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Ron Clarke recounts the A-26 Invader's use in Clandestine Operations
within the Third Reich itself.
Throughout 1944 the American 801st
/ 492nd "Carpetbagger" Group had been flying arms,
supplies and agents from Harrington, Northamptonshire, into enemy occupied
Europe. Together with the RAF Special Duty Squadrons from Tempsford in
Bedfordshire and other bases, they had equipped resistance groups from Norway
to Yugoslavia, much to the consternation of the German High Command.
As the Allied forces fought their way
towards the German heartland in 1945 there was an urgent need for intelligence
information from inside the Reich. Resistance groups in the occupied
territories were supplying valuable information to the Allied planning staffs,
but installing agents into the hostile German environment was going to be very
difficult. Both the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) and the American
Office of Strategic Services (OSS) had been training agents for this purpose -
mostly Germans with a proven hatred of the Nazi regime, and preparations now
had to be made for their delivery.

At Harrington the "Carpetbaggers"
had perfected the use of specially adapted Consolidated B-24 Liberators for
covert supply missions, but over Germany there would be no "friendly"
reception committees to help the agents, and the highly developed German
anti-aircraft defences would pose an unacceptable threat to the slow, low flying
B-24s. It was decided therefore to adapt some of the newly introduced twin
engined fast Douglas A-26 Invaders for the task. They were to be stripped of
everything but the bare essentials for low level flying and it was hoped that
they could fly in low and fast and be out again before the defences had time to
react.

A-26 Invader on a dispersal at Harrington
The operation was given top security rating
and the code name "Red Stocking" to cover the agent delivery and
radio surveillance. The crew of the A-26 was to consist of a pilot, general
navigator, a "pilotage" navigator and turret gunner. The pilotage
navigator was to direct the pilot from the transparent nose position having
made a prolonged study of the route.
The only space left for the agent was in the
bomb bay! A small compartment was made in the forward section of the bay with a
plywood floor, this was hinged on one side and secured on the other by two cable
operated catches connected to the navigator's position in the nose. Designed to
take two agents the compartment rarely took more than one and did nothing for
the peace of mind of the already apprehensive agent. Experience had shown that
the US type back parachute fitted with a British quick release harness was
ideal for agent dropping, this meant that he would have to make the journey
lying on his stomach, two handles being provided to steady himself.
Like all agents (or "Joes"), flown
from Harrington, arrival on the morning of the mission was with an accompanying
OSS officer in an American staff car with blacked out windows. The agent was
taken to a dressing hut in a remote part of the airfield, and final
preparations were carried out in such a manner that he had no way of knowing
the location of the point of departure should he be captured. In the dressing
hut he was given the things essential for his survival - a Deutschmark laden
money belt; pistol; concentrated food pack; silk map of his operating area, but
most important was a small radio receiver (part of a sophisticated
communications system codenamed the "Joan - Eleanor" set, described
later. He also had forged papers and an entrenching tool.

These and other small items were packed into
pockets inside a voluminous quick release overall, known as a jump suit. He was
given a final check on his new identity and occupation, given a meal and then
encouraged to relax until take-off time. Shortly before departure he was driven
to the A-26 dispersal hardstand on the eastern side of the airfield where the
big Pratt & Whitney engines would already be warming up. He was helped into
his position, entering the aircraft from the rear section of the bomb bay -
once the crew had climbed aboard, the bomb doors were closed and they took off
into the night sky.
Low-Level Delivery
A few miles inland they descended to 300-400
ft and headed out over the North Sea relying on the radar altimeter - low level
night flying was not recommended for the faint hearted! They crossed the enemy
coast, avoiding known defences and airfields and proceeded on a dogleg course
to the dropping point. The two navigators were fully extended during this time
directing the pilot along the planned route. When they were a short distance
from the drop point the pilot throttled back and selected enough flap to slow
the aircraft down sufficiently for the agent's exit.
A warning light was switched on in the
agent's compartment for him to be ready to drop in five minutes. He then
assumed a kneeling position and clipped the loop of his parachute static line
onto a hook on the side of the fuselage. He had a panic button in case of
emergency but when they reached the drop point the lever was pulled, the floor
dropped open and out he went! The usual dropping height was 300 - 350 ft. The
static line opened the parachute and he usually swung a couple of times before
hitting the ground. He quickly discarded his helmet, parachute, harness and
jump suit, used the entrenching tool to bury all traces of his arrival and
became, to all intents and purposes, a law abiding German citizen.

