B-17 Flying Fortress AVRO Lancaster


Hal Province


Hal was an enlisted bombardier during World War 2.  He flew on a B-17 called the Purty Chili. He arrived in England on January 8th 1945. He stayed six months overseas at the airbase Mendelsham in Suffolk. He and his crew were part of the 319th Squadron, 34th Bomb Group. The two Chowhound missions in which Hal participated were on the same days as Robert Miller's missions. Hal says that the Chowhound missions were even more exiting then the nineteen combat-missions that he had flown before the "mercy-missions".

Hal Province and his wife at the commemoration of manna/chowhound in 2000We were very excited about the drops. Please recall that the Germans were still occupying Holland when the drops begun. We had to fly LOW to the targets of the drops, to be able to drop the food without damaging it. We were told to carry NO AMMUNITION for our guns and we had to stay within a strictly defined corridor while over Holland for our approach and away from the target area. I recall seeing German flags on many buildings as
we approached the target for the drop. I saw German soldiers standing guard at railroad bridges over canals. We approached the target area at less than 400 feet above the ground. At that altitude we could see the people on the ground quite clearly. For the drop we had to lower our flaps and wheels in order to slow down the aircraft. The target area was open ground just outside of Utrecht.

Our load on this first food drop was cardboard cartons of 10-in-1 rations which were the standard rations for the American soldiers. The ten-in-one  had enough food to provide ten meals to one man. The cartons were quite dense and some crashed through roofs of apartment houses when the dropping aircraft wasn't where it should be. I saw boxes hit a green house and also saw boxes fall into nearby canals. There were no parachutes attached to the load, just free-falling boxes.

We were not only excited about the food drops we were also scared. We had been flying over Holland at altitudes of 15.000 to 20.000 feet on our way to targets in Germany and all of a sudden we were asked to fly at 400 feet, while the German soldiers were still manning the 88mm and 105mm flak guns near the corridor we had to fly through.


The Purty Chili, the aircraft of Hal Province.

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Dit Engelstalige boek "Operation Chowhound" over de voedseldroppingen is in 2015 verschenen. Je kunt het via onderstaande link in de nederlandse webshop kopen...


HERDENKING 2010

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