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Honoring WWII Veteran Fred Wiese and His Remarkable Military Journey (Rebroadcast)

Celebrate the life of WWII B-17 pilot Fred Wiese, who shared vivid memories from childhood to Army Air Corps training and his first aerobatic flight.

Honoring World War II Veteran Fred Wiese and His Journey

Fred Wiese, a remarkable World War II veteran who recently passed away at 102, shared his vivid memories and profound experiences in an interview rebroadcast on America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. His story captures the essence of a generation defined by hard work, sacrifice, and courage.

Childhood in the Great Depression

Born in 1922 in Bloomfield, Nebraska, Fred vividly recalled growing up during the Great Depression. Despite financial hardships, Fred emphasized that his family never went hungry because they grew their food. He recounted going to school in worn-out shoes and attending kindergarten briefly at four years old, highlighting the resilience fostered by tough economic times.

Answering the Call After Pearl Harbor

Fred’s life changed dramatically after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. On December 31, 1941, just weeks after the attack, Fred enlisted in the U.S. Army, initially performing duties at a hospital before transitioning into specialized training. Driven by a desire to contribute more directly to the war effort, Fred and a fellow recruit applied to the Army Air Corps after seeing an impressive pilot visiting their base.

Pilot Training and the First Loop

Fred described his pilot training with enthusiasm and humor. Initially trained in the PT-17 Stearman biplane at Thunderbird Field in Glendale, Arizona, Fred vividly remembered his first aerobatic loop. Midway through the maneuver, realizing his safety harness had loosened, Fred humorously described bracing himself by spreading his legs against the cockpit to avoid falling out—a moment etched forever in his memory.

Fred’s determination was exemplified by his personal mantra: “Work hard, study hard, don’t get into trouble, and don’t wash out.” This mindset carried him through challenging training stages, ultimately leading him to fly more complex aircraft like the BT-13 “Vultee Vibrator” and eventually the iconic B-17 bomber.

Becoming a B-17 Pilot

Fred’s first encounter with the B-17 Flying Fortress left a lasting impression, especially upon discovering the aircraft he admired was being piloted by women from the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP), a groundbreaking realization for him at the time. Despite challenges, including a harrowing experience with severe aircraft vibrations during formation flying, Fred proved himself repeatedly as a skilled and resilient pilot.

A Legacy of Courage and Commitment

Throughout his military service, Fred embodied the unwavering commitment and courage characteristic of America’s greatest generation. His experiences, from overcoming near-disastrous flight training moments to witnessing historical shifts such as the entry of women into military aviation, reflect an era defined by sacrifice, innovation, and courage.

Fred’s extraordinary journey, from a Depression-era childhood to flying B-17 bombers, is a testament to his perseverance and dedication. His story, carefully preserved through interviews and rebroadcasts, ensures his legacy will inspire future generations.

For more about Fred Wiese and other heroic veterans, visit America’s Veteran Stories.

Transcript

Announcer
00:00 – 00:26
Afghanistan and her other wars and conflicts. America’s fighting men and women strapped on their boots and picked up their guns to fight tyranny and stand for liberty. We must never forget them. Welcome to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. These stories will touch your heart, inspire you and give you courage. We stand on the shoulders of giants. Here’s Kim Monson.

Kim Monson
00:30 – 01:08
And welcome to America’s Veterans Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure and check out our website. That is AmericasVeteransStories.com. And this show began because of a trip that I had the great honor in taking to Normandy, France back in 2016 to accompany four D-Day veterans back to Normandy and realized how important these stories are that we record them and broadcast them and hear them. and so hence America’s Veterans Stories. I am so honored to be interviewing Fred Wiese and he was a B-17 pilot in World War II. And Fred, it is just great to be here with you.

Kim Monson
01:08 – 01:09
Thank

Fred Wiese
01:09 – 01:10
you. It’s nice to have you

Kim Monson
01:10 – 01:17
here. OK. We normally don’t ask people their age, but I have to ask you your age. I’m 99. 99 years old. When’s your birthday?

Fred Wiese
01:20 – 01:22
I grew up in Nebraska. Bloomfield, Nebraska. Bloomfield.

Kim Monson
01:39 – 01:39
And

Fred Wiese
01:40 – 01:54
where is that exactly? It’s in the northeast part of the state. Okay. And it’s not far from Yankton, South Dakota. South Dakota, okay. And not far from Sioux City. Okay, okay. North of Norfolk. Okay,

Kim Monson
01:54 – 02:03
so you were born in 1922 then? Yes. Okay. So you lived through the Great Depression. What do you remember about the Great Depression?

Fred Wiese
02:04 – 02:29
Well, there wasn’t much money. There was nothing. Other than that, we had plenty of food. We grew it all. And I lived in a home with my mother and her maternal parents. And at that time, I didn’t know anything about depression.

