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This great Nation & Its People War

A Little Girl’s Tidy Little Tragedy by Will Dabbs MD

What’s the hardest thing you’ve ever done? Having babies doesn’t look like much fun, but I’m a guy. I’m afraid that particular ordeal is not on my dance card.

I’ve been cold and wet before, as have we all. However, some folks certainly have it harder than others.

Medical school sucked. It was long and grueling, and I had to hustle every day to keep up. However, I got to sleep at home–for the most part–and nobody was trying to kill me, so there’s that.

1LT Robert Mains sacrificed absolutely everything for his country.

I did lots of hard things in the Army, but I resigned my commission just before 911. The Global War on Terror was destined to become somebody else’s problem.

I did five NTC rotations, jumped out of airplanes, and spent a year with the grunts as an Aviation Liaison Officer. My knees and back remind me of that stuff every single morning. It would appear that the primary mission of the military is not to create healthy, well-adjusted veterans. Regardless, throughout it all, the overwhelming probability was that I would survive to get home to my family.

1LT Robert Mains was a bomber pilot and newly minted father in 1945. He was young, idealistic, and dedicated. For 1LT Mains and his nine-man crew, every day they got up and went to work, they ran a very real risk of violent, gory death.

Young people perish in war. That’s what makes the practice so abjectly horrible. Kids are cut down in the prime of their lives. In the case of 1LT Mains, he was only 28 years old the day he rode his B-24 Liberator in over Ludwigslust, Germany.

The Bomber

1LT Mains was the aircraft commander of Ford B-24 M Liberator serial number 44-50838. The crew had named the plane Red Bow. I have no idea why. At 28, 1LT Mains was the old man of the group. Most lower enlisted soldiers were little more than souped-up teenagers. However, they were all called upon to do some very adult things.

This is the crew of Red Bow, a B-24 Liberator that took the fight to the Nazis in the closing months of WW2. They all look like such children.

The B-17 Flying Fortress got most of the press. She was an elegant, sleek, sexy beast. By contrast, the B-24 Liberator was a bomb truck. It was also the more common plane. With 18,188 copies in service, the B-24 was the most-produced American combat aircraft of the war.

Sporting a max gross weight of 65,000 pounds, a range of 1,540 miles, and a maximum allowable payload of up to 8,000 pounds, the Liberator did its share of the heavy lifting during the Allies’ relentless daylight onslaught against strategic targets in the Third Reich. Curiously, the British Avro Lancaster sported a maximum bomb load of 22,000 pounds. However, there was way more to it than just raw bomb tonnage. The B-24 also packed a whopping ten M2 Browning .50-caliber machine guns. These weapons were designed to kill German pilots.

This is an image of a stricken German Me 262 fighter in the gun camera of an American P-51 Mustang. The canopy is gone, and the pilot is about to egress. Killing German pilots was a critical component of the Allied air assault against the Axis. (Photo/Public domain)

Losses during daylight bombing raids, particularly early in the war, were astronomical. However, pulverizing German strategic targets was only part of the job. Allied planners knew that the Germans would be obliged to defend against these raids, some of which eventually involved more than a thousand four-engine bombers at a time.

Every German fighter shot down carried an irreplaceable German fighter pilot. The more German fighter pilots we killed or maimed, the easier the bomber crews’ jobs became. By war’s end, the German fighter corps was a shell of its former self. That didn’t mean they weren’t still dangerous.

1LT Mains’ Liberator was assigned to the 714th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy), 448th Bombardment Group (Heavy), based at RAF Seething, Norwich, England. Their target this day was an enemy airbase at Wesendorf, Germany. The attack consisted of 438 American heavy bombers. The Germans threw everything they had at them.

The Fighter

Oberleutnant Rudolf Rademacher of Gruppe II, Jagdgeschwader 7 (11./JG 7), based at Parchim, Germany, was 31 years old on 4 April 1945 when he answered the scramble call. By the standards of the day, Rudi Rademacher was positively ancient. He had already done more than his part for the Fatherland.

This is Oberleutnant Rudolf Rademacher. He flew Me 262 jets in defense of Germany during WW2.

Rademacher had flown more than 500 combat missions. American pilots would fly a certain amount of time or a proscribed number of missions and then rotate home to help train fresh aircrews. By contrast, German pilots flew until they died. This allowed the Luftwaffe Experten to rack up astronomical kill counts, but it didn’t do much for their mental health. By the 4 April mission, Rademacher had already logged 97 victories, fifteen of which were those prickly four-engine heavy bombers.

