| Allgemein | |
|---|---|
| Hersteller: | Douglas |
| Produktionsblock: | , B-17G-35-DL: 42-106984 bis 42-107233 |
| Einsatzgeschichte | |
|---|---|
| Bomber-Gruppe: | , 96th Bomb Group |
| Bomber-Staffel: | , 339th Bomb Squadron |
| MACR | 4165 |
| Schicksal: |
, Abschuss durch Flak (20 April 1944) |
Werbung/Advertisement
Geschichte der
B-17 42-107164
Delivered Tulsa 9/3/44; Kearney 22/3/44; Grenier 3/4/44; Assigned: 339BS/96BG [QJ- ] Snetterton 7/4/44; MIA Pas de Calais 20/4/44 Pilot: Clyde Liles, Co-Pilot: Harry Spitzenburg, Navigator: John Pavia, Bombardier: Wallace Murray, Engineer / Top Turret Gunner: John Dicicco, Radio Operator: Clarry Jones, Ball Turret Gunner: Jim Malloy, Waist Gunner: Theo Byman, Waist Gunner: Jim Tasker (9KIA); Tail Gunner: Max Kruse (POW); flak hit in bomb bay, ship broke in half, crashed Hallines, five miles SW of St Omer, Fr. MACR 4165.
Informationen können Korrekturen und Ergänzungen auf Grundlage von Jings Recherchen enthalten.
Werbung/Advertisement
Diese Seite wurde zuletzt am 29. März 2019 aktualisiert

02. Februar 2026 access_time 13:47
The pilot of this plane, Clyde Liles, was my Daddy’s brother. I have gathered information for years and have quite a bit. I received over 100 pages from the National Archives. One thing I have not been able to pin down – he had just arrived at Snetterton Heath less than two weeks before he was killed. It seems like this might have been his one and only mission. Do you have any suggestions as to how I could either prove or disprove this?