Enlisted Heritage
Research Institute honors WWII gunner
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Retired Master
Sgt. James Traylor signs a wall July 3 in the POW
exhibit at the Enlisted Heritage Hall museum at
Maxwell-Gunter Air Force Base, Ala., after being
inducted into the museum's hall of fame. Mr. Traylor is
from Alabama and served in World War II, where he was a
prisoner of war at the Stalag 17 camp, as well as
Vietnam. (U.S. Air Force photo)
| | by Carl Bergquist Air University Public
Affairs
7/6/2007 - MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE,
Ala. (AFPN) -- The director of the Enlisted Heritage
Research Institute here described July 3 as a grand day because
Enlisted Heritage Hall museum officials had inducted retired Master
Sgt. James Traylor into its ranks.
He joins the many enlisted
members the museum honors who have made major contributions to
the Air Force.
Sergeant Traylor, a belly gunner during World
War II on the B-17 nicknamed "Vertical Shaft," was shot down on his
11th mission over Germany and spent almost two years in Stalag 17, a
German prisoner of war camp.
After the war, he left the
Air Force for a while to be a bush pilot in Alaska, and then
returned to the service as a gunner on B-29 and B-50 aircraft. He
cross-trained into supply and during the Vietnam War served as a
supply sergeant at Da Nang Air Base, South Vietnam.
"This is
a great day for (the museum) and the Air Force," said Chief
Master Sgt. Malcomb McVicar, EHRI director. "We are privileged to
have veterans here today, the day before celebrating our nation's
birthday, who have helped build this country and also have
colleagues of Sergeant Traylor from the Civil Air Patrol."
At
the ceremony, Sergeant Traylor had two fellow Stalag 17 POWs
attending, and because he is a pilot for CAP, a number of CAP
officials and cadets were present as well.
"I want to share
the story of a humble individual, a native Alabamian who was born in
Montgomery and in 1942 enlisted in the Army Air Corps as soon as he
graduated from high school," said Chief McVicar. "It was his choice
to crawl into that belly turret in 'Vertical Shaft' as part of the
Eighth Air Force in Europe during World War II."
The chief
said Sergeant Traylor's imprisonment ended in 1945 when the Germans
finally had to surrender to Patton's army. The surrender followed an
18-day march the Germans put the POWs through after abandoning
Stalag 17.
Chief McVicar said Alaska turned out to be too
cold for the sergeant, so he rejoined the Air Force. But, after
being mortared with rockets one night at Da Nang, Sergeant Traylor
decided it was time to retire. He returned to Maxwell and retired in
October 1969.
"Sergeant Traylor is an American Airman who
answered his nation's call," Chief McVicar said. "You are one of the
reasons our nation will celebrate its birthday
tomorrow."
Sergeant Traylor said it was impossible to explain
how he felt about being inducted into the EHH museum.
"I
can't describe what it feels like, but it certainly isn't the way I
thought it would feel," he said.
The sergeant said he became
the belly gunner because he was the smallest man on the crew, and it
took a small person to squeeze into the cramped turret on the bottom
of the B-17.
He said before leaving for England, the
"Vertical Shaft" crew acquired a mascot they brought with
them.
"He was just a mutt named Dilbert McNasty," he said.
"We didn't have an oxygen mask that would fit him, so we had to put
Dilbert in a canvas bag and pump oxygen into the bag on the
high-altitude trip."
Sergeant Traylor said the "Vertical
Shaft" crew heard that after their aircraft was shot down and the
crew didn't come back to England, Dilbert McNasty, who often lived
up to his name, latched on to the Red Cross personnel at the base
and was riding around in their truck.
He said a memory of the
war he will never forget involves the German surrender to U.S. Army
troops.
"Seeing jeeps ride up with Patton's 3rd Army to tell
us we could go home, that's one of the best memories I have of the
war," Sergeant Traylor said.
Featured in EHH's Alabama Room,
Sergeant Traylor's exhibit is a photocopied collection of his
cherished World War II photos with the story of his career
intermingled among the photographs.
The exhibit covers nearly
all of one wall of a room dedicated to distinguished enlisted Air
Force members from Alabama.
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