George V. Stallings, Jr. Crew (original) (raw)

| | | 360th Stallings CrewGeorge V. Stallings, Jr., Pilot | | ------------------------------------------ | --------------------------------------------------- |

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GEORGE V. STALLINGS, JR. CREW - 360th BS
B-17F Thumper Again #42-5393 (360BS) PU-G
(crew assigned 360BS: 20 Mar 1943 - photo: 20 July 1943)

(Back L-R) 1Lt James "Ford" Kelley (N)(WIA), Capt George V. Stallings (P),
1Lt Joseph E. Bradbury (CP), 1Lt Frank E. Kulesa (B)

(Front L-R) T/Sgt Meyer "Mike" Levin (WG/E), T/Sgt Arthur S. Stevens (T/Sgt),
Sgt Walter K. Pallage (R), S/Sgt John J. Stickler (WG), T/Sgt Lawrence C. Pierson (TG),
T/Sgt Robert H. Yattaw (WG)(WIA), T/Sgt James A. Watson (E)

Ranks and Grades at time of last combat mission

Twenty-seven dispatched (25 credited) combat missions flown by Capt George V. Stallings:
26 (28 Mar 1943), 28, 29, 30, 31, 33, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 43A, 44 (Bail Out), 51, 52, 53, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62 (Non credit Air Sea Rescue), 63, Non-credit Recall (9/2/43), 66, 67, 69 (19 Sept 1943).
For Mission dates, targets and Mission Reports, see Combat Missions.

Ten B-17Fs flown by Capt George V. Stallings on his 27 dispatched combat missions:

Stallings Crew Notes (crewmen in photo):

Crew Notes (crewmen not in photo):

Mission Reports:

Mission Remarks by Capt Stalling Crewmen:

303rd BG's Most Decorated Crew

(read the newspaper article)
The Capt Stallings Crew's most memorable mission was on 25 June 1943 to Hamburg, Germany flying in 360th BS B17F #42-5468 Qui-Nine the Bitter Dose. The crew was leading the high squadron formation. While approaching the target, enemy fighters attacked the formation. Radio Operator, T/Sgt Dick W. Jones, caught a 20mm in the chest, killing him instantly. Waist Gunner, S/Sgt Joseph Klasnick was wounded in his knee and shoulder but kept on firing his guns. S/Sgt, R.H. Yattaw, the other Waist Gunner had shell fragments over his left eye. Shells hit in the nose wounding Navigator, Lt Ford Kelley, who kept firing his guns in between Navigation duties. With a badly damaged tail section the B-17 was crippled and difficult to fly. The Engineer, T/Sgt James Watson, continued to fire his top Turret Guns in between efforts to make damage repairs. Reaching the English Coast Capt Stallings order the crew to bail out. T/Sgt Watson helped the other injured crewmen to exit. Tail Gunner. T/Sgt J.J. Stickler had his lip torn open when his parachute opened. T/Sgt Halastala, an observer, suffered two cracked ribs. In an effort to avoid crashing the B-17 in a populated area Capt Stallings headed his B-17 out to sea where he bailed out about one-half mile from shore. He managed a difficult swim to shore through mine infested waters. The crew became the most decorated 303rd BG(H) crew for heroic mission actions. Silver Star Medals to Lt Kelley (N), S/Sgt Klasnick (WG) and T/Sgt Watson (E). British DFC Medal to Capt Stallings, American DFC Medals to Capt Stallings (P) and Lt Bradbury (CP). Purple Heart Medals to the six wounded crewmen.

[photo courtesy of Frank Kulesa] [Researched by Harry D. Gobrecht, 303rdBGA Historian Emeritus]