The Me 262 Swallow was the world’s first mass-produced jet fighter. It was a devastating weapon in competent hands. (Photo/Public domain)

Rademacher’s mount was the terrifying new Me 262 A-1 twin-engine jet fighter. The Me 262 was Hitler’s premier wunderwaffe—his vaunted wonder weapon that was designed to turn the tide of the war. With a max speed of 515 mph in level flight and 590 mph in a 30-degree dive, the Me 262 outclassed absolutely everything the Allies could throw at it.

For comparison purposes, the legendary P-51 Mustang topped out at 440 mph. In a dive, the Me 262 was fully 150 mph faster than the P-51. 150 mph is a quantum leap ahead in that space. Against congested American bomber formations, the Me 262s were pure, unfiltered murder.

The Me 262 was designed from the outset as a heavy bomber killer. Hitler dreamt for a time of using these sleek planes as medium bombers, but that was abjectly stupid. Shooting down Liberators and Fortresses was the Me 262’s forte.

Here you can see the banks of R4M rockets arrayed just outboard of the engine nacelles. (Photo/Public domain)

The Me 262 came equipped with four Rheinmetall-Borsig MK 108 30mm autocannons with a total of 360 rounds of ammunition–100 shells apiece for two guns and 80 each for the remaining two. All four of these guns were concentrated in the nose to produce a dense volume of high-explosive 30mm rounds. Additionally, the Me 262 could carry up to 24 R4M Orkan 55mm unguided air-to-air rockets.

Orkan is German for hurricane. Each R4M weighed 8.49 pounds and included a set of folding fins in the base. The R4M carried a 1.15-pound payload of high-explosive HTA 41 Torpex. This same rocket could be fitted with the shaped charge warhead from an 88mm Panzerschrek for use against hardened ground targets. A single standard R4M was more than adequate to bring down an American heavy bomber. Rudi Rademacher wielded these rockets like a cudgel.

The Engagement

One Luftwaffe fighter jock described attacking American heavy bomber formations as being akin to copulating with a porcupine. The American planes flew in tight formations specifically designed to maximize the effectiveness of their defensive firepower. In this configuration, these bomber boxes typically cruised at around 215 mph.

Despite the speed disparity, attacking US bomber formations was still incredibly difficult–even in the Me 262 jet fighter. (Photo/USAF photo)

Despite the 300 mph speed advantage, the Me 262’s still faced the daunting task of getting in close enough to get off an accurate burst or loose their deadly rockets. On this day, Oberleutnant Rudolf Rademacher pulled it off. The results were catastrophic for 1LT Mains and his crew.

History has shown without a doubt that the Nazi cause was corrupt to its core. There is a reason that the Germans make the best villains in most any decent action movie. At this time and at this place, however, Oberleutnant Rademacher was fighting for his homeland. The bombs that Mains and his mates dropped were falling on Rademacher’s countrymen. That drove what few experienced Luftwaffe fighter jocks who remained to attack recklessly and relentlessly.

One of Rademacher’s R4M rockets struck the big Liberator in the aft fuselage just behind the bomb bay. The detonation killed the two waist gunners outright and blew the big plane in half. The shattered machine then fell to earth in two major chunks.

Details

A US Army Air Corps photographer was at the right place at the right time to capture the death of the B-24 Red Bow along with most of its crew. The image was undeniably captivating.

Most of these missions were flown at somewhere around 25,000 feet—nearly five miles above the surface of the earth. Even when catastrophically damaged, these big planes took a while to reach the ground. Red Bow’s final moments were fraught with pathos.

The tail gunner on the B-24M sat strapped into his drum-shaped two-gun powered turret oriented between the twin vertical stabilizers. Disarticulated as it was from the rest of the airplane, the tail assembly began spinning like an enormous aluminum leaf. Centrifugal forces pinned the poor man in his position. Unable to extricate himself from the suffocating confines of his turret, Red Bow’s tail gunner died alone.

The rest of the crew fared little better. The interior of these big bombers was incongruously cramped. Most of the crewmembers were expected to snap their parachutes in place and then make their way to their respective egress points. With Red Bow now bereft of its tail assembly, there simply wasn’t any way to do that. Most of the rest of the crew died at their stations. However, there was one gleaming exception.

