Haynes Crew – Assigned 752nd Squadron – July 29-30, 1944

Standing: Laurence Haynes – P, Donald Page – CP, Larry Wilcox – N, Walter Kordeck – B
Kneeling: John Gerik – E, Walter Scheiber – RO, Donald Hinkley – G, Edward Lippert – G, Amulio Morelli – AG, Eugene Pilon – G
(Photo courtesy Brian Hinkley)

Completed Tour

RankNameSerial #Crew PositionDateStatusComments
1LtLaurence S Haynes0700457Pilot20-Apr-45DFCCitation: Pilot - bombardment missions...
1LtDonald M Page0767438Co-pilot18-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
2LtLarry Wilcox0715421Navigator18-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
2LtWalter F KordeckT123712Bombardier7-Jun-45CTFerry Crew 5 of 18
T/SgtWalter A Scheiber13111889Radio Operator11-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
T/SgtJohn L Gerik18101630Flight Engineer18-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
S/SgtAmulio D Morelli19090263Armorer-Gunner18-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
S/SgtDonald R Hinckley37577378Aerial Gunner18-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
S/SgtEdward Lippert37542737Aerial Gunner18-Mar-45AM (olc)Citation: Air Medal (Oak Leaf Cluster)
S/SgtEugene A Pilon, Jr36817632Aerial Gunner27-Mar-45PHCitation: Purple Heart, Wounded 18 Mar 45

2Lt Laurence S. Haynes and crew were assigned to the 458th in July 1944.  Records show that the officers and radio man arrived on July 29th, and the rest of the enlisted crew came in the next day.  This is one of only a few crews that I know of that did not ferry a Liberator to the ETO.  Walter Scheiber, the crew’s radio operator, remembered:

“We were assembled as a crew at Hammer Field, Fresno, CA, and did our crew training at Muroc Lake (now Edwards Air Force Base) in Southern California.  We shipped over on the S.S. Mauretania, a Cunard liner, in June, 1944.  There were 140 of us (enlisted men) in a “butler’s pantry”, stacked in hammocks, four high.  It was quite a trip.  Where the officers stayed, I have no idea. We landed at Liverpool, and were then flown to Cluntoe, Northern Ireland, where we sat around for a couple of weeks.  My main memory of that assignment is that there was no toilet paper in the latrines, and we had to make use of old copies of Life Magazine – not an easy task.”

The crew flew their first combat mission less than a week after they arrived, on August 4, 1944.  On this, the 458th’s 103 mission to bomb an HE111 factory at Rostock, Germany, the crew flew an olive drab 752nd Squadron B-24H named Final Approach.  In a mission diary kept by the pilot, he noted that the flak was, “moderate [and] accurate” and that the 7-1/2 hour mission was, “Long and pretty rough for a starter.”

They flew six more missions in August in a variety of 752nd Squadron ships.  In early September, the 458th (and several other 2BD groups) was pulled off of combat operations and assigned to fly gasoline to Patton’s army in France.  These “Truckin’ Missions” did not count towards the crew’s total of sorties needed to rotate home, although some thought that flying a Liberator overloaded with high octane gasoline presented more danger than the Luftwaffe did at this point in the air war.  Haynes is recorded as flying one of these cargo missions on September 23, 1944.

The group was back on operations after the beginning of October, but for unknown reasons, the crew did not fly their next (7th) mission until November 8th.  They continued to fly a variety of 752nd ships until December 4th when they were assigned a NMF (Natural Metal Finish) B-24J that had been flown on about 15 missions.

Walter Scheiber recalled, “After our 13th mission, our crew was assigned B-24 42-50502, which our pilot named Larrupin’ Linda for one of his girlfriends.  During our tour our plane, Larrupin’ Linda and others, )among them Final Approach, Here I Go Again, Wolves’ Lair, Jolly Roger, Princess Pat and You Can’t Take It With You), was hit numerous times and lost various engines, and its electrical system, but I have a feeling that our tour was fairly average, except for one crash-landing in France.”  That crash landing occurred on December 31st on a mission to Koblenz when they lost an engine on the bomb run and couldn’t get it feathered.  They were able to make it to an airfield at Lille, France.  When they finally returned to Horsham they found their belongings had been packed and quarters reassigned, as they were listed as MIA!

