TOP
usaflag.gif
39th Bomb Group (VH)

[Search Tip: Use " " for better search results ex. "John Q. Doe"; "City of ..."]
Mathers Letter
Part II

4
5


It is now Thursday 11 Oct as I rewrite my original letter & I called Lt Cedarholm yesterday - but there has been no further word. I believe that if Dendy were still alive, he would have been picked up by now & we would know - So I am sending this to Pam to give to you, Hammond, so that you may use your own judgement whether it would be better for Louise & Suzie to spare them the knowledge for now - or to accept the enviable finality of a War Department confirmation that will come later - maybe not for 6 months - and drag out their apprehension, hoping for nothing.

It is usually the procedure to list as "missing", those who bodies are not recovered.

It is now Saturday 13 Oct as I rewrite the last part of this letter once more. Lt Cedarholm called me yesterday to give me the full details of the crash - as told by the radio operator who has just been returned to Guam. Very briefly, this is what he saw - They were cruising 2000' when he felt the airplane shudder. He got up to look out a hatch & saw No. 2 engine feathered. At the same instant No. 1 started throwing oil in a stream - they feathered it immediately. They started to loose altitude & he went back to his position & put on the intercom - to hear Dendy say "we're going down, stand by your ditching positions".

They all got their ditching gear on & were ready - the approach was perfect. The next thing he knew was he was standing on the ceiling just forward of the front bomb bay - thigh deep in water - the ship was on her back. He was pretty stunned & weak & he opened the hatch to see sunlight thru the open bomb bay. Once out, he tried to make his way back to the tail to help someone out (he thought he heard someone say they were following him out from up front) - failing that, he tried to come back forward - but in the heavy sea it was more than he had strength for. He was completely exhausted & couldn't even inflate his one man raft. He was in the water 1 ½ - 2 hrs when he was picked up by a crash boat but they continued to searching for survivors ( - both boats and airplanes) - for 5 hours. The visibility on the water was good & they would have found anyone else afloat easily. The engineer was pulled out of the water dead. He said that he was scared half to death right after he got out of the airplane by the other B-29 - it came so low, circling.

Also, both boats and airplanes continued searching the area the next 3 days - in vain.

The Engineer's watch stopped at 1209 - .

Lt Devine was very well liked & respected as a responsible pilot - that al the men I talked to were emphatic on. They firmly believe that he would have ordered them to bail out if he thought it possible. But 2000' is pretty low for 10 men to get out - you can bail out as low as 700' - but it was loosing altitude fast & he probably figured the way to save all was by ditching her. Ditching is not such a dangerous operation - hundreds have been made successfully without mishap - but by pure accident - one chance in many - they probably hit in the trough of a wave, instead of on the swell, & turned over in the unusually heavy sea that has been whipped into a torment by over 2 weeks of continuous rain & winds. This probably killed the others instantly - or knocked them unconscious so they never knew what happened.

Such a dual engine failure is not unusual to a B-29. The Wright engine installation has always been notoriously the most undependable characteristic of the airplane - and a great many have ditched because of this. On one of his later raids Dendy had to abort & come in on 2 engines when 2 cut out right after take off.


Source: Suzanne Stone