A Long Time Ago
The famous Mitchell and the not-too-well-known cannon-nose
version of this warbird entered the war with a tongue-in-cheek idea. It was
born from one man’s determination to put some real punch into the firepower of
a B-25. The low level strafing role of this attack bomber had already been
established in the South Pacific and, to many, the killing power was mediocre.
In many of the strafing runs, the fifty-caliber slugs cut down Japanese
personnel, demolished wood and tin buildings and tore wheeled vehicles in
half. However, it fell far short when
it came to steel, armor plate, dirt fortifications and cement pillboxes.
Slab-sided supply barges, armored vehicles, tanks and ships simply shook off
the impact and continued on.
Tiring of the lack of punch, one enterprising pilot traded a
case of scotch whiskey to an artillery crew (who were being shipped out) for
their 75MM cannon, which was a straightforward field artillery piece. With a lot of ingenuity and modification,
the stripped-down cannon was bolted into the reinforced nose of a B-25. While
some said a prayer, some crossed their fingers and a few did their beads, the
cannon worked. The B-25 bounced with the recoil but stayed together as the crew
sent a few experimental rounds down the barrel. In the air, the cannon didn’t
perform any differently but some thought that the aircraft actually stopped
flying as the airframe absorbed the recoil.
When it came to targeting, they came up with the simple
solution of bore-sighting the cannon with the machine guns, and both were
zeroed in at the same range. Once the machine gun projectiles found the target,
the pilot would trigger off a cannon round or two during his strafing run. The
designation “cannoneer” entered the crew tasks for the crewmember, many times
also serving as flight engineer, who loaded and cleared the cannon.
North American heard about the modification, came for a
look, liked what they saw, went back to the drawing board and soon produced one
thousand cannon-nose B-25’s designated as the “G” and, later, as the “H”
models. This remarkable, though not well-known, cannon-nose version was the
most heavily armed aircraft to see continuous service in World War II. With an
unmuffled exhaust stack coupled to each massive engine cylinder, it also became
the noisiest. The popping and crackling exhaust at idle and the incredible,
earth-shaking blast at power was overwhelming and recognizable to all who came
into contact with her.
The cannon-nose B-25H was nothing more than a short,
blunt-nosed killing machine. Its cannon, complemented by four, fifty caliber
machine guns in the nose, with two more in side packs and two in the top
turret, locked and facing forward provided an unheard-of concentration of
forward firepower. Two more machine guns in the waist and two more in the tail
made the “H” a formidable foe whether it was coming or going. Some Japanese
defenders in Burma and the South Pacific called her the “Twin-Tailed Demon.”
She executed her savage mission of death and destruction at mast and treetop
levels day after relentless day.
The impact of her firepower could (and at times did) rip in
half Japanese coastal supply ships up to and including gun ships and light
destroyers. Supply tugs and their string of cumbersome barges caught scurrying
out in open water from island to island would snap apart like plastic toys and
disintegrate as the wall of searing projectiles found their mark.
The following story takes a unique approach to the small but
decisive part played by the B-25 in the air war with Japan. It touches on the
history from time to time but spends most of its pages telling a fascinating,
true story of the discovery and restoration of a rare B-25H, fifty years after
its manufacture and long after its deadly missions had ended.
Our cannon-nose B-25H, serial number 43-4106, was the second
of its series to roll off the assembly line in 1943. The first H model, 43-4105
has disappeared into oblivion. Two other, non-airworthy, cannon-noses are known
to exist in museums. For years, I referred to our warbird as “06” as she had no
name or paint scheme during this period. We would eventually name her and
decide on an authentic paint scheme as we neared a decade of meticulous
restoration on this very rare B-25.
06 was rescued from unknown fate on a farm in Northern
Illinois where she had lain idle for years. She reposed on stubbles of green
grass, her tires having worn depressions in the ground that had closed around
them more tightly with each freeze and thaw cycle until they were held in a
vice-like grip. Her odd paint job of red and white was scratched, faded and
blotched and indicated that she had been put to civilian use after the war. The
de-militarized interior, still decorated in musty olive drab, was stripped of
its armament, was worn from decades of use, stiff from years of inactivity but
was, more or less, intact.
Occupation by generations of nesting birds and angry wasps,
each determined to defend their sweltering summer home at all costs, made entry
in the summer risky. The (original) olive drab paint was cracked and peeling,
hanging from the sides and top of the interior like Spanish moss from a tree.
Sagging cables and wires wove tortuous paths through the exposed framework that
formed the bulkheads of the fuselage. Years of dust, debris, bird droppings,
feathers and grassy nest materials littered every horizontal surface and had
accumulated in every corner.
The double-rowed, fourteen cylinder Wright Cyclone R-2600-29
engines, their power silenced for years, sported rusty and unreadable engine
manufacture plates. Oil that once oozed black through every opening in the
engine cowling, showed its faint shadows of a telltale stain. Traces of red
hydraulic fluid, long ago dried up, left its pale imprint on the once-polished
landing gear struts, now dulled by years of non-use. Tires were checked and
sagged with age; antenna wires were missing; glass was flecked and yellow from
the ravages of weather; zus fasteners and bolts were ringed with rust. But the
neglected and forlorn Mitchell still reflected a haunting image of the energy
and purpose of an era that has passed into history.
Standing next to this medium bomber, you could close your
eyes and, with a vivid imagination, be taken back to the early 1940’s. In the
silence of early morning, you could hear the unmistakable deep rumble of her
great engines. Your mind would see an olive drab B-25 banking steeply over an
enemy-held island in the Pacific or a Japanese airbase, slashed into the deep,
endless jungle of Burma, as it prepared to attack. Your heart beats faster with anticipation, fear and excitement as
the B-25 now angles downward, throttles advanced to war emergency, it hurls
itself toward the enemy. Your thoughts race with the Mitchell at your side.
You reach out and your fingers touch. Yes, she is there; she
is real, she is awesome and you are insignificant alongside of her. She is the
shadow of a time when the enemy was implacable but know, when boys became
heroes as they grew to manhood and when a nation was called to come to the
defense of a world that had not yet realized its potential.
With reluctance, you walk away. Your thoughts are yours,
alo