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Photo taken at Tonapah, NV after his tour of combat in Italy. |
Staff
Sergeant Sidney ("Sid") Rivers Ayres
747th Bombardment
Squadron
456th Bombardment Group
(H)
15th
Army Air Force
Cerignola, Italy
S/Sgt Sidney ("Sid") Rivers Ayres flew 50 missions as a tail gunner on a B-24. He was a part of the 15th Army Air Force that operated in Italy. His group, the 456th Bombardment Group (Heavy) bombed targets in Italy, Germany, Austria, France, Hungary, and Romania. He flew with the crew of Dave Ogden. Sgt. Ayres was stationed most of his career at Cergnolia, Italy. His photo is on Page 67 of "456th Bomb Group" book, by Turner Publishing Company {See References below} . Also, Sgt. Ayres was called "Sid" while in the Army but at home he was always "Rivers".
Rivers
Ayres
said he and a friend went to Detroit (or Chicago) and worked in an
aircraft
factory. He said they made B-26's. He commented that it was
called the "Flying Coffin" and he hoped that name was not due to their
workmanship. He got homesick and quite work and returned to
Mississippi.
He was immediately drafted into the Army. Rivers' training
eventually
took him to Kansas where he was assigned to the crew of 1st
Lt. David M. Ogden.
Manny Liftshitz (changed name to Lawrence)- Bombadier; Dave Ogden- Pilot Kneeling (L-R) - Bob Laird-Top Turrent Gnr; Sid Ayres-Tail Gnr Bill Hudson- Radio Op; Bob Gill- Engineer; Tony Arpaia- Nose Gunner; Eddie Ryan- Ball Turrent Gnr & Armorer . |
Captain
Ogden's
crew were assigned a B-24 that had a shark's mouth painted on the
nose.
They left Kansas and flew to Italy with stops in Florida, Puerto Rica,
Brazile, and North Africa. Their aircraft was taken from them and
they received another one. Captain Ogden's crew flew two aircraft
during their combat missions. One aircraft was named "Worry
Bird" and another was "Fat
Stuff". The
456th Bomb Group book says that David M. Ogden's plane was shot down
while
he and his crew were at rest camp in Capri.
This agrees with Sgt. Ayres' entry into his notebook that said their
crew
went to Capri for R&R between July 23 and August 2. This
could
explain the second change of aircraft.
Sgt. Ayres
flew his first combat mission on May 18, 1944. This target for
this
mission was oil refineries at Ploesti, Rumania. This was not a
easy
target--or as they said, a "milk run". This target was first
bombed
by American bombers on 12 June 1942. The most famous raid was a
low-level
bombing attack on 1 August, 1943, which resulted in a large loss of
aircraft.
Ploesti oil fields were attacked several times
over
a year with the loss of 206 bombers and 2200 crewmembers. However, the
456th BG flew many missions without even seeing any enemy
aircraft.
Luckily, by 1944, the German Luftwaffe defenses were weakened.
The B-24 had
the longest range of any American bomber. Because of this, the
crew
were credited with 2 missions to some targets. His last combat
mission
was on 3 September 1944. Sid kept a souvenir of this mission: a
safety
pin from one of the bombs.
Sgt Ayres
returned
to the US on October 28. It appears that after all of that flying
the Army thought it best that he return on a ship. He continued
to
serve in Tonopah, Nevada, as well as places in Kansas and
Washington.
He was discharged and finally arrived home on October 11, 1945.
Sgt. Ayres was awarded the Air Medal, the Good Conduct Medal and a Campaign Medal.
See also the biography of George McGovern, 455th Bomb Group.
Mission Log Sgt. Ayres recorded his WW2 experiences in a small pocket-sized note tablet. The first page, he wrote down the bases and towns he stopped at during his trip to Italy
The second page(see below) begins with a list of his crew and lists his first mission to Ploesti on May 18, 1944.
On the next 5 pages, Sgt. Ayres recorded every mission he flew on, including the date, the target and the bomb load. The last page is another record of every place he was stationed and appears to be in the hand-writing of his mother.
An interesting fact I learned from his book is that the B-24 crews received credit for 2 missions to some targets. Note the "II" listed next to "Ploesti" mission.
Photo of "Fat Stuff" Posing with the photo is Eddie Ryan, the ball turrent gunner, who may also have been the artist who for this nose art. "Fat Stuff" was a cartoon character of that time.
456th Bombardment GroupConsisted of: 744th, 745th, 746th & 747th Bombardment Squadrons
Flew 249 Missions from 10 Feb 1944- 26 April 1945
Re-designated as 456th Troop Carrier in 1952.
747th Bombardment Squadron
Constituted as 747th Bomber Squadron (Heavy) on 14 May 1943. Stationed at
Stornara, Italy from 27 Jan. 1944-19 July 1945.
Decorations: Distinguished Unit Citation for Weiner Neustadt Austria(10 May 44)
and Budapest(2 Jul 44).
Re-designated as part of 456th Troop Carrier in 1952.
References
"456th Bomb Group"
by Turner Publishing Co.
Paducah KY, 1994
ISBN 1-56311-141-1
Comments taken from this book are indicated in dark red color in the above text.Sgt. Ayres photo and article are on page 67 (at right).
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Column
Headers: No. = Mission number for the 376th BG. The last column is Ayres' mission count. No. of A/C & Tons of Bombs = No. of Bombers & Tons of bombs & Type Type = GP General Purpose, RDX is special High Explosive Example- 24- 64.4 GP = 24 bombers dropped 64.4 Tons of General Purpose bombs. Flight Time = hours in the air Enemy A/C = Enemy A/C encountered on the mission. A/C Lost = Bomber losses Ayres Count = Missions credited to Sgt. Ayers Note: Sgt. Ayres recorded in his notebook a total of 50 missions. The mision on July 16 was aborted over the target but he was still credited with 2 missions. Also, the first two missions to Ploseti earned a credit of 2 missions but for the last two missions he received only credit for 1 each. Country
Abbreviations: RU-
Rumania, YU- Yugoslavia,
CZ- Czechoslavakia, AU- Austria, Summary: On just the missions flown by Sgt. Ayres, a total of 1,129 bomber sorties were flown with a loss of 18 bombers to enemy aircraft and flak. That is a bomber loss of 1.6 %. |
See also the biography of George McGovern, 455th Bomb Group.
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