Mercy Mission to Holland
By Griswold Smith
We flew three or four mercy missions to
Holland carrying food. One of them was before the Germans surrendered.
We had some kind of armistice with the Germans in Holland. They promised
not to shoot at us when we brought food to the starving Dutch. We went
at a low altitude (200 ft.) and dropped the food in specified areas. WE
had orders not to drop unless we saw crowds of civilians. The Dutch
people were lined up around the edges of the field waving and cheering.
On our first mercy mission, we could see German troops marching around
in their black uniforms with swastikas flying.
I took Erwin Jones with me on a "mercy
mission" on the day Holland surrendered. We were taxiing out to take off
in the usual manner when the hydraulic system on the ship stopped
working. The breaks on a B-17 are hydraulically operated. We were moving
right along on the taxi strip right behind another ship. The ship in
front of us stopped and we couldn’t. It looked as if we couldn’t avoid
running into her. The bombardier and navigator (John F. Accinelli and
Norbert L. Rabaskiewicz) were having a fit trying to get out of the
nose. The co-pilot was madly stamping on the breaks, and I was having a
fit reaching around trying to throw all the switches in the cockpit.
Several gunners standing behind my seat were sweating blood.
We finally restored the hydraulic system and
stopped the ship in the last possible fraction of a second. Erwin was
riding in the very front of the ship in the glass nose oblivious to all
our troubles. After we had finally stopped, he calmly turned around and
innocently asked the navigator if we weren’t awfully close. The
navigator couldn’t answer, as he was able to breathe yet.
We dropped out 4,000 pounds of food after
trouble with the improvised "drop floors" in the bomb bay. We buzzed
Amsterdam a couple of times. O’Leary, who was riding up front in the
nose where he could get a better view of the town, called out over the
interphone, "Church steeple coming in at 12 O’clock high!" I believe
Erwin was along the day we buzzed a small sail boat on the Zuider Zee
and blew it over.
Our second "mercy mission" was on the day the
Germans in Holland surrendered. The Dutch had really turned out; flags
were flying everywhere, and the streets were packed with people cheering
and waving. It was a great day for the Dutch. We buzzed a little more
and then came home.