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Personal info

Full name
LOPEZ, Victor Alonzo
Date of birth
29 March 1922
Age
22
Place of birth
Oklahoma
Hometown
Springtown, Benton County, Arkansas

Military service

Service number
18135755
Rank
Technical Sergeant
Function
Radio Operator
Unit
68th Bombardment Squadron,
44th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Air Medal with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Finding of Death
Date of death
8 April 1944
Place of death
2 km northeast the railroad station of Suderburg, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten
Walls of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Louis G. Lopez (father)
Maggie (Tibbetts) Lopez (mother)
James F. Fryer (stepfather)
James L. Lopez (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
42-110020
Data
Type: B-24J
Destination: Brunswick, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the aviation industry
MACR: 3854

More information

Victor Lopez attended the University of Arkansas at Little Rock with the class of 1942.

The primary target was the aviation industry at Brunswick. This target as well as the secondary were obscured by a smoke screen, so a target of opportunity, Langenhagen/Hannover Aerodrome was bombed instead.

On the way to the target, the airplane was attacked by enemy aircraft in the vicinity of Salzwedel at 1344 hrs. It broke into flames and blew up.

On 2 April 1946, the former mayor of Suderburg, August Burmeister, made the following statement to 2nd Lt Hugo H. Grosz of the 608th Quartermaster Grave Registration Company:
"On the 8th of April 1944 an air-battle took place above the town of Suderburg between German fighters and American bombers. One plane was hit and crashed near the station. Four men of the crew parachuted down and were found later wearing unopened parachutes. One man lay dead near the plane. The five deceased were buried in the cemetery of this place by German Military. The names of the deceased are unknown to me as nobody was admitted to the place of accident."

It can be assumed that this was the location where airplane 42-110020 crashed. Seven crew members were killed, four were taken prisoner.

The remains of the crew members were found in a radius of 20 km around the crash site and buried at various community cemeteries. Not all of them could be identified.

According to a statement of a local citizen on 2 April 1946, he attended the burial of five American airmen at the cemetery of Suderburg.

Of other crew members, the remains were recovered and identified from other cemeteries. These remains were evacuated to the cemeteries of Margraten and Ardennes. The remains of unidentified casualties were all evacuated to Ardennes.

According to reports, made after the war, other remains were found in the wreck and were taken away by German officials.

One of the photos shows General Johnson pinning an oak leaf on T/Sgt Lopez' Air Medal in 1943.

Source of information: Peter Schouteten, Raf Dyckmans, Leslie (Lopez) Cantu (niece), www.abmc.gov, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com, www.ancestry.com - School Yearbook / 1940 Census

Photo source: Peter Schouteten, Leslie (Lopez) Cantu