B-17F Crash at Cwm
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress 42-5791 “Ruthless” Of the 95th Bomb Group based at Horham in Suffolk. Crashed near Dyserth in Denbighshire (Dyserth was in Flintshire then) Wednesday 29th December 1943 at 1445 GMT. 18 Men killed. The crash site was given as:- At Bwlch, 2 miles SW of Newmarket, Flintshire, Wales, Great Britain. (Newmarket is now called Trelawnyd and is still in Flintshire, but the crash site is now in Denbighshire) Special thanks to Alan Clark of www.peakdistrictaircrashes.co.uk for most of the information on this page
Moel Hiraddug and Dyserth village are on the left and Mynydd y Cwm (Cwm Mountain) is on the right. The report said:- “A/C crashed on saddle between two mountains, (Moel Hiraddug alt. 864 ft) (Mynydd - y Dwm alt. 999 ft) Near Bwlch.” (Their spelling) The route was given as: Base - Whitchurch - Rhyl - Woodvale. The mission: Ferrying Personnel. Their base was Horham in Suffolk, where the 95th Bomb Group UK museum is located. RAF Woodvale is near Formby on Merseyside. It was a Non-Operational Cross Country Flight, Ferrying Personnel.
OS Open Zoomstack
The marker shows roughly the area in which the aircraft crashed. I don’t know exactly where, and as far as I know there is nothing to indicate the position.
A Boeing B-17F similar to 42-5791
I think it’s possible that the crash site was beyond the farm in the top left of this photo, taken from Moel Hiraddug. Cwm Mountain, site of the Halifax crash in 1947, is the wooded hill on the right. The accident investigators believed that the Navigator assumed they had crossed the coastline. The cloudbase being very low the pilot began his let down over what he thought was the sea. If you’ve seen the film “Memphis Belle”, this was the same type of aircraft.
Mr Evan Jones gave a statement saying that at about 3pm on 29th December 1943 he was walking along Brynglas Road and he heard an aeroplane flying very low. The fog was so thick he couldn’t see the plane. He said the engines sounded all right. He heard a loud bang and went across a field to the aircraft, which was on fire. There he was joined by another man and they tried to render assistance, but it was impossible to do anything. He then reported the position of the crash to a Searchlight Crew and went back to the aircraft, where he found two bodies that had been thrown clear of the plane. In the map below the road past Brynglas Farm is highlighted in yellow.
The weather at the time of the accident was given as:- Prevalent icing conditions - icing level at 2000 ft. Visibility at scene of accident 500 yards. Wind direction 320 degrees at 15 knots. Ceiling 900 ft 10/10 overcast. Scattered showers. Scattered patches of clouds at lower altitudes.
The 18 men who were killed
Name
Rating
Serial No.
Rank
Grave Location
Alden R. Witt
Pilot
0-665367
1st Lt..
Cambridge, UK
William J. Gaffney
Co-Pilot
0-745074
2nd Lt.
Cambridge, UK
Howard J. Leddy
Navigator
0-682194
2nd Lt.
Cambridge, UK
Alan S. Grant
Bombardier
0-666653
2nd Lt.
Cambridge, UK
Kingsley F. Spitzer
Engineer / Top Turret Gunner:
T/Sgt.
Singers Glen, Virginia
Wendell Verbulecz
Ball Turret Gunner
35008172
S/Sgt.
Baltimore, Maryland
Louis G. Reno
Pilot
0-738028
Captain
Passenger
California?
Louis S. Green
Bombardier
0-661620
Captain
Passenger
Bleeker, New York
Arvid S. Dahl
Navigator
0-728349
Captain
Passenger
Larson, N. Dakota
Robert N. Moon
Co-Pilot
0-680482
1st Lt..
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
Roy  D. Baughman
Engineer
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Ely, Nevada
Raymond A. Loija
R
31077787
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
James W. Leithhead
TG
37166533
S/Sgt.
