You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Short Attention Span Theater-
Remembering Glenn Miller, who gave soldiers hope
2020-03-02
[American Thinker] Once in a while, I visit with Bob Jagers, author and D-Day veteran. I enjoy the war stories and the memories of a 99-year-old man who was present on that fateful day from World War II.

Not long ago, we spoke about Glenn Miller. He said that his three favorite things back then were getting a letter from his girl and eventual wife, baseball news about his favorite Detroit Tigers, and catching Glenn Miller's music on the radio.

We remember that Glenn Miller was born in Iowa on this day in 1904. He tragically disappeared over the English Channel December 1944. His plane was lost en route to Paris, where he was going to play for the troops who had just liberated France.

We don't know much about his disappearance, but there are some reports that his small plane may have been hit by RAF bombers dropping their bombs into the waters of channel, or the "friendly fire theory." In other words, Miller may have been at the wrong place at the wrong time.

Glenn Miller's influence went beyond music, as any veteran from that period will tell you. He was too old to be drafted at 38, but he joined the service anyway.

Miller made a huge difference in the life and times of G.I.s far away and desperately looking for some connection with the homeland.
Posted by:Besoeker

#2  NYT - R.A.F. BOMBS MAY HAVE DOWNED GLENN MILLER PLANE

Two members of a Royal Air Force bomber crew in World War II believe they can explain one of the unsolved mysteries of the war: the disappearance of the band leader Glenn Miller. The two say they fear the band leader's plane was downed over the English Channel by bombs jettisoned from their own plane as they returned from an aborted mission.

The two - the navigator and pilot - said their four-engine Lancaster bomber was one of some 150 returning from an aborted mission on Dec. 15, l944 - the same day Mr. Miller took off in bad weather from an airfield near Bedford, England, on a flight to Paris, where he was to give a show. The two R.A.F. crewmen said that after the jettisoned bombs exploded, they saw a Norseman aircraft fall into the sea below them, apparently knocked out of the sky by shock waves. The plane carrying Mr. Miller, who was then a Major in the Army and leader of the Army Air Force band, was a Norseman D-64.
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-03-02 08:15  

#1  Millers plane is the only one of that type unaccounted for. News report last year discussed some fisherman who pulled a single engine wreck ip in their nets, then cut it loose. Evidently there was some identifying characteristics leading some to believe it was Millers. I believe fund raising is in play fora diveteam.
Love his music
Posted by: USN, Ret.   2020-03-02 08:07  

00:00