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About this item
Highlights
- Bomber Mountain's Namesake Tragedy June 1943 saw forty-one heavy bombers lost within the continental United States, including a B-17 that went missing over Wyoming late during the night of June 28.
- About the Author: Sylvia A. Bruner has worked in the museum field since 2000.
- 176 Pages
- History, United States
- Series Name: Disaster
Description
Book Synopsis
Bomber Mountain's Namesake Tragedy
June 1943 saw forty-one heavy bombers lost within the continental United States, including a B-17 that went missing over Wyoming late during the night of June 28. That aircraft had ten young men on board destined for World War II. They had been ordered overseas to participate in the intense and constant bombing raids being conducted in Europe, but they never made it out of America. Two years later, area cowboys discovered the wreckage strewn across an otherwise picturesque landscape. U.S. Air Corps Captain Kenneth G. Hamm noted in his personal diary, "The plane was so completely demolished that we were almost on top of it before we saw it." Author Sylvia A. Bruner shares the stories of the men who lost their lives deep in the Bighorn Mountains and recounts the events of the crash, search and U.S. Air Corps accident investigation.
Review Quotes
"I write mysteries for a living, but there's one that haunts my home--the crash of 477th Bomber Group Scheherazade when it crashed into what became Bomber Mountain in the Bighorn Mountain Range a fateful night in 1943. We and the world at large have long awaited an authoritative treatment of the event that took the lives of the ten-man, B-17 crew hoping for a writer and a book that would give us not only the details of the crash, but an insight into the men who flew her--Sylvia A. Bruner is that author and The Wyoming Bomber Crash of 1943 is that book." --Craig Johnson, author of The Walt Longmire Mysteries
About the Author
Sylvia A. Bruner has worked in the museum field since 2000. As the executive director of the Jim Gatchell Memorial Museum, she has guided the museum through reaccreditation by the American Alliance of Museums and was there when the museum received the Institute for Museum and Library Services' National Medal. The museum is the repository of artifacts related to Bomber Mountain and has a permanent exhibit on the topic. For Bruner, the museum serves as a constant reminder to research and compile this story.