Kim Monson
02:30 – 02:31
You were just a kid, huh?

Fred Wiese
02:32 – 02:41
But I knew there was no money. Frequently my shoes were worn out. And I had no shoes, but that was all right. Wow.

Kim Monson
02:41 – 02:45
Did you go to school in a one-room schoolhouse, or where’d you go to school?

Fred Wiese
02:45 – 03:17
No, I went to school in the public school building, the school system in Bloomfield. And we had a kindergarten. And I know I was put in there when I was still four years old. I had an aunt that lived there, too, and she was eight years older than I. She was in high school at the time, or in junior high, I think. I cried a lot.

Kim Monson
03:18 – 03:19
You cried a lot?

Fred Wiese
03:19 – 03:35
Yeah, I did. I was put in kindergarten at age four. They took me out and kept me out until my birthday. Then I went back to school, a whole different thing.

Kim Monson
03:36 – 03:47
Isn’t that amazing? Yeah. Ah, that’s quite a story. Okay, so you grew up during the Great Depression. When did you join the Army Air Corps?

Fred Wiese
03:47 – 04:02
Well, I joined the service on December 30, 1941. But I was sworn in on December 31st. Okay, that

Kim Monson
04:02 – 04:09
was right after Pearl Harbor then. Oh yeah. Okay. Do you remember, where were you when you heard about Pearl Harbor?

Fred Wiese
04:09 – 05:05
Well first I had graduated high school in 1940 and that year my mother had moved out and she had gone to Ames, Iowa from our hometown because My maternal grandparents passed away, and by that time they had to sell the home and move on. She had no income or whatever, but this was her first job, I think, away from home of any consequence. She learned to know a lady at one of the restaurants in a little town, and this lady had a sister over her name that needed help. And she had a restaurant, too. So, she moved over there.

Fred Wiese
05:07 – 06:02
After graduation, I went to enroll at Nebraska U. And on that first winter, At Christmas time, my teeth gave me some trouble, and I had to abandon school. And I used up all the money my mother had given me for tuition, et cetera, for the whole semester. and the following semester, I guess. Back in those days, I guess, tuition was about $25 a semester. Oh my gosh. Whatever it was, it was not much in today’s standards. But I had no money left, and so I had a friend that happened to be rooming in a mortuary.

Fred Wiese
06:05 – 07:00
in the employees’ bedroom area where he could stay. So I knew about him. He was a friend of mine from school. I went to ask Dean one day, suppose I can get in here? I need a place to sleep, you know. So he came back with the answer, yes, you can get in. They took me in, and I had some simple duties to do. One was to dust the caskets, the new caskets that were on display, and other menial tasks to do. Among them, sometimes we’d use the hearse for an ambulance. And in those days, they didn’t have ambulances running around like they do today.

Fred Wiese
07:01 – 07:59
And et cetera, et cetera. And I had run out of money and I had to do something. So now I had to go to work at other places to eat. I had a room. I was in that, I had that place there and on the 7th of December, I can picture that right now. I can, it’s just frozen up there. I was looking to the west. They had a radio standing up there and I remember the names of the people that were there. Max Cruz Hans and Harold Schwartz. They’re both employees and both bombers. And they were up there, it was in the evening, about 5 or 6 o’clock, I think, as I recall hearing that.

Fred Wiese
08:01 – 08:07
And Dean was there, and I was there, and probably a couple of other fellows, I’m not sure.

Kim Monson
08:08 – 08:11
Okay, so Fred, you said you can remember the names of the guys that were there.

Fred Wiese
08:12 – 08:59
Yeah. I said Max Grosshans, Harold Schwartz, and Dean Schrader and myself, I know for sure. And we were stunned at what we heard. Up to that point in time, I didn’t know anything about government, didn’t know anything about anything really. I was just a kid off a farm, off a small farm. That just stunned me and I, at that time, it was near Christmas, you know, and a couple of weeks I decided I’m going to go see my mom. I haven’t seen her for two years. So I had nothing else to do. Went to Ames, Iowa to see her.

Fred Wiese
09:00 – 09:10
And I asked her one day, Mom, I said, what do you think about me going down and enlisting in the service? She didn’t much like that.

Kim Monson
09:10 – 09:12
Most moms didn’t like that very much.

Fred Wiese
09:12 – 10:06
At any rate, she finally acquiesced after I told her. I said, well, if I enlist, perhaps I can get a better situation, which I pumped her for. And she agreed to it. I went down there and I was inducted on the 30th of December of that year. And on the 31st, they told me to come back on the next day. And on the 31st, they would swear me in, along with a bunch of other guys. This is a recruiting station, and there’s only a cavalry post. called Fort Des Moines.

