4 May 1945 – Survivor James Cyril Mooney is liberated from POW camp

The third crash survivor James Cyril Mooney volunteered for this mission (his first) when regular Worry Bird crew member Sgt. W. Bollinger reported off sick that day. Mooney was rescued by the French resistance on the morning of the Worry Bird Crash landing 28 April 1944. His life was saved but he was wounded so badly with a broken back that they had no choice to turn him over to the Germans for medical treatment or he would have likely died.

He survived his injuries but was hospitalized for months in a POW hospital in Lyon, France and was then marched on foot back to Germany and eventually to Poland before the British liberated his POW camp in 1945.

On 4 May 1945 RAF Bomber Command implemented Operation Exodus, and the first prisoners of war were repatriated by air. Bomber Command flew 2,900 sorties over the next 23 days, carrying 72,500 prisoners of war.
By 20 May 1945, all surviving American POWs were back in US hands. 

Liberation of POW camps in 1945.

I have been unable to obtain a photograph of Mooney but was able to locate his obituary.

Born 20 April 1921 in Englewood, New Jersey he was the youngest of three children born to Mary and William Mooney. He was a graduate of Horace Mann High School then volunteered to serve in the US Army Air Corps on 25 June 1942.

Mooney was awarded the Purple Heart, and a Bronze Star. After the war, he attended Citadel University and went on to become a successful regional sales executive for Johnson & Johnson. He and his wife of 58 years, Jeanne T. Mooney, raised a daughter Deborah A. Frey. He was a winner of the Greenwich Town Golf Tournament in the Super Senior Bracket.

James Mooney died on Saturday 29 December 2007 in Connecticut at the age of 86.

22 April 1945 – Public memorial in St. Cyr de Valorge

This was a difficult post to write. On 22 April 1945, hundreds of people, including Chuckie’s squadron commander, from two villages in France paid tribute to Chuckie that day in a public memorial. Yet sadly, due to the need to keep the secrets of the Carpetbagger Project, Chuckie’s parents sat in a small apartment in a small American town unaware with hope still alive that he would return home safely. All they still knew from the US Government was that he was still Missing in Action. It would be another year before they knew what what everyone else involved in the public memorial knew that day – Chuckie was killed in action one year before.

The villagers of St. Cyr de Valorge and Tarare built a monument to honor these men. The held a public memorial to the five American airmen who died there in a crash one year before in a very large public ceremony that included Chuckie’s squadron commander. It was to be the first of a series of memorials to honor Allied Forces airmen who had died delivering supplied and agents to the French resistance forces.

An actual copy of the official Memorial Program from that day.

Translation – Left side: 28 April 1944
“Five American aviators were killed in the process of air-dropping weapons.โ€œ 
Right Side:: 22 April 1945
“Tribute from the French resistance to th five victims”
The Official Program from the Memorial

English Translation

Left Hand sideTitle: Tribute to our allies
Main text: The Resistance of St Cyr de Valorges, upon the initiative of the local committee of Liberation, dedicates a memorial to the five American aviators fallen on 28thApril 1944 on the air-dropping field of this municipality.
Bottom left: Unveiling of the memorial on 22ndApril 1945


Right-hand sideTitle: Program
Main text:
9:00 am: Welcome of the official public authorities on the square
9:30 am: Official mass
10:30 am: First wreath laying at the memorial
11:30 am: Cortege preparation to march
11:45 am: Blessing of the memorial
Further wreath laying
A minute of silence
Anthem
Speeches
1:00 pm: Official meal


Lt. Col Robert Boone was invited to be present at the days celebration and memorial dedication as a representative of the American Carpetbagger units.

Lt. Col Robert Boone

Boone was one of Chuckie’s squadron commanders at Harrington and in command of the 801st Bomb Group. He was responsible for the working up of the air and ground echelons in preparation for the first Carpetbagger missions.
On 13 August 1944 the Carpetbaggers at Harrington were redesignated to the 492nd Bomb Group (H) and the four squadrons became the 856th, 857th, 858th and 859th Bomb Squadrons under Col Clifford Heflin, the first commander of the 801st/492nd Bombardment Group, nicknamed the Carpetbaggers.


