Intermission – Monogram Martin B-26 Marauder – Marauder at Midway

33BS-22BG-B-26-at-MIDWAY

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Marauder at Midway

Impressive painting and story…

Description

Early on the morning of June 4, 1942, the Japanese Combined Fleet, with four aircraft carriers, was approaching Midway Island in the Central Pacific with the intention of seizing the island. They expected to surprise the Allied base, but due to a broken Japanese code the Allies had advance warning, and sent every available bomber in Hawaii to Midway’s defense. Among this eclectic mix were four B-26 Martin Marauder fast medium bombers, now equipped to carry aerial torpedoes: two from the 22nd Bomb Group and two from the 38th Bomb Group. Navy ships, including two carriers, were also now approaching the scene. But even without the element of surprise, the Japanese had more ships, more carriers, and more aircraft armed to take down opposing ships.

While Midway Island was subjected to a terrific pounding by an initial Japanese air attack, the B-26s participated with Midway-based Navy attack aircraft in a desperate but spirited counterattack on the carriers. The strike ended badly for this American strike force and two of the B-26s were shot down during their target runs. The other two were so badly shot up that they barely made it back to Midway, where they crash-landed and never flew again. While attempting to evade the Akagi’s Zero fighters after releasing his torpedo at the ship, Lt. James Muri of the 408th Bomb Squadron, 22nd Bomb Group, in B-26 #40-1391 SUZIE Q, ended up flying just feet above the Akagi’s flight deck. Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo, leader of the Midway assault, witnessed the American counterattack, saw the Marauder fly a few feet above the ship’s deck, and incorrectly surmised that the planes stationed on the island’s airbase were the biggest threat to his precious carriers. Accordingly, he re-armed his force of attack aircraft with ordnance intended to destroy land targets. What Nagumo didn’t realize was that at the moment that Lt. Muri was hurtling down the flight deck of Akagi, mere feet away, two yet undetected US carriers had arrived to engage the Japanese fleet.

The shocking discovery a short time later of US carriers preparing to strike the Japanese fleet forced Nagumo to once again download the ordnance on his waiting planes and reload them for attacking ships. Aside from the breaking of the Japanese code that allowed the US Navy to respond to the Japanese invasion fleet, this fateful decision was responsible, more than anything else, for the US Navy’s stunning victory over the Japanese Naval forces in the Battle of Midway. While the Japanese planes were sitting on the flight decks, busy reloading, the Americans had already launched their attack aircraft. Had the Midway-based attack not been so aggressive, or if Lt. Muri had not so audaciously buzzed the Admiral’s flagship, the Japanese attack aircraft may well have kept their anti-ship ordnance and been in the air when the American carrier attack planes were launched. By the end of the day, all four of the Japanese carriers had been sunk; the USS Yorktown was the only carrier loss suffered by the United States Navy in this battle, which was the turning point in the Pacific war.

Building model airplanes is like taking history lessons and learning more about those who served their country.

James.Muri.and.Pren.Moore.jpgCrew_of_Lt._James_Muri_with_Martin_B-26_Marauder_at_Midway_in_June_1942.jpg1280px-B-26_Susie-Q.jpg

I had no idea in 1978 that Lt. James Muri had buzzed the Akagi.

What I knew was that Monogram offered two versions of the B-26 with different types of rear turret.

Screenshot_20210806-225022-868

To be continued…

9 thoughts on “Intermission – Monogram Martin B-26 Marauder – Marauder at Midway

  1. Allen's avatar a gray August 7, 2021 / 4:20 am

    I wonder what Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo said when he saw a B-26 Marauder flying a « few feet above the ship’s deck »? I can only imagine that it singed the ears of officers standing near by.

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    • Pierre Lagacé's avatar Pierre Lagacé August 7, 2021 / 4:41 am

      爆弾を搭載した爆撃機を再編成し、ミッドウェイの陸上目標を破壊する。

      Liked by 1 person

      • Allen's avatar a gray August 8, 2021 / 3:23 am

        I’ll bet he said something more strongly than that and children were told to cover their ears.

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      • Pierre Lagacé's avatar Pierre Lagacé August 8, 2021 / 4:36 am

        I don’t know if there is a sequence in the movie showing the B-26 buzzing the Akagi.

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  2. ModelAirplaneMaker's avatar ModelAirplaneMaker August 7, 2021 / 10:37 am

    Wait, what?? This happened?!!? I’m going down a research rabbit hole tonight!

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    • Pierre Lagacé's avatar Pierre Lagacé August 7, 2021 / 11:34 am

      It did happen.

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  3. tcinla's avatar tcinla August 7, 2021 / 11:17 am

    Unfortunately, you cannot get there from here with the Monogram kit. The kit is a B-26B/C, very different from the B-26A. The A model has smaller tail feathers, a completely different rear gun position from anything in the kit, the wings are four feet less in span (and you can’t just cut off the tips) and the engine cowlings are completely different. There’s also some big differences around the nose.

    Mike West makes a resin conversion kit that provides a different rear fuselage with the correct gun position, different tail, outer wings (from the engine nacelle out), different cowlings, and a resin nose. Unfortunately, due to family medical problems, he has closed Lone Star Models and isn’t producing things right now. He has announced he will re-open in September, but from what he told me in a recent e-mail, that is now « iffy » due to the continuing medical problem in the family.

    The best thing to do is what I have done: set the kit aside until he reopens and you can get the resin set, or decide to do one of the many colorful B-26B/C Marauders for which there are lots of decals availabile at eBay for this out-of-production kit.

    But trust me, neither you nor anyone else has the skills to just modify the kit to get to a B-26A. You’re talking about half the model being replaced with scratchbuilding. You really cannot get there from here and you’re wasting your time to try, I know whereof I speak.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Pierre Lagacé's avatar Pierre Lagacé August 7, 2021 / 11:33 am

      I thank you for your comment. I was going to say later that I will be building this one out of box. Your comment is not lost because I will use it in an upcoming post. Thanks again for your comment.

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