The crew flew Larrupin’ Linda on 19 of their 35 missions, flying only three different aircraft in 1945.  On January 24th, after flying 21 missions, the entire crew was sent on Rest Home Leave. What would normally be a break of 7-10 days, apparently ended after only five, as Haynes is shown flying again on January 29th.  In February, bombardier Walter Kordeck was transferred to the 755th Squadron to be a pilotage navigator.  At this point in the war, it was feasible for bombardiers to fill this position and to toggle the bombs on the lead aircraft.  Haynes’ crew flew the remainder of their combat sorties with a nine-man crew

Their 35th and final mission was on March 18, 1945 to hit an ordnance plant in Berlin – the crew’s first and only trip to the German capitol.  A mission to Berlin was never an easy one, and for one member of the crew, this turned out to be true.  S/Sgt Eugene Pilon was manning the tail turret and picked up a piece of flak in his foot during the bomb run.  This was, as far as records show, the only combat injury to any of the crew during their 35 trips over the Continent.  After completing their combat tour, most of the crew would have been released from flying status and shipped home for leave before reassignment.  Two exceptions were Eugene Pilon, who appears on a May 1, 1945 roster of 752nd Squadron personnel.  He was probably still recovering from his wound on March 18th.  Walter Kordeck, having been transferred to be a pilotage navigator, would not have flown as often and was still on base when hostilities ceased.  He is listed on June 7, 1945 orders as a crewman ferrying a Liberator back to the States with 1Lt Kendrick E. Ferriell and crew.

Missions

DateTarget458th MsnPilot MsnSerialRCLSqdnA/C MsnA/C NameComments
04-Aug-44ROSTOCK103142-52457Q7V48FINAL APPROACH
05-Aug-44BRUNSWICK105242-52457Q7V49FINAL APPROACH
08-Aug-44CLASTRES108342-95179X7V32HERE I GO AGAIN
12-Aug-44MOURMELON111442-109812V7V36UNKNOWN 016
14-Aug-44DOLE/TAVAUX113544-40118R7V2WE'LL GET BY
24-Aug-44HANNOVER117641-29340N7V49YANKEE BUZZ BOMB
25-Aug-44TERTRE119741-29340N7V50YANKEE BUZZ BOMB
23-Sep-44HSF to ST DIZIERTR07--42-100425OJ3T6THE BIRDCARGO
08-Nov-44RHEINE144844-40475D7V11JOLLY ROGER
10-Nov-44HANAU A/F146942-100407R7V55LITTLE LAMBSY DIVEY
16-Nov-44ESCHWEILER1471042-95316H7V56PRINCESS PAT
21-Nov-44HARBURG1481142-95165L7V46COOKIE
26-Nov-44BIELEFELD1501241-29352K7V59WOLVE'S LAIRABORT - K-21 - SORTIE
30-Nov-44HOMBURG15113--------No FC - Sqdn Rec's
04-Dec-44BEBRA1521442-50502E7V16LARRUPIN' LINDA
11-Dec-44HANAU1551542-50502E7V18LARRUPIN' LINDA
12-Dec-44HANAU1561642-50502E7V19LARRUPIN' LINDA
24-Dec-44SCHONECKEN157NTO42-50502E7V--LARRUPIN' LINDANO TAKE OFF - OVERHEATED BRAKES
28-Dec-44ST. WENDEL1601742-50502E7V20LARRUPIN' LINDA
30-Dec-44NEUWIED161MSHL--------MARSHALING CHIEF- 752ND
31-Dec-44KOBLENZ1621841-29567G7V11MY BUNNIE / BAMBI
07-Jan-45RASTATT1661942-50502E7V22LARRUPIN' LINDA
08-Jan-45STADTKYLL1672042-50502E7V23LARRUPIN' LINDA
14-Jan-45HALLENDORF1702142-50502E7V25LARRUPIN' LINDASUB DEPOT
17-Jan-45HARBURG1722244-10487RJ327Girl on surfboard (no name)
28-Jan-45DORTMUND1742342-50502E7V26LARRUPIN' LINDA
29-Jan-45MUNSTER1752442-50502E7V27LARRUPIN' LINDA
14-Feb-45MAGDEBURG1812542-50502E7V31LARRUPIN' LINDA
15-Feb-45MAGDEBURG182ASSY41-28697ZZ5A59SPOTTED APEASSEMBLY CREW - 752
16-Feb-45OSNABRUCK1832642-50502E7V32LARRUPIN' LINDA
19-Feb-45MESCHADE1842742-50502E7V33LARRUPIN' LINDA
21-Feb-45NUREMBERG1852841-29340N7V61YANKEE BUZZ BOMB
22-Feb-45PEINE-HILDESHEIM1862942-100425O7V56THE BIRD
28-Feb-45BIELEFELD192ABT42-51514B7V--BIG CHIEF LIL' BEAVERABORT - #3 ENG SMOKING
02-Mar-45MAGDEBURG1943042-50502E7V38LARRUPIN' LINDA
04-Mar-45STUTTGART1963142-50502E7V40LARRUPIN' LINDA
07-Mar-45SOEST1983242-50502E7V42LARRUPIN' LINDA
08-Mar-45DILLENBURG1993342-50502E7V43LARRUPIN' LINDABOMBED WITH 466BG
12-Mar-45FRIEDBURG2023442-50502E7V46LARRUPIN' LINDA
15-Mar-45ZOSSEN204ABT42-50502E7V--LARRUPIN' LINDAABORT - #3, 4 BLOWERS OUT
17-Mar-45HANNOVER2053542-50502E7V48LARRUPIN' LINDA
18-Mar-45BERLIN2063642-50502E7V49LARRUPIN' LINDA

