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Man Survived 22,000-Foot Fall Out of Bomber

Albuquerque Journal | 2/3/04 | Paul Logan

Posted on by woofie

Alan Magee of Angel Fire ranked among the luckiest of those who served in the Army-Air Force during World War II.

A B-17 ball turret gunner, Magee had no choice but to jump out of a disabled, spinning-out-of-control bomber from about 22,000 feet.

A drop of more than four miles. Without a parachute. And Magee miraculously lived.

His incredible story was featured in a 1981 Smithsonian Magazine on the 10 most amazing survivals during World War II.

Magee seldom spoke of that death-defying drop. He died nearly 61 years later on Dec. 20 of complications from a stroke and kidney failure in San Angelo, Texas, said a niece, Jill Greene of Albuquerque. Magee was 84.

"He didn't like to talk about it, and he wouldn't dwell on it," Greene said. "One of the guys who saw him come through the roof of the railroad station tracked Alan down (in 1978).

Before that, Alan wasn't interested in discussing this."

However, Greene recalled him saying, "God was certainly looking out (for me.)"

Alan E. Magee, who retired to northern New Mexico in 1979, was born in Plainfield, N.J. The youngest of six children, he enlisted after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Greene described her uncle as "just a regular guy."

He was 5-foot-7, barely small enough to fit in the B-17's ball turret a cramped, donut-shaped plastic glass and metal turret on the bomber's underside. It was such a tight fit a gunner's knees were practically against his chest that Magee had to leave his chute on the deck of the four-engine Flying Fortress.

The ball turret offered a panoramic view and also a precarious target for German fighter planes. B-17 gunners had a high casualty rate, said Don Jenkins of Albuquerque, Magee's friend of 38 years and a World War II Navy veteran.

"He was very easy to get along with very cheerful, very talkative and a very, very sweet guy," Jenkins said. But, he said, Magee only spoke to him three times about the events on Jan. 3, 1943.

Sgt. Magee, 24, was one of the oldest of the 10-man crew who flew out of Molesworth, England, on a bomber nicknamed "Snap! Crackle! Pop!" The pilot was only 19.

His seventh mission was a daylight bombing run on St. Nazaire, France, called "Flack City" because of the anti-aircraft guns defending the German submarine port. The 360th Bomb Squadron of the 303rd Bomb Group sent 85 B-17s with a fighter escort.

Over the target area, flack damaged Magee's plane, and then German fighters shot off a section of the right wing.

Magee, who was wounded, scrambled back into the cabin, but his parachute was ruined.

"He saw a gap in the spinning plane and jumped out," said Jenkins, who explained that in the confusion Magee forgot he wasn't wearing a chute.

"He remembered tumbling," Jenkins said. But at that altitude, Magee quickly lost consciousness.

Eyewitnesses saw Magee crash through the Nazaire train station's glass skylight, breaking his fall. When he regained consciousness, Magee said to his captors: "Thank God I'm alive."

Magee's injuries included 28 shrapnel wounds. A lung and kidney were hit. His nose and an eye were ripped open. His broken bones included his right leg and ankle. A right arm was nearly severed.

Jenkins said the Germans decided that anyone who could miraculously survive deserved "real special attention."

With the German doctors' help, Magee fully recovered. Jenkins said Magee later hiked and backpacked and "led a pretty good life."

Two of his crewmen also survived. In all, 75 airmen died, seven U.S. planes were destroyed and 47 were damaged that day, he said.

Magee was a prisoner of war until May 1945. He received the Air Medal for meritorious conduct and the Purple Heart.

"Alan was never the type to look in the past," Greene said. "He always was looking forward, living for the moment."

Despite the harrowing experience, Magee loved to fly. He qualified for a private pilot's license. His career included the air freight business and airline reservations.

On Jan. 3, 1993, Magee and the other two crewmen were guests of the St. Nazaire townspeople. They hosted a banquet and erected a six-foot-tall memorial to salute the Snap! Crackle! Pop! crew.

"He was very excited and honored," Jenkins said.

Magee is survived by his wife, Helen; a sister, Adele; six nieces and three nephews. A celebration of his life will be held this spring.



