 |
 |
| Bud & Ann Richell shortly before the crash. |
A Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress |
B-17G Flying Fortress #42-97619, crashed on June 28, 1944,
Telegraph Pass, Yuma, Arizona
Summary: The B-17 bomber departed
Yuma Army Airfield just after midnight for a round-robin night navigation
training flight. The crew consisted of an instructor pilot, two copilots in
training, a flight engineer, and a crew chief. At 1:42 am, 2nd Lt. William Richell radioed the tower at Yuma AAF to request landing instructions. Ten
minutes later, a few witnesses 20 miles east of Yuma saw a massive fireball as
the bomber impacted the top of the of the Gila Mountains. Although it is unknown
who was in control of the bomber at the time of the crash, it was thought by
investigators that the pilot had been using the lights of Yuma as a navigational
aid, and inadvertently let the bomber descend too low before the city lights
became obscured by the ridge the plane impacted.
Most of the debris from the bomber remains today, but six decades
of rockslides and steep terrain have covered up much of the wreckage.
I spoke with Bud Richell's brother, Fred, who was only 15
years old when his 22 year old brother was killed in the crash. He recalled the
last time he saw Bud was when he came home on furlough in upstate New York, only
three weeks before he died. Bud had just left Roswell AAB in New Mexico where
he had completed his 4-engine training before being assigned to Yuma. Bud had
told Fred that he loved flying, but the one thing that bothered him was flying
at night.
The crew members were: 2nd Lt's William Richell, Angus MacArthur and
Sheridan Marek, Sergeant Manteu Jones, and Corporal Merle Ice.
 |
 |
 |
 |
| A photo of the Gila Mountains while searching for the
lost bomber. |
Looking up the steep ravine where the bomber crashed. |
A propeller assembly. |
One of the B-17's Wright-Cyclone R-1820 nine-cylinder
radial engines. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| A supercharger from one of the engines. |
A landing gear and supercharger. |
Landing gear wheel. |
A smashed engine. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Crankshaft and pistons buried under rocks. |
Looking down the steep ravine. |
"Model No. B-17G" This tag was mounted on a bulkhead in
the tail section. |
A crushed flight instrument. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Dozens of .50 caliber machine gun shells at the site. |
The head stamps of the shells. |
The parachute buckles offer a somber reminder of the
five men who perished in the crash. |
Parachute silk, webbing, shroud lines, and possibly a
fragment of the parachute bag. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| I think this is from the auxiliary power unit. |
A few cockpit instrument dials. |
Headphone speakers. |
The backside. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| A fuel selector valve. |
I think this is the handle and trigger to a fire
extinguisher. |
The tail gunner's gun sight for the twin .50 cal guns.
|
Note the tail gunner's gun sight location |
HOME