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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Mark in Rochester
Theories about Miller's disappearance include:
Miller made it to Paris and was attacked by a
German
group
Miller died in a brothel in Paris
I've heard all the other theories but never these 2.
Paris was liberated in August of 44 and Miller disappeared in December so the Germans theory is unlikely.
If we're to believe his biography movie he was a devoted husband and never would have been in a cathouse.
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12-23-2024 09:03 PM
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The Following 5 Members Say Thank You to Bob Womack For This Useful Post:
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First time I'd heard that. I'd never heard how he went down, thought they were just lost like Amelia Earhart...
I've read lots of theories but have yet to see any facts or evidence of any.
"You are what you do when it counts."
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I've never quite understood "fuel line icing." Aviation gas does't freeze (unless there is water in it) so it has to be water on the carburetor that freezes and prohibits it's function.
"You are what you do when it counts."
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
eb in oregon
"fuel line icing."
Another supposition. No wreckage, no proof. Suppositions.
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I thought Bader was lost in a collision with a ME 109 he turned in to gun the leader (He could sustain more G loads without blacking out due to no legs) turning so tight he got in between the leader & his No 2 who collided with Bader's Spitfire chopping off the tail plane just aft of the cockpit.
That's the story I have, I'll check his book tomorrow.
One story from the book he was flying at height over the channel and was startled by the sudden noise of popping he thought he had been bounced so did evasive manoeuvres to get out of the supposid enemy fire.
It then dawned on him what it actually was, Bader feared being shot down into the drink then being dragged under by his tin legs so he filled them with ping pong balls, it was those balls that were popping due to the pressure differential at high altitude...............
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(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)

Originally Posted by
CINDERS
One story from the book he was flying at height over the channel and was startled by the sudden noise of popping he thought he had been bounced so did evasive manoeuvres to get out of the supposid enemy fire. It then dawned on him what it actually was, Bader feared being shot down into the drink then being dragged under by his tin legs so he filled them with ping pong balls, it was those balls that were popping due to the pressure differential at high altitude...............
That was Colin ‘Hoppy’ Hodgkinson, another double amputee in the RAF.
Cheers,
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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I thoroughly enjoyed the thread drift on this one. LOL! The story I heard was that Glenn Miller's aircraft was flying low over the English Channel and enveloped in the spray and/or shrapnel from a bomb(s) dumped by a returning Allied bomber.
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Contributing Member
My error, I do have Hoppy Hodgkinsons book "Best Foot Forward" it is a great read just like Bader's one of strength & determination over adversity however I must have got confused between the 2 Bob being allot of years since reading them both.
But I'm pretty sure the reason for Bader's incident is on the money either way he was very lucky to have been able to get free of his doomed Spitfire.
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