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News / Nation & World

Fly-past honors WWII airmen

10 Americans crashed, died to avoid hitting British children playing in park

By DANICA KIRKA and JO KEARNEY, Associated Press
Published: February 23, 2019, 6:05am
9 Photos
Tony Foulds, 82, reacts after warplanes from Britain and the United States staged a joint flypast tribute to ten US airmen Friday Feb. 22, 2019, at Endcliffe Park in Sheffield, 75-years after Foulds witnessed the crash that killed them. Foulds was just a child playing in the park on Feb. 22, 1944, when a U.S. Air Force crew decided to crash and die rather than take the chance of hitting the playing children. For decades Foulds has tended a memorial dedicated to honouring the 10 U.S. airmen who died in the plane crash at Endcliffe Park, and today the flypast fulfils his wish for the men who saved his life.
Tony Foulds, 82, reacts after warplanes from Britain and the United States staged a joint flypast tribute to ten US airmen Friday Feb. 22, 2019, at Endcliffe Park in Sheffield, 75-years after Foulds witnessed the crash that killed them. Foulds was just a child playing in the park on Feb. 22, 1944, when a U.S. Air Force crew decided to crash and die rather than take the chance of hitting the playing children. For decades Foulds has tended a memorial dedicated to honouring the 10 U.S. airmen who died in the plane crash at Endcliffe Park, and today the flypast fulfils his wish for the men who saved his life. (Danny Lawson/PA via AP) Photo Gallery

SHEFFIELD, England — U.S. and Royal Air Force planes roared over the English city of Sheffield on Friday to honor 10 American airmen who sacrificed their lives to save British children playing in a park beneath their crippled bomber during World War II.

The fly-past brought tears to the eyes of 82-year-old Tony Foulds, for he was one of those children at that park.

The spectacle over Sheffield’s Endcliffe Park was the culmination of decades of lobbying by Foulds, who wanted an aerial display befitting the young fliers who died that day. As thousands of spectators watched from the park below and the BBC broadcast live on its morning news program, the climax came when four U.S. fighters passed overhead, with one veering skyward in the missing man formation to honor the fallen.

“That was worth waiting 66 years for,” Foulds said as he dabbed his eyes with a wadded tissue and recalled the dream he’d had since he was 17.

The crowd burst into a cheer of “Hip, hip hooray!” for Foulds, who has tended a nearby memorial for the airmen for decades, wracked with guilt because he believed he was responsible for the deaths of Lt. John G. Kriegshauser and the crew of the B-17G Flying Fortress nicknamed “Mi Amigo.”

Kriegshauser, a 23-year-old pilot from St. Louis, Mo., was on his 15th mission on Feb. 22, 1944, when Mi Amigo was hit by enemy fire during a daylight raid on the Aalborg airfield in occupied Denmark. The crew nursed the damaged plane back across the North Sea, trying to reach their base in Chelveston, England.

But the weather was poor, and when the plane broke through the clouds it was over Sheffield, 80 miles northwest.

Tony was almost 8 years old that day and had joined a group of children for a schoolyard brawl in Endcliffe Park, an oasis of green surrounded on three sides by terraced houses and dense woodland on the other.

After five years of war, including German attacks on Sheffield’s steel and armaments plants, the boys were accustomed to hearing planes. But the sound of this aircraft wasn’t right.

The plane circled over the stretch of green and one of the airmen waved his arms at the kids. They waved back, thinking he was being friendly. Years later, Tony realized he was trying to get them to clear the field.

“No one will ever tell me any different: I killed these lads,” Foulds told The Associated Press. “And that will always stay with me.”

In January, BBC presenter Dan Walker chanced upon Foulds tending the memorial, as he does some 260 days a year, and took up his call for an aerial tribute. Walker started a Twitter campaign under the hashtag #gettonyaflypast.

“Tony has pretty much single-handedly spent the best part of seven decades ensuring the memorial in the park is kept up to standard, and ensured that the memory of the Mi Amigo and those brave crewmen is kept alive,” said Lee Peace, a reporter at The Star newspaper in Sheffield. “Once people heard about the story, it just took off.”

Also in the crowd Friday were several family members of the crewmen. Kriegshauser’s nephew Jim and a relative of 2nd Lt. Melchor Hernandez, the crew’s bombardier, sat beside Foulds and both stretched out a comforting hand as he repeated his remonstrations of guilt.

Painted on the sides of the planes were the names of the crew, young men from every corner of America.

In addition to Kriegshauser and Hernandez, there were 2nd Lt. Lyle Curtis of Idaho Falls, Idaho, co-pilot; 2nd Lt. John W. Humphrey of Wyoming, Ill., navigator; Staff Sgt. Robert Mayfield of Raymond, Ill., radio operator; Sgt. Vito Ambrosio of Brooklyn, waist gunner; Staff Sgt. Harry Estabrooks of Mound Valley, Kan., flight engineer and top turret gunner; Sgt. George M. Williams of Faxon, Okla., waist gunner; Sgt. Charles Tuttle of Raceland, Ky., ball turret gunner; and Sgt. Maurice Robbins of Manor, Texas, rear gunner.

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