Public Memorial Program

9AM Welcome – The public square at St. Cyr de Valorge, near where the crash had occurred, was packed with people from the two villages. Flags of France, the United Stated, and Great Britain were flying, while bands played the national anthems of the three countries. There was much cheering, and hundreds were in tears as speakers told of the stirring days of the resistance.

The village square at St. Cyr de Valorge, France

9:30 Official Mass – The official party and the villagers gathered in the village church, where a priest spoke, eulogizing Chuckie and the fliers. After the mass, the villagers moved to the monument for dedication.

This picture shows the village church in the background.
This is the hill and site where Chuckie’s plane crashed. The memorial still stands today.

11:45 AM Memorial Dedication
Boone gave his address, which was translated into French by an interpreter, He said that he was happy to be on the ground in daytime to see the beauty of the country – something that was impossible to see at night – and to feel the warmth of the French people – impossible to feel in a Liberator airplane. He said that the men in his outfit remembered the dead men well, and to him the ceremony was evidence that the men fought not only for, but with, France in the war of Liberation.

Boone and French officials

Photos Above: The memorial from 22 April 1945 above.

1:00 PM Official Meal – After the ceremony, the party moved to a banquet hall for lunch. Colonel Boone was given Lieutenant Ambrose’s identification tags and part of his bracelet, which he promised to send to the lieutenant’s relatives in the United States.

The villagers walk back down the hill to an Official luncheon.

Sadly, Chuckie’s parents, brother and sister went to their graves thirty and forty years later never knowing any of this.

Here is that monument as it stands today, 74 years later.

The memorial as it stands today.

TRANSLATION:
โ€œIn memory of five American aviators found dead in their plane debris, that crashed into flames in this place on 28th April 1944; whose mission was to airdrop weapons to our secret army for the liberation of France and the restoration of our ideals.”
Lieutenant C.W. Ambrose
Charles M. Wilson
Robert H. Redhair
A.B. Pope
Lieutenant Peter Rocciaโ€

Left hand side little black stone: โ€œFrenchy to his friendsโ€

It speaks to the service and sacrifices of all the Carpetbaggers.  

  1. Pilot 1st Lt George W Ambrose; is buried at Long Island National Cemetery, Farmingdale, New York, USA
  2. Co-pilot, 2nd Lt. Robert Harry Redhair; is buried in Akhard Cemetery, Polk Co, Missouri
  3. Navigator, 2nd Lt. Arthur Bozeman Pope; is buried in National Cemetery Marietta, GA
  4. Bombardier, 2nd Lt. Peter Roccia; is buried in Arlington National Cemetery
  5. Flight Engineer, Staff Sargeant Charles M Wilson; is buried at Rhone American Cemetery, Draguignan, France

Right hand side white stone: โ€œLoved comrade-in-arms on 28 April 1944 James Heddlesonโ€

There were three crash survivors, their stories told in previous posts.

  • James Joseph Heddelman
  • George Willam Henderson
  • James Cryl Mooney
A small clearing on the way to the monument.
Photo credit.

27 August 1944 – Two Worry Bird airmen safely return to Harrington

Four months after they walked away from B-24 Liberator The Worry Bird crash landing that killed Chuckie and four others airmen of the 801st Bomb Group, two of the three survivors returned back to RAF Harrington on 27 August 1944 after successfully evading the German enemy with the help of the French.

Only on one occasion we had a very close call. We were eating at an outside restaurant along the Rhone River, when word came that the Germans were stopping everyone for their papers. We climbed over a wall and dropped down to the river bank. Just as we cleared the wall I spotted the Germans, we made it. From here we were taken to a farm to hide out. We met several more French people who were also escaping back to England. The plane was supposed to come in July but didnโ€™t arrive until the last week of August.

We were taken to a field before dark and hid in the nearby woods. As we heard the plane approaching, the Maquis lit several fires for the plane to land, when it came in and landed we were waiting to climb aboard. It only took several minutes to take off. We were overloaded but we made it.