TOPICS:

Culture/Society

Miscellaneous

News/Current Events

US: New Mexico

KEYWORDS:

fall

lucky

survivor

veteran

wwii





To: woofie

bump



To: woofie





To: woofie

bump



To: woofie

I recall a similar story I read in elementary school in the sixties. The story I recall had the B-17 crew member leaping out after finding the chutes on fire and decided it better to fall to his death rather than burn. His boots were ablaze when he jumped and he blacked out after leaving the plane. After falling about 13000 ft I believe, he fell through pine trees and landed in deep snow on a steep slope and slid to a stop. His only injuries were burned feet. He blew his whistle and was shortly captured by the Germans, who disbelieved his story. After finding the wreckage, and extrapolating the flight path, he became somewhat of a celebrity with the Germans. Does anyone recall this? is it the same guy, or a different story altogether?



To: longtermmemmory

This is truly amazing



To: woofie

I vaguely remember reading about this before but I still find it hard to believe a man could fall 22,000 feet without a parachute and survive. A glass skylight "breaking" his fall? C'mon.



by 7 posted onby SamAdams76 (I got my 401(k) statement - Up 28.02% in 2003 - Thanks to tax cuts and the Bush recovery)

To: woofie

Memo to the 82nd and 101st: Think we just found a cost savings for ya.



To: SamAdams76

Does anyone want to estimate his air speed?



To: SamAdams76

I knew a Navy chief who fell 4 stories onto a stone courtyard, and his fall was broken by a large cactus plant. Broken pelvis among his many breaks, but he lived.



To: Travis McGee

OK, but four stories is what, maybe 40-50 feet at most? We are talking 22,000 feet here. That's over four miles of falling. I just don't buy it.



by 11 posted onby SamAdams76 (I got my 401(k) statement - Up 28.02% in 2003 - Thanks to tax cuts and the Bush recovery)

To: woofie





Thought you might like to see this. There's a great photo there too.



http://www.303rdbga.com/c-360-adams.html



ADAMS CREW - 360th BS

B-17F Garbage #41-24563 (PU-H)

(original crew assigned 360BS: 26 July 1942 - photo: 14 Oct 1942)

what a story. Thanks for the post.Thought you might like to see this. There's a great photo there too.ADAMS CREW - 360th BSB-17F Garbage #41-24563 (PU-H)(original crew assigned 360BS: 26 July 1942 - photo: 14 Oct 1942)

To: woofie

A remarkable story.



To: woofie; snippy_about_it

HOLY SMOKE!!! It just wasn't his time.



by 14 posted onby SAMWolf (Elevators smell different to midgets.)

To: SamAdams76; Squantos

Terminal velocity is the same whether you fall from 2,000 feet or 22,000. People have jumped from skyscrapers and landed on car roofs and lived. You just need that little cushion, whether it's a snow bank, hay stack, auto roof, awning, cactus plant or a skylight.



To: woofie

Does anyone want to estimate his air speed? About 120 mph, plus or minus a few, depending on how baggy his flight suit was.



To: Boiling point

I remember a similar story. A tail gunner who fell out of a damaged airplane and fell head first (he could see the stars through his feet) and landed in trees and snow. The Germans believed his story when they realized his parachute harness had not been used. That's the version I remember.



To: SamAdams76

Terminal velocity for a falling human body is around 120 MPH, faster if you are falling head first perpendicular to the ground. Since he was passed out, he probably curled into a ball back first for the fall. It pretty much doesn't matter once you get above about 300 feet, you will be at terminal velocity when you hit the ground.



Strange things do happen. I wouldn't want to make that trip though.



by 18 posted onby spodefly (This is my tagline. There are many like it, but this one is mine.)

To: woofie

From Guinness: Highest fall survived without parachute Who: Vesna Vulovic

When: January 26th, 1972

Where: Somewhere over the Czech Republic

What: 33,330 ft.

Vesna Vulovic, a flight attendant from Yugoslavia, survived a fall from 10,160 m. (33,330 ft.) when the DC-9 in which she was traveling blew up over Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic), on January 26, 1972. No other passengers survived. It is believed the plane crashed after the detonation of a bomb planted by Croatian terrorists in the forward cargo hold. Vesna Vulovic fell 10,160 m. (33,330 ft.) - breaking both legs and becoming paralyzed from the waist down.



To: Travis McGee

Or a fat girl on yer tandem rig.....That's good for a dead cat bounce at least once !



by 20 posted onby Squantos (Salmon...the other pink meat !)

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