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Ruhr
Valley Raiders
Robert Bailey

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A
special release to commemmorate the 60th Anniversary of the
91st Bomb Group.
B-17's of the 91st. Bomb Group are attacked
over Germany by Me 109's. The 91st. were first over the Ruhr
Valley to Hamm, and led both Schweinfurt missions in 1943.
They received credit for shooting down more enemy aircraft
then any other group in the Eighth Air Force, and had the
highest overall loss rate of any other B-17 group! Only 12%
of original crews survived the war.
Main subject is the B-17 'Nine-O-Nine.'
Others shown: 'The Wild Hare,' and 'General Ike. '
All prints except Studio Edition signed
are signed by: 1st. Lt. Paul
Chryst, 1st. Lt. Donald
Murray, 1st. Lt. Harold
Lasch, 1st. Lt. Ralph
Danekas, 1st. Lt.
John Howland, Lt. Herbert
Egender. |
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Sheet size:
33 1/2" wide x 22" high. (Group Edition 33 1/2"
wide x 24 1/2" high)
| Ruhr
Valley Raiders by Robert
Bailey |
| 50 Limited
Editions with SIX signatures. |
US
$175 |
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| 150 The Collectors Edition
with THIRTEEN signatures. |
US
$245 |
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100 Group Edition with
SIXTY signatures. (Each Group Edition comes with a list
of signees, printed on acid-free paper and suitable for
framing.
Included in the sixty signatures are two Gunners, Radio
Operator and Navigator of 'Nine-O-Nine.') |
US
$550 |
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| 20 Artist's Proofs with
SEVEN signatures. |
US
$285 |
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| 20 Remarques with SEVEN
signatures. |
US
$395 |
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Standing
silently today in the fields near Bassingbourn, England, one
can hear the rustling stalks of grain as they sway in the
gentl breezes, accompanied by the song of an occasional meadow
lark. It is the picture of peace and tranquility. But it was
not always so. To understand the significance of these fields,
one must squint through the mists of time, back some sixty
years ago, when those fields were occupied by the 91st. Bomb
Group (H) of the USAAC (8th Air Force).
Back then, those same fields of wheat
and oats lay flattened under the enormous wind generated by
hundreds of radial engines, in preparation for an air armada
destined for the Ruhr Valley in Germany. The ground would
shake and the air would vibrate as wave after wave of B-17
Flying Fortresses lumbered down the airstrip under the weight
of their lethal loads as they struggled to gain altitude for
the day's mission. These were strikes to targets that would
soon become familiar names to the young Americans who prepared
the planes and the ones who flew them. Names like Hamm, Bremen,
Meresburg and Schweinfurt. They named their planes after their
hometown sweethearts, or from a sense of patriotism, or just
from a sense of humor.
Names like 'General Ike,' 'Nine-O-Nine,'
'Outhouse Mouse,' 'The Wild Hare,' 'Hellsapoppin,' 'Memphis
Belle,' and 'Mary Ruth' are some. |
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The crews who
returned to Bassingbourn were not the same as when they left.
They had exoerienced a terror high over Germany that few cam
imagine. German fighters, anti-aircraft shells, sub-zero temperatures
and the loss of close friends had altered their lives forever.
The world has turned many times since those dark days when
men of the 91st B.G. began building their proud history. A
history based on duty, personal sacrifice and a belief in
God and country. The fields around Bassingbourn have returned
to their rural past as the men and machines have all but faded
into the mists of time. What remains, as if distilled through
the years, is the legend of the 'Ragged Irregulars.' The men
who answered freedom's call with their blood, sweat and tears.
In Robert Bailey's exhilarating new picture,
Flying Fortresses of the 91st are seen high over Germany's
heartland in early 1944. Cleared from the flak corridor over
the target, aircrews are set upon by waves of cannon-equipped
Me109 'experten,' specifically trained to attack the multi-engine
bombers. The men respond at every station with their twin
fifties. It will be a long ride home.