Edited from transcribed copy of letter by crash survivor James Heddelman in the archives at the Air Force Academy June – 1998

Historical records note they boarded on board RAF Hudson (Operation Machette) 27 August 1944.

When an aircraft has completed its mission and returned to the home base, its crew are driven directly to the Intelligence Library situated at the rear of the Group Operations Building, for interrogation by S-2 Officers. In the case of Heddelson and Henderson, they had much to report. Their first person accounts given about the crash and Chuckie were posted in a previous post.

801st Bomb Group OSS Liaison Officer, S2 Lt.Robert D Sullivan debriefs a crew
Photo credit Harrington Aviation Museum.

After the interrogation, the crew go to the Mess Hall, where under the supervision of a medical officer, each man is given a two ounce medicinal ration of whiskey. The man signs a receipt for his whiskey, which is issued for operational use only and serves to relax tense nerves.

More than 25 B-24s and 208 Carpetbaggers were lost in those lonely flights over enemy territory.  Heddelson and Henderson were one of the very few Carpetbaggers to make the complete circle:
(a) flew the parachute missions from England.
(b) participated in the drops from the ground.
(c) fought with the Maquis and did some sabotage.
(d) escaped back to England by the secret landings.

After the war

Heddleson wound up back in his hometown Louisville, Ohio after the war, worked as senior works engineer of the Hoover Co. During World War II, the Hoover Company switched its production from vacuum cleaners to items needed for the American war effort, such as helmet liners and bomb fuses. Hoover won numerous government awards for its contributions to the nation’s war production. Once the war ended, the company returned to producing vacuum cleaners.

Heddelson and his wife, Ruth, raised four sons, and the couple twice traveled to France, where they visited the scenes of his wartime exploits.

I have been unable to find much about what happened to Henderson after the war.

Colonel Clifford Heflin – Commander of The Carpetbaggers

Chuckie’s Commander was Colonel Clifford Heflin, a decorated member of the Armed Forces, serving in the Air Force for 31 years.

Colonel Heflin began his military career in the Air Cadets in 1938 at the age of 21. In just three years, his technical and leadership skills garnered him the rank of Major. At the start of World War II, Colonel Heflin had a succession of roles flying bomber planes involving anti-submarine missions.ย 

He was then given an assignment to work with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in England, and in January 1944 became commander of Chuckie’s secret unit known as the โ€œCarpetbaggers.โ€ย The Carpetbaggers dropped supplies to the Allies and armed resistance movements in enemy territory.ย 

His second in command Lt Col Bob Fish Fish, left, and Col Heflin, right
Photo Credit

Colonel Heflinโ€™s bravery and superior skills in commanding the Carpetbaggers garnered him the Legion of Merit, awarded to him by Eisenhower. He was also given the French Cross of War and the Legion of Honor, award by the French government. 

492nd Group Headquarters Officers in front of the Operations Room map

His work with the Carpetbaggers brought him to the attention of the Manhattan Projectโ€™s top military commanders, who assigned Colonel Heflin to be commander of the 216th Army Air Forces Base Unit Special Airfield at Wendover during the Manhattan Project. The Manhattan Project was a research and development undertaking during World War II that produced the first nuclear weapons.

After the warโ€™s end, Colonel Heflin was transferred to Stead Air Force Base outside of Reno, Nevada as commander. He went on to become the base commander of Lowry Air Force Base in Denver.

In 1968 Colonel Heflin retired from the Air Force and moved to Reno.ย 

19 June 1944 – Happy 21st birthday, Jimmy

Chuckie’s fellow airman and crash survivor James “Jimmy” Heddelson celebrated his 21st birthday on 19 June 1944 while in hiding behind enemy lines evading the Germans with the help of the French.

On the 19th of June (1944) it was my 21st birthday and the Boyers family told Henderson and myself to get ready, on a minutes notice, to leave. We accepted our fate, and after dark, they led us through the back streets, often hiding in the shadows as people would approach, so as not to see us. We approached a familiar apartment, I began to get curious as you see it was the house of Rene Simonโ€™s.

