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39th Bomb Group (VH)

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Mathers Letter

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The following letter by USMC Corp Robert Mathers, a friend of Hammond Sadler's, to the Sadler family with information he was able to find out regarding their son and the crew. These are his words as written.


M.A.B.
Agana Guam

Sunday, 7 Oct 1945

My Dear Hammond, Louise & Suzie,

This is very hard for me to write because I know there is nothing I can say or do that will ease the shock. And I'm afraid that I may only make it worse for you. But I want to help so much that I must try. I'm writing this on the supposition that you want to know more details than the War Department may volunteer about the circumstances surrounding the accident - at least if you do not, there is no earthy reason for reading this letter. So I am forcing myself to recount the few facts I have learned while they're still fresh in my mind - the great part of my sorrow is because I can do no more to help. I pray that these facts do not increase your unbearable bereavement. Please God - .

Dendy & Lt Bowman were down last Friday nite (28 Sept) & invited me to come up for a "party" one Saturday nite and said he would call me the next morning if it was to be that nite. He expected to make a flight to Korea Sunday & if he didn't he would tell me to come on up. He never called. I called him yesterday morning, only to learn of the accident. So immediately went up to the camp to learn what I could from the other men.

I talked to a crew of another B-29 who happen to in the air over Tinian at the of the crash - & to Lt Cedarholm, the Radar man, who by chance, let another man take his place for the flight. This is all I have learned.

Dendy & the full original crew - except for Cedarholm & Cox, (the Bombardier who recently went home for discharge) - took off from North Field on a routine single flight last Wednesday morning (3 October). They were up to put in their required monthly flight time. The crew of the other B-29 saw then over Tinian & all seemed well - but between 1100 & 1200 they saw the wreckage in the water about 8 miles west of Aguijan - or about 15 miles S.W. of Tinian. They think they saw the wreckage immediately after the accident & came over very low & circled the area until the weather closed in & forced them leave - but by that time shore boats & a "D.E." were over half way out from Tinian & a PBM or PBY was making a rescue. They saw 2 men in the water - the airplane was badly broken up & indicated that it must have struck the water with great force. There was hardly any wreckage at all on the surface.

The engineer and the radio operator were picked up - the engineer was dead & the radio operator has not been out of the hospital at Saipan yet - so nothing has been learned from him yet.

It is the opinion of the crew of the other B-29 that it was miraculous that even one man survived the crash - considering the force with which No.30 struck the water - & they believe that if anyone else had survived the impact they would have been picked up by the rescue craft. A miracle is always possible; yes, but all of the possibilities that we have tried to speculate upon, none appear to be possible - considering the rescue craft which was so quickly on the scene & the observation of the other B-29. The crew of the other airplane told me they would have seen anyone else in the water because they cam over so low - .


Source: Suzanne Stone