Living in Waco there is another local connection to Operation Tidal Wave.
Col. John Riley "Killer Kane" KaneJohn Riley Kane came to Baylor University in 1924 as a football and basketball student-athlete. The son of a Baptist minister, Kane came to Baylor from Missouri, having previously lived in Texas and Louisiana to follow his father's church assignments. Kane started at Baylor with the intent to become a medical doctor, ultimately graduating in 1928 with his bachelor's degree. During his time at Baylor, Kane played on the Baylor Bears Football team. He also survived with minor injuries the 1927 bus crash in Round Rock, Texas, that killed many of his teammates on the Baylor basketball team, as well as others, in what would later become known as the "Immortal Ten" tragedy.
After two years of medical school, Kane decided to change course and join the military in 1931, receiving his commission and his wings in 1932 from the U.S. Army Air Corps. By 1942, a 35-year-old Kane was a major and part of the 98th Bombardment Group, 9th Air Force, known as the "Pyramiders," flying missions in Africa. It was here that he earned the nickname among his men and their Axis adversaries, 'Killer Kane," as he flew 43 combat missions. He had earned a reputation as a fearsome pilot when, on Aug. 1, 1943, Col. Kane led his bombers in a mission known as Operation Tidal Wave to bomb the Ploesti oil refineries in Romania.
Heavily fortified and deep in the Romanian mountains, the refineries around Ploesti, Romania, that supplied the Nazis with 35% of their petroleum supplies represented a major challenge to the Allied forces. Clouds hampered the low-level, long-range air raid, and although Kane's element became separated from the others, he led a successful attack against a prepared Nazi defense in a grueling 2,400-mile round trip mission. By the time his bomber "Hail Columbia," turned back, he had lost an engine and been struck more than 20 times by anti-aircraft artillery. He circled the bomb site until all of his squad was clear of the fight, a decision that burned up his fuel and caused him to crash-land in Cyprus before reaching his home base in North Africa.
For his "conspicuous gallantry in action and intrepidity at the risk of life above the call of duty," Kane was awarded the Medal of Honor nine days later in 1943. Four others also were awarded the medal, making the raid the most highly decorated single engagement in the nation's history at the time. After the war, Kane continued to serve in the military until 1954. He later retired to a farm in Logan County, Arkansas, until 1987, when he moved to Pennsylvania to be closer to his son, John Franklin Kane II. Kane died in 1996 and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
He was born in McGregor in 1907.


B-24D, Hail Columbia. Crashed Nicosia Cyprus. 1 Aug 1943. Col. Kane holding jacket between #4 and #3 engine, #4 engine destroyed over Ploesti.
Tidal Wave film