Kim Monson
10:06 – 10:10
So once you were, so this is the end of 41, you’re 19 years old.

Fred Wiese
10:11 – 10:19
Well, I was just barely 41. I was just 19. Okay.

Kim Monson
10:21 – 10:25
After you were inducted into the Army, where did you go for boot

Fred Wiese
10:26 – 10:32
camp? Well, I stayed right there. I don’t recall ever having any boot camp at all.

Speaker 4
10:32 – 10:33
Okay.

Fred Wiese
10:33 – 11:23
It’s one of those weird things. Somebody, I don’t know who it was, but someone walked up to me and asked me, what do you think you can do when you’re in the service here? I said, well, I don’t know what I can do, but I think I might be able to drive an ambulance. They took me in and they gave me no particular task to do. I hung around the station hospital area a good deal and the medical department and assumed that that was going to be my duty. And so I had a buddy who had a serial number of three digits from mine and we became good friends.

Fred Wiese
11:24 – 12:13
His name was Mike Markson. And he was an Iowa boy. And he knew his way around that better than I did. So I had menial tasks to do, and the sergeant there took to me for some reason. He took me in and gave me a job. One day I walked in and told him, I said, Sergeant, I don’t have nothing to do. What can I do for you? He said, well, you can clean up the basement. Well, those old military buildings like that on the arms post like that were all brick buildings, and they had an open basement, as it were, half basement, I guess.

Fred Wiese
12:15 – 13:09
I went down in the basement there and cleaned up, dusted it good and swept it and so forth. Then I got into a bin that had several bins there, probably for clothing and other equipment that they would have separated, sort of separated. A whole bunch of shoes scattered all over in there, and they were just not in pairs, so I bundled them up in pairs and such, and she had it up really clean and neat. And I came across a pair of shoes called garrison shoes. And of course, I had no knowledge of what a lot of that stuff was for that I saw down there.

Fred Wiese
13:10 – 13:37
But I asked the sergeant, I said, Sergeant, these things fit me. Do you suppose I could wear these instead of these boots that I have? Because I can shine these. He said, I’ll imagine if you can. So I put those on after I shined them. And from that day on, I was just somebody special. Because I had those shoes on. Well, you already were something special.

Kim Monson
13:39 – 14:11
Fred, let’s go to break. This is Kim Monson. I’m talking with World War Two veteran Fred Wiese. And we’re going to go to break. Before we do that, though, the nonprofit that I’ve adopted is the USMC Memorial Foundation. They are raising money to remodel the Marine Memorial out at Sixth and Colfax. And they’re going to have these different walkways and you can actually buy a brick to honor your loved one’s military service. It’ll have their name and their branch and when they served and so you can do that or you can just donate. Go to usmcmemorialfoundation.org.

Kim Monson
14:12 – 14:15
That’s usmcmemorialfoundation.org. We’ll be right back with Fred Wiese.

Speaker 10
14:17 – 14:49
REMAX Realtor Karen Levine helps bring to life the individual stories of our servicemen and women. With her sponsorship of America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson, Karen honors the sacrifices of our military and is grateful for our freedom. As a member of the National Association of Realtors Board of Directors, Karen works to protect private property rights for all of us. Karen has a heart for our active duty military and veterans and is honored to help you buy or sell your home. Call Karen Levine at 303-877-7516 to help you navigate buying or selling your home. That’s 303-877-7516.

Speaker 7
14:58 – 15:17
All of Kim’s sponsors are an inclusive partnership with Kim and are not affiliated with or in partnership with KLZ or Crawford Broadcasting. If you would like to support the work of The Kim Monson Show and grow your business, contact Kim at her website, KimMonson.com. That’s Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com.

Kim Monson
15:29 – 15:54
And welcome back to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure and check out our website. That is AmericasVeteranStories.com. I’m so honored to be sitting here with Fred Weese, World War II veteran, 99 years old, and you’ll turn 100 at the end of October this year. So we were talking about your first job in the Army, and you were talking about garrison shoes. Just tell us a little bit more. What is a garrison shoes?

Fred Wiese
15:54 – 16:29
What are they? Well, it’s just a soft leather shoe. And it’s a shinable shoe. Most of the G.I.s had what was just a rough leather and a boot and so forth. And this was a special shoe for the garrison when they had parties and such, I suppose. Okay. Anyhow, this was a fine thing to have, you know. Boy, my feet were growing. And this was something comfortable.

Kim Monson
16:31 – 16:37
We take so much for granted these days, oh my gosh. Okay, so what happened after that? What was your next duty?

Fred Wiese
16:37 – 17:32
Well, this buddy of mine and I were hanging around the hospital area all the time. As a matter of fact, that’s where we took our food as well. It came up one time we happened to run into the bulletin board and see an item up there that suggested they were looking for some technicians and they needed to train them and the technician job was a surgery technician. Well, we decided we’d like to try that and you know they sent us out to Denver to the Fitzsimmons Hospital. And Fitzsimmons was brand new in those days. And we took a course in surgical technician work.

