History Daily - A B-24 Crash Survivor Begins a Fight for Survival
Episode Date: May 27, 2026May 27, 1943. A B-24 bomber crashes in the Pacific Ocean, beginning a two year ordeal at sea and in Japanese captivity for former Olympic athlete Louis Zamperini. This episode originally aired in 2024.... Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's the afternoon of May 27, 1943, in the skies above the Pacific Ocean, several hundred miles south of Hawaii.
Louis Zamperini stands on the flight deck of an American B-24 bomber.
Louis is a 26-year-old lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air Forces, and while the pilot and co-pilot fly the plane,
Louis carefully scans the waves ahead with a pair of binoculars.
Yesterday, an aircraft from Louis' squadron set out from their airbase in Hawaii bound for Canton in China.
but it never arrived.
So today, Louis' bombers, one of the two that's been sent out on a search and rescue mission,
scouring the ocean for any sign of the missing plane or its crew.
Louis lowers his binoculars as a metallic rattle shudders through the plane.
Looking out the window, Louis sees that one of the bomber's four engines is shaking violently on its mounting.
Then the propeller blades stop turning.
Louis grips the metal walls of the flight deck to steady himself
while the co-pilot urgently stabs its switches on the console.
But then a second engine stops working.
Pilot and co-pilot struggled to control the plane,
but they can't stop it tipping to the left.
The bomber begins spiraling into a dive.
Pilots face turns pale, and he shouts at Louis to get to his crash station.
They're going down.
Louis fights the G-forces of the tumbling plane,
clamors out of the cockpit, and into the waist of the bomber.
Five other crewmen are already in their seats as Louis takes his designated spot.
Out of the window beside him, the sky spins around faster and faster.
He can't see the ocean, but he knows it can't be far below.
But then a strange sense of calm comes over him.
Louis knows that this is his moment to die.
When the B-24 bomber hits the ocean's surface, eight of the men on board are killed instantly.
Louis Zamperini is not one of them, though.
Somehow he and two others survive.
But the plane crash is just a beginning.
Louis and the others may be injured and stranded in the Pacific,
but it will be another two years of suffering that follows
after their bomber tumbled out of the sky on May 27, 1943.
Hopefully by now you've heard me mention the European Christmas Market Tour
I'm putting together for this December,
an incredible 10-day journey throughout France, Germany, and Austria,
packed with tradition, Christmas cheer, and history, of course.
Well, I have an update.
The trip is confirmed.
We've booked enough places to definitely go ahead, which means if you've been thinking of joining me, you need to act fast.
Only 20 places are available total, and over half of those are already taken.
Tickets are on sale now.
Go to historydaily.com and look for the Christmas market section.
That's historydaily.com.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is May 27, 1943. A B-24 crash survivor begins a fight for survival.
It's July 12, 1936, at Randall's Island Stadium in New York, seven years before Louis Zamperini's bomber crashes into the Pacific Ocean.
19-year-old Louis takes his mark on the running track, leaning forward slightly and waits for the crack of the starter's pistol.
When the sound ricochets around the arena, Louis allows several front runners to sprint past him into the lead.
Even though only the top three finishers would qualify for the American Olympic team,
Louis is content to run in the pack of more than a dozen other athletes.
Despite lining up shoulder to shoulder with America's fastest 5,000-meter runners,
Louis wasn't a natural athlete growing up.
A high-spirited child, Louis was encouraged to join the school track team by his older brother
to help keep him out of trouble.
And it worked.
Louis got into shape and began to set high school and then college records.
Even so, at today's trial,
Louis is up against the country's top runners,
and he isn't expected to gain a spot on the U.S. Olympic team.
But New York is sweltering in a heat wave,
and that plays to Louis's advantage.
Louis's favorite race is the 1,500 meters,
so he's decided to save himself for that
and take this longer event at a manageable pace.
But the pre-race is a pre-race.
favorites are overconfident and they've set off sprinting too quickly. After several laps,
the intense heat begins to take its toll. They begin to slow and in the final two laps, the
fresher Louis is able to step up his pace and quickly close the gap on the frontrunners. By the final
straight, only one man stands between Louis and victory. They match each other, stride for stride,
their legs and arms pumping as they sprint over the finish line. The timekeeper's stopwatches
can't separate Louis from the other runner, so the officials record the race result as a dead
heat. But who wins doesn't actually matter. What's more important is that both men have
qualified for the U.S. Olympic team and are headed to the Games in Germany. The following month
at the Berlin Olympics, Louis again crosses the line at the exact same time as an opponent during his
5,000 meter heat. This time, though, officials can examine footage of the race and place Louis 5th,
just ahead of an Italian runner.
