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name
KITTREDGE, David R - Date of
birth
27 August 1922 -
Age
22 - Place of
birth
Itasca County, Minnesota -
Hometown
Outgamie County, Wisconsin
Personal info
Military service
- Service
number
16094800 -
Rank
Staff Sergeant -
Function
Radio Operator -
Unit
450th Bombardment Squadron,
322nd Bombardment Group, Medium
-
Awards
Air Medal with 6 Oak Leaf Clusters
Death
-
Status
Killed in Action - Date of
death
16 April 1945 - Place of
death
South of Wittenberg, Germany
Grave
-
Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten - Walls of the Missing
Immediate family
-
Members
John Kittredge (father)
Eunice (Ross) Kittredge (mother)
Catherine Kittredge (sister)
John Kittridge (brother)
Robert Kittredge (brother)
Nathan Kittredge (brother)
Plane data
- Serial
number
42-96225 -
Data
Type: B-26B-55
Destination: Wittenberg, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the railroad station
MACR: 14463
More information
S/Sgt David R. Kittredge volunteered for the Air Corps of the U.S. Army in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on 21 August 1942. He attended high school for 3 years and was a chauffeur before he joined the army.Statement of Donald E. Sheperd, O-704507, 1st Lt., 450th Bomb Squadron: "I was flying as co-pilot in the aircraft leading the flight. The lost aircraft was flying on our left wing. I first observed Lt. Dow's aircraft as we turned off the target and his plane came directly under ours. The plane was in a steep dive and smoke was coming from its tail. Later I saw flames come out of the left side of the plane. At the same time I saw one chute leave the aircraft and blessom out. Diving earthward the plane made a shallow turn to the left and hit in the center of a small town. The aircraft exploded immediately upon hitting the ground."
The plane received a direct hit from antiaircraft fire and crashed into a house at Muhlanger, 1 mile south east of Wittenberg. In December 1948 the wreckage could be located, however no trace could be found of the remains of the decaesed crew members. It is believed that their remains were totally destroyed by the ensuing fire since the plane and the house burned completely.
In 2007, a German aircraft researcher interviewed eyewitnesses, who reported seeing two deceased crew members buried near the crash site under an apple tree. He also reported the crew members as being exhumed in 1947 or 1948, by an allied recovery team.
In June 2012, a German national informed the U.S. government that he found possible human remains in Muhlanger, which he believed to have been associated with an April 1945, B-26B crash, and turned them over to the local police. In July 2012, a Department of Defense (DoD) team began excavating the site recovering human remains, personal effects and aircraft wreckage. DoD also took custody of the remains that the local German national had previously recovered. The remains were of two crew members, S/Sgt Howard and S/Sgt Kittredge.
To identify Sgt Kittredge’s remains, scientists from DPAA and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory (AFDIL) used circumstantial evidence and forensic identification tools such as mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA).
The individually identified remains of S/Sgt Kittredge were buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia on 27 May 2015, together with the individually identified remains of S/Sgt Howard.
Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Peter Schouteten, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov, www.ancestry.com - Family Tree / 1930 Census / Birth Index, www.fold3.com, IDPF of Dwight K. Booth
Photo source: Peter Schouteten, www.findagrave.com - Sue, Arlington National Cemetery