Fred Wiese
17:32 – 18:23
And apparently we did all right with it. They sent us back to Fort Des Moines. When we got there, the camp looked a little different. There were different things going on, more people there, and there were some women in uniform, and there were WACs. Not many, but there were some. And we were assigned to go up and get into the surgery section. And while I was up there, neither Mike nor I got anything to do except carry bedpans. And that’s not a suitable thing for me. So along came another situation. I needed technicians for pharmacy.

Fred Wiese
18:24 – 19:14
So they sent us back to Fort, to Denver here, to Fitzsimmons. And we went through that course. And that took a couple of months. So we got back to camp that time at Fort Des Moines, and there was a whole lot of change by that time. They had lots and lots of women there, and they were recruiting. That was where the main recruiting station was for that area, and they had converted the stables to And there were three of those that they had converted to living quarters for the women. And they had consequently built a whole bunch of wards for women at the hospital.

Fred Wiese
19:16 – 20:27
And that was just in a couple of months they had done all that stuff. So I’m standing one day in the pharmacy. And the pharmacist had left the area for some reason. And a full bird colonel came up to the window to get a prescription filled. I forget right now what it was, but it was medicine. We actually had to make it. We used the USP and the national formulary for our books that we had to work with. And it was made with alcohol, dry alcohol, drinkable stuff. And it was a good mix anyhow. I told Mike after this guy had left, I said, Mike, we’ve got to get some of this.

Fred Wiese
20:29 – 21:24
And we, you know, this guy looked very young and he was a full bird colonel and he was wearing wings. Boy, he was a top class person. So we went to the, we found out where the, place where we could go and ask if we could get into service, into the Air Corps. So the next day we had off, the next opportunity we had, we went downtown to Des Moines and got into a recruiting station and told the sergeant there that we’d like to be introduced to the Air Corps somehow.

Kim Monson
21:26 – 21:28
And was this Colonel, was he in the Army Air Corps?

Fred Wiese
21:28 – 21:29
Yeah, he’d been in

Kim Monson
21:29 – 21:30
the Army. So that’s why, okay, got the

Fred Wiese
21:30 – 21:47
connection. The sergeant said, you two dummies are going to have to take a test. Okay. And so it was just information whether or not we were smart enough to even write our names, you know. Okay.

Kim Monson
21:48 – 21:50
So you passed that, huh? Yes, we did.

Fred Wiese
21:50 – 22:41
Matter of fact, he put us into a big room, large room, very large room. One of us on one side, one on the other, so we couldn’t cheat. Okay. We’re told then, after we finished that, he said, well you gentlemen sit down here and stay here. I will dismiss you when I’m finished with you. And at any rate, he came back and he says, you two dummies did pretty well. Somebody will be calling you. We had a call a couple weeks later and went into the company or detachment office and there’s a lieutenant standing there, second lieutenant, brand new guy.

Fred Wiese
22:42 – 23:39
And he’s a red-headed guy. His name was Morrison. I’ll never forget him. Lieutenant Morrison. And he called us to attention. We froze like an icicle. We didn’t know what was going to happen next. And he read off a riot act at us. And then he stood up and stuck his arm out, and I didn’t know what was going to happen then. He says, at ease. And he says, congratulations, and thank you for your initiative. So we were then called to go to have a physical. And we went out to Fort Dodge, Iowa. That was a Fort Dodge campsite right out west of Des Moines.

Fred Wiese
23:42 – 23:57
And my buddy and I passed the physical, but my buddy was told, well, you’re short about five bananas. gets himself some bananas and eat them, a lot of them.

Kim Monson
23:57 – 23:59
He didn’t carry enough weight,

Fred Wiese
23:59 – 24:21
huh? He didn’t carry enough weight. Next thing we know, he comes out of there and the sergeant says, well, you’re short. He went back and had another exam right shortly after that. I’m sorry I didn’t say it. You’re one banana sharper. We’re going to let you in anyhow.

Kim Monson
24:22 – 25:13
Oh my gosh. Hey Fred, let’s go to break. I’m talking with Fred Wiese. He’s a World War II veteran, flew B-17s, talking about his experiences. Before we do that, another great a great story. It’s a story of capitalism and free markets and freedom. So check that out. That’s on my website at KimMonson.com. We’ll be right back with Fred Wiese. And before we go to break, I’ve got on the line with me Karen Levine. She is a REMAX award-winning realtor. She’s a sponsor of both the shows, both the Kim Monson show and America’s Veterans Stories. And it is because of her and our other sponsors that these stories come to you.

