
The President of the United States
in the name of The Congress
takes pleasure in presenting the
Medal of Honor
to
MICHAEL, EDWARD S.
(Air Mission)
Rank and Organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army Air Corps, 364th Bomber
Squadron, 305th Bomber Group. Place and Date Over Germany, 11 April 1944. Entered
Service at: Chicago, Ill. Born: 2 May 1918, Chicago, Ill. G.O. No.: 5, 15
January 1945.
Citation: For conspicuous
gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty while serving as pilot of a
B17 aircraft on a heavy-bombardment mission to Germany, 11 April 1944. The group in which
1st Lt. Michael was flying was attacked by a swarm of fighters. His plane was singled out
and the fighters pressed their attacks home recklessly, completely disregarding the Allied
fighter escort and their own intense flak. His plane was riddled from nose to tail with
exploding cannon shells and knocked out of formation, with a large number of fighters
following it down, blasting it with cannon fire as it descended. A cannon shell exploded
in the cockpit, wounded the copilot, wrecked the instruments, and blew out the side
window. 1st Lt. Michael was seriously and painfully wounded in the right thigh. Hydraulic
fluid filmed over the windshield making visibility impossible, and smoke filled the
cockpit. The controls failed to respond and 3,000 feet were lost before he succeeded in
leveling off. The radio operator informed him that the whole bomb bay was in flames as a
result of the explosion of 3 cannon shells, which had ignited the incendiaries. With a
full load of incendiaries in the bomb bay and a considerable gas load in the tanks, the
danger of fire enveloping the plane and the tanks exploding seemed imminent. When the
emergency release lever failed to function, 1st Lt. Michael at once gave the order to bail
out and 7 of the crew left the plane. Seeing the bombardier firing the navigator's gun at
the enemy planes, 1st Lt. Michael ordered him to bail out as the plane was liable to
explode any minute. When the bombardier looked for his parachute he found that it had been
riddled with 20mm. fragments and was useless. 1st Lt. Michael, seeing the ruined
parachute, realized that if the plane was abandoned the bombardier would perish and
decided that the only chance would be a crash landing. Completely disregarding his own
painful and profusely bleeding wounds, but thinking only of the safety of the remaining
crewmembers, he gallantly evaded the enemy, using violent evasive action despite the
battered condition of his plane. After the plane had been under sustained enemy attack for
fully 45 minutes, 1st Lt. Michael finally lost the persistent fighters in a cloud bank.
Upon emerging, an accurate barrage of flak caused him to come down to treetop level where
flak towers poured a continuous rain of fire on the plane. He continued into France,
realizing that at any moment a crash landing might have to be attempted, but trying to get
as far as possible to increase the escape possibilities if a safe landing could be
achieved. 1st Lt. Michael flew the plane until he became exhausted from the loss of blood,
which had formed on the floor in pools, and he lost consciousness. The copilot succeeded
in reaching England and sighted an RAF field near the coast. 1st Lt. Michael finally
regained consciousness and insisted upon taking over the controls to land the plane. The
undercarriage was useless; the bomb bay doors were jammed open; the hydraulic system and
altimeter were shot out. In addition, there was no airspeed indicator, the ball turret was
jammed with the guns pointing downward, and the flaps would not respond. Despite these
apparently insurmountable obstacles, he landed the plane without mishap. |