Puneet Varma (Editor)

Bomber Mountain

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Topo map
  
USGS Lake Helen

Prominence
  
341 m

Parent range
  
Elevation
  
3,914 m

Mountain range
  
Bomber Mountain Backpacking In the Bighorns Hiking Bomber Mountain Black Hills

Location
  
Johnson / Big Horn counties, Wyoming, U.S.

Similar
  
Cloud Peak, Black Tooth Mountain, Penrose Peak, Downs Mountain, Washakie Needles

Climbing bomber mountain


Bomber Mountain is the crest of a ridge line within the Big Horn Mountains of the U.S. State of Wyoming. It borders the south side of Cloud Peak, the tallest peak in the range. It is about 23 miles (37 km) west of Buffalo. A military aviation accident that occurred upon the mountain in 1943 led to it being named Bomber Mountain in 1946.

Contents

Bomber Mountain Bomber mountain wreckage In 1943 10 men lost their lives Flickr

Bomber mountain july 2015


1943 air accidentEdit

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On 28 June 1943, a B-17F-55-DL Flying Fortress, serial number 42-3399, nicknamed "Scharazad", departed Pendleton Army Air Base in Pendleton, Oregon destined for Grand Island, Nebraska. From there, the bomber would join the other members of the 383d Bomb Group and continue to England to participate in the ongoing World War II bombing campaigns. Around midnight, the captain radioed that their position was near Powder River, Wyoming. They were not heard from again. After they failed to arrive in Grand Island, the plane was declared missing and the Army mounted a search effort with no results. A second search was conducted the following year, concentrating on the Wind River Mountains, Absaroka Mountains and Big Horn Mountains, but still no wreckage was spotted.

Bomber Mountain Bomber Mountain Trip Reports SummitPost

On 12 August 1945, two cowboys spotted something shiny on a ridge line in the Cloud Peak area of the Big Horn Mountains. They discovered the wreckage and the deceased crew, and contacted authorities, who conducted an operation to recover the bodies of the crew and return them to their families. It was believed that during earlier search efforts, the paint color of the aircraft blended in closely with the mountain side, making the wreckage difficult to spot. After a few years, the paint wore off, and the shiny aluminum underneath made the plane more visible. No official cause for the crash was ever determined, but it is presumed that malfunctioning navigational equipment, and a moonless night combined with bad weather caused the pilot to not see the ridge until it was too late.

Bomber Mountain Climbing Bomber Mountain YouTube

After a petition by veterans groups in Wyoming, the previously unnamed ridge was christened Bomber Mountain on 22 August 1946 by the U.S. Forest Service. In honor of the crew members, a commemorative plaque was placed on the shores of Florence Lake, 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the crash site.

The crew included:

Bomber Mountain Bomber Mountain July 2015 YouTube

  • William R. Ronaghan (pilot)
  • Anthony J. Tilotta (co-pilot)
  • Leonard H. Phillips (navigator)
  • Charles H. Suppes (bombardier)
  • James A. Hinds (aircraft engineer)
  • Ferguson T. Bell, Jr. (radio operator)
  • Lee 'Vaughn' Miller (assistant aircraft engineer)
  • Charles E. Newburn, Jr (assistant radio operator)
  • Jake F. Penick (aircraft gunner)
  • Lewis M. Shepard (assistant aircraft gunner)

  • Bomber Mountain Bomber Mountain A Mystery in Wyoming39s Bighorn Mountains Wyoming

    References

    Bomber Mountain Wikipedia