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Old 20th June 2007, 14:29
Herb Kugel Herb Kugel is offline
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July 4, 1942 First US Raid.

Hi, I copied below from the 303 BG(H) Assn: http://www.303rdbg.com/pp-marshalldraper.html.

The trouble is in reading this and other sites and books is that I find contradictory information in them. For instance, how many American planes were lost in this first raid, one or two? How many planes damaged? Since the Boston bomber carried a crew of three, if there were 8 casualties and one prisoner of war taken as listed below, at least three planes must have been hit. I've searched Google but can find no complete document on this first American raid. Please, any suggestions?
Thanks
Herb

303 BG(H):
MOLESWORTH, ENGLAND: Independence Day was selected as the date for the US to enter combat from England. RAF 226 Squadron leaders had judged that most of the 15th Bombardment Squadron (L) crews were ready for war. Six American crews accompanied six 226 Squadron crews, all flying 226 Squadron Bostons. The twelve aircraft were divided into four flights of three aircraft each to bomb four Dutch airfields.
From the Molesworth-based US crews, two crews were assigned to bomb the airfield at De Koog, one crew to Bergen/Alkamaar, one to Haastede, and two to Valkenberg. The flight to hit De Koog was led by an experienced RAF pilot, with CAPT Kegelman flying one wing and 2Lt F.A. Loehrl, the other.
As they neared the target, Lt Loehrl's aircraft was hit by intense enemy anti-aircraft fire and crashed in flames. CAPT Kegelman's aircraft took a direct hit in the right engine, shearing off the propeller and setting the engine on fire. He simultaneously released his bomb load. The lightened Boston surged upward and then down, its right wingtip hitting the ground and ripping off part of the lower fuselage. With full throttle on the left engine, his forward guns silenced a flak tower. Through a combination of skill and luck CAPT Kegelman brought his crew home.
Lt Marshall Draper became the first 8th Air Force POW. Seven other crewmen's lives were lost on 8th Air Force Mission Number 1 (Italics mine)
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