And at last, the thrilling conclusion!
the National Archives replied and indicated that those records were technical reports related to the performance of H2X radar and had no mention of crews. They then directed me to the National Air and Space Museum for access to their microfilm copy of the USAAF's Aircraft History and Record Cards. That inquiry resulted with the following results
- the Aircraft History and Record Cards were tracking data solely for aircraft operated within the United States, they did not cover any period when the aircraft were being ferried to Europe or their disposition there.
- Personnel were permanently assigned to crews, but crews could be (and were) arbitrarily assigned to whatever aircraft were available as the missions required.
- Aircraft typically had a primary crew and any naming or nose art were applied by this primary crew. If the crews were referred to at all they were almost always referred to as [Pilot In Command]'s Crew (Lt. Smith's Crew, eg).
-The NASM provided the squadron code (T4) and the unit identifier (Green vertical stabilizer with vertical white band and aircraft letter)
Shortly thereafter, I received a reply from the Air Force Historical Research Agency, which consisted of a handful of documents that included my grandpa's travel orders, assignments and lists of medal recipients. And there he was, his name mostly faded away from a combination of light typewriter keystrokes and non-archival ink, but it was quite clear: his travel orders for the rest of his crew from the US to England, and the aircraft was...
42-94948
He obviously didn't stick with this aircraft for the duration; when 948 was interned in Sweden in August 1944, it carried a completely different crew. B24bestweb has three photos of this aircraft, and I believe these are the only ones that exist. It doesn't seem to have born a name, but it does carry (what looks like) a pinup on the starboard side of the nose. It is VERY similar in shape to the noseart on the P-47D "In The Mood" which was also based at Halesworth (see the attached image from the great Tolga Ulgur: https://imodeler.com/2022/12/1-32-trumpeter-p-47d-1-in-the-mood/) . It also sported applique arrmor plating under the pilot and copilot's windows, and its outer nacelle rings were unpainted metal. Its inner cowl flaps were also unpainted metal.
The End!
4 attached images. Click to enlarge.