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- Citation to Accompany the Award of
The Distinguished Flying Cross To
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- 2nd Lt. Palmer Bruland
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- When 2nd Lt. Palmer
Bruland’s B-24 bomber was shot down in 1944, he remembers he awoke to
the drone of American bombers flying over the German village where he
was being held prisoner.
It game him a new perspective on the war.
“Suddenly, I thought all those German villagers seeing these
planes going overhead every day – it took two hours for all of them to
pass – and I wondered how they felt.”
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- He was flying his bomber dubbed Q for
Queenie, because it ha a Q painted on the tail for identification to
its target when a group of German Focke-Wolfe 190 fighters attacked.
Two of the four engines on his plane were shot out and the
oxygen tanks that allowed the crew to breathe at high altitudes were
hit, so he had to drop out of formation and descend to a level at
which he could breath.
But the extra oxygen in the air allowed the plane to catch fire.
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- “Then I gave the order to bail out,”
he said.
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- After waiting to make sure the entire
crew of nine others had escaped, Bruland bailed out in a parachute
made for a shorter crewmember who apparently had made off with
Bruland’s in the confusion.
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- “Boy, I hit the ground hard with that
smaller chute,” he said
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- But hew was glad to ht the ground at
all – while he dangled defenselessly from his parachute a German
fighter squared off and flew at him, apparently attacking.
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- “I figured, “well, this is it – it’s
allover,” he said
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- At the last minute, however the German
dipped his wing and flew to the side of the young pilot.
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- “Then he came back around and gave me
the thumbs up sign, just to say “I Gotcha!”
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Bruland was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross as a result of that
flight and for his exemplary conduct throughout the crisis.
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