When we went inside it was full of people and they actually had a surprise birthday party for me, with a few gifts too. The people had been planning and saving things for this occasion. Such as sugar, butter and meat. They had baked a cake and we had drinks. I had the most memorable birthday of my life, I shall never forget it. You would never believe it could happen under those perilous times.

Edited from transcribed copy of letter by crash survivor James Heddelman in the archives at the Air Force Academy June – 1998

It is unclear to the author who the ‘Rene Simon’ was Heddelson referring to. The only Renรฉ Simon at that time I can uncover was a French actor (1898 in Troyes โ€“ 1971), founder in 1925 of the Cours Simon drama school in Paris. Somehow that doesn’t seem correct. The French Resistance involved men and women representing a broad range of ages, social classes, occupations, religions and political affiliations. It was estimated there were 200,000 activists and a further 300,000 with substantial involvement in Resistance operations.

Jimmy Heddelson at age 85 holding a photo of himself at 21 years old.
Image is from a poor photocopy scan of an Air Force newsletter article in March 2009

Two months later, Heddelson and Henderson returned safely to RAF Harrington thanks to the French Resistance who helped them.

6 June 1944 – D-Day and The Maquis and French resistance army

Resistance movements during World War II occurred in every occupied country by a variety of means, ranging from non-cooperation to propaganda to hiding crashed pilots and even to outright warfare and the recapturing of towns. In many countries, resistance movements were sometimes also referred to as The Underground.

Chuckie and the Carpetbaggers supplied the Maquis and the French Resistance before the invasion of Normandy and continued throughout the summer of 1944. A previous post provided information on the B-24 crew preparation of the Carpetbagger missions.

Carpetbaggers parachuted in bazookas, carbines, rifles, Sten guns, small arms, grenades and other items in heavy demand especially designed for sabotage. Explosives had to be handled very carefully. Because they were not units that the United States had formally agreed to logistically support, they were not eligible to receive the standard U.S. equipment that was provided to French regular army units. Thus, the French resistance units often clothed themselves in nonstandard uniforms or uniforms of 1940 vintage. The same condition existed with weapons, with the use of captured German infantry weapons a common practice. Because of the mix of American, British, French, German, and other weapons, the supply of ammunition and spare parts was complicated and often difficult to accomplish. 

Medical supplies, radios and other breakable items were placed in tins and baskets that were placed inside wire bins stuffed with moisture resistant corrugated paper to help them withstand the impact of the drop.  These were covered with canvas call โ€œpanniers.โ€

The cylindrical containers the B-24s dropped were designed with a shock absorbing buffer on one end.  They consisted of five individual cells and carried a variety of items.  This included rounds of ammunition, boots, socks and other clothing, bicycles, tires., gasoline, and riffles.   The Carpetbaggers supplied over 20,000 rifles during the course of the operations. Parachutes were then attached to the containers prior to take off. Once fully loaded, the containers could weigh up to 300 pounds each. 

The bomb bay of the B-24 carried 12, fully packed, 300-pound containers. The same push button method used to drop the bombs was employed to drop the containers. Packages were stored forward in the aircraft until after takeoff and later placed on roller conveyers leading to the Joe Hole.

The Maquis waiting on the ground and gathered the canisters and supplies and dispersed them to the resistance army. The word “Maquis” cam from the type of terrain in which the resistance groups were hiding. Members were called “Maquisards” and operated in the isolated mountainous areas of rural France. The hilly region was perilous and dangerous to the big B-24 Liberators as Chuckie and fellow crew tragically found.

Individual circuits behind enemy lines inside France were identified by a specific code name. Usual, the name referred to a corresponding location or occupation such as ‘Wrestler”, ‘Lockey, or ‘Headmaster’.

The supply requests from each circuit were sent by radio to Special Operations in London and then on the the Carpetbaggers in Harrington. The exact location of the reception committee was determined by matching the code name to the secret files kept at Carpetbagger headquarters in Harringon.

Charles Andrรฉ Joseph Marie de Gaullew was a French army officer and statesman who led the French Resistance against Nazi Germany in World War II and chaired the Provisional Government of the French Republic from 1944 to 1946 in order to reestablish democracy in France after the war. 

