From William Orient's flight log: aircraft '095-R' (42-95095 'Sleepy Time Gal', 328th BS), B-24H. Briefed for Ahrweiler, bombed a Target of Opportunity with the 96th CBW (intended Ahrweiler, actual Target of Opportunity). Log remark: maximum effort tactical support, good results. Duration 5:45.
Mission 760
- Reveille
- 06:45
- Stations
- 10:05
- Takeoff
- 10:30
- Form-Up
- 06:30
- Time Over Target
- 11:00
- Return Time
- 16:55
- Distance
- 1,045 nmi
- Fuel Aboard
- 2,500 gal
- Fuel Consumed
- 2,000 gal
- Cloud En-Route to Target
- Clear skies with unlimited visibility from departure to target — exceptional conditions.
- Air Temp at Altitude
- -26 °F
- Lowest Temp
- -35 °F
- Wind Speed
- 55 kt
- Wind Direction
- 70°
- Bombing Altitude
- 22,000 ft
- Bombing Run Heading
- 124° True
- Forming Altitude
- 12,000 ft
- Fighter Cover
- 2 P-51, 2 P-47 sweep
- Bombing Accuracy
- Good results
Four-gun batteries scattered throughout the operational area
Each ship that lifted off, and the men aboard her.
▸ 1 ship carrying your selectionAlso referenced as 598/Z in heading; may indicate two ship numbers or a pairing notation
Formation position 4-3
The crew returned to base just in time to be grounded by weather. They went operational again on December 12th. Four days later, the Germans launched the offensive that became known as the Battle of the Bulge. Missions were briefed every day and canceled every day. The weather was impossible. December 24th dawned clear. Every aircraft that could get off the ground flew that day. The group typically put up around 30 planes per mission; that morning more than 50 went. The usual restrictions on targets of opportunity were loosened. Communications were the objective, and any crossroads, telephone line, or railroad was fair game. The formation flew in over France toward the front lines, hitting the railroad and town of Ahrweiler. Four-gun batteries were active throughout the area, the flak accurate enough to damage the elevator. All crew returned safely. What the pilot didn't know until later was that his brother Elmer was on the ground below that day, part of Patton's relief force. Elmer later described what he saw: contrails stretching in every direction as far as the eye could reach, the bombers overhead crossed by the tighter trails of their fighter escorts. A few days later Elmer was wounded. A round detonated just behind his foxhole, shredded his helmet, and drove fragments into his skull. The pilot learned of it through the Red Cross. Elmer was hospitalized at Penley Hall near Wrexham in Wales.
Lead 20 CBW "A"
Deputy Lead 20 CBW "A"
Formation position 1-3
Formation position 2-1
Formation position 2-2
Formation position 3-1
Formation position 3-2; noted as 329th squadron aircraft
Formation position 3-3
Formation position 4-1
1-1 Hi-right; 409th Bomb Sq
1-2 Lo-left; 329th squadron
350th squadron
350th squadron; Leading 448th
Position in formation listed as 4-3
Leading 446th; Lt. Col. WILLIS (446th) listed as AC
Squadron Lead