Passenger
Duluth, Minnesota
Harry A. Shade
Engineer
33315369
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
Dewey J. Cox
Ball Turret Gunner
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Bremen, Ohio
Linus C. Thomas
Left Waist Gunner (?)
38098487
S/Sgt.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
Eugene Downey
Right Waist Gunner (?)
13124113
S/Sgt.
Passenger
Upper Darby, Pennsylvania
Andrew J. Mullavey
0
15077925
Cpl.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
For information about the individual crew members click here for the Find A Grave website Corporal Mullavey got to permission to fly and reported to the aircraft just before it taxied, the pilot didn’t call his name in to the Tower Officer so his name wasn’t on the Aircraft Clearance form. Nine of the men killed in the crash - as indicated above - are buried at Madingley American Cemetery, 3 miles from Cambridge, England. Also known as Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial, Cambridge Military Cemetery or just Cambridge Cemetery, it is maintained by the American Battle Monuments Commission. The crash was initially dealt with by the RAF and the medical officer from Hawarden was sent to the crash site. He only took one orderly with him when he received the call from the local police. They found 17 of the victims on the day of the crash and the police found the 18th the following day when it got light. They were all taken to Hawarden and were later transferred to the USAAF. I’m told that all of them would have been buried in the UK, either at Cambridge or Brookwood, and after the end of the war most were repatriated, with nine still being at Cambridge.
A similar aircraftBoeing B-17F-85-BO (S/N 42-30043) of the 384th Bomb Group, 547th Bomb Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo)
Landscape photographs on this page are Copyright © Peter J Robinson 2015 War Grave photographs are Copyright © Alan Clark 2015 The aircraft images are from Wikimedia Commons and were stated to be in the Public Domain. I have photographs of seven of the graves, taken by Alan Clark of Peak District Air Accident Research
William J. Gaffney
Alan S. Grant
Howard J. Leddy
Robert N. Moon
Andrew J. Mullavey
Linus C. Thomas
Alden R. Witt
Click on the photos for larger versions
Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress 42-5791 “Ruthless” Of the 95th Bomb Group based at Horham in Suffolk. Crashed near Dyserth in Denbighshire (Dyserth was in Flintshire then) Wed 29th December 1943 at 1445 GMT. 18 Men killed. The crash site was given as:- At Bwlch, 2 miles SW of Newmarket, Flintshire, Wales, Great Britain. (Newmarket is now called Trelawnyd and is still in Flintshire, but the crash site is now in Denbighshire) Special thanks to Alan Clark of www.peakdistrictaircrashes.co.uk for most of the information on this page
B17-F Crash at Cwm
Moel Hiraddug and Dyserth village are on the left and Mynydd y Cwm (Cwm Mountain) is on the right. The report said:- “A/C crashed on saddle between two mountains, (Moel Hiraddug alt. 864 ft) (Mynydd - y Dwm alt. 999 ft) Near Bwlch.” (Their spelling) The route was given as: Base - Whitchurch - Rhyl - Woodvale. The mission: Ferrying Personnel. Their base was Horham in Suffolk, where the 95th Bomb Group UK museum is located. RAF Woodvale is near Formby on Merseyside. It was a Non-Operational Cross Country Flight, Ferrying Personnel.
The marker shows roughly the area in which the aircraft crashed. I don’t know exactly where, and as far as I know there is nothing to indicate the position.
A Boeing B-17F similar to 42-5791
I think it’s possible that the crash site was beyond the farm in the top left of this photo, taken from Moel Hiraddug. Cwm Mountain, site of the Halifax crash in 1947, is the wooded hill on the right. The accident investigators believed that the Navigator assumed they had crossed the coastline. The cloudbase being very low the pilot began his let down over what he thought was the sea. If you’ve seen the film “Memphis Belle”, this was the same type of aircraft.
