Quelle:
www.americanairmuseum.com
| Allgemein | |
|---|---|
| Hersteller: | Boeing |
| Produktionsblock: | , B-17G-30-BO: 42-31732 bis 42-31931 |
| Einsatzgeschichte | |
|---|---|
| Bomber-Gruppe: | , 305th Bomb Group |
| Bomber-Staffel: | , 364th Bomb Squadron |
| RCL | WF-E |
| MACR | 2541 |
| KSU/ME/KU: | 1028 |
| Schicksal: |
, Abschuss durch Feindflugzeug (25 Februar 1944) |
Geschichte der
B-17 42-31820
Delivered Denver 29/12/43; Kearney 13/1/44; Presque Is 24/1/44; Assigned: 364BS/305BG [WF-E] Chelveston 15/2/44; MIA Augsburg 25/2/44 Pilot: Foster Perry, Co-Pilot: Bob Brundage, Navigator: Rich Plothow, Bombardier: Dudley Winkler, Engineer / Top Turret Gunner: Jesse Vowell (5POW); Ball Turret Gunner: Zeb Kisner, Waist Gunner: Donato Turchiano, Waist Gunner: Odie Gilvin, Tail Gunner: Gerhardt Hildebrandt (4KIA); Radio Operator: Jerome Bajenski (EVD); Enemy aircraft, crashed Ferme de Mont Garni, near Raucourt, six miles S of Sedan, Fr; MACR 2541.
Informationen können Korrekturen und Ergänzungen auf Grundlage von Jings Recherchen enthalten.
B-17 42-31820 Details


B-17 42-31820 Crew
| Position | Rang | Name | Status | Bemerkung |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | 1LT | Forster F. Perry | POW | - |
| CP | 2LT | Robert S. Brundage | POW | - |
| NAV | 2LT | Richard E. Plothow | POW | - |
| BOMB | 2LT | Dudley E. Winkler | POW | - |
| ENG/TT | T/SGT | Jesse G. Vowell | POW | - |
| RO | T/SGT | Jerome J. Bajenski | EVD | - |
| BT | SGT | Zeb D. Kisner | KIA | - |
| WG | S/SGT | Donato V. Turchiano | KIA | - |
| WG | S/SGT | Odie P. Gilvin | KIA | - |
| TG | S/SGT | Gerhardt E. Hildebrandt | KIA | - |
Diese Seite wurde zuletzt am 04. Dezember 2021 aktualisiert

03. Dezember 2022 access_time 9:02
Pilot Foster Perry was captured but escaped. I bought my house from him in 1979. We were talking about his service in WWII and he told me it was try to escape or starve to death. They sent him out on a detail to work in the gardens near the camp on the edge of a forest. Just before the were rounding everyone up he slipped off into the forest, then made his way back to Spain.
John Baumann