Crew of a Red Stocking A-26C with their aircraft at Harrington. Left to right: Standing: Crew Chief; Captain Willard Smith (pilot); Lt Wilhelm Ecklund (navigator). Kneeling: Sgt Thompson (gunner); Lt Allen Wayne (pilotage navigator). Each aircraft sported a playing card on the nose. (photo via Allen Wayne)
Joan and Eleanor
The only link with Harrington was the Joe's
radio mentioned earlier. The Joan - Eleanor system was specifically developed
for Red Stocking Operations by two US radio technicians, Lt. Comdr. Stephen
Simpson and Dewitt R. Goddard of the Radio Corporation of America - the code
name referring to one's wife and the other's girlfriend.
The system operated on 260 MHz, a frequency
free at that time of enemy surveillance stations. The small "Joan"
agent's set had a range of about 20 miles. He was given a specific time,
usually in the evening to transmit his report, which he did in plain language,
the message being received by a radioman hunched in a small cabin installed in
the rear fuselage of a DeHavilland Mosquito orbiting above at 30,000 ft.
The "Eleanor" equipment on the
mosquito was fitted with a wire recorder and the designers claimed that the
voice recording could receive in 20 minutes what would take three days by coded
Morse. Garbles and mistakes could be clarified on the spot. The original
intention was to use B-17 Fortresses for the "Eleanor" but stooging
around Germany unescorted, they were assured by the air force was not to be
recommended in a Fortress.
The Mosquito was thought ideal for the
purpose, so a small batch of PRXVIs were acquired from Hatfield and fitted out
at the USAAF base at Watton where the American 654th Reconnaissance
unit used the type for tactical intelligence missions. Red Stocking agent
missions had a high priority and the 492nd Group at Harrington was
chosen to carry out both the A-26 and Mosquito operations. The radio operator
access was through a small door cut into the starboard side of the mosquito
rear fuselage. He was provided with a heated suit and had an interphone link
with the pilot. Long range wing mounted fuel tanks gave sufficient range for
most missions. On very long runs they could overfly to an OSS field in Italy.
Popular Missions
The first Mosquitoes to arrive at Harrington
were written off by enthusiastic pilots unfamiliar with the pronounced swing on
take-off, but former commanding officer Bob Fish remembers that once the pilots
mastered the new ships, everyone wanted to fly the Red Stocking trips.
Bob also recalls the first A-26 mission to
Germany. In February 1945 he had handed over command of the base to Colonel
Hudson Upham, newly arrived from the USA. Bob had reverted to second in command
but owing to Upham's lack of operational experience, he relied on Fish for
operational decisions. In the following excerpt from his book We Flew by
Night he describes the circumstances of the first A-26 mission:
On the night of March 16/17 I flew a B-24
"Carpetbagger" mission out of England into eastern France and after
completing it we landed at our temporary forward base at Dijon in France. I
remained at Dijon for a few days while I flew into the "Redoubt" area
of southern Germany and evaluated our operations out of Dijon.
It was while I was at Dijon that our
first A-26 mission was attempted. In my opinion we were not fully prepared to
attempt that mission. While the individual aircrews were fully trained in their
respective skills, they were not fully trained as co-ordinated teams.
While I was in France there was some
pressure on Upham from OSS in London to expedite the mission to fly in the
first German agent. Had I been at Harrington I feel that I could have reasoned
with the Colonel that we should not attempt it until the crews were fully
qualified as coherent teams.
Knowing Fish's reservations, Upham was faced
with a dilemma but he decided that "if higher Headquarters want it flown
now - we must do it". He decided that the best chance of success was to
use experienced staff officers to crew the aircraft.
The Group Navigation Officer, Major Edward
Tresemer, was to be "pilotage" navigator (Tressemer had been with
Fish since their days flying Douglas B-18 Bolos on anti-sub patrols off the US
East Coast). The pilot was Lt Oliver H. Emmel and John Walsh, another long
serving navigator, took the navigator's seat while Staff Sergeant Frank Brummer
manned the mid upper turret. At 11.45 hours they took off into the night from
Harrington and were never seen alive again.

Lt. Col Bob Fish, a "Carpetbagger" base commander. Postwar he organised the first CIA training schools using expertise developed at Harrington
Bob Fish stated in his book that Tresemer
was the finest navigator he knew, but when he was directing flight from the
nose position he sometimes needed some restraining. He said "When I
piloted for him at night I ignored his requests to fly lower when we were
within 300 ft of the ground. Oliver Emmel was one of our best pilots, but he
had no way of knowing Edward's idiosyncrasy about altitude, there is the
possibility that he induced him to fly too low." The remains of the
aircraft and crew were discovered after the war on a remote moor near Bramsche
in Germany - there were no signs of enemy action (See also the report filed by
Lt Comdr Simpson)
The Red Stocking missions were mainly
successful. Agents transmitted vital information needed by the Allied Military
Intelligence. After the first tragic failure, the A-26's operated without
further loss and the Mosquito surveillance missions managed to contact most of
the agent's transmissions.
Three of the A-26 flights involved flying
over Berlin to drop agents into a wooded area of the city. One of these agents
sent back reports until the end of the war. After the war a "Joe"
remarked that "It wasn't the way that we were dropped that worried us - it
was all over in a flash, but we sometimes wondered what would happen if the
plane was attacked by fighters - would they pull the lever to get rid of the
extra weight in the bomb bay?"

