Flying Home on Fire: First Lieutenant William R. Lawley Jr. and the B 17 That Wouldn’t Quit

A dead copilot in the right-hand seat. A burning engine. A jammed bomb load. Eight wounded men in the back. On 20 February 1944, First Lieutenant William R. Lawley Jr. had every reason to bail out of his shattered B-17 over Nazi-occupied Europe—and two gravely injured crewmen who made that choice unthinkable. In this week’s Beyond the Call: Medal of Honor Stories feature from Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, we follow the 23-year-old pilot from small-town Alabama to the frozen skies over Leipzig, where quiet resolve and stubborn courage turned a doomed mission into a fight to bring his crew home alive. If stories of leadership under impossible pressure speak to you, don’t miss this one in today’s Beyond the Call feature developed by Trackpads.com.
Flying Home on Fire: First Lieutenant William R. Lawley Jr. and the B 17 That Wouldn’t Quit
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