Writer: Mike Coenen |
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Captain
Phillip L. Collins -
324th Squadron 1st Lieutenant
John W. Howland -
324th Squadron (Bio)
Staff Sergeant Bobby
E. Pride - 401st Squadron
1st Lieutenant Ralph
Danekas - 401st Squadron
(Bio)
1st Lieutenant Robert
Slane - 401st Squadron
1st Lieutenant Sam
Newton - 401st Squadron
Sergeant G.
Paul Lynch - 324th Squadron
Technical Sergeant Howard
L. Wilson - 323rd Squadron
Staff Sergeant Clyde
J. Garrison - 324th Squadron
Technical Sergeant Steve
Perri - 323rd Squadron
(Bio)
Technical Sergeant Russ
Wilson - 324th Squadron
Technical Sergeant Cliff
Schultz - 324th Squadron
(Bio)
Staff Sergeant Roy
E. Loyless - 401st Squadron
Sergeant Joe
Harlick - 324th Squadron
(Bio)
1st Lieutenant George
Fredrickson - 401st Squadron
1st Lieutenant Hal
Johnson - 401st Squadron
(Bio)
Staff Sergeant Earl
G. Williamson Jr. - 323rd Squadron
1st Lieutenant A.
J. Sinibaldo - 323rd Squadron
(Bio)
1st Lieutenant Paul
Chryst - 401st Squadron
(Bio)
Staff Sergeant H.
John Luke - 323rd Squadron
1st Lieutenant Harold
W. Lasch - 322nd Squadron (Bio)
2nd Lieutenant Herbert
F. Egender - 322nd Squadron
(Bio)
Technical Sergeant William
G. Reid - 322nd Squadron
2nd Lieutenant Sidney
Barnsley - 322nd Squadron
Technical Sergeant Bernard
V. Lopez - 322nd Squadron
Staff Sergeant Seymour
B. Gold - 324th Squadron
Colonel Robert
W. Harris - 323rd Squadron
Staff Sergeant Bruno
Lombardi - 323rd Squadron
1st Lieutenant John
Hatfield - 324th Squadron
Sergeant Richard
McCoy - 323rd Squadron
(Bio)
1st Lieutenant John
W. Allen - 401st Squadron
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1st Lieutenant
Frank D. Hintze -
322nd Squadron 2nd Lieutenant
Verne Woods -
324th Squadron Captain
Dick Pressey -
401st Squadron 1st Lieutenant
Harold W. Burts -
324th Squadron Technical Sergeant
Ralph 'Cliff' Vrooman -
401st Squadron 1st Lieutenant
Melvin Dart -
322nd Squadron 1st Lieutenant
Dan Haley -
324th Squadron 1st Lieutenant
(later General) Earl G. Pate
- 324th Squadron 1st
Lieutenant Marv Anderson
- 322nd Squadron Lieutenant
Asay B. Johnson -
324th Squadron Corporal Erwin
Steele - 322nd Squadron
1st Lieutenant Lauri
E. Kivimaki - 323rd Squadron
Technical Sergeant George
F. Witt 'Kwasniewski' - 323rd
Squadron 2nd Lieutenant
Alvin R. Leonard -
323rd Squadron Staff Sergeant
Ed. F. Jackman -
323rd Squadron Technical Sergeant
Donald R. Smith -
401st Squadron Captain Walter
Carpenter - 324th Squadron
1st Lieutenant
Quentin Ellis - 323rd Squadron
Staff Sergeant Bernie
E. Stanton - 401st Squadron
1st Lieutenant Donald
R. Freer - 322nd Squadron
Captain Charles
A. Holman - 324th Squadron
Sergeant Merle
L. Choffel - 401st Squadron
Lieutnant Colonel Donald
Sheeler - 322nd Squadron
Staff Sergeant Bert
Larson - 324th Squadron
Corporal Jack
Paxson - 322nd Squadron
Staff Sergeant Faber
Cripps - 401st Squadron (Bio)
Staff Sergeant C.