Kim Monson
25:13 – 25:48
Karen Levine, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me, Kim. Boy, things are crazy out there in this real estate market. We’re seeing public policy has had such an assault on single family home ownership. But yet we know people want to own their own homes. And so you’ve been in this business for a long time. I think what’s happening is kind of unprecedented. But with all your experience, you’re still helping people successfully get into homes. And specifically, there’s some special things for veterans that you can help them with as well.

Speaker 12
25:49 – 26:37
Most definitely. I think the one thing our government has done well is provide veterans the opportunity for home ownership with their VA financing, the VA loan, which allows a veteran to be able to get into a home with no down payment. They have to come up with their closing costs and in this very competitive marketplace, if veterans have been well managed their money, if they have well managed their finances and have been able to put away monies for a home, those monies can then be used for what we call an appraisal gap. And what’s happening in this very, very competitive marketplace is homes are selling above their appraised value.

Speaker 12
26:37 – 27:19
And people would think, well, that’s not wise, but it’s wise in an appreciating marketplace because appraisals are historic. So it’s data that’s already happened. So as prices are rising, buyers are having to offer more money than what the appraised value would be to be competitive. And this, with the VA financing, gives veterans an opportunity to get into homes if they’ve been able to save some money for that appraisal gap. And I have been very successful in helping our veterans become homeowners and utilize this fabulous financing and these tools in the marketplace to help them be successful and become a homeowner.

Kim Monson
27:20 – 28:00
Well and being a homeowner is something that we’ve talked about many times is one of the ways that middle class America is able to create wealth for themselves and for their families. Now I just wanted to mention new bills because we are seeing new bills out in some of the suburbs. and it’s important that the home buyer has representation and all they need to do is have you accompany them on their first inquiry into those new bills. And then that way, the builder’s on one side of the table, the buyer’s on the other, but they have representation by you who has a whole lot of experience.

Kim Monson
28:00 – 28:05
So we’ve got about 45 seconds left. How would you like to explain that and then how can people reach you?

Speaker 12
28:06 – 29:01
I think you with the buyer that I come with you, and that’s just on the first visit, but I will accompany you on many other visits because I’m representing you, the buyer. The person on site, the on-site salesperson, is representing the seller, which is the builder, and their goal is to sell as many homes as possible. Of course, that’s many of our goals, but with that said, they are not going to divulge to you information that might be helpful in your And I have a background in new home construction. That’s where my career started over 30 years ago.

Speaker 12
29:01 – 29:17
So I’m able to bring that knowledge to the table so that you can make an educated decision about your home buying opportunities. And I would encourage you, if you’re considering new construction or resale in the home market, that you would give me a call at 303-877-7516.

Kim Monson
29:22 – 29:27
That’s Karen Levine, 303-877-7516. We’ll be right back.

Speaker 9
29:27 – 30:04
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Speaker 11
30:13 – 30:53
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Speaker 11
31:04 – 31:06
I love you

Kim Monson
31:08 – 31:28
And welcome back to America’s Veteran Stories. Be sure and check out my website. That is americasveteranstories.com. And I’m thrilled to be sitting here with Fred Wiese. He is a World War II veteran, was a pilot of B-17s. We’re hearing about his experiences. So you’re in the Army Air Corps now. Where do you go from there, Fred

Fred Wiese
31:28 – 32:24
Wiese? Not yet, but I’m on the way. On the way, okay. We’re leaving Des Moines. We have an assignment to go out to to Santa Ana, California, Santa Ana Army Air Corps Station. This would be the pre-flight area where we’d be examined physically and mentally and even at calisthenics and bring us up to speed to go to our next, our beginning of flying. And so we spent a couple of months there. We had to go through bariatric tests and so forth like that. to see if we could comprehend identification, aircraft identification and things of that nature.

Fred Wiese
32:24 – 33:11
And we were in several, oh, there were just tons of us out there, of people. And we were there for about two and a half months, as I recall. While we were there, we had to go through a couple of things, and my friend Mike and I, when we went to the bariatric thing, I came out of that just fine. And I supposed that at that time I was chosen to be a pilot, to go through pilot training. Mike did not make it. He was washed out. But he went to navigator school then. And Navigator School washed him out.

Fred Wiese
33:13 – 33:21
And I don’t know, I lost track of him from that time on. But I did run into him many, many years later here in Denver.

Kim Monson
33:23 – 33:24
Did you say what happened to him?

Fred Wiese
33:25 – 34:25
Well, I don’t know. I guess he just didn’t have the physical and mental knowledge for it. I didn’t know any different. My mantra from that day on when we first got in there was to work hard and to study hard and don’t get in trouble. And I didn’t want to wash out. And that was a no-no. A lot of people did. And consequently, My statement was to myself, if you wash out, people back in Bloomfield, Nebraska will probably say, this narrative well never would be worth a darn. And, you know, it was my bringing up that caused that part of it.

