04/22/2026
The Same Last Name, but Different Experiences
*18th in a series
Robert Fettinger’s mural painted on one of the Center’s interior walls, which depicts airplanes over our fair city, has stimulated an interest in local pilots.
Former Huntington resident Toni Rae Mayo’s 2001 Ball State University master’s dissertation, titled “Defining Flight,” listed 19 of the county’s early pilots and their exploits. Unique among them was John A. Mills (1918-2008), because he liked to fly a helicopter. His son, Louie Mills, recounted the following story about his father and grandmother to Ms. Mayo.
Louie said his father was an excavator by trade — he called it “ditching” — and was an Army pilot trainer during World War II. Louis recalled that his father was known to use his “chopper” to keep thes business going. On one occasion, when a critical piece of machinery broke down, John flew to Ohio for parts and landed back in the field where he had been working. By 4 p.m. he was back o the job.
As a member of the Flying Shriners in Fort Wayne, John Mills participated in the group’s annual charity breakfast each year to raise funds for Shiners Children’s hospitals. Besides serving food and other duties, his main contribution was flying the funds raised to one of the Shrinersfacilities.
On July 13, 1968, John gave his mother-in-law, Bertha Day, most frequently called “Granny,” a unique gift for her 92nd birthday. He planned a special flight over Huntington in his Brantly helicopter. He wanted her to see familiar places like the home where she and her husband, Leslie, had raised four children and operated a “healthy milk route in the horse and buggy days.”
Granny, who nicknamed herself “Granny-go-day,” was excited for the trip as John moved the chopper out of a modified two-story barn at his home in Majenica, where he had built a large concrete landing pad. He carefully lifted the barely 90-pound “Granny” into the front seat of the craft for the best view and fastened her safety belt. From the air, Granny marveled at how Huntington had expanded, seeing her former home at 737 E. Taylor Street, and so many other sights that she did not want to stop flying!
Louie explained that his father favored helicopter travel because he “loved the freedom of being able to go whenever and wherever he wanted.” We’ll bet “Granny-go-day” would agree!
Thomas A. Mills — not a relative of John A. Mills — had flying experiences that were quite a bit more harrowing. Mayo extracted these episodes from his 1999 booklet titled, “My Part in World War II.”
On June 6, 1944, Tom (1918-2008) was among 60 pilots flying B-17s in tight formation from Italy to the oil fields of Ploesti, Romania. Nobody realized they were taking part in the Allied invasion of Europe that day. Bombardier Harry Filcorn dropped 500-pound bombs on camouflaged storage tanks and Tom turned the bomber around. As he did, flak hit the first engine. At 40 miles from the target, the tail-gunner yelled, “enemy fighters at 6 o’clock.” Five or six bombers received direct hits. Tom’s bomber continued to receive flak until the second engine was hit, dropping the plane another 2,000 feet. With no choice left, Tom rang the bailout bell.
As pilot, Tom was the last to leave after admonishing the crew not to pull their ripcords at a high altitude because “enemy fighters often shot men after they bailed out.” His booklet noted, “At six miles up, I pulled my ripcord and the shock was severe … my sheepskin flying boots (fell) into the clouds.”
When Tom hit the ground, he was surrounded by Romanian peasants who kept him at bay. He later learned that several Romanians had helped another crew member escape to Turkey and six Romanians were then executed by the Germans for aiding in the escape.
Tom got into a straw-filled horse-drawn wagon and asked where he was being taken. The driver said one word, “prisoner.” A few miles later, Tom’s co-pilot, Charles Whiteside, was picked up and crew member Sgt. John Williams was also located. They were taken to a jail. All needed medical attention and Tom was able to convince the jailer to get a doctor.
After two nights behind bars they were moved to Bucharest, where nine Americans were held prisoner. The POW camp was no more than a schoolhouse surrounded by a 10-foot-high fence. The senior officer at the camp, a Lt. Col. Gunn, organized an escape but before it occurred a rock was thrown over the fence with a note tied to it which read, “Be patient, the revolution will be soon.”
Tom’s journal noted that at 10 p.m. on July 18, 1944, one month after being captured, someone came into their room and shouted, “Romania is at peace.” Their government had changed and had declared war on Germany. The next day the prisoners were turned loose and given rifles. They tried to leave Bucharest, but machine-gun-wielding Germans blocked the roads. German fighters began dropping bombs on the city as they stood defenseless in the street until a group of people motioned for them to come upstairs to an apartment. Tom noted they accepted the invitation and spent the night as “The family served us the best they had.” The following day, they made it back to the schoolhouse where they learned, “Arrangements were being made to fly us out of Romania … as the sound of artillery fire came closer.”
German soldiers left the city on September 4, 1944, and several P-51s from the 15th Air Force “buzzed the airport” to provide protection for the B-17s coming in to take them home. Tom’s notes said, “Seeing those P-51s gave me a feeling of pride, which I cannot describe.”
The B-17s landed six at a time and POWs scrambled aboard until 400 of them were evacuated. Commander of the 15th Air Force Base in Italy, General Twining, greeted the war-weary soldiers home. The final sentence in Tom’s booklet reads, “After a short visit to each of our bomb groups, we returned home to the states.”
Tom completed 25 years as a pilot in the Air Force and retired as a lieutenant colonel in 1965. We sincerely thank him for his service.
Taxi over to YOUR History and Education Center for more sky-high tales and exhibits.
— Researched and compiled by Dr. John Regan
Volunteers are always welcome to help us preserve the part for the present and future at the Huntington County History and Education Center, 315 Court Street, in Huntington. Visit the Center from 10-a.m.-4 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, and Saturdays by appointment. More information on the Center’s collection, tours, room rental, and how to become a member of the Huntington County Historical Society is available from Executive Director Barbara Rupley at (260) 356-7264 or www.huntingtonhistoricalmuseum.com