W. 'Bud' Koeller - 401st Squadron
Sergeant Francis
A. Hentges - 322nd Squadron
1st Lieutenant Andrew
D. Caswell - 324th Squadron
(Bio)
Staff Sergeant James
E. Dumouchel - 323rd Squadron
1st Lieutenant Edward
Gates - 323rd Squadron (Bio)
1st Lieutenant Donald
Scott Murray - (Bio) |
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1st
Lieutenant Andrew Caswell
enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1942. He ferried a B-17 to
England in 1944 and was assigned to the 91st B.G., 324th Bomber
Squadron. The Wild Hare
was assigned to his crew and he flew 14 of his 34 missions in
this aircraft. He was shot down on his 34th mission over Merseburg,
Germany, and was liberated on April 29th, 1945. His decorations
include the D.F.C., Air Medal with 4 O.L.C.'s, Army Commendation
Medal and many other decorations. He retired as a Lt. Colonel. |
1st
Lieutenant Paul Chryst
was born in Hartford, Connecticut.
He enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1942. After aerial gunnery
training he became a bombardier and assigned to the 91st Bomb
Group in England. He first flew in combat on August 3 to Mulhouse,
near the Swiss border. The same aircrew stayed together and
he finished the prescribed 35 missions on December 15, 1944.
Awards include D.F.C., Air Medal with 4 O.L.C.'s. Four of his
missions were as navigator. |
Staff
Sergeant Fab. H. Cripps
was born in Fort Dodge, Iowa. He enlisted
in the army in 1942 and was assigned to the 91st B.G., 401st
Squadron. In September 1942 he arrived in Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire,
England, as a sheet metal crew chief. Along with T/Sgt. W.W.
Hill of the 323rd B.S., he pioneered the installation of .50
caliber machine guns in the nose of B-17F's that their crews
were flying.
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1st
Lieutenant Ralph Danekas
is originally from Ritzville, Washington.
He enlisted in the Air Force the day after Pearl Harbor. B-17
training was at Roswell, New Mexico. He was assigned with his
crew to the 91st B.G. in Bassingbourn, England. His aircraft
was Peacemaker. 1st Lieutenant Danekas was wounded over Cologne
on his 17th mission and was in hospital for 3 months. His wounds
were serious enough for a transfer to a VA hospital in Vancouver,
Washington State for a further 7 months. He then flew C-47's
until war's end. He has the Air Medal, Purple Heart, and the
D.F.C. |
Lieutenant
Herbert F. Egender was
born and raised in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He graduated
from Bombardier School at Kirtland Field, Albuquerque, N.M.
His first mission was to St. Nazaire, and he received a credit
for an Me109 shot down on his second mission. He moved to squadron
lead on his 7th mission, while his former crew were all shot
down while flying his left wing. Lt. Egender was himself shot
down en route to Schweinfurt, and became a P.O.W. Decorations
include Legion of Merit, Purple Heart, Air Medal with 3 O.L.C.'s. |
1st
Lt. Gates,
originally from Kansas City, Kansas,
he hoped to fly the B-25 Mitchell two-engine bomber, but he
was assigned the starboard side two engines of a B-17! He frequently
flew Outhouse Mouse
in 1944. He also flew Nine-O-Nine,
leading the low element in November 1944 to Merseburg, when
the 91st lost 13 of 38 aircraft. He was on the Hamm, Schweinfurt
and Cologne missions. He is the 2002 to 2004 91st BGMA President.
He completed 35 missions. |
Sergeant
Joseph I. Harlick was
born in Butte, Montana. Trained as a photographer, he served
with the 324th Squadron in the 91st B.G. from May 1943. He was
not listed as a flight crewmember, but flew as a volunteer and
extra passenger on missions to solve bomb strike camera problems
and to record mission events on film. Some of the books carrying
his photographs are 'Ragged Irregulars
of Bassingbourn,' 'The Mighty Eight,' 'Fortress of the Sky,'
and 'Fortress at War.'