TRANSLATION: TO ALL FRENCHMEN!
France has lost a battle! But France has not lost the war! Some that have happened into governing positions may have capitulated, ceding to panic, forgetting honour, delivering the country to servitude. However, nothing is lost! Nothing is lost, because this war is a world war. In the free universe, immense forces have yet to get into the fray. One day, those forces will crush the enemy. That day, France must be there for victory. Then she will find her liberty and her greatness again. Such is my goal, my only goal! This is why I invite all Frenchmen, wherever they may be, to join me in action, in sacrifice, and in hope. Our motherland is in lethal danger. Let us all fight to save her! LONG LIVE FRANCE! General de Gaulle Head-Quarters, Carlton Gardens 4 London, S.W.1.

On 6 June 1944. Celebrated as โ€œD-Dayโ€โ€“ the Allied Forces began a massive invasion of Europe, landing 156,000 British, Canadian and American soldiers on the beaches of Normandy, France. The Carpetbaggers and the French Resistance were credited with delaying German mobilization by blowing up railroad track and repeatedly attaching German Army equipment and garrison trains.

Omaha, commonly known as Omaha Beach, was the code name for one of the five sectors of the Allied invasion of German-occupied France in the Normandy landings on June 6, 1944, during World War II. “Omaha” refers to a section of the coast of Normandy, France, facing the English Channel.

Taking Omaha was to be the responsibility of United States Army troops, with sea transport, mine sweeping, and a naval bombardment force provided predominantly by the United States Navy and Coast Guard, with contributions from the British, Canadian, and Free French navies.

Many years later, Churchill, Eisenhower and Patton acknowledged the inestimable value of Chuckie and the Carpetbaggers contribution to defeating the enemy. According to General Patton, the rapid advance of his army through France would have been impossible without the fighting aid of the French resistance which the Carpetbaggers supplied.

Allied Forces approaching Omaha Beach

4 May 1944 – French agents report back, plane crashed

For eight long days back at Harrington, Chuckie’s Squadron Command didn’t hear anything from the Ambrose Crew or those on the ground about the fate of the Carpetbagger mission or their friends and colleagues of The Worry Bird crew.

Finally on 4 May 1944 Allied Forces Operations at Baker Street London received a message from French agents in the field that Chuckie was killed, along with a part of Chuckie’s airplane with the aircraft number.

French witnesses on the scene reported the aircraft had arrived over the target and made three descending circles. It struck the ground on the third circle, crashed and burned, killing all crew members except George W. Henderson, S Sgt. James J Hedddleson and St. James C. Mooney.

This is copy of the actual report dated 6 May 1944 which can be found in the National Archives.

French agent field report to OSS offices in London “Baker Street” that Chuckie was killed.
French agent field report to OSS offices in London “Baker Street” confirming Chuckie’s Identification page found on his body.
French agent field report confirming Sgt. Mooney taken to hospital as POW.

Carpetbagger missions were carried out by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) to clandestinely deliver agents and supplies into Nazi-occupied Europe. The OSS was a wartime intelligence agency of the United States during World War II, and a predecessor to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The OSS was formed as an agency of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to coordinate espionage activities behind enemy lines for all branches of the United States Armed Forces.

To support the Allied invasion of France on D Day in June 1944 the Carpetbaggers from January – to June dropped three-man parties (a total of 100 men and women) into various parts of France as agents to co-ordinate widespread overt (as opposed to clandestine) acts of resistance. They served in a variety of functions including arms and sabotage instructors, couriers, circuit organizers, liaison officers and radio operators. The names of all 13,000 OSS personnel and documents of their OSS service, previously a closely guarded secret, were released by the US National Archives on August 14, 2008. 

French agents were directed from OSS offices in London “Baker Street” where they occupied much of the western side of Baker Street. The precise nature of the buildings remained concealed. Secure communications were established with OSS HQ in London and Station 179, Harrington where the 801st Bomb Group OSS Liaison Officer, S2 Lt. Sullivan directed the covert Carpetbagger operations.

