Switch to full style
This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Post a reply

An Amazing Coincidence And a Great Story!!!!!!

Sun Jan 07, 2007 9:17 pm

A couple of days ago Lynn Allen made this post in Gary's diamond Lil thread.
I was going to run the Yellow Rose one Saturday when a old man walked up with that look in his eyes. He smiled and said that he flew B-25's in the Med's. I told him that I was going to run the engines to check the hyd system and could use his help with the checklist. Before I was finished asking him, he was in the right seat with the checklist waiting for me. With the engines running, you could see in his eyes, history was passing him by once again. Yes, its really great when a vet tells you thank you and you tell them, no, thank you.

I immediately knew who Lynn was referring to because he's a friend of mine. So here's the rest of the story. He fellow is Rev. Glenn T. Black and during WWII he flew B-25s in the 310th BG 12th AF from Corsica. On June 22, 1944 Lt Black led a mission to bomb shipping in Leghorn Harbor, Italy. The German were attempting to sink ships to block the harbor. Just has the bombardier calls bombs away there was a tremendous blast (it it believed that flak hit the bombs leaving the bomb bay) shook the B-25 wounding everyone in the forward part of the airplane. The left engine was knocked out, hydraulics disabled, fuel system damaged flooding the a/c with fuel, instruments damaged, prop control on the right engine shot away, and over 150 schrapnal holes. The co-pilot had a bad hip wound and Lt Black had his right elbow shot off and had numerous wounds on his torso. Vision was limited because the plexi was covered with Glenn's blood and flesh. He asked God to help him have the strenght to get that B-25 home and he'd take the calling. Not to help himself but rather to save his crew. Glenn got his crew home, they all survived and Glenn received the Silver Star. At the last stage of a long recovery he was asked in what position he wanted his arm fused? going out to the local airport he sat in a J-3 and figured out a good position for his arm so he get full play on the stick and it that position his arm was fused. He became a flying minister serving people in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. He also was a CFI and taught many people how to fly. He sold his C-152 and quite flying a couple of years ago. We had the honor of putting Glenn in the left seat of his B-25 a couple of years ago. Let me tell you that he gave us a real flying lesson. He flew that bomber like a master!!! He smoked Lenhardt's Airpark were he lived a couple of times and really racked the 25 around. He then made numerous runs at JCW's place a little east. I was standing behind him and was holding on for all I was worth!! What a great ride he gave us and a memory to last a life time!!! That's Lynn for sharing you story of Glenn and bring that day to the top of my memory bank. Rev. Glenn lives now with his wife of 64 years, Carmen, in Canby, OR. Sharing these aircraft is truely a gift.
Image
Lt Glenn Black 310th BG in his B-25
Image
Glenn's B-25J "Cowgirl" back from Leghorn Harbor
Image
On it's gear again and ready for salvage
Image
Flak damage to the bomb bay area.
Last edited by Jack Cook on Wed Dec 23, 2009 7:25 pm, edited 3 times in total.

Sun Jan 07, 2007 10:14 pm

Ahh, who's Tracy????

Lynn

???

Sun Jan 07, 2007 10:19 pm

Ahh, who's Tracy????

Aw.cr*p :Hangman: ........... Possibly a porrnn star.
I should fix that. :?

Sun Jan 07, 2007 10:24 pm

Great post, Jack! Look at that smile on Rev. Black's face! :D There's yet another fine example of why warbird pilots and maintainers spend the time, effort, and money to keep 'em flying!

Re: ???

Sun Jan 07, 2007 10:32 pm

Jack Cook wrote:
Ahh, who's Tracy????

Aw.cr*p :Hangman: ........... Possibly a porrnn star.
I should fix that. :?


Me a pony star :shock: :shock: It has not been a pretty site for awhile

Lynn

???

Sun Jan 07, 2007 11:22 pm

Note that Glenn is wearing his CAF hat and his B-25 has a Texas cowgirl on the side has does Yellow Rose!

????

Wed Jan 10, 2007 11:55 am

Lynn,
I chatted with Rev. Black last night for an hour and will go see him in a week or 2.
He's really a fine fellow and remembers well what a memorable experience it was
helping you run-up "Yellow Rose" and said to say hello to you.
I thought he quit flying when he sold his C-152 about 5 years ago but until recently
he had been flying a friends Champ. :rock: :rock: :rock: :rock:

Wed Jan 10, 2007 12:06 pm

Awesome!

Wed Jan 10, 2007 12:26 pm

What a great story and photos.

???

Wed Jan 10, 2007 12:27 pm

Here's his Silver Star & DFC Citations! 8)
Image
Image

Wed Jan 10, 2007 12:57 pm

Great story Jack....thanks for sharing! :D

John

Wed Jan 10, 2007 11:21 pm

Incredible. I used to volunteer as a docent at the Kalamazoo Air Zoo, and one of the things I loved was talking to the old vets. It's one thing to read about this stuff in books, but it's much better to talk with those who actually lived it. What's incredible is that most of these guys did all these things before they were even old enough to drink!

Here's a pic I shot during a flight on Fuddy Duddy a couple of years ago. The gentleman's name escapes me (got it written down somwhere.) He was actually a B-24 crewman, and this was his first flight on a WWII bomber since the war. I think he enjoyed it....

SN

Image

???

Wed Jan 10, 2007 11:34 pm

Great picture! The patch on his flight jacket shows that he was in the 392nd BG. My cousin Dallas Books was a 392nd B-24 pilot shot down by FW-190s and KIA over Germany in March 1944. :cry: [/url]

Thu Jan 11, 2007 9:03 am

After digging through the piles of cra....uh, carefully organized reference material on my computer desk, I found the gentleman's business card. His name is Dick Esenwein.

Here's another shot taken that day, of Mr. Esenwein with a former B-17 radioman. The EAA brought them out to give us reporters somebody to interview. The patch on the other gentleman's had says "95th Bomb Group, 8th USAAF..First B-17s Over Berlin!" I asked him what his most vivid memory of his missions was, and he told me watching his best freind's plane blow up during a mission on Christmas Day, 1944.

SN

Image

Re: An Amazing Coincidence And a Great Story!!!!!!

Wed Dec 23, 2009 7:27 pm

Talked to my dear my Glenn recently. He shattered arm has been giving him trouble recently.
So the Doc ended up removing shell fragments and old sutchers from his original surgeries from 1944 :shock:
One awesome man!
Post a reply