Fred Wiese
34:25 – 34:42
But that was my idea. So, this held true all the way through my training. Every time I got into a tough spot, I had to remember that. And by golly, I got myself through.

Speaker 4
34:42 – 34:43
Wow.

Kim Monson
34:44 – 34:51
And work hard, study hard, don’t get into trouble because you didn’t want to wash out. That’s great advice for people. Well,

Fred Wiese
34:52 – 35:13
you know, I was a kid that didn’t have any sisters or brothers. And I lived alone with my mother and grandparents for all those years, through 16. And so…

Kim Monson
35:13 – 35:19
Okay, well, so pilot training. You’d never flown before, right?

Fred Wiese
35:19 – 36:18
I had never been in an airplane. Okay, this base had no airplanes on it, not at this point. So when we finished that, they sent me to Thunderbird 1 at Glendale, Arizona, outside of Phoenix. And there was a number 2 Thunderbird just over the next ridge. And these were civilian training stations at one time. But now I’ve been taken over by the Air Corps. And I was assigned a pilot trainer named Mr. Walker. He was a man that was probably, I have no idea, but he was probably 45 years old or something close to that.

Fred Wiese
36:19 – 37:10
And he was a little bit heavier than any of us were. And a great guy. Because he took me up and, well, let’s get out on the field and I’ll tell you what we had to go through. We were students taking ground school learning what aircrafts were about and what the lift was all about and such as that. And we would do that for a half day and the other half a day would be on the flight line. Half the time on the flight line you were wing walking so that they wouldn’t run into other airplanes or into anything with the wings.

Fred Wiese
37:11 – 38:06
You could be out there and direct them a bit. Or we would be cranking the engines and the other half of that flight time was actually flying. So we had a quarter of a day for that, most every day. And it was scheduled differently almost every day. What plane were you training in? The PT-17, a Stearman. And Walker took me up on the first flight. And in that, I remember him getting in the front seat, in the front cockpit, and I was in the back one. And he showed me about buckling up and so forth, put the belt on and so on.

Fred Wiese
38:09 – 38:53
And the belt had a funny-looking device on the top of it. It looked like kind of a snaky S-shaped thing. And that was the thing that you would release it with. And we were wearing flight suits. And the flight suits had long, had big sleeves in them. You know, large sleeves. And they’d catch things. Anyhow, we got in there and Mr. Walker showed us some things about Okay, we’re going to see if we can find a place to land. We’re assuming the engine is out. And you’ve got to find a place to land. And this was a very important thing.

Fred Wiese
38:54 – 39:48
But next thing he said to me, okay, we’re going to do a loop. He said, have you got your belt on good tight? I said, yes, sir. And I don’t know, I might have reached in and loosened it with my sleeve, I don’t know. And we get to the top of the loop, back upside down. And I felt that there wasn’t anything under my bottom. I never have spread my legs like that in my life. But I didn’t fall out. I was wearing a parachute. It wouldn’t have mattered anyhow. It was an experience that I never wanted to have again, and I never had to after that.

Kim Monson
39:48 – 40:00
So what you did, so you spread your legs so that your legs were against the side so that you didn’t fall out? Yeah. Oh my Lord. That’s amazing. That is just amazing. So you finished the loop, then what happens?

Fred Wiese
40:00 – 40:46
Well, of course, from there on, I did pretty well. And he checked me out and I was soloing at the regular time about, I don’t know how many hours, probably five or six hours. And then we would fly, we’d get out and fly and do all kinds of aerobatics and all that sort of thing. It was a wonderful airplane to play with. And from there, if you graduated from that thing, that was two and a half months, I believe, something of that nature. And it was probably just over the Fourth of July weekend, something of that nature.

Fred Wiese
40:46 – 41:57
Yeah. And then we were transferred to Minter Field at Bakersfield, California. And while at Minter Field, we were on in the BT-13. We called it the Vultee Vibrator. Volte made the airplane and the vibrator was shook like a dickens. Oh my god. It was just noisy. It was a 450 horse engine. Now that was a big engine compared to what we had previously. Okay. 220 engine. 220 horse power I think. So while we were there we had various experiences, like we had been introduced to radios, we’d been introduced to flaps and stuff of that nature, we’d been introduced to a cockpit that had a slight over the top of it, and we could see all around as we flew.

Fred Wiese
41:58 – 42:49
And it had a front and a back seat on it. And then we had an Air Force officer by that time, Air Corps officer at that time, as our instructors. We had to do certain things, like we had to do stage landings, which was you go over a device that was similar as a high jumper. If you hit the rod up there, that rod would fall off, the tight pegs, and that would wash you out. If you couldn’t make that thing work for you. So anyway, the point of it was to get down on the ground as quickly as you could after you make an approach to the landing.

