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  • It was December the 20th, 1943 and in the freezing air high above Germany,

  • 2nd Lieutenant CharlesCharlieBrown struggled to keep

  • his mortally damaged American bomber on course.

  • Brown had been wounded in the shoulder,

  • his tail gunner Sergeant HughEckyEckenrode was dead,

  • and several other members of the crew were wounded, some severely.

  • Their aircraft, B-17 Ye Olde Pub, had been hit twice by flak as it approached its target,

  • the Focke-Wulf plant in the German city of Bremen, forcing the crew

  • to shut down one of the engines and throttle back on another.

  • This had left it lagging behind the main formation of aircraft from the 379th Bombardment Group

  • and groups of German fighters had closed in like sharks sensing blood in the water.

  • Up to fifteen fighters had attacked the bomber and the whole tail section was shot to pieces,

  • the nosecone was missing, the electrical, hydraulic and oxygen systems were damaged,

  • the radio was out and the entrails of the crippled bomber flapped in

  • the slipstream through gaping rents in the fuselage.

  • But B-17s are tough old birds and this one somehow kept on flying despite the damage.

  • Brown blacked out for a short time due to pain, loss of blood

  • and a lack of oxygen and the bomber spiraled towards the ground.

  • Brown came to and realized that the B-17 was only a few hundred feet above the ground.

  • He somehow managed to get it back under control and turned west,

  • towards England and safety, two hundred and fifty miles away.

  • Brown wasn't able to coax the B-17 much above one thousand feet

  • and he was vaguely aware that he had passed close to the perimeter of a German airfield.

  • Soon after he realized that a German Messerschmitt Bf 109

  • was flying in close formation beside him.

  • It was so close that Brown could see the German pilot

  • as he gestured towards the ground, telling Brown to set the bomber down.

  • Most of the B-17's gunners were wounded, only a few guns were still working

  • and none were able to shoot at the enemy fighter alongside.

  • Brown could only look at the German pilot and shake his head.

  • For a short time the Messerschmitt flew beside the bomber.

  • Then it slid away, above and behind.

  • Brown waited for the gunfire that must mean the end of Ye Olde Pub.

  • But nothing happened.

  • He realized to his astonishment that the German fighter was flying escort on the B-17.

  • As they crossed the coastline and flew out over the North Sea

  • the fighter remained on station.

  • Only when they were well out from the German coast

  • did the fighter slide in again, close to the bomber.

  • Brown looked acrossthe German pilot looked back at him,

  • raised a gloved hand in salute

  • and then swung his aircraft away, back towards the east.

  • Brown managed to put Ye Olde Pub on the ground,

  • not at their home base in Cambridgeshire

  • but at an airbase of the 448th Bomb Group near Norfolk in East Anglia.

  • He and all his crew other than the tail gunner survived.

  • At debriefing, Brown told his story about the German fighter which escorted him.

  • It was decided that this should be kept secret

  • the notion of an honorable German pilot

  • choosing not to shoot down a damaged American bomber

  • just didn't fit with the message that the USAAF wanted to give out.

  • Charlie Brown survived the war, went home to go to college,

  • and then re-joined the Air Force in 1949.

  • He served until 1965 when he retired as a colonel.

  • It wasn't until much later, in 1986, at a meeting of retired combat pilots

  • calledGathering of the Eaglesthat he first spoke about what had happened.

  • The response was strong, though some questioned

  • whether the whole incident really happened.

  • Even Brown began to wonderhis memories of that day in 1943

  • were hazy due to his injuries, exhaustion and the stress of combat.

  • Could he be remembering it all wrong?

  • Brown decided that he was going to find the German pilot involved,

  • if only to prove that he hadn't imagined the whole thing.

  • It took four years, but in 1990 Brown finally received a letter

  • from a man named Stigler who was living in Canada.

  • Stigler explained that he had been the pilot of the German fighter

  • who had escorted Ye Olde Pub.

  • On December 20, 1943, Franz Stigler had been a twenty-seven kill veteran pilot.

  • He had flown against American bombers

  • in his Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-6 that morning

  • and he was refueling on the ground when Ye Olde Pub passed close by.

  • He took off intending to shoot down the American bomber.

  • However, as he closed with the limping aircraft,

  • he could see just how badly it had been hithe would later say that

  • he had never seen a more severely damaged aircraft still flying.

  • Stigler's commander had told his pilots never to fire at an enemy

  • who was descending on a parachute.

  • While the crew of Ye Olde Pub hadn't bailed out,

  • they were clearly no longer capable of fighting

  • and Stigler decided that he could not bring himself to attack.

  • Instead, he flew alongside and gestured to Brown to land.

  • He just simply couldn't imagine that the crippled aircraft

  • could possibly make it back to England.

  • When Brown refused, Stigler made an extraordinary decision.

  • Instead of shooting it down he flew close formation with the B-17,

  • hoping that this would deter flak batteries on the coast from firing at it.

  • He flew with the bomber well out over the North Sea

  • until it was clear of German airspace,

  • and then left it to continue towards England.

  • Stigler never told anyone about what had happened

  • sparing an American bomber would likely have led to

  • punishment and perhaps even execution,

  • but he often wondered if it had made it back to base.

  • Stigler continued flying fighters throughout the war.

  • In 1953 he emigrated from Germany to Canada

  • where he started a successful business.

  • When he heard from Charlie Brown in 1990,

  • Stigler confirmed every aspect of his story.

  • Franz Stigler and Charlie Brown were astonished to discover

  • that they had been living less than two hundred miles apart

  • for much of the time since the war

  • Stigler had settled in Vancouver, British Columbia

  • while Brown was in Seattle, Washington.

  • In the later years the two men remained close friends,

  • often visiting and talking to other fliers

  • about their shared experiences.

It was December the 20th, 1943 and in the freezing air high above Germany,

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