Mayhew “Bo” Foster, a World War II Army pilot who transported the one-time heir to Adolf Hitler for interrogation in an unarmed, unescorted plane, has died. He was 99.
Foster died on Monday night in a Missoula nursing home, son-in-law Roy Korkalo said on Tuesday. A cause of death was not immediately given.
Foster served as brigadier general of the Montana National Guard, was awarded the Silver Star for valor as an artillery air officer and received the French Legion of Honor for his service in World War II.
However, his mission flying Reichsmarschall Hermann -Goering was the highlight of his military career. The head of Nazi Germany’s Luftwaffe had surrendered when the war ended in Europe in 1945 and Foster flew him from Kitzbuhel, Austria, to 7th Army headquarters in Germany for interrogation before turning him over to stand trial at Nuremberg.
Goering weighed more than 136kg and Foster said in January that he had to take a larger plane than he normally used for reconnaissance missions.
“I had the impulse to turn the plane over and see if I could shake him out, but he was wedged in like a champagne cork,” Foster told his wife, Virginia Lou Foster, in a letter written soon after the mission.
Foster said Goering was relaxed during the 55-minute flight, avoiding any talk of Hitler or the war and instead pointed out the sites below them.
“He acted as though he was going on a sightseeing tour, or really as though as I was going on a sightseeing tour and he was showing me where he grew up,” Foster said.
Goering was found guilty of war crimes at Nuremberg, but killed himself by swallowing a cyanide capsule before a hanging sentence could be carried out.
Foster returned to the US in October 1945, having flown 70 reconnaissance combat missions. He was awarded the Silver Star after spending five hours taking fire above the battlefield when the 36th Division made an amphibious assault landing in southern France in 1944.
Foster was born on Oct. 9, 1911, in Richmond, Virginia, and graduated from Yale University in 1937 with an English degree. He married his wife, Virginia, in 1940 and they had a daughter, Susan, who died in 2007. His wife died in the 1990s.
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