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                    | Grp 
                        Mission # 11Target: Kanoya
 Date: 28 April 1945
 Time: 0953 hrs
 Altitude: 16500
 31º22' - 130º50'
 Crew P-41
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                    | Air 
                        Force Photo Courtesy of Ben Hill, RG, P-22
 Click on image to enlarge
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                No 
                  one will ever forget the exploit of Captain Gene Flewellen and 
                  crew 49 which grew out of this Kokobu strike on 26 April. 
                Weather 
                  was wretched at the assembly point just south of Kyushu that 
                  day and Flewellen's "City of Cleveland", Ohio had trouble with 
                  its radar set. When he failed to make assembly with the other 
                  planes of the 39th that day, he decided not to abandon the strike 
                  but to head for target and hope to join up, if not with the 
                  39th then with the B-29s of another outfit. The only trouble 
                  with this reasoning was that, because his radar set was not 
                  working properly, he was not in the position he thought he was 
                  and headed off not for Kokobu, but on a due north course for 
                  Korea. After flying for some hours through overcast, he finally 
                  discovered that he had crossed Japan and was over the Korean 
                  Straits.
                Refusing 
                  to turn to back for base before dropping his bombs on something, 
                  Flewellen looked at his map and saw the great Japanese industrial 
                  city of Nagasaki staring him in the face. This was long before 
                  the time of the Atomic Bomb, and Nagasaki was known to be one 
                  of the more heavily defended targets in Japan. 
                For 
                  a lone B-29 to go over and bomb the place was risky to say the 
                  least, but relying on a thin scattering of clouds below him 
                  to cut down on the enemy spotting power, Flewellen did just 
                  that. All alone and with not one other plane friendly or enemy 
                  in the sky he made three passes over Nagasaki, finally got on 
                  a bombing run and dropped his entire load of delayed action 
                  eggs right on the Nagasaki dock area. Then having been molested 
                  by no one, he returned to Guam and told his story. 
                Even 
                  after that day it was a standing joke in the 39th that Nagasaki 
                  was Flewellen's private bombing range and when the Atomic Bomb 
                  broke up his little playhouse, Gene felt robbed. 
                  
                Nevertheless, 
                  the Kyushu missions were not always devoid of opposition. The 
                  27 April attack on Kushira resulted in the loss to the 39th 
                  Bomb Group of its most famous B-29. The plane was named "General 
                  Andrews." [read more...] 
                  
                The 
                  most enemy opposition of the Kyushu campaign was met with on 
                  29 April mission to Kyushu airfield. Thirty to forty aggressive 
                  attacks were make on the 39th Group's bombers by enemy fighters 
                  estimated to number around fifty-three. About fifteen white 
                  phosphorus bombs were dropped in air-to-air bombing attempts. 
                  The group's gunners claimed nine enemy aircraft destroyed, four 
                  probably destroyed and four damaged, with some returns not being 
                  tabulated from outlying precincts because the precincts were 
                  at Iwo, Saipan and Tinian. That day there was a hot fight with 
                  the Japanese. 
                
                   
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                    | Grp 
                        Mission # 14Target: Oita
 Date: 04 May 1945
 Time: 1038 hrs
 Altitude: 17500
 33º15' - 131º38'E
 Crew P-48
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                    | Air 
                        Force Photo Courtesy of Ben Hill, RG, P-22
 Click on image to enlarge
 | 
                
                For 
                  his outstanding work in connection with this mission to Kushira, 
                  Major Woody Styron of the 61st Squadron (P-22) 
                  was awarded the Silver Star for gallantry in action. [read 
                  more…] 
                The 
                  Kyushu missions were varied in their execution and they produced 
                  varied results. Higher authority, realized the necessity of 
                  putting the Japanese out of a position where they could menace 
                  our Navy so threateningly at Okinawa, tried to fly strikes everyday. 
                  Sometimes weather was so bad that missions could not be flown 
                  at all, but just moderately bad weather would see big birds 
                  on the way to the Empire. Sometimes targets were not hit because 
                  of cloud coverage, but we went back another day when the bombardiers 
                  could draw a bead in clear daylight. 
                When 
                the Kyushu series was over, the 39th Group along with other units 
                of the XXI Bomber Command, had the  
                great satisfaction of hearing Admiral Chester W. Nimitz himself 
                say what a fine job the B-29s had done and thanked the Army Air 
                Force for the vitally needed support the Navy had been given.