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December 27, 1944, I was pilot of the CG-4A glider towed by 2d Lt. Joe
Fry, bringing in supplies to the 101st Airborne Division.
About eight miles from the LZ, we started getting small-arms
fire, and as we got nearer to Bastogne the ground fire became heavier. I
could hear the bullets hitting the heavy ammunition I was carrying and I
was praying that they would not hit the detonators that I had hanging
next to my seat!
Then something turned loose on us from underneath.
It sounded like large anti-aircraft fire.
The towship then caught fire under the belly and it blazed up
suddenly over the whole back end. We
flew for about three or four miles farther with the blaze getting larger
all the time. It looked as though the towship would blow up any minute, it
was burning so furiously. I
realized Joe was trying desperately to get me over the LZ.
Flames were leaping back halfway down the towrope. Two chutes came out through the flame.
After another mile I thought I could make it into the LZ, and
around the time a third chute appeared, I cut loose and cut across to
the LZ.
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Glider
Pilot John D. Hill was towed into Bastogne behind the burning
C-47 flown by Lts. Fry and Weisfeld |
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