A 99-year-old former U.S. Air Force pilot who delivered chocolate for children b…




A 99-year-old former U.S. Air Force pilot who delivered chocolate for children behind the Iron Curtain has been honored for his service by the Royal British Legion.

Colonel Gail Halvorsen – nicknamed the Candy Bomber – released the treats, tied to miniature parachutes made from handkerchiefs, as he flew in vital supplies to West Berlin after it was blockaded by the Soviet Union in 1948.

Halvorsen, from Utah, was just one hundreds of air crew who flew in supplies to West Berlin’s 2.5 million population amid emerging tensions in Germany’s ruined and divided capital.

His work was featured during the Royal British Legion’s Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night.

A young actress read a testimonial from Traute Grier, a teenager when the blockade began, who said: “The chocolate was wonderful but it wasn’t the chocolate that was most important. “What it meant was that someone cared. That parachute was something more important than candy. It represented hope.” For his part, Col. Halvorsen has told how the chocolate drops began with two sticks of Wrigley’s chewing gum, following a group of children’s heartfelt plea for liberty from Communist oppression.

The pilot, then a 28-year-old lieutenant, met the children through the fence of an airfield where he was working. “The kids said, ‘someday we’ll have enough to eat but if we lose our freedom, we’ll never get it back’. I thought their attitude was wonderful so I reached in my pocket. All I had was two sticks of gum. “They held it like it was fragile, they were thrilled,’” he recalled last week, during a tour of the RAF Museum in Hendon, north London, organised with the help of the RAF Museum American Foundation.

Operating almost non-stop and through the harsh German winter, the Berlin Airlift carried more than two million tonnes of supplies on more than 277,000 flights, mainly into Tempelhof.

U.S. Air Force C-47 Skytrains and C-54 Skymasters took milk, flour and medicine to the needy. At the height of the Berlin Airlift, aircraft were landing every three minutes, supplying up to 13,000 tons of food, coal and medicine a day. #binspirednews

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