3:56 | In this stirring account, SSgt. Phillips describes the incredible danger C-47 pilots faced taking off from troop carriers. He exposes a little known fact about what happened to a co-pilot when he mistakenly jumped into German territory.
Rejected by the Marines because of poor eyesight, SSgt. Phillips didn't let it stop him from serving in World War II. He describes how he ended up with the paratroopers on missions to fight the Germans.
Flying over some exotic places including Brazil, SSgt. Phillips vividly recalls why his squadron needed carrier pigeons, what it was like to land and take off on a volcanic cone, and how he felt sitting near highly explosive tanks aboard a cramped C-47.
As the sources of silk dried up, rigging parachutes presented new challenges. SSgt. Phillips explains how a new material was used and what he stole to help rig the parachutes correctly.
In this stirring account, SSgt. Phillips describes the incredible danger C-47 pilots faced taking off from troop carriers. He exposes a little known fact about what happened to a co-pilot when he mistakenly jumped into German territory.
Reflecting back on the war, SSgt. Phillips lauds the success of his parachute team, and explains just how the parachutes they rigged, really worked.