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View Full Version : B-24 'the Sharon D.'



jankees
April 24th, 2020, 08:37
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49814026242_c8f2284084_h.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2iTTUvq)2020-4-24_16-16-34-282 (https://flic.kr/p/2iTTUvq)



https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49814026307_5139dd0786_h.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2iTTUwx)2020-4-24_16-15-50-196 (https://flic.kr/p/2iTTUwx)



https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49813178153_48bad596a3_h.jpg (https://flic.kr/p/2iTPypc)2020-4-24_16-16-20-208 (https://flic.kr/p/2iTPypc)



So many different B-24's so many fantastic names and noseart, and quite often there's a story behind it.

This the story of the Sharon D. and its pilot, Lt Col Leon 'Bob'Vance.

Bob Vance started at West Point and graduated in 1939, becoming a lieutenant and marrying his girlfriend, Georgette Brown, the day after his graduation. The had a daughter in 1942, which they called Sharon Drury Vance. Lt Col Vance worked as a flight instructor, before being transferred to England, where he was assigned to the 8th Air Force, 2nd Bomb Division, where he flew Liberators, and he named one after his daughter, Sharon D.

On the 5th of June, 1944, he led the 489th Bomb Group on a diversionary bombing mission in the Pas de Calais. When he was over the target in the lead plane, his bombs wouldn't drop, and since he wanted to make sure the group hit the target, they circled around to fly the approach again. This time, they came under an intense flak barrage, and his aircraft was hit severely: 4 crew members were wounded, three engines were disabled, and fuel lines were ruptured. Still, standing behind the pilots, he led the group over the target and this time the bombs dropped on time. Another flak burst hit, killing the pilot and almost completely severing Col Vance's foot, which got stuck in the mangled cockpit. The copilot began a descent to maintain airspeed, and Col Vance managed to feather the engines, while a crew member was applying a tourniquet on his severely bleeding leg.

The aircraft managed to reach the English coast, and Col Vance, realizing it was impossible to land, took the controls and ordered the surviving crew members to bail out, which they did. After they had jumped, he discovered he was stuck, he could not get the remains of his foot from the wreckage of the pilots seat. He also believed there was still a crew member aboard, so he decided to ditch the aircraft, which he managed to do while being severely wounded, losing blood and standing between the two pilots seats, thinking that at least the other crew member had a fighting chance of being picked up by a boat and survive.

However, the one bomb that was still on board exploded at this moment, blowing the B-24 to pieces, and sending Vance through the air, now liberated from the wreckage. He managed to inflate his life vest, and spent the next 50 minutes trying to find the crew member he thought was still aboard, before he was rescued by a a RAF boat.

He had survived his ordeal, but only to missing two months later, when the C-54 that was evacuating him back to the US disappeared between Iceland and Newfoundland.

On January 4 1945 it was announced that he would receive the Medal of Honor posthumously, and the presentation was delayed until 1946 so that his daughter Sharon could receive her father medal.

DonMuskopf
April 24th, 2020, 21:59
Great repaint. Really great story.

modelr
April 25th, 2020, 06:40
Great paint, Jankees. I really like the way you and John, and some others put the stories about the paints you've researched and done, and shared with the community. It really adds to the depth and atmosphere of our enjoyment.

Thank You