Mosquito "Patty" with Navigator Edward P. Kolawski on the left and Pilot James G. Kuntz on the right
Red Stocking Tragedy - Memorandum by Lt Comdr Stephen Simpson
co-inventor of the "Joan-Eleanor" system concerning the loss of the
A-26C on the first Red Stocking mission.
On March 19th orders were given
and cancelled several times to fly the CHISEL mission (the first A-26
operation). It was brought to everyone's attention that the A-26 needed a 100
hour check and the radio altimeter needed recalibrating. The Loran and Gee
navigation systems needed checking and that Lt Emmel had insufficient in the
A-26 - he had only flown it twice at night.
Major Tresemer had only been in an A-26 once
before and had been completely bewildered by "ground pilotage" at
such a speed. None of the crew - pilot, navigator or bombardier had ever flown
together before, and were unfamiliar with the ship as a whole.
It was finally decided to put the ship into
the hanger for repair and inspection. At 4 o'clock Comdr Simpson heard a rumour
that Col Upham had again changed his mind and proceeded to headquarters to find
that this was true. Upon advising Col Upham that both engines were down, that
the altimeter was not operating properly he was told to call the hanger and get
the ship back into commission and have it ready by 7.30.
The whole crew advised the Colonel that it
would be impossible to get the flight plan and mission organised by that time,
but the colonel stated that this was an order from Headquarters and it had to
be done. The weather section added to the unease of the crew, stating that a
bad front would be crossing the area and conditions on the continent were not good.
The mission finally got off the ground at
approximately 10.00 after instructions from Comdr Simpson and Lt Fogarty on
operating the special apparatus in the ship they were not familiar with. Final
statements were made by the pilot, navigator and bombardier to Col Upham that
the trip was not feasible.
The aircraft did not return from the
mission, it was found after the war on a moor in Germany with the remains of
the crew. Although this train of events may sound inconceivable it shows the
almost impossible decisions expected of a commanding officer during those
hectic times. Allied and German commanders had to issue orders that were
virtual death sentences to their airmen. Commander Simpson's report was filed
and marked "Top Secret"
This article was published in the
November 1999 edition of Flypast
Marvin Edwards, a USAAF Mosquito
navigator on Red Stocking Missions with the 492nd BG comments:
I have noted the
description of the Red Stocking missions. It mentions the A-26 aircraft as
the plane used. Please be advised that it was found that the British Mosquito
aircraft was superior to the A-26 for these missions. That plane could fly
faster and at a higher altitude than the A-26. The Mosquito flew at an altitude
up to 40,000 feet at a speed of up to 450 miles per hour. It's crew consisted
of a pilot and a navigator (I was a navigator on the Red Stocking missions
almost to the end of the war in April 1945.) Only one OSS operator in the belly
of the plane was required, In fact, several years ago, I wrote an article on
Red Stocking missions for the Mosquito Air Crew Association publication. I
never flew in an A-26 on these missions.
A year ago, the
History Channel on cable TV did a 45-minute special on the Mosquito. It
mentioned its use for the Red Stocking Joan/Eleanor missions. The article I
wrote for the Mosquito Air Crew Association was reprinted in the Carpetbagger
News Letter earlier this year. I might mention the Mosquito had two Rolls Royce
Merlin engines for the Red Stocking missions. The plane was made out of
plywood. I would greatly appreciate your adding this information to your web
site.
Thanks. Marvin R.
Edwards
The Mosquito
Association article can be viewed on Tom Ensminger’s FTP website at:
ftp://67.169.254.147/Data%20-%20ETO%20Publications/Mosquito%20Association/
Norman
Malayney comments on 4 June 2008
Gentlemen,
Your
web site describes the Red Stocking mission as delivering agents and radio
communications with OSS agents in enemy territory.
Unfortunately,
you have listed the term "Red Stocking" out of context, from its
original purpose. The operations themselves were not named Red Stocking. If you
research the OSS records at the National Archives in Washington, DC. there is
no mention of Red Stocking in the 12,000 pages of documents covering these
secret operations. The operations are titled the "Joan-Eleanor
Project, or the JE Project" among the official documents. Never is the
term Red Stocking used in this regard.
When
the OSS operations began at Watton in September 1944, under the 25th Bomb
Group Rcn, the group headquarters wished to receive credit for all
the missions flown for the OSS. So for statistical purposes they labelled all
missions flown for the OSS as Red Stocking. In the monthly reports sent to 325
Recon.Wing HQ the various types of mission flown were covered by various
nomenclatures, and all OSS mission fell under the title Red Stocking
title.
Technically,
there is no such "project" as Red Stocking--it was known by the OSS
as the Joan-Eleanor Project, but the USAAF classified these OSS missions, for
statistical purposes, as Red Stocking. Therefore, Red Stocking is a USAAF term
"not used" by the OSS. Steve Simpson once told me he never heard the
term Red Stocking until after the war when he read articles
mentioning the 492nd BG Red Stocking missions.
Norman
Malayney
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