Fred Wiese
42:51 – 43:46
Well, that took place, and on one occasion we were coming in for that landing. And we were told to get out of the area and get back in our practice quadrant. And what the reason was, was simply it was a B-17 coming in for a landing. And we were landing on a tarmac, which was a square piece of asphalt. So they had to bring this airplane in, the B-17, across the furthest point for the landing surface. And then we were called to come on in after that airplane landed and was safely back on the flight line being checked out for fueling or refueling or something.

Fred Wiese
43:49 – 44:43
I asked the captain then, are we going to be allowed to go see that airplane when we get down, get our logs filled out and such as that? He said, well, I imagine so. We’ll see about that. So he allowed for that to happen. We walked over like we were not too anxious to get over there, but we had to walk slowly. You don’t run out there. We walked under the wing and we saw these turbo buckets going on around. Turbo buckets, that’s for the turbine engines. They have the splined wheel that just spins like the dickens, probably up to 22,000 RPMs or something like that.

Fred Wiese
44:43 – 45:35
And it was hot under there. And I just got out in front of the airplane. I stood back to view the cockpit and the silhouette of the airplane. And I saw women up there. One of them was in the cockpit, in the pilot’s seat. And one was on the wing, checking the fuel tanks. And another one was climbing up on the side of the fuselage for something else. And I just was mesmerized by that. I couldn’t believe it. What are these people doing out there? They happened to be wasps. I had never heard of it before, and it just put me down something terrible.

Fred Wiese
45:35 – 45:59
I just couldn’t believe that. I had heard of Amelia Earhart, but I had never, ever heard of people, women flying airplanes like that. Now, you see, these people had a minimum time in anything. But they had the nerve and the ability to fly those darn things.

Kim Monson
46:00 – 46:07
Let’s go to break. I’m talking with World War II veteran Fred Wiese. When we come back we’ll continue the conversation. Stay tuned.

Speaker 5
46:09 – 46:32
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Speaker 2
46:39 – 46:55
You’d like to get in touch with one of the sponsors of The Kim Monson Show, but you can’t remember their phone contact or website information. Find a full list of advertising partners on Kim’s website, KimMonson.com. That’s Kim, M-O-N-S-O-N, dot com.

Kim Monson
47:04 – 47:55
Welcome back to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure to check out our website. That is americasveteranstories.com. I am interviewing Fred Wiese. He’s 99 years old. He was a B-17 pilot in World War II, and we haven’t even gotten to that yet. So during break, Fred and I were talking, we’re going to schedule another time. to do Could it have been Hap Arnold? They were concerned that one of the bombers was having a record of crashes and so that they had some women flying those so that the guys realized if the women could fly it, they could fly it.

Kim Monson
47:55 – 47:57
Does that have anything to do with that or do you know? I

Fred Wiese
47:57 – 47:59
have no idea.

Kim Monson
47:59 – 48:04
Okay. But you were surprised that it was women that were flying this B-17? Yeah, I had

Fred Wiese
48:04 – 48:11
never run into women flying before. I had never even conceived that idea.

Kim Monson
48:14 – 48:17
So you see the B-17 though, did you like the plane when you saw it?

Fred Wiese
48:17 – 49:04
Oh yeah, of course I did. I was mesmerized by the size of the thing. and that it could get off the ground at all. But I knew it was flyable. I had seen it, heard of it, and so forth. Now, we were at Minter Field at that time, and on that stage landing thing, I had not done well with it the first day. And this captain said, Weas, if you don’t get that down right, The next time we fly, you’re washed out.” Well, he made me think about it again, that mentor of mine. So, I did graduate from that area, and then went down.

Fred Wiese
49:05 – 49:49
The next issue was to go to advanced training, advanced pilot training. And this put us in either multi-engine or we were in single engine. And he had already told me I would never be in a single engine. So that was fun. So we were on train. We were de-trained at a place out in the middle of the desert, and we didn’t know where we were. It was down in between Marfa, Texas, and Alpine. And there was a field called Marfa Army Airfield out there. We had to get off there, off the train. You could see nothing.

Fred Wiese
49:49 – 50:44
We marched out there to the place. It was all of our baggage on our shoulders. It about seemed like a mile or more. And we were out in the desert. It was in southwest Texas. Now, we were flying at that time the Bobcat. It was a two-engined aircraft, and we called it the Bamboo Bomber. It was made of wood. I think it was a Cessna. We had experiences there that were different, too. Now we had retractable gear. We had flaps. We had radio transmissions. We had a fly-by-night. And we had to do stuff like that.