Decorations include Victory Medal and Unit Citation with 1 O.L.C. |
1st
Lieutenant John Howland
was born in Casper, Wyoming. He flew
eleven missions as a line crew navigator with the 381st B.G.
Following the first three raids to Berlin in March 1944; he
was transferred to the Pathfinder Force of the 1st Bomb Division
on detached service with the 305th and 91st Bomb Groups. He
then flew his remaining 19 missions as lead or deputy lead navigator.
He developed a unique Combat Wing formation assembly technique
and became an ardent disciple of GEE box navigation. He was
awarded the D.F.C., Air Medal and several citations for his
performance as lead navigator. |
1st
Lieutenant Hal Johnson
was born in Galesburg, Illinois. At
an early age, he and his family moved to Sacramento, and he
completed school through Junior College. He was transferred
to the Air Force from the California National Guard and became
a pilot in February 1944. Assigned to the 91st B.G., he completed
35 combat missions as co-pilot and then first pilot. |
1st
Lieutenant Harold W. Lasch
was born in South Euclid, Ohio. He
graduated from Selman Field as a navigator in April 1944. Flew
on the November 2, 1944 Merseburg mission. His plane was Easy
Does It and was practically
destroyed, with 3 injured aboard. They left the formation and
made it back to England alone. On December 5, 1944, again in
Easy Does It,
he was shot down over Berlin and became a P.O.W. |
Sergeant
Richard W. 'Dick' McCoy was
born in Brooklyn, New York. He received basic training at Jefferson
Barracks, St. Louis, Mo. and Air Mechanics School at Kessler
Field, Biloxi, Mississippi. In May of 1942 he was assigned to
the 91st B.G. For 33 months he served in the ground crew, maintaining
B-17's at Bassingbourn, England. Sergeant McCoy returned to
the States aboard the B-17 Careful
Virgin. Decorations include
European Campaign Medal, Presidential Citation Medal and WWII
Victory Medal. |
1st
Lieutenant Donald Scott Murray,
one of four brothers in military service, enlisted in January
1942. He and his crewmates in their B-17F Miss
Minookie were assigned as replacement
crew to the 91st B.G. (H). Returning from his 16th mission as
navigator he was shot down over Osnabruck, Germany in February
1944. He was wounded and unconscious, so his co-pilot attached
a static line to his parachute and threw him out of the plane.
He became a P.O.W. Decorations include Purple Heart and Air
Medal. |
Sergeant
Steve Perri was
born in Asbury Park, New Jersey. He was with the 323rd Squadron
as the Ball Turret Gunner. His aircraft was Delta
Rebel #2. He completed 25 missions,
mostly on this B-17. He was officially credited with 4 enemy
aircraft destroyed: 2 Me109's, an Me110 and an Fw190. He claimed
7, but only 4 were confirmed. Sgt. Perri received the Air Medal
with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters, plus a D.F.C. His longest mission
was nearly 7 hours actually inside the ball turret. |
T/Sergeant
Clifford M. Schultz originally
hailed from Chicago. He entered service in 1943 and arrived
in England in August 1944. He was assigned tot he 324th Bomber
Squadron with the 91st B.G. Flew in The
Wild Hare as Radio Operator
on his 9th mission, October 6th, 1944. Target was Neubrandenburg.
The Wild Hare
was destroyed by fighters on November 26th. He crashed on take
off Christmas Eve, 1944 with a full load of bombs and fuel.
Entire crew survived. He completed 35 missions. Awards include
D.F.C., Air Medal with 5 O.L.C.'s and two Presidential Unit
Citations. |
1st
Lieutenant Armando J. Sinibaldo
was born in Chicago, Illinois. He enlisted
in the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1942 and became a navigator. He
joined the 91st B.G. in the 323rd Squadron, and flew 35 missions,
including such B-17's as Nine-O-Nine,
General Ike and Outhouse
Mouse. He completed his missions
one-week before the 91st experienced 'Massacre at Merseburg.'
He has the D.F.C. and Air Medal with four O.L.C.'s. |
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