Five miles up was a horrifying place to die.

Like real estate, escaping from a stricken combat aircraft boiled down to location, location, location. Technical Sergeant Charles E. Cupp, Jr., the doomed plane’s radio operator, was stationed just ahead of the bomb bay. He also had enough space to keep his parachute handy. When the rocket blew the plane in half, the bomb bay suddenly became a gaping void open to space. TSGT Cupp simply dove out of the hole.

Despite the rarefied altitude, Cupp got his parachute deployed and reached the ground safely. As he came down over the very country he had only moments before been bombing, his reception was less than cordial. Miraculously, he ended up in a POW camp and ultimately survived the war.

The Rest of the Story

A crewmember on a sister plane happened to have a camera on this mission. He also just happened to snap a picture of Red Bow just as the rocket blew it in two. The resulting profoundly poignant image has captured the imagination of military aviation enthusiasts for more than half a century. More than just a shattered airplane, this is the picture of the deaths of nine young American heroes frozen in time.

There wasn’t a whole lot left of Red Bow once the smoke cleared. (Photo/USAF Photo)

The rest of the crew rode the plane in. What remained of the massive machine ended up punched deep into the German dirt. As a result, the families of Red Bow’s crew were deprived of the closure that comes from recovering their loved ones’ remains. They were listed as Missing in Action.

In 2014, a US government forensics team excavated the site. During the course of the excavation, they recovered human remains that were then identified via DNA assays as being those of 1LT Robert Mains. He was finally laid to rest back home in New York in 2017.

1LT Mains fathered a daughter. The young Army Air Corps pilot held his newborn baby, Barbara, exactly one time back in August of 1944 before shipping out for Europe and the war.

72 years after her father had been declared MIA, Barbara O’Brien of Stony Brook, New York, finally got her Daddy back–a hero who gave absolutely everything so his little girl could be free.

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COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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All About Guns Ammo

The .357 Magnum: Anything But Boring by Dave Campbell

Top image: Ruger Vaquero

Like a lot of old guys, I am a hopeless dinosaur. Today’s pistoleros seem to be all about go-fast guns—quick-shooting, lightweight semi-automatics with magazines capable of holding enough rounds to shoot for a week before reloading. I get it.

Shooting is fun, and the more shooting, the more fun. But I grew up shooting revolvers, and to this day I cannot get enough of them. Among my revolver shooting buddies, most—including me—are enamored with large-bore wheelguns. Some even look down their noses at .38-caliber revolvers with considerable disdain. Anything that doesn’t threaten to dislocate your shooting wrist is boring. I respectfully, but firmly, disagree.

The .357 Magnum is definitely not boring, obsolete, nor is it useless. It came about in 1934 as the result of experimental work of Elmer Keith, along with some technical assistance from Phil Sharpe who some 20-plus years later served with the Technical Department of the NRA, and Winchester.

Douglas B. Wesson, grandson of Smith & Wesson founder Daniel Wesson and president of the company at the time, coordinated the effort and produced heavy N-frame revolvers for the project. After the cartridge was made available to the public, Wesson did double duty serving as a public relations proponent of the gun and cartridge by taking it all over North America on hunting expeditions.

Whereas the .38 Special cartridge offered a slight improvement over its parent, the .38 Long Colt cartridge—a 25 percent heavier bullet at nearly the same velocity—the .357 Mag. virtually doubled the velocity of the .38 Spl. and nearly tripled the muzzle energy. This allowed law enforcement officers the advantage of a revolver, which most were comfortable carrying at the time, with the capability of penetrating a motor vehicle body and disabling suspects using that automobile to shield themselves.

It also allowed hunters the capability of humanely taking big game with a handgun. Wesson demonstrated that by taking animals as small as coyotes and as large as walrus with his .357 Mag.

Smith & Wesson Model 27

My first center-fire handgun was a Smith & Wesson Model 27 in .357 Mag. I bought it in 1974 at a time when finding any Smith & Wesson revolver in a case at a gun store priced at factory MSRP was nearly impossible due to the widespread popularity of the “Dirty Harry” movie which featured the Model 29 revolver in .44 Mag. All S&W revolvers were subject to scalping prices, but N-frame magnums—and especially the ultra-premium Model 27 and 29 revolvers—were often priced north of $500, while the MSRP of the revolver was about $275.