Fred Wiese
50:44 – 51:05
It was an airplane that could carry two people and possibly three. And so we had two students flying as we were checked out. And I enjoyed the airplane. There was nothing to it. It had no power at all much, but we could just stay up in the air.

Kim Monson
51:05 – 51:06
Well, that’s a good feature.

Fred Wiese
51:07 – 52:08
Yeah, it was. And as I graduated there, I graduated as a flight lieutenant. I had no idea why, but I assumed that I was not as able as some others. But that wasn’t the truth. They had run out of spaces for second lieutenants. So we were temporarily in that category. And I remember the serial number that well, T2835. And I remember his serial number so well. Yeah, that’s amazing. 1-7-0. I’m going to have to go back and get the other one. I’ve got it written down somewhere. give us that same, that ranking. And now we were being paid the same as the second lieutenant.

Fred Wiese
52:08 – 53:05
It didn’t matter anyhow. So I got my second lieutenant’s here after I got to the second station I was assigned to. However, we were then introduced to go down to Roswell, New Mexico. And that was a station, I think it was Roswell Army Airfield at that time. But it was a B-17. Now, this time, I got to get up close and personal with the darn thing. And I tell you what, it was an airplane that just fascinated me. And we went up with our two students and an instructor. And of course, I had a flight engineer with them.

Fred Wiese
53:07 – 53:59
and maybe an observer, I don’t know that. But that training took two and a half months. And then I was assigned to go to Lincoln, Nebraska, pick up a crew. And when I got there, they put me as a pilot, and I had a co-pilot, and I had eight other guys. So a total of ten. Nine other guys. Yeah, a total of ten. So a total of ten, yeah. We trained in Rapid City, South Dakota. While at Rapid City, we had to do aerial work and the first thing we had to do was go out and prove that we could fly instruments.

Fred Wiese
54:01 – 54:53
And I did pretty well, apparently, on the first instance of flying instruments. We had to go out and orient ourselves into the cone of the beacon that was right over on our station, on our field. and get that stuff done. And you had no windage and such as that. And listen to the radio and get… We had oral null at that time. That was our bacon type of radios. And it was just a sound, an A or an NN. And when you get to the middle of that, it was a solid tone. So that’s what we’re looking for is trying to get that solid tone.

Fred Wiese
54:54 – 55:47
And I did make my flight into it and came out right over the spot. Now we had to go out and turn around and come back in. Now the signal is reversed. And I hit it again right on the button. And at that time, my engineer said, I think we’ve got a good crew. And that was the end of that. I will tell you that the next thing I did, I had to go fly formation. On my first flight of formation, we had a whole crew aboard. And I had just gotten in position to fly in my own spot that I was assigned to be.

Fred Wiese
55:49 – 56:40
And all of a sudden my aircraft started shaking like the dickens. I couldn’t figure out what it was. I changed prop positions, changed the throttle, forward and aft, put down flaps and lifted them, tried to lift it, put the gear down and so forth. Everything worked. Couldn’t figure out why they were doing that. So we went. I broke formation. I told the commander of the formation that I had to break out. My airplane was shaking. And he didn’t like it. What he said, it was not very nice. Okay. Anyhow, I went in to land and it shook like the dickens.

Fred Wiese
56:40 – 57:24
I thought it was going to come apart, that whole airplane. I can’t emphasize enough about the vibrations we had. So we got on the ground and I got stopped and I could see an officer running up to the airplane and it was the maintenance officer. He says, he got up board and he says, everybody off here but you. And he’s pointing at me. He said, we’re going to fly this airplane. I’m going to prove to you that there’s nothing wrong with it. So he got us all off, and the engineer, I think, came along with me.

Fred Wiese
57:25 – 57:54
I’m pretty sure he did. Anyhow, we took off. And the moment that we broke ground, He started yelling, Mayday, Mayday, Mayday, Mayday, all the way around the circuit, coming back in. And he had all the fire trucks out there, everything else, and he was shaking like a leaf. And I’ve never heard another word about it. Oh my gosh.

Kim Monson
57:54 – 58:13
Fred Wiese, we are out of time for this interview. This is part one. We’ll be scheduling part two very soon. This is fascinating talking with Fred Wiese, World War II, a veteran, flew B-17s. And my friends, these stories are so rich. We indeed, we stand on the shoulders of giants. So God bless you and God bless America.

Announcer
58:14 – 58:24
Thank you for listening to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure to tune in again next Sunday, 3 to 4 p.m. here on KLZ 560 and KLZ 100.7.

Speaker 1
58:32 – 58:46
The views and opinions expressed on KLZ 560 are those of the speaker, commentators, hosts, their guests, and callers. They are not necessarily the views and opinions of Crawford Broadcasting or KLZ Management, employees, associates, or advertisers. KLZ 560 is a Crawford Broadcasting God and Country station.

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