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Herald & Review/Stephen Haas
Jimmy Rue of Marshall, a World War II
veteran who was a gunner aboard a B-17,
stands in front of one of the bombers at the
University of Illinois Willard Airport in
Savoy.
B-17
Flying Fortress a flight down memory lane
for World War II veteran
By HUEY FREEMAN - H&R Staff Writer
(Reprinted with Permission of the
Decatur, IL Herald & Review)
SAVOY - When the passengers boarding the
B-17 Flying Fortress were asked who would
volunteer to sit up in the cockpit, Jimmy
Rue quickly spoke up.
After all, it was the dream of becoming a
pilot and flying high over the fields of
Central Illinois and Europe that caused the
18-year-old to volunteer for the Army Air
Corps after he received his draft notice in
1943.
Rue, 83, was disqualified from becoming a
pilot because of a knee injury suffered
during basic training. Instead, he was
tucked into the other end of a B-17 as a
tail gunner during 35 missions over Germany
during World War II.
Thursday afternoon, Rue, a Marshall resident
and longtime pastor of nearby Oliver Church
of Christ, returned to the air in a restored
B-17 bomber, a four-engine plane with a
reputation for incredible resilience in
surviving enemy attacks.
"I love that plane," Rue said as he walked
onto the apron at Willard Airport shortly
before boarding. "Isn't it gorgeous? Ours
looked just like this."
Rue was invited by the Experimental Aircraft
Association to take a free ride on its B-17,
which is touring the nation as part of its
"Salute to Veterans" tour. The plane, built
in 1945, will be available at Willard for
ground tours and flights until Sunday.
Rue recalled that he was selected to serve
as a tail gunner partly because he was
compact enough to fit into the compartment
at the bottom of the tail section, as a
5-foot, 10-inch, 125-pound young man.
Crouching beneath the gleaming silver plane
nearly 64 years after his first mission, Rue
pointed out the tail gunner's hatch, which
he had been instructed to use if he had to
bail out.
"Fortunately, I never had to use that," said
Rue, a warm, cheerful man who has been
organizing reunions with his crew members in
recent years.
Considering that Rue, a member of the Eighth
Air Force, routinely flew over enemy
airfields, factories and oil refineries that
were heavily guarded by German anti-aircraft
guns and fighter planes, it was amazing he
and his eight fellow crew members survived.
The Eighth Air Force, flying out of England,
suffered half the casualties of the Army Air
Corps, with more than 26,000 killed in
action.
For Rue, who grew up on a farm in Cumberland
County, it was an incident during his second
mission that gave him the resolve to kill
the enemy, despite his mixed feelings about
taking the lives of others.
A fellow airman, Richard Anthony, who had
served as a ball turret gunner on Rue's
plane on the previous mission, was aboard a
nearby plane. While Rue was just starting
his five months of air combat, this was to
be Anthony's final flight. Anthony was 19
years old or so.
"During that mission, I found out what
combat was all about," Rue said. "We lost a
number of planes that day to enemy fire."
During the successful raid on an oil
refinery at Merkweiler, Rue's plane was hit,
and the No. 4 engine was spewing smoke and
had to be shut off. Three fighters attacked
from behind. Rue, sitting on a little
tricycle seat, fired his twin 50-caliber
machine guns.
"We got two of them," Rue said. "The other
one left."
Anthony's plane was shot down.
"I saw him bail out of his portion of the
plane," Rue recalled. "Shortly after he
opened his chute, German fighters went after
him. They attacked him." Rue broke down as
he recalled the death of the young man.
"It's an event I've remembered all these
years."
Rue, a member of the 92nd Bombardment Group,
325th Squadron, experienced his own close
call with death during his eighth mission, a
raid on a Luftwaffe base in Frankfurt.
"On the way back, a piece of flak went
through my steel helmet and leather helmet,"
Rue said. "It was a glancing blow that cut
through the back of my scalp. It hit the
bone of the skull but didn't fracture it. It
left a wound enough. Head wounds bled
profusely. I thought I'd had it."
When the pilot ordered him to come out of
the tail to a safer spot, he rejected the
order, remaining at his post.
"Our ship was badly banged up, but like the
good fort it is, it brought us back home,"
Rue said. "On 35 missions, at least half the
time we came back with battle damage. After
one flight, they replaced parts of two wings
and a tail section."
When he returned safely to base on that
eighth mission, with 136 holes in the plane,
Rue refused treatment to remain with his
crew.
Rue said he believes God protected him,
which later led him to a career in ministry.
Because he never received regular medical
treatment for his head wound, Rue did not
receive a Purple Heart until 2006, after his
former crew lobbied for it.
Missions were flown at 28,000 to 30,000
feet, about five to six miles high, with
temperatures of 50 degrees below zero in the
unheated aircraft. Crew members wore heated
suits, hoping and praying that the electric
lines were not cut by shrapnel.
"Otherwise, you would sit there mighty
cold," he said.
But on a balmy day, Rue wore a short-sleeved
shirt for his flight over Champaign-Urbana
and the surrounding countryside.
Afterward, he was beaming as he greeted his
wife of nearly 59 years, Kathy, who stayed
on the ground.
"I enjoyed it," Rue said. "When you feel
that plane taking off and going down the
runway, it brings back all those same
feelings, but it got off the ground much
easier. When it was heavily loaded with
bombs, sometimes it was hard to get off the
ground."
Huey Freeman can be reached at
hfreeman@herald-review.com or
421-6985.
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