Mr Evan Jones gave a statement saying that at about 3pm on 29th December 1943 he was walking along Brynglas Road and he heard an aeroplane flying very low. The fog was so thick he couldn’t see the plane. He said the engines sounded all right. He heard a loud bang and went across a field to the aircraft, which was on fire. There he was joined by another man and they tried to render assistance, but it was impossible to do anything. He then reported the position of the crash to a Searchlight Crew and went back to the aircraft, where he found two bodies that had been thrown clear of the plane. In the map below the road past Brynglas Farm is highlighted in yellow.
The weather at the time of the accident was given as:- Prevalent icing conditions - icing level at 2000 ft. Visibility at scene of accident 500 yards. Wind direction 320 degrees at 15 knots. Ceiling 900 ft 10/10 overcast. Scattered showers. Scattered patches of clouds at lower altitudes.
The 18 men who were killed
Name
Rating
Serial No.
Rank
Grave Location
Alden R. Witt
Pilot
0-665367
1st Lt..
Cambridge, UK
William J. Gaffney
Co-Pilot
0-745074
2nd Lt.
Cambridge, UK
Howard J. Leddy
Navigator
0-682194
2nd Lt.
Cambridge, UK
Alan S. Grant
Bombardier
0-666653
2nd Lt.
Cambridge, UK
Kingsley F. Spitzer
Engineer / Top Turret Gunner:
T/Sgt.
Singers Glen, Virginia
Wendell Verbulecz
Ball Turret Gunner
35008172
S/Sgt.
Baltimore, Maryland
Louis G. Reno
Pilot
0-738028
Captain
Passenger
California?
Louis S. Green
Bombardier
0-661620
Captain
Passenger
Bleeker, New York
Arvid S. Dahl
Navigator
0-728349
Captain
Passenger
Larson, N. Dakota
Robert N. Moon
Co-Pilot
0-680482
1st Lt..
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
Roy  D. Baughman
Engineer
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Ely, Nevada
Raymond A. Loija
R
31077787
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
James W. Leithhead
TG
37166533
S/Sgt.
Passenger
Duluth, Minnesota
Harry A. Shade
Engineer
33315369
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
Dewey J. Cox
Ball Turret Gunner
T/Sgt.
Passenger
Bremen, Ohio
Linus C. Thomas
Left Waist Gunner (?)
38098487
S/Sgt.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
Eugene Downey
Right Waist Gunner (?)
13124113
S/Sgt.
Passenger
Upper Darby, Pennsylvania
Andrew J. Mullavey
0
15077925
Cpl.
Passenger
Cambridge, UK
For information about the individual crew members click here for the Find A Grave website Corporal Mullavey got to permission to fly and reported to the aircraft just before it taxied, the pilot didn’t call his name in to the Tower Officer so his name wasn’t on the Aircraft Clearance form. Nine of the men killed in the crash - as indicated above - are buried at Madingley American Cemetery, 3 miles from Cambridge, England. Also known as Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial, Cambridge Military Cemetery or just Cambridge Cemetery, it is maintained by the American Battle Monuments Commission. The crash was initially dealt with by the RAF and the medical officer from Hawarden was sent to the crash site. He only took one orderly with him when he received the call from the local police. They found 17 of the victims on the day of the crash and the police found the 18th the following day when it got light. They were all taken to Hawarden and were later transferred to the USAAF. I’m told that all of them would have been buried in the UK, either at Cambridge or Brookwood, and after the end of the war most were repatriated, with nine still being at Cambridge.
A similar aircraftBoeing B-17F-85-BO (S/N 42-30043) of the 384th Bomb Group, 547th Bomb Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo)
Landscape photographs on this page are Copyright © Peter J Robinson 2015 War Grave photographs are Copyright © Alan Clark 2015 The aircraft images are from Wikimedia Commons and were stated to be in the Public Domain. I have photographs of seven of the graves, taken by Alan Clark of Peak District Air Accident Research
William J. Gaffney
Alan S. Grant
Howard J. Leddy
Robert N. Moon
Andrew J. Mullavey
Linus C. Thomas
Alden R. Witt
Click on the photos for larger versions