Berliner Boersenzeitung - US 'candy bomber' pilot dead at 101

EUR -
AED 4.194411
AFN 79.947642
ALL 94.105403
AMD 438.296922
ANG 2.044016
AOA 1047.317223
ARS 1353.641906
AUD 1.758905
AWG 2.057231
AZN 1.935796
BAM 1.961619
BBD 2.305017
BDT 139.505036
BGN 1.956302
BHD 0.430629
BIF 3398.440313
BMD 1.142113
BND 1.472555
BOB 7.88833
BRL 6.435061
BSD 1.141877
BTN 98.031934
BWP 15.334756
BYN 3.73605
BYR 22385.411899
BZD 2.293182
CAD 1.562188
CDF 3272.153487
CHF 0.934727
CLF 0.027922
CLP 1071.473496
CNY 8.228125
CNH 8.193889
COP 4692.564812
CRC 580.617202
CUC 1.142113
CUP 30.265991
CVE 110.593538
CZK 24.82153
DJF 202.976412
DKK 7.459713
DOP 67.40907
DZD 150.327247
EGP 56.727033
ERN 17.131693
ETB 153.215063
FJD 2.567755
FKP 0.844752
GBP 0.842885
GEL 3.129164
GGP 0.844752
GHS 11.703614
GIP 0.844752
GMD 82.232341
GNF 9894.436523
GTQ 8.7731
GYD 238.838467
HKD 8.958945
HNL 29.694583
HRK 7.534401
HTG 149.351715
HUF 403.428185
IDR 18613.355783
ILS 3.98132
IMP 0.844752
INR 98.111777
IQD 1496.167836
IRR 48111.50377
ISK 144.648365
JEP 0.844752
JMD 182.100164
JOD 0.809787
JPY 162.989744
KES 147.906003
KGS 99.877975
KHR 4591.293415
KMF 492.251111
KPW 1027.862129
KRW 1557.967267
KWD 0.349852
KYD 0.951339
KZT 582.643194
LAK 24669.638211
LBP 102333.311192
LKR 341.683537
LRD 226.880955
LSL 20.786413
LTL 3.372362
LVL 0.690853
LYD 6.228476
MAD 10.50385
MDL 19.704795
MGA 5162.349936
MKD 61.538656
MMK 2397.925909
MNT 4083.770557
MOP 9.227514
MRU 45.219531
MUR 52.296147
MVR 17.657203
MWK 1981.566432
MXN 21.929669
MYR 4.850582
MZN 73.106659
NAD 20.786353
NGN 1804.709457
NIO 42.054996
NOK 11.546287
NPR 156.852271
NZD 1.89457
OMR 0.43915
PAB 1.141576
PEN 4.176135
PGK 4.704934
PHP 63.65562
PKR 322.077078
PLN 4.28133
PYG 9122.098838
QAR 4.162365
RON 5.049345
RSD 117.235633
RUB 90.513298
RWF 1615.319813
SAR 4.283592
SBD 9.52972
SCR 16.237396
SDG 685.836815
SEK 10.943674
SGD 1.469254
SHP 0.897521
SLE 25.948187
SLL 23949.535694
SOS 652.71744
SRD 42.315473
STD 23639.430119
SVC 9.988717
SYP 14849.589332
SZL 20.789444
THB 37.231385
TJS 11.302024
TMT 3.997395
TND 3.403496
TOP 2.674939
TRY 44.867559
TTD 7.736882
TWD 34.214254
TZS 3064.521805
UAH 47.323476
UGX 4157.295395
USD 1.142113
UYU 47.601618
UZS 14670.440104
VES 108.325435
VND 29790.871631
VUV 137.715133
WST 3.140251
XAF 657.914333
XAG 0.03308
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.086617
XDR 0.818651
XOF 655.572576
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.504087
ZAR 20.35027
ZMK 10280.390158
ZMW 29.482195
ZWL 367.759872
  • RBGPF

    -1.5000

    67.5

    -2.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0899

    22.2

    +0.4%

  • BCC

    -0.0050

    87.54

    -0.01%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    10.37

    -1.54%

  • RYCEF

    0.1150

    12.15

    +0.95%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    71.05

    -0.38%

  • CMSD

    0.0587

    22.21

    +0.26%

  • RELX

    0.2950

    54.36

    +0.54%

  • VOD

    -0.0450

    10.26

    -0.44%

  • GSK

    0.3300

    40.8

    +0.81%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.94

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.1750

    46.17

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    -0.3000

    58.55

    -0.51%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.96

    +0.05%

  • AZN

    1.1800

    73

    +1.62%

  • BP

    -0.6350

    28.92

    -2.2%

US 'candy bomber' pilot dead at 101
US 'candy bomber' pilot dead at 101

US 'candy bomber' pilot dead at 101

Gail Halvorsen, the former US pilot who thought up the idea of dropping tiny improvised parachutes loaded with sweets for children into Berlin during the Soviet blockade, has died at the age of 101.

Text size:

The Allied Museum dedicated to Cold War history in Berlin's former American sector confirmed media reports of Halvorsen's death on Wednesday.

"Gail Halvorsen died in Utah in a hospital, surrounded by his family," a museum spokeswoman told AFP on Thursday.

A lifelong ambassador for German-American friendship, Halvorsen became famous in the embattled city as the first American pilot to drop bundles of chocolate and chewing gum from his plane to local youngsters waiting below.

Fans nicknamed him "the candy bomber" and "Uncle Wiggly Wings" for the way he manoeuvred his plane so the children, still traumatised by the war, would know to look out for incoming treats.

He inspired many imitators in the ranks of the airforce.

"Even though I flew day and night, ice and snow... I was happy because of the look on the faces of the children when they would see parachutes coming out of the sky," he told AFP in 2009.

"They would just go crazy."

Halvorsen rose to the rank of colonel and eventually ended up commander of the Tempelhof airfield, the staging ground for the 1948-49 Berlin Airlift.

Pilots flew supplies to West Berlin's 2.5 million people, still reeling from the Second World War.

- 'A father-figure' -

Operating almost non-stop and through a harsh German winter, the airlift brought in more than two million tonnes of supplies on more than 277,000 flights, mainly into Tempelhof.

At least 78 US, British and German pilots and ground crew lost their lives in accidents in the air and on the ground, as the Allies delivered fuel and food to prevent Berlin's population from starving.

Officially known as "Operation Vittles", it was the first major salvo of the Cold War.

Mercedes Wild recalled in 2019 how she as a seven-year-old girl had protested that the constant drone of airlift planes disturbed her chickens at a time when eggs were a valuable commodity.

Halvorsen wrote back, enclosing sticks of chewing gum and a lollipop with his letter.

His gesture sparked a long-lasting friendship between Halvorsen, Wild and their families which mirrored the post-war ties between their countries.

"It wasn't the sweets that impressed me, it was the letter," she told AFP.

"I grew up fatherless, like a lot of (German) children at that time, so knowing that someone outside of Berlin was thinking of me gave me hope."

Wild called the tall, lanky pilot with the broad grin "a father-figure" and "the best ambassador we could have for German-American friendship".

Halvorsen said the same year on one of his many visits to the German capital, even well into his 90s, how impressed he was with Berliners' hunger for freedom.

"The heroes were the Germans -- the parents and children on the ground," the airforce veteran said, calling them "the stalwarts of the confrontation with the Soviet Union".

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)