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The B17 Flying Fortress On the 20th March 1944, the crew of a Fortress aeroplane baled out over the land and the aeroplane crashed in Looe Bay, South East Cornwall |
SCUBA DIVE B17 FLYING FORTRESS |
Minimum qualification: National Geographic Diver |
The following extract is from the “Supplement to Annual Reports of the RNLI 1939-1946”
“About five in the evening of the 20th
March 1944, the crew of a Fortress aeroplane baled out over the land and the
pilot, an American officer, then took her out over the sea and himself baled out
and came down in the sea about a mile south of Seaton beach. The aeroplane
crashed in
That aeroplane was the B17 Flying Fortress 42-31559
This succinct report records the bare bones of the incident, however, the little dramas which surrounded the crash and the remains of the plane, have continued to create interest to this day.
The B17 had been part of the 96th
BG at
The pilot,
The subsequent interest in the accident mainly centred on the remains of the plane. People locally, remember the wheels being on the quay shortly after the crash. In the 1970s, some local divers rescued some parts of the plane but could not find anywhere to place them so they were put back.
Now with the rediscovery of some of the
engines and propellers, after the recent storms, by
The pilot died about 2 years ago, but his widow has been informed of the interest being shown in the event of which there has been a great deal.
The engine is resting at Looe Divers dive
centre. In the museum in Looe and there are notes and pictures illustrating the
whole story, both of the crash and the subsequent recovery of the artefacts and
many details of the story. The 2 propellers have gone to
Looe Divers Club having started to search for the wreckage of the flying fortress.
Hopefully, after all the memories which are being recounted, there will be a chance to create a record of life in and around Looe during the dark days of World War 2