Assembly Crew – February 15, 1945

Members of Haynes Crew in front of the group’s second assembly ship, Spotted Ape

Standing: John Gerik, Larry Wilcox, Laurence Haynes
Kneeling: Donald Page, Walter Scheiber

(Photo courtesy Walter Scheiber)

Flight Log of Laurence S. Haynes, Jr.    August 1944 – March 1945

The following is a diary submitted by Larry Haynes, son of pilot Laurence Haynes (pictured at left). It is presented here as written, although some words have been corrected. This log was used to confirm the accuracy (or lack thereof) of the mission list above, which was compiled from 458BG records. Where differences have occurred, I have made note in the comment section of the Mission List.

————————-

Mission 1
Date: August 4, 1944
Target: Heinkel Assembly Plant, Rostock
Bombs: 10 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2700 Topped off
Method: Visual
Results: Excellent
Flak: Moderate, Accurate
Ship: “Final Approach”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: Long and pretty rough for a starter

Mission 2
Date: August 5, 1944
Target: Jet Plant at Waggum A/F, Brunswick
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2700
Method: Visual
Results: Good
Flak: Intense, Accurate
Ship: “Final Approach”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Good, but pretty rough. Our ship collected minor battle damage.

Mission 3
Date: August 8, 1944
Target: Clastres A/F St. Quentin
Bombs: 52 x 100 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: Visual
Results: Very Good
Flak: Meager, Inaccurate
Ship: “Here I Go Again”
Time: 5 hours
Remarks: Had trouble with #2 supercharger but on the whole an easy mission

Mission 4
Date: August 12,1944
Target: Mourmelon le Grand A/F, Reims
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: Visual
Results: Good
Flak: Nil at target
Aircraft: 812-V
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Dropped 30 seconds late, and blew up a barracks, went off course over Rotterdam on return and accurate Flak split up formation, sweated our gas out.

 

Mission 5
Date: August 14, 1944
Target: Dole – Tavaux A/F Dijon
Bombs: 52 x 100 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Visual
Results: Fair
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Wolves’ Lair”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: Long, but a milk run

Mission 6
Date: August 24, 1944
Target: Misburg Oil Refinery, Hanover
Bombs: 20 x 250 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Visual
Results: Good
Flak: Moderate, Accurate
Ship: “Wolves’ Lair”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Major battle damage (had to replace stabilizer)

Mission 7
Date: August 25, 1944
Target: Tertre Synthetic Ammonia Plant, Brussels
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: Visual
Results: Poor
Flak: Nil at Target
Ship: “Yankee Buzz Bomb”
Time: 5 hours
Remarks: Took off at 3 pm with 18 ship formation. Target wasn’t picked up by bombardier on first run and we picked up moderate accurate flak several miles past MPI. We made a “180” and a second run on the target, proceeding to drop our bombs in a river which runs past the plant. Pity the poor taxpayer.