But it's a crucial intervention,
since it's only the top five finishers in the heat
who progressed through the Olympic final.
In the gold medal race,
Louis replicates his race strategy
from the American trials.
He starts slowly, running at a manageable pace
until he goes all out for the final few laps.
Louis's last lap is easily the quickest
of any athlete in the race,
and he thrills the crowd by overtaking
several competitors as though they're standing still.
But the best runners in the world
are still too far ahead, and Louis's last lap exploits aren't enough to earn him a medal.
He finishes the race in eighth place.
But Louis's fast finish catches the attention of the guest of honor in the Olympic Stadium.
After cleaning himself up, Louis wanders the stands with a camera to shoot a few photos for his family and friends back home.
Coming close to the box used by visiting dignitaries, Louis spots Germany's leader, Adolf Hitler.
Since taking power three years ago, Hitler has brutally suppressed his political opponent,
and his aggressive posturing has fomented talk of war in Europe. Louis fundamentally disagrees with
Hitler's extreme ideology, but he can't help getting a thrill from being so close to one of
the world's most notorious figures. When Louis spots a sharp-faced man entering Hitler's box,
he doesn't recognize Nazi propaganda minister Yosef Goebbels and thinks nothing of beckoning the man over.
Louis holds his camera out to Goebbels and asks him to take a photo of Hitler with it.
Louis's American team track suit marks him out as a competitor, so Gerbils does as Louis asks.
But when he returns a few moments later, he brings an unexpected message for Louis.
Adolf Hitler would like to meet him.
When Louis introduces himself to Hitler, Hitler congratulates Louis on his fast finish in the 5,000 meters.
The two men exchange a brief handshake before Louis is ushered away.
This interaction with Hitler is cordial, but it won't be long before Louis is fighting against him.
The next Olympic Games will be cancelled after Hitler launches a genocidal war of aggression in Europe.
All across the world, young men like Louis Zamperini will have to put their ambitions and careers on hold
and risk their lives in the battle against fascism.
It's April 21, 1943, in the skies over the Pacific Ocean, seven years after Louis Zamperini raced in the Berlin Olympic Games.
An ear-splitting succession of explosions rattles through the B-24 bomber Superman.
At his post at the front of the plane, Louis drops into a crouch as bullets punch a line of holes
through the fuselage.
Louis joined the U.S. Army Air Forces in September 1941 and was commissioned as a lieutenant.
Three months later, the USA was dragged into World War II by a surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Louis spent months training as a bombardier before he finally flew his first mission in December
1942.
Now, in April 1943, Louis feels like a veteran.
A few minutes ago, Louis dropped another bomb load over the remote Nauru Island deep in the Pacific,
but now his squadron has come under attack by Japanese fighters.
Louis crawls through the Superman to check for damage.
The plane is perforated by bullet holes.
The right rudder is shot through.
Control cables have been cut, and the hydraulic lines have been severed,
meaning that the plane has no flaps, no landing gear, no brakes for landing.
And the crew has sustained damage as well.
The B-24 is two waste gunners, its tailors.
gunner, its top and belly turret gunners have all been hit by bullets or shrapnel. Louis
sets to work patching them up as best he can as the plane's pilot fight to keep control over the
crippled aircraft. Luckily, Superman's engines are undamaged, and the plane is able to remain
in the relative safety of its formation until it makes it back to base in Hawaii. It's a heavy landing,
though, which inflicts further damage on the plane. In the aftermath of the mission, the squadron
leader has no choice but to pull Superman from service. Its men are too.
transferred to an alternate plane. But Louis and his crewmates aren't happy with the new B-24 they're given.
