C. Walder Parke certificate confirming Bronze Star award   Save
Charles Walder Parke WW2 Collection
Description: Certificate of receipt of the Bronze Star medal signed by C. Walder Parke. Parke won this award for "single acts of merit or meritorious service" on the ground during August of 1944. The details of his actions which won him the medal are unknown. The Bronze Star was created by an executive order in February of 1944, primarily as a ground-based counterpart to the Air Medal. Charles Walder Parke was born on July 28, 1924, and grew up in Shaker Heights, Ohio. He enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces in 1942 intending to be a pilot during WWII, but spent most of his military career as a navigator on B-17 Flying Fortresses in the 94th Bombardment Group. Parke earned two Bronze Stars, an Air Medal with several Oak Leaf Clusters, and the Distinguished Flying Cross for his successful bombing missions, including some over Berlin. He is best known for being on board a B-17 which was shot down over France by German planes on June 25, 1944, during a non-combat mission. The crew managed to make an emergency landing, and everyone inside survived. After the war, Parke founded the Cleveland-based Laurel Industries Inc., which became a prominent supplier of antimony oxide to the plastics industry. He died of Lou-Gehrig’s Disease on September 15, 1996, at the age of 72. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: MSS1510_B01F23_001
Subjects: Bronze Star Medal (U.S.); Parke, Charles Walder, 1924-1996; Military decorations
Places: France