Boeing B-17G-30-BO 91st BG 323rd BS 42-31909, "Nine-O-Nine", RAF Bassingbourn, 1945. This was one of Kev367th's AHII B-17Gs.
Part of the 91st Bomb Group, this Flying Fortress went on to complete a record tally of 140 missions without an abort or loss of a single crew member. Starting operations in February 1944, her first bombing raid was on Augsburg, Germany, on February 25, 1944. She flew 18 bombing raids on Berlin. By April 1945,
“Nine O Nine” had flown an extraordinary 1,129 hours. M/Sgt. Rollin L. Davis, maintenance line chief of the bomber, received the Bronze Star for his role in achieving the record. In all she flew 1,129 hours and dropped 562,000lb of bombs.
"Nine-O-Nine" returned to the United States after the war in Europe finished, on June 8, 1945. She was sent to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation facility at Kingman, Arizona on December 7, 1945, and eventually scrapped.
The Collings Foundation of Stow, Massachusetts, flew a B-17G painted as a "tribute ship" to honor the original Nine-O-Nine at airshows and for "living history" flights, from 1986 until October 2019. On the morning of October 2, 2019, she crashed at Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, while attempting to return shortly after takeoff. The aircraft was destroyed in the crash, and seven of the thirteen people on board were killed. The National Transportation Safety Board launched an investigation and in April 2021 released a report citing pilot error as the likely cause, with inadequate maintenance as a contributing factor.
I used to see this B-17 regularly, as our airport seemed to be on the Collings annual circuit. She was beautiful in the air. The low rumble of her 4 radials was so distinctive as she made her way low along the Front Range - giving rides I suppose.