Maquisards (Resistance fighters) in the Haute-Savoie dรฉpartement in August 1944.
Third and fourth from the left are two SOE officers.
Photo Credit

It would be two more years before the Wilson family were told that Chuckie was killed.

29 April 1944 – One Worry Bird airman is now POW

The third crewman to survive the crash that killed Chuckie, Sergeant James Cyril Mooney plummeted through the open “Joe hole” where the bottom ball gun-turret had been removed so agents could parachute from the plane.ย  Mooney was rescued by the French resistance on the morning of 28 April 1944 when The Worry Bird crashed but his back was broken and he was wounded so badly that they had to turn him over to the Germans for medical treatment.

His condition was such, I found out later, that the man whose house he was taken to, had to turn him over to the Germans. He told me personally how sorry he was for having to do this. But I tried to assure him that in Sgt Mooneyโ€™s case (broken back) he probably saved his life as I heard the Germans took him to a hospital.

Edited from transcribed copy of letter by crash survivor James Heddelman in the archives at the Air Force Academy June – 1998

Mooney was hospitalized for months and then marched on foot back to Germany and eventually to a POW camp in Poland.

Stalag Luft III was located 100 miles southeast of Berlin in what is now Poland. “Luft” means “air” in German, and it designated a camp holding mostly Allied airmen. The officer airmen who were POWs in the German camps at Stalag Luft III arrived there through an accident of war. They varied widely in age, military rank, education, and family background, but had several common experiences:

  • They all volunteered to go to war as airmen.
  • They all managed to complete flying training.
  • They all entered into combat flying in airplanes.
  • They all were survivors of a traumatic catastrophe in the air.

By early 1945, the war was going badly for the Germans, with Allied forces poised to overrun Hitler’s homeland. As the Russian army approached from the east, the Germans decided to move the occupants of certain POW camps, called stalags, farther west.

From a total of 257,000 western Allied prisoners of war held in German military prison camps, over 80,000 western Allied prisoners of war held in German military prison camps were forced to walk on foot on “The Great March” westward across Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Germany in extreme winter conditions to prisoners of war (POWs) camps (with part of the distance covered by cattle train) over about four months between January and April 1945.

The march started at Stalag Luft IV in German Pomerania (now part of Poland), a POW camp for US and British aircrew men which likely held Mooney and an estimated 9,000-10,000 other POWs.

It was later estimated that a large number of POWs had marched over 500 miles
by the time they were liberated, and some had walked nearly 930 miles.

POW Monument at Luft 4
Published in AIR FORCE Magazine September 1997, Vol. 80, No. 9

In 1992, the American survivors of the march funded and dedicated a memorial at the former site of Stalag Luft IV in Poland, the starting place of a march that is an important part of Air Force history. 

Mooney was held prisoner in a German POW camp until the British liberated his POW camp in Poland at the end of the war in 1945.

28 April -27 Aug 1944 – Two Worry Bird airmen evade the Enemy

Of the three airmen to survive the crash that killed Chuckie and four other airmen, two successfully evaded the enemy before safely returning four months later to RAF Harrington.

Just before the crash Sergeant James Heddleson had gone to an open hatch in the tail to exchange recognition signals, flashing lights, with people waiting below in a clearing surrounded by high hills. Suddenly the plane shook violently, as if the aircraft or its wingtip had hit something. Heddleson fell across the hatch. Both he and the tail gunner Sergeant George Henderson were thrown free as the rear fuselage tumbled and broke apart. 

Sergeant James Heddleson under the Worry Bird 1943

Heddleson and Henderson found each other amid the burning remains of the plane and exploding bullets. Staggering on battered but fortunately unbroken legs, they limped to the nearby woods, then turned and watched The Worry Bird erupt in a final fireball.

The pair spent the next few days traveling across the countryside, begging food from startled French civilians and eluding Germans searching for them with dogs and planes.


After several days of hiding and only moving at night, we ended up in a cemetary, when daylight came we decided we better hole up for the day, when we saw an old man walking towards us. We really scared him when we approached him for food or help or anything. I showed him my โ€œwingsโ€ and he motioned for us to follow him, at a distance. Eventually we ended up in the garage of a schoolhouse.

