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2LT James Edward Robinson

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2LT James Edward Robinson Veteran

Birth
Lufkin, Angelina County, Texas, USA
Death
29 Jun 1944 (aged 25)
Oschersleben, Landkreis Börde, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
Burial
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA Add to Map
Plot
SECTION I, SITE 237
Memorial ID
View Source
Husband of Betty J. Robinson who resided in Lufkin, Texas.

James served as a Second Lieutenant & Bombardier on B-24J "Belle Of The East" #42-110187, 789th Bomber Squadron, 467th Bomber Group, U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II.

He resided Angelina County, Texas prior to the war.

B-24J #42-110187 took off, with a crew of 9, from Station 145, Rackheath, England on a bombing mission over Oschersleben, Germany.

Over the target they were hit by ground anti-aircraft fire and eventually exploded and crashed near Oschersleben. There was only one survivor from the crew.

James was "Killed In Action" in this crash during the war.

He was awarded the Air Medal and a Purple Heart.

He was originally interred overseas and was later repatriated here on December 5, 1950.

Service # O-754771

The reason he is named on a group headstone is because when soldiers & sailors were killed in close proximity to each other they were unable, at that time, to identify them separately and interred their remains together in one grave.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Airmen who perished on B-24J #42-110187:

Davis, Harris P ~ S/Sgt, Tail Gunner, AL
Fisher, Robert C ~ S/Sgt, Engineer, NJ
Greble, William E ~ 2nd Lt, Co-Pilot, NY
Hudson, Donald H ~ 2nd Lt, Navigator, IL
Kennedy, Joseph J ~ S/Sgt, Right Waist Gunner, NY
Murphy, John J ~ S/Sgt, Ball Turret Gunner, RI
Robinson, James E ~ 2nd Lt, Bombardier, TX
Van Veen, Francis P ~ S/Sgt, Radio Operator, DE

The pilot, 2nd Lt. William H. Counts became a POW of the German Army and survived the war.

( Bio & Crew Report by: Russ Pickett )

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Husband of Betty J. Robinson who resided in Lufkin, Texas.

James served as a Second Lieutenant & Bombardier on B-24J "Belle Of The East" #42-110187, 789th Bomber Squadron, 467th Bomber Group, U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II.

He resided Angelina County, Texas prior to the war.

B-24J #42-110187 took off, with a crew of 9, from Station 145, Rackheath, England on a bombing mission over Oschersleben, Germany.

Over the target they were hit by ground anti-aircraft fire and eventually exploded and crashed near Oschersleben. There was only one survivor from the crew.

James was "Killed In Action" in this crash during the war.

He was awarded the Air Medal and a Purple Heart.

He was originally interred overseas and was later repatriated here on December 5, 1950.

Service # O-754771

The reason he is named on a group headstone is because when soldiers & sailors were killed in close proximity to each other they were unable, at that time, to identify them separately and interred their remains together in one grave.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Airmen who perished on B-24J #42-110187:

Davis, Harris P ~ S/Sgt, Tail Gunner, AL
Fisher, Robert C ~ S/Sgt, Engineer, NJ
Greble, William E ~ 2nd Lt, Co-Pilot, NY
Hudson, Donald H ~ 2nd Lt, Navigator, IL
Kennedy, Joseph J ~ S/Sgt, Right Waist Gunner, NY
Murphy, John J ~ S/Sgt, Ball Turret Gunner, RI
Robinson, James E ~ 2nd Lt, Bombardier, TX
Van Veen, Francis P ~ S/Sgt, Radio Operator, DE

The pilot, 2nd Lt. William H. Counts became a POW of the German Army and survived the war.

( Bio & Crew Report by: Russ Pickett )

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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