Mission 8
Date: November 8, 1944
Target: Rheine M/Y
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: ———
Results: ———
Flak: Meager, Inaccurate
Ship: “Jolly Roger”
Time: 5 hours
Remarks: Bad cloud formation snafu’d assembly. We hooked onto the 453rd formation. However, they failed to drop on the primary, eventually jettisoning their bombs into the Zuiderzee. We didn’t have a bombsight, but we made a run on a city near the Dutch border. The monsoon proved that his middle name wasn’t “Norden” after all, as our bombs dropped several miles short, blowing up a Kraut farmhouse.

Mission 9
Date: November 10, 1944
Target: Hanau / Langendiebach A/F Frankfurt
Bombs: 40 x 100 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee it
Results: Fair
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Little Lambsy Divey”
Time: 8 hours
Remarks: We had our troubles: Morelli’s Oxygen mask froze, and he passed out. Then we lost the flight deck oxygen system after sweating out our gas. We made the base without further misadventures. Photos of the target showed that we overshot our MPI (we were supposed to post-hole the field) and hit hangars and repairs shops.

Mission 10
Date: November 16, 1944
Target: Eschweiler Ground Defenses, Aachen
Bombs: 20 x 260 Frags
Gas: 2300
Method: Gee-H (Visual Assist)
Results: Excellent
Flak: Meager, Accurate
Ship: “Princess Pat”
Time: 4-1/2 hours
Remarks: This was part of the “Softening up” process before the 19th army jump-off at Aachen. The whole 8th A. F. bombed in a 3-mile square area. Weather was bad at takeoff and we joined the 93rd bombing with them. We were diverted to Hartford Bridge R.A.F. Station on return at which base we spent a lousy two days before returning to Horsham.

Mission 11
Date: November 21, 1944
Target: Rhenania Oil Refinery, Hamburg
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: PFF
Results: 458th – Poor; 96th wing – Very good
Flak: Intense, Fairly Accurate
Ship: “You Can’t Take It With You”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: Photos show that we dropped 2-1/2 miles SSE of MPI, in a park. However, 466th and 467th really creamed the joint.

Mission 12
Date: November 26, 1944
Target: Bielefeld R/R Viaduct
Bombs: 8 x 1000 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H
Results: Unobserved – Fair
Flak: Nil at target
Aircraft: 812-V
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: No enemy opposition, but we lost our electrical system after leaving the target area. No instruments, radio, or heat. Temperature 40 deg. below zero

 

 

Click image for larger view

Mission 13
Date: December 4, 1944
Target: Bebra M/Y
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2700
Method: Gee
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 8 hours
Remarks: Long, but an easy mission

Mission 14
Date: December 11, 1944
Target: Hanan M/Y, Frankfurt
Bombs: 6 x 1000 GP’s
Gas: 2700
Method: PFF
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Meager, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 8-1/2 hours
Remarks: A record number of 8th A.F. bombers made this mission, and the whole 2nd division attacked this target by instruments. However, nobody managed to hit it. We shoulda stood in bed.

Mission 15
Date: December 12, 1944
Target: Hanau M/Y, Frankfurt
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: visual
Results: Hi Hi Rite – Very good
Flak: Moderate, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Three squadron’s bombs landed in the town, but the high high right, led by Sullivan hit right on the money. We had to feather #4 at one target, but had little other trouble.

Mission 16
Date: December 28, 1944
Target: St. Wendel M/Y N.Z. of Saarbruchen
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: ———
Results: ———
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Gee equipment went out on the bomb run, and as we had passed the secondary target by that time, we brought our bombs back.

B-24H-15-CF 41-29567 7V G  My BUNNIE
This aircraft was repaired and returned to Horsham St. Faith in late February 1945.

Mission 17
Date: December 31, 1944
Target: Coblenz R/R Bridge
Bombs: 4 x 2000 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H
Weather: Fair
Flak: Meager, Accurate
Ship: “My Bunnie” (pictured above)
Time: 5 hours
Remarks: We lost #2 on bomb run, and turned back, but couldn’t feather it. It continued to windmill and caused bad vibration. Finally, just as we were about to bail out the prop froze and we were able to crash land at Lille. Hitched a ride back to Horsham with the R.A.F. Back at base found all our gear packed & quarters reassigned as we were listed as MIA.

