Monuments
Air Battle over the White Carpathians 'Mission 263' Mass Grave Cenotaph
B-17 #42-38096 'Big Time' Information Board - Mission 263
B-17 (42-38096) 'Big Time' Crash Site Marker - Mission 263
Dudley Earl Standridge was born on July 21, 1919, in Oklahoma. He was the son of Dudley Frank Standridge and Melissa Waugh Standridge. At seventeen, he joined the Civilian Conservation Corps and later enlisted in the U.S. Army, serving with the 12th Field Artillery and spending time in the Panama Canal Zone. Eventually transferring to the Army Air Corps, he worked as a mechanic on AT-6 Texan aircraft at Kelly Air Field before training at gunnery school to become an aerial gunner. He served in the 20th Bombardment Squadron, 2nd Bomber Group, Heavy, as a Sergeant and Tail Gunner of B-17 #42-38096 nicknamed ''Big Time'' during World War II.
On August 29, 1944, the 15th U.S. Army Air Force carried out Mission 263, known as the Air Battle over the White Carpathians, a daylight bombing raid on the Moravská Ostrava industrial complex in German-occupied Moravia, now part of the Czech Republic. The 2nd Bombardment Group’s 20th Bomb Squadron took part in the mission as one of the strike units. One of the aircraft involved was B-17G 42-38096 “Big Time,” which had already completed around sixty-five missions before that day. During the operation, the formation came under intense attack from German fighters over Moravia. “Big Time” was heavily damaged, lost altitude, and eventually crashed near Vsetín / Šanov in the present-day Czech Republic. Of the ten crew members on board, nine were killed in the crash, and only the pilot survived.
Sgt Standridge was one of the 28 U.S. airmen laid to rest in a mass grave at Slavicin, Czechoslovakia, before being exhumed and reinterred at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery, San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas, USA.
Source of information: www.findagrave.com, b17flyingfortress.de; www.leteckabitvakarpaty.cz