| 
		 | 
        TP | - | M# | SER | - | BLK | - | MF | SERIAL #  | 
        AF  | 
        BG  | 
        BS  | 
        SC | RCL/# | V#-P | PHOTO CREDITS  | 
    
SHACK? WOLF!  | 
        B  | 
        -  | 
        24  | 
        H | -  | 
        5 | -  | 
        CF | 41-29194 | 15 | 451 | 725 | ~ | 00-2 | 
           N/A  | 
    
Port (Left) Side - Transferred from 451/725 to 449/716 
(#61)
Lost 25 Feb 44, GER - MACR 
2617 - Pilot Robert J. Knapp
Contributor - Brendan Wood
Info Contributor - Mike
Careatti
Original Pilot E. L. Wilson. Transferred to the 449th BG / 716th BS 
(#61) 8 Feb 44 based at Grottaglie, Italy. While under the command of Robert
Knapp, she was one of four 449th BG ships lost of 24
total downed 25 Feb 44, as B-24s struck the Fiume
marshalling yard, Zell am See railroad and Graz airfield. From
Robert Knapp's crew, six were KIA and another four became POW's.
Local villagers placed a grave marker for the crew at the crash
site and a plaque in a nearby village church.
Info Contributor - Wally
Forman
The meaning of this nose art just happens to be an indecent
proposition and a rebuff! "Shack?" (to shack up) was a commonly used term,
during W.W. II (and after), propositioning a girl to sleep with
you (for a night or longer) when you were on leave. "Wolf!" (guys who were "fast" or
"aggressive" were often called a "wolf") was
her response to the proposal, which essentially meant, "No
Way, I'm not that kind of girl!"
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