USAAF Nose Art Research Project


 
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Dragon Lady (42-30836)


Madam Shoo Shoo (43-37786)


Homesick Angel (42-107135)


Haybag Annie (42-97280)

Anne HAYWOOD

American Red Cross Aero Club, 385th Bomb Group
Great Ashfield


Born half-Austrian, half-English, Anne Haywood spent two years in Austria tutored by French and Austrian governesses before attending an English finishing school. Having been painting since the age of two, she planned to go to Paris to study art after leaving school. But the onset of war changed things and like many women in Britain she sought work to aid the war effort. Living at that time in a thatched cottage in rural Suffolk, Anne applied to the British Red Cross but her application was refused because her mother was Austrian. Undeterred, Anne joined the American Red Cross and worked in the Aero Club at Great Ashfield, base of the 385th Bomb Group. Serving an endless supply of hot coffee and doughnuts she became a great listener to many an airman's woes. Her artistic talents were soon recognised and put to work and one of the first assignments was to paint wall murals in the Aero Club and then the Officers' Club. It was not long before she was heavily engaged in the painting of nose art onto the group's Fortresses.

The sight of an attractive young 24-year-old woman roaming the airfield brought many an admiring glance, as did her paintings on the noses of the planes. Her work was considered of such importance as a morale booster to the group that Lt.Col. Vandervanter, the group CO, wrote to the local Labour Exchange to request her deferment from other war work. She was driven out to the remote hardstands by an MP in a jeep and collected later as she was not allowed to use the base bus.

All of Anne Haywood's designs were drawn from her vivid imagination based on the requests of the men. "Dragon Lady" sported a fearsome dragon, "Off Spring" had a cartoon baby, "Madam Shoo Shoo" and "Satan's Mate" carried sexy ladies. In addition to the huge nose arts painted on the aircraft, Anne also embellished dozens of A-2 jackets with miniature masterpieces. After the war, when all the GIs had gone home and left Great Ashfield all but deserted, Anne went to Oxford to pick up her art studies again and continued to paint for the rest of her life.




© Ray Bowden 2 December 2023
Information Update for Readers of
"Plane Names & Fancy Noses - 91st Bomb Group (Heavy)"