Thunder in a Clear Sky
There was no mistaking it. That distinctive rumble of four mighty synchronized "Cyclone" radial engines increasing in intensity until it was directly, low, over my house this fine Spring Sunday, causing it to vibrate. Completely different from the usual whine of the engines of the jets throttling back as they make their final approach to Boeing Field just a few miles south of my house. I rushed to my front window, just in time to get a glimpse of the ancient B-17 lumbering overhead.
At that moment my memory raced back more than sixty years to the warplanes that sometimes flew low past my childhood home in Trinidad during World War II on their way to Waller Field, a US base there at the the time. My eldest brother was an ardent model airplane maker and with him I would look at the Popular Mechanics or Flying magazines to identify the fighters and bombers or as he laboriously made scaled drawings, based on whatever pictures were available then, for the models of the planes he used to make.
I got my camera ready. I knew it would be back because at this time of year, leading up to Memorial Day, that restored B-17 is based for a while at Boeing Field where the public is offered 20 minute rides in it over Seattle.
As I waited eagerly for the drone that would indicate its approach, I reflected on what a different significance that sound had for millions in World War II. Known as the "Flying Fortress", it was then one of the most lethal weapons. B-17's dropped 640,000 tons of bombs on Germany (Wikipedia). They carpet bombed cities in Germany. Their gunners shot numberless German fighters out of the skies. Accounts of Flying Fortresses returning to their bases damaged to an extent that it seemed impossible they could fly have become legendary.
Who know what missions this very B-17 now taking tourists for rides had flown? What did it leave below in its wake in World War II? It seemed so innocuous as it flew so low and slowly over my roof as I took this picture, a curiosity, a relic, now
Sunday, May 3, 2009
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2 comments:
Hi louis,
Looks very similar to the incident where Air Force One was flown very low few weeks back.
But B-17 is one legendary plane ..a bomber to be specific and it's second to none during its time.
RIZAL
Hello Rizal,
The flyovers of the B-17 around Memorial Day have become an annual Seattle event, so they don't cause any fright :)
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