The
“Wing’s Of Freedom Project” and the B-17G
“Flying Fortress” are considered Icons of our
community. Not only has the airplane “flown”
above McLoughlin Boulevard for nearly 64 years
in Milwaukie, Oregon but it has gained
recognition as a significant and integral part
of the community.
Art Lacey's daughter, Punky Scott, knows the
story of her father's wild B-17 adventure well
and recently sat down with KATU News to tell
the famous tale “The Incredible Journey of The
Bomber”. She said it all started at a party
where her father, a local businessman, bragged
that he was going to put a B-17 on top of his
gas station. "He was at his own birthday party
in 1947 and he, I think, probably had a few
adult beverages," Punky said with a laugh. A
friend promptly told Art he was absolutely out
of his mind and could never pull it off. Art
bet the man $5 he could do it and immediately
ran with the idea. "And so he turns to his
friend Bob and says 'you got any money on you
Bob?' And Bob says 'yeah, how much do you
need?' (And my dad says) 'I need $15,000.' And
the guy had it on him," Punky said. "I don't
know how that translates into today's money,
but it's got to be a lot." If it sounds
surprising that someone back in 1947 would
have that much cash on them, Punky said you
have to realize what Portland was like back
then. "The whole area was wide open. There was
gambling, there was prostitution, there was
illegal booze - everything," she said. So Art
got the money from his friend Bob and wasted
no time on getting the ball rolling on his big
plan. "So he got acquainted with this guy who
was the head of the base (in Oklahoma) and my
dad was a real outgoing, personable sort of
guy, easy to talk with," said Punky. "So he
bought a B-17 and then the guy says 'now you
go into town and you come out tomorrow, you
and your co-pilot and I'll have the plane
ready for you.' Art had two problems with his
plan. For one, he didn't have a co-pilot and
more importantly, he didn't even know how to
fly a B-17. But he was determined to pull the
whole thing off. He borrowed a mannequin from
a seamstress, dressed it up and made it his
'co-pilot.' Then he hopped in the plane and
made some practice runs on the runway with the
manual in hand. "He knew how to fly a
single-engine aircraft and was a good pilot,"
said Punky, "But he didn't know how to do the
big ones." Art might have been able to fake
his way through it if the plane's landing gear
didn't malfunction. He was trying to land back
on the runway when he ran into trouble. "So he
flew it around and finally he just had to
bring it in. So he crash landed it and skidded
in," said Punky. "He was flying it low and
slow and skidded in and crashed it into
another parked B-17." Art wasn't hurt in the
mishap but he did have to walk up to
headquarters and admit that he really didn't
know how to fly a B-17. Punky said the guy he
talked to took pity on him. "He turned to his
secretary and said 'have you written up the
bill of sale yet on that B-17?' And she said
'no.' and he said 'worst case of wind damage
I've ever seen.' And so he sold him a second
B-17," she said. And that second B-17 actually
turned out to be a better deal for Art. "The
first one that crashed had seen serious time
during the war," said Punky. "It wasn't the
best." The one that Art ended up buying was in
much better shape with less than 50 hours of
fly time. But he had already spent over
$13,000 on the B-17 that he had crashed and he
didn't have much money left. Fortunately for
Art, the guy took pity on him once again and
sold him a second B-17 for just $1,500.
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This time,
Art decided it probably wasn't a good idea
for him to try to fly it alone, so he got
some buddies lined up to help him take it
home.
"So he called my mom and had her send down
two of his friends," said Punky. "And one
was the guy who had taught him to fly in
the first place and the other one had been
a crew chief on a B-17. And he told her to
send them down with a case of whiskey.
"The whiskey, Punky explained, was to be
used to bribe the local fire department.
Art didn't have any money left for gas and
he wanted to use their fire truck pumps to
siphon fuel out of the two crashed B-17s.
Oklahoma was a dry state at the time and
whiskey was a good enticement." |
And so that's what they did and they fueled up
and took off the next morning," said Punky.
"They flew to Palm Springs, California and
then bought gas. But he didn't have the money
for gas there either, so he wrote a bad check
for it and covered it when he got home."
By this point you might be wondering what
Art's wife thought of all this. But Punky said
her mom was pretty cool with it all.
"I think she was used to it by that time," she
said. "He was pretty crazy. Their whole
married life, he was just one of those people
that would do anything."
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"Anyway, they got lost on the way home - lost
in a snowstorm," she went on, adding that her
dad almost hit a mountain during the flight
and even flew low to the ground so they could
see street signs and get their bearings.
Through it all, they did manage to finally
land in Troutdale.
"So they got it to Troutdale, dismantled it,
put it on trucks and then he went to get
permits to bring it here. And they wouldn't
give him any permits because it was still too
high, too long and everything was wrong," said
Punky. But by that time, Art Lacey was so far
in debt there was really no turning back.
"So
he hired a motorcycle escort for funerals,"
said Punky. "And the guys are in black leather
and they put him out in front in the middle of
the night and had two teenagers ride along
with him. And he told them 'now if the police
show up you burn rubber in another direction
and they'll follow you.' He told the trucking
drivers 'you just keep going. I'll pay any
tickets, just keep on going and don't let them
stop you.' |
"Punky said her dad didn't run into any issues
with the cops, but she does remember hearing
about a tipsy driver who probably got the
scare of his life.
"McLoughlin Boulevard was a two-lane highway
at the time and there was some guy that had
been drinking. And he sees this airplane
coming at him in the middle of the night and
he thinks he's on a runway. And so he cranks
his wheel and goes off into the ditch and the
plane goes on by," Punky said, laughing.
The B-17 made it to Milwaukie but it's hard to
keep something that big a secret and it didn't
take long for local officials to come after
Art for not having permits. Punky said a local
newspaper article helped him out.
"The Oregon Journal wrote up an article saying
something to the effect of 'local government
tries to keep bomber from final resting
place.' This was right after World War II, so
patriotism was running pretty high. So they
ended up fining him $10 for doing what he
shouldn't have done. And it's been in the area
ever since." |
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This B-17G has
the lowest air miles of any B-17
in existence. It never left the
Country. |
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