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name
STEADHAM, Roy James - Date of
birth
5 November 1919 -
Age
25 - Place of
birth
Georgia -
Hometown
Decatur County, Georgia
Personal info
Military service
- Service
number
O-668816 -
Rank
First Lieutenant -
Function
Bombardier -
Unit
68th Bombardment Squadron,
44th Bombardment Group, Heavy
-
Awards
Distinguished Flying Cross,
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters
Death
-
Status
Finding of Death - Date of
death
1 November 1945 - Place of
death
Over Suderburg, Germany
Grave
-
Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten - Walls of the Missing
Immediate family
-
Members
Joseph E. Steadham (father)
Jewell J. (Rogers) Steadham (mother)
Joseph E. Steadham (brother)
Sadie M. Steadham (sister)
Marshall B. Steadham (brother)
Theresa L. Steadham (wife)
Plane data
- Serial
number
42-110020 -
Data
Type: B-24J
Destination: Brunswick, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the aviation industry
MACR: 3854
More information
Roy Steadham graduated from Pine Hill High School and studied at North Georgia College in Dahlonega, Georgia. Later he attended Georgia Southwestern in Americus, Abraham Baldwin College in Tifton and the University of Georgia. After three years of college he volunteered for the Air Corps of the Army of the United States at Fort McPherson, Atlanta on 12 January 1942.Note: The incident took place on 8 April 1944. Roy Steadham was reported missing in action as of that day and was officially declared dead on 1 November 1945.
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 on with 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.
According to reports, made after the war, other remains were found in the wreck and were taken away by German officials.
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.
Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.ancestry.com - Clay Stidham Jr Family Tree, www.fold3.com - MACR, BainbridgeGA.com
Photo source: Peter Schouteten, www.findagrave.com, www.wwiimemorial.com, Arie-Jan van Hees, Bombardier Class Book 42-17, Midland Army Flying School, Texas.