Colonel Jimmy Stewart
JIMMY STEWART
BOMBER PILOT
STARR SMITH
FOREWORD BY WALTER CRONKITE
First published in 2005 by Zenith Press, an imprint of MBI Publishing Company, 400 First Avenue North, Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN 55401 USA
Copyright 2005, 2006, 2010 by Starr Smith
Hardcover edition published in 2005. Softcover edition 2006. Digital edition 2010.
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Digital edition: 978-1-61673-761-0
Softcover edition: 978-0-7603-2824-8
Hardcover edition: 978-0-7603-2199-7
The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:
Smith Starr
Jimmy Stewart, Bomber Pilot / by Starr Smith
p. cm.
Includes biographical references.
ISBN 978-1-61673-761-0 (hardcover)
1. Stewart, James, 1908 . 2. United States. Army Air Forces. Air Force, 8thBiography. 3. World War, 19391945Aerial operations, American. 4. World War, 193919475CampaignsWestern Front. 5. Bomber pilotsUnited StatesBiography. 6. Motion picture actor and actressessUnited StatesBiography. I. Title.
D790.228th.S65 2005
940.544973092dc22
[B]
Designed by: Mandy Iverson
In memory of two members of my family, now deceased, who served as flying officers in the Army Air Corps/United States Air Force in World War II and beyond: My brother, Colonel James W. Smith, who was on active duty for more than thirty years, and my brother-in-law, First Lieutenant Chandler Chuck Clover, who flew B-24 Liberators in the Pacific in World War II. And to my colleaguesthe Liberator combat crewmen of the Eighth Air Force in the ETO in World War II.
Jimmy Stewart was that rare public man who performed his duty without calling attention to himself. Stewart has found his biographer in Starr Smith, a man who knew Stewart, who knew the World War II Army Air Corps, and who surely knows how to write.
Wayne Flynt, professor of history, Auburn University
This is an excellent biography of a distinguished airman and fine human being, not a Hollywood star in uniform but a dedicated officer whose primary interest was the campaign of the Eighth Air Force. It is the work of a very accomplished writer, one who really knows his craft. When you turn the last page, you cannot but have a clear understanding of Jimmy Stewarts character.
Roger A. Freeman, air power historian and author, The Mighty Eighth
Several senior-officer mentors, recognizing Stewarts competence as more than merely respectable, secured him combat assignments when Hollywood and the air force would probably rather have kept him making training films... Smith dishes no dirt, possibly because, like other Stewart limners before him, he found none to dish.
American Library Association, Booklist
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
W e metJimmy Stewart and Iin an atmosphere as far removed from Hollywoods make-believe as it was possible to imagine. It was in Britain during World War II on an American Liberator bomber base. Both of us were there on business. I was a war correspondent. Jimmy was a squadron commander in the 445th Bombardment Group, assignedas were the rest of the U.S. Eighth Air Force and Royal Air Forces entire heavy bomber fleetto bomb Nazi Germany to its knees.
Captain Stewart had been on duty in England for a few weeks before the word leaked out that this famous movie star was in such perilous action as flying bombers against the enemy. The word was probably spilled in one of the G.I. bars, perhaps a Red Cross club, by one of Stewarts enlisted men on weekend leave in London.
When I applied to visit Stewarts group, Eighth Air Force Headquarters pretended no knowledge that he was in the British Isles, let alone flying missions and commanding aircrews.
The denial stories didnt hold up for longbut an instantly imposed ban against any press visits to Stewarts base proved harder to break. We correspondents covering the air war finally broke the ban by appealing to the same modest, unselfish motivation that had caused Stewart to impose the press blackout in the first place. We simply pointed out that the courage under fire, heroics, and daring exploits of bringing crippled bombers back to base by his combat crews were not making their hometown newspapers as was the case with all the rest of the Eighth Air Force.
I heard later that Stewart was crushed when he was made to realize how his closed gates had denied the press access to his own aircrews.
But Stewarts modesty remained undaunted. He opened his base to the press, and ordered that he was not available to meet the press in an interview. He yielded just a little bit on this with one or two of us, not to submit to an interview but for an occasional informal chat with a stern warning that his remarks were not for publication.
I have met a few movie stars and Ive found many of them in real life not to be so different as themselves in reel life, but of them all, I think that Jimmy Stewart was most like those modest heroes he portrayed. The occasional times after the war when we met at small parties, he seemed to enjoy our short chats, and the war was mentioned only when he or I inquired of mutual friends with whom one or the other of us had lost touch.
Now journalist Starr Smithwartime Eighth Air Force intelligence officer who worked with Jimmy Stewart briefing the combat crews for their daring daylight raids on German targetshas raised the curtain on Stewarts gallant service as a bomber pilot and air combat commander in World War II. Its a true story of personal knowledge, with sharp insight, and told with skill, respect, and admiration.
Walter Cronkite
New York City
November 2004
Walter Cronkite in his war correspondent uniform in England in World War II while covering the Eighth Air Force.
A DAUGHTERS TRIBUTE
Left to right, Judy, Kelly, Jimmy, and Gloria Stewart in 1988.
M y fathers experiences during World War II affected him more deeply and permanently than anything else in his life. Yet his children grew up knowing almost nothing about those years. Dad never talked about the war. My siblings and I knew only that he had been a pilot, and that he had won some medals, but that he didnt see himself as a hero. He saw only that he had done his duty.
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