BALL TURRET Gunner on COMBAT and BAILING OUT of a B-17 Bomber | Masters of the Air | Lester Schrenk

Lester Schrenk joined the U.S. Army Air Forces on his 19th birthday in November 1942. Even though he still sees perfectly today, he was told he could not become a pilot due to poor eyesight. So this Minnesota farm kid was assigned as a ball turret gunner on a B-17 bomber crew, a real-life ’Master of the Air’ flying with the 92nd Bomb Group of the Mighty Eighth Air Force. At 5’11“, he was much bigger than most men tasked with squeezing into that very tiny space. Roughly a year later, he was deployed to Europe. Schrenk tells us what the missions were like for a ball turret gunner and he describes a harrowing mission in which his damaged bomber barely made it back to England but not all the way back to base. On his 10th mission - aboard the B-17 ’Pot o’ Gold’, his bomber was badly damaged by a German JU-88 over Denmark. Bailing out, he was immediately captured and held prisoner at the Stalag Luft IV camp, surviving harsh conditions and interrogations. Near war’s
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