Are there any B-25B's left in the world, I wonder.
I really like the Museum of the Pacific War. Fred is a great little German town surrounded by the Texas Hill Country and not too far from Austin and San Antonio. I didn't even know about it until pieces of that Val showed up in USAA's C-Courtyard one Veteran's Day. I ran up there that very weekend.
One of the exhibits that draws me annually is Saburo Sakai's flying helmet, goggles and scarf. I believe they are the among the very few things Sakai was able to save from his experiences in the air. The short version of the story is that the canopy bow and these goggles took the fatal punch out of a bullet fired from a USN bomber. He was blinded in one eye nonetheless. The scarf was used to clean the blood from his remaining eye and was eventually stuffed into his head wound. He then flew from near Savo Island to Rabaul (approx. 625 miles) and landed with about two liters of fuel remaining. Further reading:
Samurai (M.Caidin-F.Saito) and
Eagles of Mitsubishi (J.Harukoshi).
Sakai's daughter is a graduate of San Antonio's Trinity University. The display appeared in MoPW around a year after Sakai's death.
The museum is rich with displays donated by those that served. The stories are inspiring in any case. I recommend it.
Great question about the B-25, though. I never really paid attention to the accuracy of that display.