APG85 wrote:
Never heard that one. I thought it was scrapped after the war...
So did I.
Until I read this last night:
http://home.comcast.net/~noseart/0noseart.htmlQuote:
Command Decision [7657] 19BG-28BS: "Command Decision" was probably inspired by the stage play and 1948 movie of the same name. The cast of the film reads like a "who's who" of Hollywood actors at the time. The lead character, played admirably by Clark Gable, was rumored to have been based on the 98BG's Colonel "Killer" Kane (read more).
The most knowledgeable of the Seven Dwarfs (from Disney's Snow White & the Seven Dwarf's), Doc, is making his "command decision" based on Dopey's flip of a coin. Although the depicted scene is satirical, Command Decision is certainly the best know B-29 of the Korean War. It is the only bomber ace and last B-29 bomber retired from the USAF. Officially credited with shooting down five MiG-15s, the aircraft had an early history of nose gear problems. One of our missions was scrubbed when its nose gear collapsed and blocked the rest of us from taking the runway.
Remarkably, the color photo (that I took & restored) of a 28BS B-29 on a daylight bomb run has been identified as Command Decision. Up until Joe Savko solved the conundrum, the tail number had been a mystery because no B-29 by that number had ever been manufactured. Joe wrote, “(7657) had been in a SAC unit (and) SAC, in the name of secrecy, played games with their serial (numbers) … In fact, SAC had three phantom bomb squadrons on paper that it kept moving about early in the Cold War."
Anthony Queeno provided most of the photos and data on Command Decision contained on these pages, especially during the final chapter of its combat service. (click here for Tony's pages).
Command Decision's nose art is on display at the Air Force Museum, but what you see is not the original art or airplane. After the original was destroyed in a multiple transportation accident, the forward section of #44-62139 was requisitioned and painted for the display. It's ironic that an aircraft that survived heavy flak and multiple MiG attacks was damaged after being dropped from a helicopter, and while being transported from the AF Museum, on loan to another museum, rolled off of a flatbed truck, was destroyed, and had to be replaced
Anyone else heard of this?
Shay
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Semper Fortis