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Personal info

Full name
PHELPS, Bruce E
Date of birth
2 April 1920
Age
24
Place of birth
Kansas
Hometown
Olathe, Johnson County, Kansas

Military service

Service number
O-722753
Rank
Second Lieutenant
Function
Navigator
Unit
603rd Bombardment Squadron,
398th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
3 February 1945
Place of death
7,5 km southeast of Lehmke, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
D 23 16

Immediate family

Members
Elmer Roy Phelps (father)
Trella Maude (Smith) Phelps (mother)
Roderick Phelps (brother)
Rober T. Phelps (brother)
Wanda W. Phelps (wife)
Douglas Phelps (son)

Plane data

Serial number
43-38697
Data
Type: B-17G
Nickname: Powell's Prowler
Destination: Berlin, Germany
Mission: Bombing of Tempelhof marshalling yard
MACR: 12215

More information

2nd Lt Bruce E. Phelps attended college fand was an laboratory technician.

He joined the Air Corps of the U.S. Army Reserve in Kansas City, Kansas on 14 December 1942.

Statement by S/Sgt Donald D. Dunn, tail gunner of plane 42-97317: "1st Lt Powell's plane had gone over to the right to avoid propwash. Evidently he caught propwash from another element and went into a dive. He pulled out abruptly and his plane broke in half between the radio room and ball turret. The front half of the plane turned a loop and cut part of the nose of Lt McCormick's plane off. The tail half of Lt Powell's plane hit the tail section of the other plane, tearing part of the horizontal stabilizer off and about all of the vertical stabilizer off. About that time an orange parachute went out and a second later a white one went out. I believe it to be the waist gunner on Lt Powell's crew. Both planes dropped off into a spin and I followed them down to the cloud layer. Nothing else was seen."

Of the nine men crew of A/C 43-38697 eight were killed. Only the tail gunner survived. Of the nine members on board of Lt McCormick's ship, seven were killed.

Powell, Walker, Luckie, Phelps, L’Estrange, Harper, Colgan and Aleskyn were killed. According to the MACR all of them, except for Powell, were buried by the Germans in the cemetery of Lehmke, a small village not so far from the place their plane crashed.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, www.abmc.gov, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com - MACR, www.ancestry.com, http://neutralboy001.wixsite.com/battle-history/perry-e-powell-and-bruce-e-phelps

Photo source: Peter Schouteten, Kristof de Geyter, http://neutralboy001.wixsite.com/battle-history/perry-e-powell-and-bruce-e-phelps