Green Hornet has a poor record for reliability. One month later, on May 27, 1943, Green Hornet lives
up to its reputation. The plane suffers mechanical problems on a search and rescue mission,
and the pilot is forced to ditch at sea, killing eight of the crew. Louis survives alongside
two others, Staff Sergeant Francis McNamara and First Lieutenant Russell Phillips. These
survivors take to a life raft, but their hopes of rescue are slim. Green Hornet went down so quickly
that there wasn't enough time to send a distress signal. Now the men bake in the sun aboard a raft
helplessly drifting westwards towards enemy territory. The three airmen have no supplies with them.
They drink rainwater when they can and eat the occasional raw fish or seabird they managed to catch,
but it's not enough. After 33 days at sea, Francis McNamara dies from exposure and
and starvation. Louis and Russell Phillips roll his body off the raft into shark-infested waters.
They fear it won't be long before they two succumb. The two men are starving, but they
managed to last another 12 days until they finally spot land. It's the Japanese-occupied Marshall Islands,
but after a month and a half at sea, Louis and Russell are in no state to escape from the enemy.
They are immediately captured by the Japanese and sent to a prisoner of war camp. There, the
conditions that Louis and his fellow prisoners endure are atrocious. The rations they're given by the
Japanese are barely enough to live on, and the cells they're kept in are overcrowded, dirty,
and a haven for disease. Somehow, Louis is strong enough to cope with all of this, but even
he struggles with the inhumanity of the Japanese guards. Many of them seem to take sadistic
pleasure and beating inmates for the smallest of infractions. Prisoners are whipped for merely
folding their arms, brushing their teeth, or talking in their sluble.
sleep. And the rules seem to change arbitrarily day to day as if they're designed to catch prisoners
and infractions. All the POWs live in a constant state of fear, but for Louis it's worse. Because when
the Japanese find out that he was an American Olympic athlete, they make it their mission to hurt
and humiliate him at every opportunity. But while Louis and his fellow prisoners are tortured
behind the walls of their prison camp, the war turns against Japan and its fascist ally Nazi Germany.
By the fall of 1945, Adolf Hitler will be dead, Japan will have surrendered, and the POWs will finally be free.
Only then will Louis Zamperini return home to the United States, more than two years after his plane took off on its doomed last mission over the Pacific.
It's September 1945 at an airfield in Okinawa, Japan, more than two years after Louis Zamperini's air crash.
For the first time since his plane ditched in the Pacific Ocean, Louis finds himself aboard an air raid.
and it's another B-24.
But this one isn't carrying bombs.
It's shuttling American servicemen
who've been liberated from Japanese prison camps
at the end of World War II.
Louis' presence in a camp
came as a surprise to American officials.
The Japanese authorities never registered him
with the Red Cross as a prisoner of war,
so the U.S. military had listed him as killed in action.
Now, though, Louis has been found alive
and he's on his way home to his surprised
and overjoyed family.
The B-24 carrying Louis and his fellow ex-prisoners
opens its throttle and speeds down the runway.
But the plane is so full of men that it struggles to make it off the ground.
Louis' seat gives him a view through the open Bombay doors
so he can see the bomber's wheels bumping along the asphalt.
Eventually, the plane does get airborne, but barely.
And as the bomber flies over the end of the runway and out to sea,
the spray from the waves just below brings vivid and terrifying memories
of the crash flooding back to Louis.
These are memories he struggles with long after his return to America.
He suffers regular flashbacks of his ordeal at sea and in captivity,
and he starts drinking heavily to cope.
Louis gets his life back on track, though,
thanks to the support of his wife and to a newfound faith in evangelical Christianity,
which leads him to eventually forgive his captors and even travel to Japan to meet them,
becoming a symbol of American-Japanese reconciliation after the horrors of war.
Louis Zamperini will die in 2014 at the age of 97, but his extraordinary life will not be forgotten.
Five months after his death, a movie based on his story will be released.
Unbroken will recount Louis' struggle to reach the Olympics and the even greater battles that awaited
after his plane crashed into the Pacific on May 27, 1943.
Next on History Daily, May 28, 1897.
After accidentally creating a strange new movie,
food product. A 23-year-old inventor
trademarks his wobbly dessert
as jello. From Noisor and Airship, this is
History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive
produced by me, Lindsay Graham, audio editing by
Malibov. Sound design by Malibag. Music
by Thrum. This episode is written and
researched by Scott Reeves, edited by
William Simpson, managing producer Emily
Berth, executive producers are William Simpson for
Airship, and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