Mission 18
Date: January 7, 1945
Target: Rastatt M/Y
Bombs: 6 x 1000 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Meager, Accurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: Bad weather, but an easy mission

Mission 19
Date: January 8, 1945
Target: Stadtkyll Crossroads
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: Gee-H
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Bad cloud formations, dense contrails, temperature 55 deg below, otherwise a milk run

Mission 20
Date: January 14, 1945
Target: Herman Goring Wenke, Hallendorf, Brunswick
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2700
Method: Visual
Results: Excellent
Flak: Intense, Accurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: This was a rough one, but the bombs were right on the MPI, for a change. We lost #1, and straggled back – right over Dummer Lake, where the enemy fighters were forming. 8th A.F. fighters got a record bag in the air on this date.

Mission 21
Date: January 17, 1945
Target: Rhenania Oil Refinery, Harburg
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Visual
Results: Excellent
Flak: Intense, Accurate
Ship: “Surfboard Sue”
Time: 6 hours
Remarks: 458th only put up one makeshift squadron, but we beat up the target anyway. Hink saw 2 B-24’s go down in flames, and Hicks on our right wing took a direct hit, and took off for Sweden. Rough. [Click for diary pages on this date]

Mission 22
Date: January 29, 1945
Target: Munster M/Y
Bombs: 6 x 1000 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: H2X
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Meager, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 6 hours
Remarks: An uneventful mission

Mission 23
Date: February 14, 1945
Target: Magdeburg M/Y
Bombs: 4 x 1000 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: H2X
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Moderate, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: This was our secondary target and was bombed because visual conditions did not prevail at the Rothensee oil refinery. Enemy opposition was meager and it turned out to be an easy mission.

Mission 24
Date: February 16, 1945
Target: Osnabruck M/Y
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2300
Method: Gee-H
Results: Good
Flak: Moderate, Accurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 6 hours
Remarks: A short, sharp mission

Mission 25
Date: February 19, 1945
Target: Jumo Jet Plant, Meschede
Bombs: 6 x 500 GP’s & 6 x M-17 Incend.
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Nil at Target
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7 hours
Remarks: Scope photos indicate that the group dropped about 1/2 mile short of the MPI. Some flak was encountered at the front lines of withdrawal. It was an easy mission.

Mission 26
Date: February 21, 1945
Target: Nuremburg M/Y
Bombs: 10 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2700 Topped off
Method: H2X
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Moderate, Inaccurate
Ship: “Yankee Buzz Bomb”
Time: 8 hours
Remarks: We nearly tore the roof off the pub on take off, but the rest of the mission wasn’t bad. We saw little flak at the target, some at the front lines. Recon photos showed that only 3 of the 11 groups that bombed this target dropped in town.

February 22, 1945: Bomb strikes from an unknown group on the marshaling yards at Peine, Germany.  The 458th lost two aircraft on this mission.
 
(Click for full photo – courtesy FOLD3)

Mission 27
Date: February 22, 1945
Target: Peine M/Y (pictured above)
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Visual
Results: Very Good, Excellent
Flak: Meager, Accurate
Plane: 425-0 (“The Bird”)
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: This was the famous low-level mission. Our part of it was a nightmare. En route, we encountered accurate flak at Bebra, and 2 ships in the flight squadron had it before they knew what was happening. Hess nearly got it, too. That’s enough, brother.

[The two crews that were lost were 2Lt Joseph E. Szarko 752BS, and 2Lt William A. Duke 754BS.]

Mission 28
Date: February 28, 1945
Target: Bielefeld M/Y
Bombs: 6 x 1000 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: H2X
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Big Chief Little Beaver”
Time: 5 hours
Remarks: We lost #3 just before reaching the German border, but continued in and dropped our bombs on a target of opportunity. We then feathered #3 and returned to base without further complications.

Mission 29
Date: March 2, 1945
Target: Krupp Tank Works, Magdeburg
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2700
Method: Gee-H (Virtual Assist)
Results: Fair
Flak: Moderate – Intense, Fairly Accurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: Nobody hit the target, even though there was a visual assist. It was an easy but not satisfying mission.

