Authors:
Historic Era: Era 8: The Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
May/June 1994 | Volume 45, Issue 3
Authors:
Historic Era: Era 8: The Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
May/June 1994 | Volume 45, Issue 3
I was excited. I looked at Flight Officer Bill Meisburger, my chosen partner in this coming operation and my fast friend. He was pale, but his eyes were bright. With some twenty-four other glider pilots and forty power pilots we were crowded into the bare, dank interior of a Nissen hut at Greenham Common, the big American troop carrier air base west of London, being briefed on our first airborne combat mission.
“Gentlemen,” Major Clement Richardson, our squadron commanding officer, began tremorously, reflecting the tension in the room, “I want you to know that the big show is about to begin, and we are beginning it with a bang.” He unveiled some large maps and charts on the wall. Our C-47s would transport paratroops into Normandy in the very first wave of assault on the night of D-day minus one. Our gliders would go in on Dday proper. We were only a small part of the gigantic Overlord operation, but to all appearances we were in the brunt of it.
Sleep did not come easily for me that night. I kept mulling over the events of the past few days: lectures on air-sea rescue, sessions on first aid, lectures on mines and booby traps, the erecting of barbed-wire barriers around that part of the hut area occupied by combat crews, and our restriction to this enclosed space.
Around 1900 on Monday, June 5, we were summoned to the squadron briefing room. This was it! We learned that planes loaded with paratroops would take off that evening at 2230. All glider pilots were to make final preparations for the following day.
Amid general hullabaloo the power pilots appeared in all their combat finery—shock helmets, flak suits, Mae West life preservers—and last-minute activities included the payment of gambling debts and the bidding of warm farewells. We all acted as if nobody would ever see anybody again.
At 2230 sharp, the first C-47 began to ease down the runway piloted by Colonel John Donaldson, commanding officer of the 438th Troop Carrier Group. One by one those 80 ships followed, laden with their precious cargoes of human destroyers. The long caravan of planes headed south and disappeared into the gloom.
About four in the morning, several of these power pilots piled into our hut, brimming with excitement. We were overjoyed to see them. The flak had been light, no enemy aircraft had been encountered, all sticks of paratroopers had been discharged successfully, and not a plane or a man had been lost. Excitement and joy unbounded reigned throughout our camp that night.
Now, it was our turn. Bill and I solemnly flipped a coin to determine who was to occupy the left seat in the pilots’ compartment of the glider. Bill won the toss. After eating an early supper at 1600, we were trucked to the flight line. Bill and I were assigned to glider number 49 in a 50-ship formation. We doffed our packs and donned flak suits over our