They eventually met a man who told the airmen to stay in a vineyard where they had hidden, then returned an hour later with a note, in English, from the local school master, who promised to meet them at 5 p.m. The teacher kept his promise and after bringing them food, left to bring back a member of the local Resistance, or Maquis, who was so heavily armed that “he looked like a walking arsenal,” Heddleson said.

We were given some bread, cheese and wine and after dark a group of men came in a car, it was M. Benoit the school teacher. They were all armed with pistols and rifles. After a few questions and some very vague answers, they decided we were the two Americans that everybody was looking for. I also knew then, that at last, we had made contact with the French underground (Maquis). We then were taken to a farm (in the car) and hidden in the barn. This place was owned by a Mme. De Havrincourt. We stayed there a couple of weeks, hiding sometimes in the nearby woods and barn and house. She had a doctor come and he fixed up my forehead, he opened up the gashes and re-stitched them. I mean the hard way , with a needle and thread. I can still remember that. We were spotted by the wrong person at this farm and she told the Germans โ€œshe thought she had seen some English fliersโ€. When the Germans came through the gate, we escaped out the back of the barn to the woods. We could see them looking everywhere, but to no avail. Mme. De Havrincourt convinced them (the Germans) the woman was demented and they finally left.

Sergeant George Henderson in front of The Worry Bird 1943

Heddleson and Henderson were given false identity cards during the four-month stay with the French Resistance. It identified the as deaf-mutes, to reduce the risk of exposing them as a fugitive, non-French-speaking Allied airman.

Needless to say the Maquis decided it was time for us to move on. We were taken to the Jean Crozet farm near St. Germain Laval. The main structure was walled in and a person could feel slightly safer. While there, we participated in two different night parachute drops. This was not only dangerous but a lot of work. The parachutes were everywhere. We loaded them into trucks and even oxen-drawn wagons. We stored them in various barns before daylight. I can still remember looking up and seeing those B-24โ€™s flying very low and turn and head back to England, Harrington, I assumed. It gave you an empty feeling in your stomach. I spelled my name with a flashlight in Morse code several times but I never knew if they received it.

Heddleson and Henderson were shuttled from one hideout to another, narrowly escaping capture several times. Heddleson learned later that the Germans had posted a 25,000-franc reward on the heads of two surviving downed Allied airmen.

From the Crozet farm we went to the village of St. Germain Laval to stay. We first stayed at the home of Rene Simons for a few days, never venturing out of doors. From here we went to the home of Jean Boyer. He was an officer in the Maquis. We stayed with the Boyers the longest, about 8 weeks. It was through Jean Boyer that we participated in several raids with the Maquis. I can recall one raid in particular that involved Jean Boyer, Henderson, Joseph Tournaire, and myself.

Heddleson and Henderson started working with Maquis groups in the area, assembling Carpetbagger-dropped weapons and training partisans in their use. They accompanied resistance fighters in raids on the homes and shops of suspected collaborators. As the Allied D-Day of France neared, the underground was ordered to destroy railroads and bridges that the Germans could use to resupply their coastal defenses. 

We rode at night on a bicycle, quite a distance from St. Germain Laval to a railroad trestle that we were going to blow up (sabotage). It crossed over a small river. Boyer and myself went to the center of the trestle and we climbed down over the side carrying our explosives. We had a timing device for it, and we thought we had plenty of time to make our escape and would be well on our way back to St. Germain Laval, before any action took place. I could look back over my shoulder and see the trestle behind us, when all hell broke loose. Obviously our timer was wrong. ( I believe these were from a parachute drop). In the still of the night the explosion was felt from where we were.

We made our departure immediately away from there. Several times we would hide along the road as the Germans would pass us on their way to the trestle, or what was left of it, not seeing us. We made it back to the Boyerโ€™s house just as the sun was coming up. Needless to say we were very shaken and tired. The Boyerโ€™s house was located almost in the center of St. Germain Laval and had a small walled-in area about 24ft by 20ft. It was here we would spend our time cleaning and assembling British machine guns, that were parachuted to the Maquis at night. Many a time we would go to the basement of the schoolhouse where the walls were about 4 to 5 feet thick, and testfire these weapons, always on the lookout for the enemy, because of the noise. 

