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The P-MAN III team spent considerable amounts of time in
the Koror area investigating possible leads concerning a Corsair belonging
to Major Quintus B. Nelson, who was shot down in the Koror area in 1945.
While investigating a report by a local Palauan of a possible site of
interest in western Koror, we searched several mangrove areas in SW Koror
without success.
However, just after climbing out of the swamps, our guide
Joe showed us a home where we did find what appear to be two aircraft
tires, which are being used as planters in the yard of one home in the
area, as well as one Hamilton-Standard
propeller sitting next to a shed). This propeller is missing its protective
center hub and the individual blades are each uniformly bent rearward
in a smooth arc. The leading edges and tips of the blades are not ground
down, suggesting that the propeller was either not under power when it
came to rest (e. g., feathered) and/or the propeller squarely struck a
uniform surface (e. g., water).
This type of propeller could have originated with a variety
of American aircraft in the Pacific, from single engine fighters (e. g.,
F4U Corsair, F6F Hellcat, SB2C Helldiver, TBM/F Avenger) to 2- and 4-engine
aircraft (e.g., PBY, B-17, B-24). I initially thought this propeller might
have belonged to Maj. Nelson's Corsair because of the locale, and because
of this prop's diameter of approximately 140 inches. The B-24's cited
propeller diameter was 139 inches, versus Corsair, Hellcat and Avenger
propeller diameter of 157 inches, so this prop's size was consistent with
that of a B-24. (The PBY's cited propeller diameter was 144 inches, and
we have found no reports concerning losses of PBY's or B-17's over Palau
during WWII.)
Interviews
of neighbors in the vicinity of this propeller revealed that it was found
and removed from Iberor Island (ref: 1986 USGS map), in the lagoon south
of Koror by a now-deceased Palauan. He had located it in the proximity
of the wing of a B-24 lying upside down on that island. When I asked when
and why the old man had done it, the neighbor said he had removed the
propeller many years ago because he had wanted it as a decoration for
his yard. This had to have been a considerable effort, as the propeller
weighs several hundred pounds and would be difficult to get it out of
the jungle or shallows onto a small fishing boat.
In 1994, I found and described this wing on Iberor; accordingly,
this propeller most probably belonged to the "Brief" ('058),
flown by Lt. Glenn Custer and crew of the 494th BG (H), 7thAAF and lost
on a combat mission over this lagoon 4 May 1945. Interestingly, this is
the third isolated Hamilton-Standard propeller I have seen in Palau. One
stands alone and vertical in the middle of a coral head off SW Babeldaob
near Aemiliik and one sits among various unidentified war memorabilia
near the weather station on Koror.
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