ripped from another place - no direct link. interesting read.
The Airplane that Ended a War
Remembering the B-29 bomber and crew that flew the last major combat mission 
of World War II.
By Stephen Pope / Published: Jan 10, 2012
Enola Gay. FIFI. The Great Artiste. Kee Bird. The Big Stink.
It was an airplane dubbed "Superfortress." Yet many of the most famous 
Boeing B-29 bombers that plied the skies during the latter days of World War 
II carried strangely meek-sounding individual names. Perhaps that's of 
benefit to our collective psyche since the airplanes in question were 
capable of raining such unfathomable destruction from above. After all, 
attaching a name to a killing machine is merely an attempt to humanize the 
brutality of war, isn't it?
Virtually all combat B-29s had distinctive names, bestowed upon them by 
their crews. This is somewhat unusual since other bombers of the day, 
including the B-17 and B-24, were less likely to carry an individual name 
(although a great many did, Memphis Belle being perhaps the most famous 
example among many, many thousands).
My interest in Superfortress naming arises from a familial link with the 
most famous (or second most famous, depending on how you rank them) B-29 
mission of all. My grandfather's first cousin (and my first cousin twice 
removed) was SSgt. Raymond Gallagher, a gunner on the B-29 that dropped the 
atomic bomb "Fat Man" on Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945. It was the mission that 
broke the will of the Japanese, and, as we all know, it marked only the 
second time an atomic weapon had been used in war after the Enola Gay 
dropped "Little Boy" on Hiroshima three days earlier.
The oddest part of the Nagasaki mission, for me, was that cousin Ray was a 
crewmember aboard a B-29 called The Great Artiste and not Bockscar, the 
airplane that the history books tell us flew the Aug. 9 bombing run. Even 
stranger, the first news reporter to write about that mission referred to 
the airplane as The Great Artiste. And when Bockscar was first enshrined in 
an aviation museum, The Great Artiste and not Bockscar was painted on its 
nose.
What gives? As Paul Harvey would say, here's the rest of the story:
Bockscar, named after its aircraft commander, Capt. Frederick Bock, was 
indeed the B-29 that bombed Nagasaki - but it was flown on that day by a 
different crew. The mission had been assigned to the crew of The Great 
Artiste, commanded by Maj. Charles Sweeny. But his crew couldn't fly their 
own airplane, which had been outfitted with observation gear for the 
Hiroshima bombing run, in which they participated. Rather than take the time 
to refit The Great Artiste for bombing duty, its crew, which had practiced 
the dropping of Fat Man in Bockscar, commandeered that airplane for its 
mission.
Here's where the story gets interesting. On the morning of the mission, 
Bockscar was found to have a faulty fuel transfer pump that made it 
impossible to use 625 gallons of fuel in the tail. As a result, Sweeny was 
warned to spend a maximum of 15 minutes at the rendezvous point, where 
Bockscar was to meet up with The Great Artiste and another B-29, The Big 
Stink.
That 15-minute window stretched to 45 minutes after the third B-29 failed to 
reach the meeting point. Undeterred, Sweeny proceeded to the primary target, 
the Japanese city of Kokura, where Bockscar made three bombing runs - but 
each time thick cloud cover prevented the crew from dropping its ordnance. 
By the end of the third run, Japanese fighters were climbing through the 
overcast. Sweeny made the decision to head for the secondary target, 
Nagasaki.
But the cloud cover over Nagasaki was no better. With fuel running 
critically low, the crew decided to bomb the city anyway, using radar. At 
the last moment, Kermit Beahan, the crew's highly skilled bombardier (from 
whom the The Great Artiste takes its name) spotted a break in the cloud that 
allowed him to confirm they were over Nagasaki (more or less) and drop their 
ordnance. (Even though the bomb missed its target zone, more than 70,000 
were killed in the detonation. Japan surrendered six days later.)
Now 30,000 feet over Nagasaki, the crew of Bockscar faced a new problem. 
They didn't have enough fuel to make it back to base on Iwo Jima. Sweeny 
decided to fly to Okinawa instead, knowing he'd have enough fuel for only 
one landing attempt. As Bockscar began its final approach, a faster than 
normal descent, the number 2 engine quit due to fuel starvation. On 
touchdown, another engine quit as the fast moving B-29 lurched violently on 
the runway, nearly taking out a row of B-24s.
There isn't much written in the historical record about Gunner Ray 
Gallagher, although some interesting letters, including this one, have been 
preserved. Commander Sweeny is another story. He was reamed out by General 
Curtis LaMay, chief of staff for the Strategic Air Forces, upon arriving in 
Guam days later. Col. Paul Tibbets, commander of the Enola Gay, wanted 
Sweeny disciplined for failure to command. But when the Japanese surrendered 
and the war abruptly ended less than a week later, the matter was quietly 
dropped.
Today Bockscar is on permanent display at the National Museum of the United 
States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. The display includes a replica of the "Fat 
Man" bomb and a simple sign bearing a concise and wholly accurate 
description: "The aircraft that ended WWII."
View our Bockscar B-29 Superfortress Photo Gallery.
http://www.flyingmag.com/blogs/fly-wire/airplane-ended-war?cmpid=011212&spPodID=030