Edited from transcribed copy of letter by crash survivor James Heddelson in the archives at the Air Force Academy June – 1998

After D-Day, Heddleson hoped he could return to his unit in England, but it was another two months before he and a handful of other escaped fliers could hop on a British plane that landed by moonlight in a field behind enemy lines.

Brian Albrecht interviewed Heddelson, shortly before his death at aged 85, for an article which ran in the The Plain Dealer in March 2009 portions of which have been reprinted here.

The Crash (Part four): 08:00 – 28 April 1944, it was the next day

It was now morning daylight. Sometime in the morning hours, members of the French resistance army removed the remains of Chuckie and his four fellow comrades from the wreckage of the plane in a field near Saint-Cyr-de-Valorges, France and buried them in an unmarked temporary grave. They also worked very hard to quickly retrieve all the container canisters and packages of supplies strewn about and to hide them.

The Nazi’s would soon arrive at the crash site to retrieve any intelligence they could find.

Quickly burying the dead while under threat of the imminent danger of the arrival of the Nazi’s was a humane act of enormous compassion and respect by the French people. They protected Chuckie and the other fallen from any potential further desecration by the Nazi’s. It also allowed for Chuckie’s body to be identified and, at a later point, safely moved to a temporary cemetery and his subsequent permanent interment in December 1948 at his final resting place at Rhone American Cemetery in Draguignon, France.

Chuckie’s parents were never given many facts about how he died because on his “S E C R E T” Carpetbagger mission. They did have the comfort of knowing that their their son’s body was always treated with the dignity and respect he deserved for paying the ultimate sacrifice for Freedom.

Chuckie’s family never saw these photos of his crashed plane.
Today, they are easily findable by anyone on the internet.

April 1944 B-24 Liberator “The Worry Bird” wrecked upside down in a field west of Lyon, France, after striking a hill near the town of Saint-Cyr-de-Valorges during a night mission. Note the square ‘Joe Hole’ which canisters and packages exited during an airdrop. 

A second photo of B-24 Liberator “The Worry Bird” April 1944
This is the underside of the bombay compartment in the center of the aircraft and the tail section section.

Killed In Action – 28 April 1944
Lieut. George W Ambrose, Pilot; of Springdale, PA
Lieut. Robert H Redhair , Co-Pilot; of Bartlesville, OK
S Sgt. Charles M Wilson, Engineer; of Beaver, PA
Lieut. Arthur B Pope, Navigator; of Fulton, GA
Lieut. Peter Roccia, Bombardier; of Washington, D.C.

It was the next day that they (the French) realized that two more Americans survived (in addition to Mooney). They found the chutes, 1st one and then another, which they immediately buried.

Survivors of the crash included:
Sgt. James J Heddleson, Radio Operator; of Louisville, OH
Sgt. George W Henderson, Tail Gunner; of Santa Monica, CA
Sgt. James C Mooney, Dispatcher; of Englewood, NJ – He volunteered for this mission (his first) – the rest of the crew only met him shortly before take-off, as regular crew member Sgt. W. Bollinger had reported off sick that day.

We assumed everyone was killed except Sgt. Mooney.
His condition was such, I found out later, that the man whose house he was taken to, had to turn him over to the Germans. He told me personally how sorry he was for having to do this. But I tried to assure him that in Sgt Mooneyโ€™s case (broken back) he probably saved his life as I heard the Germans took him to a hospital.

Heddelson and Henderson were now on the move to evade the enemy, as trained

“We moved only at night as we traveled quite a way for the shape we were in. The French started to look for us they said in every direction possible. We skirted villages and main roads, avoiding everyone we saw, especially the Germans. Having no idea where we were, we headed South.”

Edited from transcribed copy of letter by crash survivor James Heddelson in the archives at the Air Force Academy June – 1998

A French secret agent on the ground that day also took the piece of the plane with the serial number.

It would soon be returned back to the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) headquarters at Baker Street in London as part of his field report to the Allied Forces command that the plane had crashed and USAAF men had died.