Mission 30
Date: March 4, 1945
Target: Stuttgart
Bombs: 10 x M-17 Incendiaries
Gas: 2700 Topped off
Method: H2X
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Moderate – Intense, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 8 ½ hours
Remarks: This was a target of opportunity selected, when we couldn’t get through the clouds to the primary. There was complete cloud cover at Stuttgart, and no flak burst too close to us. The MPI was the center of Stuttgart, and the consensus is that we must have beaten hell out of it.

Mission 31
Date: March 7, 1945
Target: Soest M/Y
Bombs: 24 x 250 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H
Results: Fair
Flak: Meager, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 6-1/2 hours
Remarks: An uneventful mission

Mission 32
Date: March 8, 1945
Target: Dillenberg M/Y
Bombs: 20 x 300 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H (Visual Assist)
Results: Good
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 6 hours
Remarks: We led the trail element of the 467th’s 3rd squadron. The 467th dropped about 3000 feet off the MPI, but just after bombs away a concussion was felt. It’s believed to have been the explosion of the ammo dump, which must have damaged everything in the vicinity. The lead squadron of the 458th overran us on the bomb run, and couldn’t drop. The following squadron dropped 23 miles off the MPI. The 458th’s 3rd squadron didn’t drop.

Mission 33
Date: March 12, 1945
Target: Friedberg M/Y
Bombs: 44 x 100 GP’s 2 x M-17 Incendiaries
Gas: 2500
Method: Gee-H
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Nil
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 6 hours
Remarks: One large milk run

Mission 34
Date: March 17, 1945
Target: Hanomag Tank Works, Hanover
Bombs: 12 x 500 GP’s
Gas: 2500
Method: H2X
Results: Unobserved
Flak: Meager, Inaccurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 6 hours
Remarks: Some of the boys sweated this one out, but it turned out to be a milk run

Mission 35
Date: March 18, 1945
Target: Tegel Armament Works, Berlin
Bombs: 52 x 10 Indec.
Gas: 2500 Topped off
Method: Visual
Results: Excellent
Flak: Intense, Accurate
Ship: “Larrupin’ Linda”
Time: 7-1/2 hours
Remarks: 10/10 w. W/breaks entry @ 22500’ to I.P. Let down cov vis. run. Encountered moderate to intense flak on run 105 mm or exp 128 mm. very accurate. Hit sump return oil line, #1 eng on run, but eng. Maintained full power for approx. 1:00 past target #2 cyl. head temp slightly high en route out – thought we’d lose it too. Pilon hit in foot on run. R/O had close shave opening doors. Squadron leader had #3 shot out on run, took us down to 17500 over NW part of B. before relinquishing lead. Dep. lead did poor job bringing squadron out. Left sq. S.E. Dummer Lake w/feathered #1 return priority. Landing uneventful

B-24J-401-CF 42-50502 7V A Larrupin’ Linda

Haynes and crew flew Larrupin’ Linda on 19 of their 35 combat missions.  According to radio operator, Walter Scheiber, “After our 13th mission, our crew was assigned B-24 42-50502, which our pilot named Larrupin’ Linda for one of his girlfriends.”

They were forced to abort one mission on March 15, 1945 while flying this aircraft, due to mechanical difficulties and were not credited with a sortie.  The crew made it to the Zuider Zee (now called the IJsselmeer) before having to turn back. See Abortion Report for that date.

Photo: Mike Bailey

Haynes Crew in front of Larrupin’ Linda – possibly taken after their last mission, March 18, 1945

Standing: Edward Lippert, Donald Page, Laurence Haynes, Larry Wilcox
Kneeling: John Gerik, Donald Hinkley, Walter Scheiber, Amulio Morelli

(Photo courtesy: Walter Scheiber)

1Lt Walter F. Kordeck – Bombardier

Walter Kordeck with Larrupin’ Linda
 
Kordeck was transferred to the 755BS in February 1945 as a lead navigator.

S/Sgt Donald R. Hinkley – Gunner

Upon his return to the States in 1945, Donald Hinkley was assigned to the 1040th AAF Base Unit at Santa Ana AAB in California.

1945: Donald Hinkley (left) with what appears to be a Public Relations group and an unidentified movie star.

1945:  Donald Hinkley with another unidentified movie star.
 
(Photos courtesy Brian Hinkley)