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Personal info

Full name
MOORE, Gardner Hastings
Date of birth
24 February 1920
Age
23
Place of birth
St. Albans, Franklin County, Vermont
Hometown
District of Columbia

Military service

Service number
31118582
Rank
Staff Sergeant
Function
Assistant Engineer
Unit
322nd Bombardment Squadron,
91st Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
17 August 1943
Place of death
Mayen, 15 miles west of Coblenz, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten
Plot Row Grave
H 18 24

Immediate family

Members
Justus A. Moore (father)
Helen (Hastings) Moore (mother)

Plane data

Serial number
41-24453
Data
Type: B-17F
Nickname: The Bearded Beauty
Destination: Schweinfurt, Germany
Mission: Bombing of Kugelfisher ball bearings factory
MACR: 275

More information

S/Sgt Gardner H. Moore enlisted on 29 April 1942 in Hartford, Connecticut.

A/C first started to get into trouble over Mayen, Germany, before ever reaching the ball-bearing factories at Schweinfurt. Egender and Vender both remember the vicious and unrelenting head-on attacks of German ME-109's and FW-190's which passed literally within feet of the bombers as they rolled past them. Egender reported that a string of 7 FW-190's were attacking at a near-level altitude from dead ahead, a popular attack strategy that exploited the Flying Fortess' weakest area of defensive gunfire in the nose of the aircraft. The fighters pumped a continuous stream of shells into A/C, raking the ship from left to right as they passed and rolled away at the last second. The fighter in the middle of the attacking group found is mark. Gunfire hit and destroyed the number 2 engine, ran across the inboard wing setting it a fire, and then hammered into the flight deck. Both Pilot Everett Kenner and Co-Pilot George Bryan were killed instantly. According to a later report by Flight Engineer Sgt Glen Chase, both Pilots were decapitated in the attack. Egender recalls
that he was leaning over the bombsight when the attack commenced. He remembers the Plexiglas nose getting hit and a 20mm cannon shell exploding under the bombsight, throwing him from the nose back into the tunnel below
the flight deck. The dazed bombardier remembers the aircraft's nose being filled with smoke and the smell of cordite permeating in the air. Egender, now with a minor wound on his right leg, regained his wits and stuck his head up into the cockpit. Chase came down from the top turret when the fire hit his cockpit. From the flightdeck he informed Egender that the pilots were dead and that he should get out.

S/Sgt Gardner Moore failed to get out of the plane and his body was found in the wreckage.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov, www.fold3.com - WWII Enlistment Records, www.8thafhs.com/db/index.php, www.ancestry.com - Headstone and Interment Record / Birth Record

Photo source: www.findagrave.com - Des Philippet, www.fold3.com