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Today is the birthday of George Ott, who was born in
1919 on his parents homestead near New England, ND. After graduating
from high school, Ott took two years of pre-med training at Dickinson
College and also joined the ND National Guard. After finishing with the
Guard, George was given a choice of what to do next. He wanted to join
the Army Air-Corps, but he first had to have his tonsils out. His brothers
friend was a doctor, so George had the operation in the doctors
office and then herded sheep until his throat felt better.
Ott joined the Air Corp in November 1940. When his dad died the following
year, he flew a B-18 bomber home and buzzed New Englands Main Street
before landing in Dickinson.
By the time the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor Dec 7, 1941, George was flying
B-25s at Ft. Pendelton, OR, and, as a member of the 17th Bombardment Group,
he began flying submarine patrols. Thirteen days later, he co-piloted
a B-25 credited with sinking the first enemy sub off the West Coast.
1943 was a pivotal year for Ott; First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt interviewed
him for an article for the February issue of Ladies Home Journal. He was
now a Major in the 8th Air Force, and he soon began flying bombing raids
into the heart of industrial Germany. Fighters would escort the B-17s
from England, but at the German border the bombers had to go it alone.
The results were disastrous. During whats now called Black October,
some 100 planes and their 10-men crews went down in enemy territory. More
than half of these casualties took place on October 14th or Black
Thursday. The Major woke before dawn with an uneasy feeling. I knew
in my mind that, by God, this wasnt going to be my day, he
said. I had that feeling all morning. He was right. He was
about to take part in the wars bloodiest European air battle.
Major Ott was commanding officer of the 325th squadron of the 92nd bomb
group, but on this day he was flying with the 326th as the deputy lead.
His plane was brand new, not yet painted or even marked with squadron
letters. All 291 planes took off blind in pea-soup fog relying
only on instruments to guide them. As was the pattern, their P-47 escorts
turned back when they reached Germany. It was strange to look to
your left and see one of your planes over there, he said, then...seconds
later and it was gone.
The mission was in trouble within minutes. They were all over us
with everything they had, Ott said. Anything that could fly
they sent after us. With German shell casings falling onto his windshield,
Ott saw an ME109 swoop below him, then come straight up gunning. A large
shell exploded beneath him, killing his bombardier. The No. 3 engine went
out, and a fuel tank for the # 1 engine caught fire. Major Ott ordered
his remaining crew to bail out while he held the plane steady. As he,
himself, prepared to jump, a German twin engine came alongside, and he
remembers seeing the faces of the pilot and a gunner as they watched him
leap from the aircraft.
With no oxygen, Ott had to free-fall from 25,000 feet, through the fighting,
until he could breathe. He pulled his ripcord and parachuted into a potato
field but was caught within minutes. A German soldier came from behind
a tree and said, in his native language, For you, the war is over.
He wasnt the only one; 60 American B-17s went down that day
600 men were missing in action. George Ott spent the next 18 months in
Stalag Luft III, a POW camp for flight officers. After he and his 10,000
fellow prisoners were liberated in April 1945, he and his wife, Clara,
raised five children on their farm near New England. Mr. Ott is now retired
and lives in Dickinson where you may wish him a very happy birthday.
Sources:
Carey, Brian Todd. Operation Pointblank: Evolution of Allied Air
Doctrine. World War II Magazine. Nov 1998.
Nelson, Scott (Solen, ND). Black Thursday. Personal Interview
with George Ott. 2004.
Spilde, Tony. Sixty years later, Dickinson man recalls Black
Thursday. Bismarck Tribune. 11 Oct 2003.
92nd Bombardment Group: 326th Squadron, Daily Operations Journal. October
1943.
<http://www.92ndma.org/92nd/326Journal/o43.htm>
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