Tribute to US airmen 80 years after fatal crash
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Families of US airmen who served during World War Two have paid tribute to their relatives 80 years after their aircraft crashed, killing two crew.
On 16 December 1944, a B17 "Flying Fortress" Bomber, crashed in the Cheviot hills in Northumberland.
Sergeant Frank Turner and Flight Officer Fred Holcombe lost their lives in the crash, but remarkably the other seven airmen survived.
Pieces of the crashed bomber can still be found on the Cheviots, which is a popular walking site for those with an interest in the war.
Carol Kyle-Sage, the daughter of pilot George A Kyle, has taken multiple trips to the hills and wants her father's story to be remembered.
She said: "My father suffered serious injuries, a broken jaw, and at one point after descending from the crash local farmers thought they were Germans."
Mr Kyle spent three months recovering in Newcastle General Hospital after the crash and the events stayed with him until his death in September 2005.
"Dad said he should have died that day and asked if me if I would scatter his ashes at the crash site and that's what we did."
Over the course of World War Two 19 allied planes crashed or were downed over the Cheviots, claiming the lives of 56 airmen.
J Hardy, son of Flight Officer James H Hardy who was on the B17, said: "We want to to tell the story for younger generations and we have regular meet ups in the States."
A permanent memorial was placed at the foot of the Cheviots in 2018.
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