt. Ken McCullar and his crew and was
given the nick name
BLACKJACK, an obvious choice when the
last two digits of her air force serial number were ''21''.
In the air, the bond between man and machine is real. In war it
becomes even stronger and such a bond was forged between Ken McCullar
and BLACKJACK. Ken McCullar was a flamboyant gambler and a totally
fearless aggressive pilot - he even had his ground crew fit a extra
machine gun in BLACKJACK'S nose, fired by a button on his control
wheel, so he could use the big bomber to duel with Japanese fighters.
He pioneered a tactic called ''skip bombing'' -night attacks against
Japanese shipping in port or at sea. The Fortresses would roar along
the moon slick at minimum altitude, releasing their bombs a hundred
feet short of the targeted skipping them off the water into the
side of the enemy ships at the waterline. It was dangerous, but
devastatingly effective.
BLACKJACK and Ken McCullar became a legendary team. His name is
still spoken with a kind of awe whenever 5th Air Force veterans
gather. Flying as many as three combat missions in one day, BLACKJACK
and McCullar always came back, sometimes against all odds.
There was a night in November 1942 when 5 Japanese destroyers,
laden with troops dashed from the navel bastion at Rabaul into the
Huon Gulf. The B17's were sent to stop them. McCullar made his first
bomb ran at 200ft as tracers lit up the soft darkness, and BLACKJACK
was rocked by the bursts of heavier shells. His bombs hit just off
the end of the ship, but the enemy fire had set off ammunition in
the B17 tail section, starting a fire. The crew was able to extinguish
it as McCullar positioned his plane for another bomb run. BLACKJACK
took more hits and shell fragments wounded three of the crew, but
their bombs started a blasé in the bow of the destroyer.
Japanese destroyers could put up a devastating shield of fire,
and BLACKJACK was hit hard when McCullar attempted a third attack.
The left outboard engine was hit and the controls were shot away.
Although his aeroplane was crippled McCullar made a fourth bomb
run, rocking the stricken Japanese ship, but taking more damage
to his aeroplane.
With two bombs left, McCullar made a fifth and final attack, this
time from 4000ft. That cost him the inboard engine on the right
wing, which was hit somewhere in the fuel system, and cut out. With
only two good engines, BLACKJACK began to loose altitude, and McCullar
and his crew were faced with the long climb over the Owen Stanley
mountains, which rise to a height of two miles, forming a rugged
spine along New Guinea.
The damaged left engine could have caught fire or exploded at any
time - McCullar could see it glowing cherry red in the darkness,
but there was never any doubt that he would stay with BLACKJACK
to the end. The propeller finally ground itself loose from the engine
and spun off into the darkness. The motor cooled down but BLACKJACK
was still sinking to earth. While the crew threw out all their ammunition
and other loose equipment to lighten the plane, the pilots tried
to restart the damaged engine, and were finally able to get partial
power from it BLACKJACK began to climb, very slowly. It took two
and a half-hours to reach 10000 feet, just enough for the bomber
to make it through a mountain pass and set the plane down safely
on the ground at Port Moresby. His persistence had paid off - later
that night the destroyer HAYASHIO exploded and sunk.
After McCullar's return to Moresby another plane was dispatched
to finish off the HAYASHIO and as the aircraft entered her bomb
run the vessel blew up and sank. While on her way back to MORESBY
she ran out of fuel and ditched at Cape Vogel this was an a Australian
BEAUFORT A-28-2 and it was this plane we were searching for when
we found BLACKJACK.
BLACKJACK and McCullar lived charmed lives together, and the Japanese
could not stop them. But McCullar died in a fiery take off crash
of another aeroplane, and BLACKJACK fell victim to the New Guinea
weather. Caught up in a violet storm, with a malfunctioning engine
vibrating so badly it threatened to tear itself from the wing and
the other on the same side giving only limited power, her crew was
unable to hold a straight course and became hopelessly lost. With
fuel running low they tried to land on the shallow waters of a reef,
but missed and landed in deep water. Three of the crew was wounded
in the crash, but all friendly natives rescued 10 men and an Australian
coast watcher named Eric Foster. The next day after a radio call
had been sent out by Foster a small seaplane arrived to take of
the wounded and leave supplies for the rest of the survivors Later
a P.T.boat arrived to take the remaining crewmembers to Goodenough
Island where they were flown back to Moresby.
The story of BLACKJACK and Ken McCullar has been told in a recant
documentary titled BLACKJACK'S LAST MISSION, filmed on location
in P.N.G. it covers the history of BLACKJACK and includes interviews
with crew members, villagers and other promandant people. It also
includes some incredible world war two and underwater footage.
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