Wednesday, September 05, 2018

Thanks to H Edo Jeria for sending me Henn's Revenge!


This B 17 was shot down on the 23rd mission of her last crew http://www.luftkrieg-oberhavel.de/webs/usaforce/us018.htm  of the crew of 9, one survived, and one wasn't brought home for burial until 2014 https://www.fieldsofhonor-database.com/index.php/fr/american-war-cemetery-margraten-a/45126-atkinson-gerald-v. It was the 69th mission of the plane. http://www.303rdbg.com/ground-nose.html


Looks like Disney's pistol-packing rooster named Panchito Pistoles, from the cartoon The Three Caballeros, a 1944 film, which was premiered in Mexico City in Dec 1944, and was being shown publicly in London at least by August 1945.



https://b17flyingfortress.de/en/b17/44-8427-henns-revenge/44-8427/
A thorough encyclopedic article at http://www.303rdbg.com/358murray.html

In 1998 Ray Calenberg wrote "Diary: 35 combat missions of B-17 crew on "Henn's Revenge" over Germany--WW II" https://www.amazon.com/Diary-combat-missions-Revenge-Germany-WW/dp/B0006FBS50


Panchito was also nose art on a B25, a B29, and was known as Pancho Pistoles in the Mexican Squadron 201



The airfield at Porac had previously been used by the Japanese and abandoned aircraft and other material littered part of the area.
Three second lieutenants - Lopez, Vega and Moreno - found the wreck of a Japanese Nakajima Ki-84 fighter, removed its left wing and planted it in the ground, tip-up, at the main entrance to the encampment.
Moreno, a pilot who had aspired to a career as an architect before the war, painted the popular cartoon character "Pancho Pistolas" on it.



1 comment:

  1. Here's "little friend" Panchito's bigger cousin:

    http://www.delawareaviationmuseum.org/aircraft/b-25.html

    ReplyDelete