I was just fortunate enough to be at a local sporting goods chain one day when this revolver was a part of the weekly gun delivery to the store. When the driver wheeled the boxes of guns into the store, this one was on top, and I literally plucked it from the hand truck, marched up to the counter and plunked down my money.

As I learned the art of pistol shooting, I put thousands of rounds through my Model 27. Now some 42 years later, I’d estimate that revolver’s round count to be a bit more than 50,000 rounds—about half of them magnum handloads. I used to load a Sierra 158-gr. softpoint or 158-gr. hollowpoint over 15.5 grains of the old Hercules (now Alliant2400 powder.

Recently I chronographed that load and got 1,475 fps from the 5″ barrel. It’s pretty stiff but still manageable. That revolver has been rebuilt twice and now has the longest hand Smith made for that gun. The pistolsmith had to peen the tip slightly to make it long enough to time correctly. If I ever shoot it loose again, I’d need to replace the cylinder, which is why it’s in semi-retirement.

A few years later, as I prepared to move to Wyoming the first time, my dad expressed interest—no doubt fueled by his gun-struck son—in acquiring a home handgun. I had told him that the 1903 Colt .32 ACP pistol he inherited from his dad really wasn’t up to the task of defending the home.

So he set me about to find him a “good .357 Magnum.” I ended up finding him an S&W Model 19, brand new with what we now call 3Ts—target hammer, target trigger and target stocks. I doubt that he put more than 300 rounds through the gun, but he kept it meticulously clean.

I have it now but shoot it rarely. Nonetheless it is a sweetheart—accurate, easy to shoot with a nice trigger and very controllable even with magnum loads. Its finish is 98 percent-plus, and like all vintage Smiths, it’s drop-dead-gorgeous.

Smith & Wesson Model 19

One of the great advantages of the .357 Mag. is its versatility. You can drop in powder-puff .38 Spl. wadcutters and punch paper or small game all day without punishing your hands or wallet.

At the other end of the spectrum you can load a magnum case with slow-burning powder and 190- to 200-grain bullets and slam steel out to 200 yards or drop a big game critter cleanly. I tried some loads with a 190-gr. semi-wadcutters about 20 years ago. They can be hard on the hands and the gun, but if you want the most power you can get from the cartridge, that’s part of the cost of doing business.

Today when I carry a .357 to the field I have settled on another cast bullet load. RCBS makes a replica of Elmer Keith’s original .357-cal. semi-wadcutter (.38-150-SWC 429). It supposedly weighs 150 grs., but my mould and my alloy—about 50-50 Lyman No. 2 and linotype—tosses them out at 155 grs. Atop 11.5 grs. of Alliant 2400 in Winchester +P+ cases, this bullet leaves a 5″ or 6″ barrel at between 1,175 and 1,200 fps. This load is as accurate as wadcutters, pleasant to shoot and has enough steam to pound just about anything you’d care to take on with a revolver.*

The .357 Mag. I most often carry is a Smith & Wesson Model 342PD. At 13 oz. it’s not a gun you wan tto shoot with heavy-bullet magnum loads, but stuffed with Speer 125-gr. Gold Dot hollowpoints it is an easy-to-carry and effective pocket rocket.

Smith & Wesson Model 340PD

So despite the trend toward semi-automatics, revolvers still garner a large part of the market. And the .357 Mag. is chambered in virtually every revolver platform capable of handling the cartridge. As a revolver aficionado, I am equally as enthusiastic shooting a single-action revolver or a double-action revolver.

My Ruger Flat Top is a revolver that is a joy to shoot, as are a pair of Vaqueros I used to shoot in cowboy action shooting. When I switched to a pair of Colts I briefly considered selling or trading the Vaqueros. But they are so accurate and so much fun to shoot I decided to keep them. The .357 Magnum is anything but boring. Whether in a big-frame Model 27, a pocket-pistol 342PD or loafing around the back country with a single action, the .357 Magnum is a versatile, accurate round with the capability of a target round or a powerhouse. I believe I’ll keep mine.Colt Single Action

*Editor’s Note: All technical data in this website, especially for handloading, reflect the limited experience of individuals using specific tools, products, equipment and components under specific conditions and circumstances not necessarily reported in the article and over which the National Rifle Association (NRA) has no control.

The data have not otherwise been tested or verified by the NRA. The NRA, its agents, officers and employees accept no responsibility for the results obtained by persons using such data and disclaim all liability for any consequential injuries or damages.