Flypast commemorates WW2 bomber-crash crew in Suffolk
- Published
A flypast has taken place to remember eight American airmen who died when a World War Two bomber crashed.
The B-17 Flying Fortress - known as Little Davey II - ditched in the River Deben at Ramsholt, Suffolk, on 20 February, 1945.
The crash was commemorated with a service on Ramsholt Quay, followed by a special flypast by RAF Mildenhall.
Harbour master, George Collins, 89, who remembers the crash, said the crew "sacrificed themselves for us".
The 10-strong crew from 493rd Bomb Group were among 2,900 American personnel stationed at Debach Airfield, external, near Woodbridge, in the final years of World War Two.
The 35-tonne aircraft - loaded with bombs, ammunition and a full fuel tank - was embarking on a bombing mission over Nuremberg, Germany, when it was forced to ditch after catching fire.
It came down six minutes after take off in the River Deben, close to the quay at Ramsholt.
Only two airmen - pilot Frederick Stindt and flight engineer J K Haynes - survived the crash.
A special service was held on the quayside earlier, attended by relatives of the American crew, service personnel, villagers and local schoolchildren.
Flight Lt. Stindt's daughter, Janice Stindt-Vasek, said her father, who died in 1994 at the age of 77, never spoke of the war.
She found out about events in Ramsholt after finding a cigar box full of newspaper cuttings in the family garage, she told the service.
The commemoration concluded with a flypast, involving a MC-130J Commando II and a V22 Osprey, flown by personnel from 67th Special Operations Squadron based at RAF Mildenhall.
Mr Collins, who was 14 at the time, said the crew of the B-17 "weren't thinking of themselves".
"We came down at night and you could just see the tail end sticking out of the water," he said.
"They were brave people. They sacrificed their lives."
- Published17 February 2020
- Published22 February 2019
- Published2 January 2019