The School That Fell from the Sky on June 5, 1943, Lt
Tne AtR FoRCES EscApE & EVASIoN soctEry SUMMER 2005 Communications Volume 17, No. 2 WICHITA FALLS, TEXAS 76g0T-2501 JUNE 16, 2OO5 *)hlAlN*il4NNXXXlry*tXeXt-tXXStXl+ttt<St*tt+lXtS,lrStXXt:trStS.ll-itS.tSla.tSlt+lSySlStS'Sla.tS.tS,t*tX The school that fell from the sky On June 5, 1943, Lt. Fred Hargesheimer was in a P-38, PAPUA flying a photo reconnaissance mission 8,000feet above the Japanese-occupied island of New Britain He was shot down by an enemy jighter. A month after parachuting into the jungle, he was found by the M eramer a p eop I e fro m the vil lag e of Ea Ea (now called Nantabu) in Papua New Guineu ForJive months, they nursed him back to health, hid himfrom enemy patrols andftnally took him to a Coastwatchers camp. From there he was rescued by a submarine, the U.S.S. Gato. In 1960, Fred went back to the ishnd to acpress his grntitade to was the dreams that haunted me. a crowd of natives chattei.ine and the people who had aided him Weeks had passed since I had sjnqfng as they waded throulh the shallow That led to the establishment of bailed out of Eager Beaver, but the water. I screwed the Airmen's Memorial School in trauma continued to grip me. I had up enough courage to temiSring nightrnares, sometimes staft walking towards the canoe. I Papua New Guinea by Fred, his about those moments when I moved if family andfriends. struggled to escape from the these p t bv the cockpit, and other times about the Jap rhe er/en man I had picked out This k part of his story.
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