Ogden, Utah
A replica of the Memorial Stained Glass Window is located in the Col. Nathan H. Mazer Memorial Chapel, near Hill Aerospace Museum, Ogden, Utah. It was dedicated on September 8, 1989. It is significant for the Memorial Window and Memorial Monument to be located at Hill Air Force Base, as Hill Field was the parent base of Wendover Army Air Field in western Utah where the 384th Bombardment Group (H) originally trained in B-17s.
The 384th Bomb Group Commemorative Wing Panel is now on permanent display at the Hill Aerospace Museum as the centerpiece of an Eighth Air Force exhibit. 154 veterans of the Group signed the wing panel in a nine-year project that took place over the course of September 2010 to September 2019. Some even added a note or comment relating to their service with the group. One statistic stands out about this artifact: of the 141 combat crewmen who signed, at least one was on each of the 316 combat missions flown by the 384th Bomb Group. Additional interesting statistics⇗ can be found on the 384th Bomb Group Heritage Association research website.
Also located at the Hill Aerospace Museum is the Col. Nathan H. Mazer Memorial Chapel, named after the Group's ordnance officer. Inside the chapel is a replica of the Memorial Stained Glass Window, dedicated on September 8, 1989. Outside the chapel is a replica of the Memorial Monument in Grafton Underwood. It is significant for the Memorial Window and Memorial Monument to be located at Hill Air Force Base, as Hill Field was the parent base of Wendover Army Air Field in western Utah where the 384th Bombardment Group (H) originally trained in B-17s.
In addition to the Col. Mazer Chapel, there is another chapel called the Heritage Chapel. There stands a duplicate of the American Bell, dedicated on May 9, 1997. It was produced at the same foundry in England that made the original bell.
Photo courtesy of Todd Cromar
Photo courtesy of Harry deCourcy
Photo courtesy of Hill Air Force Museum
Photo courtesy of Marc Poole and 384thBombGroup.com
Photo courtesy of Marc Poole and 384thBombGroup.com