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1LT Henry Oren Cox Jr.

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1LT Henry Oren Cox Jr. Veteran

Birth
Maryville, Blount County, Tennessee, USA
Death
16 Sep 1943 (aged 22)
England
Burial
Coton, South Cambridgeshire District, Cambridgeshire, England Add to Map
Plot
Plot E, Row 6, Grave 70
Memorial ID
View Source
1st Lt. Henry Cox laid to rest with his crew
by Old Uncle Gib Chronicle correspondent The Crossville Chronicle Tue Aug 06, 2013.

CROSSVILLE — We don't pay enough attention to those who serve our country in the military, including those who gave their lives for our freedom. Once a month, let's give a few lines of remembrance to some of these men. Henry Oren Cox Jr. was born Jan. 28, 1921, in Maryville, TN, the son of Henry Oren Sr., and Amelia Young Cox. The family roots in Cumberland County are deep, and they were among the original Cumberland Homesteaders, with Amy serving as project nurse.
Henry Jr. was a graduate of the 1940 class of Cumberland County High School. Two classmates, and football team members, graduating from CCHS in 1938, Ben H. West Jr. and Cecil G. Buttram were killed in action. AMM 3rd Class Ben H. West Jr. enlisted Dec. 1, 1940, and was killed in action at Guadalcanal, Jan. 1, 1943, as a result of a plane crash. He was Crossville's first death in World War II. Tech. Sgt. Cecil G. Buttram, who enlisted Jan. 7, 1941, was KIA ten days later on Jan. 11, 1943, in North Africa.
H.O. Cox Jr. was enrolled in his second year at Tennessee Polytechnic Institute; however, he left college to enlist in the US Army Air Corps on Jan. 22, 1943, and was among the first to receive his pilot's silver wings at George Field, Illinois. He served in the 388th Bombardment Group (Heavy), 8th Air Force, 3rd Air Division, 45th Combat Wing, Station 136, Knettishall, England. This group flew 333 total missions from 1943 to 1945, 306 being combat missions. Henry O. Cox Jr. was a pilot in the 567th Bomb Squadron on a B17-F (Flying Fortress), the "Sondra Kay," named for the baby of one of the crew members.
The 8th Air Force Historical Society lists an engagement on Sept. 16, 1943, as follows, 93 of the 148 B-17s, after bombing the German U-Boat pens at LaPallice, and Luftwaffe installations, destroying 22 German aircraft, headed back to England. On the return flight, the formations had to break up and return independently due to inclement weather. Four B-17 aircraft were lost, with 44 crew members killed in action. One plane crashed into the Black Mountains, one on Exmoor, one made a forced landing on three engines at Shobden.
1st Lt. Henry Oren Cox Jr.'s aircraft, short of fuel and in poor visibility, crashed near Rhayader, England. 1st Lt. Cox was buried at the American Military Cemetery in Cambridge, England. He was posthumously awarded an Army Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster.
Mrs. Amy Cox was approached about bringing her son's body back from England at the end of the war, but she wanted him to stay with his crew members. Amy made a compromise and placed a memorial marker in the Crossville City Cemetery that tells where 1st Lt. Henry Oren Cox Jr. is buried.
Memorial erected on the 60th anniversary of this wartime fatal air crash of the 'Sondra Kay', a B17 Fortress which crashed on 16th September 1943 near Upper Cilgee Farm, Llanyre.

Cenotaph Crossville City Cemetery.
1st Lt. Henry Cox laid to rest with his crew
by Old Uncle Gib Chronicle correspondent The Crossville Chronicle Tue Aug 06, 2013.

CROSSVILLE — We don't pay enough attention to those who serve our country in the military, including those who gave their lives for our freedom. Once a month, let's give a few lines of remembrance to some of these men. Henry Oren Cox Jr. was born Jan. 28, 1921, in Maryville, TN, the son of Henry Oren Sr., and Amelia Young Cox. The family roots in Cumberland County are deep, and they were among the original Cumberland Homesteaders, with Amy serving as project nurse.
Henry Jr. was a graduate of the 1940 class of Cumberland County High School. Two classmates, and football team members, graduating from CCHS in 1938, Ben H. West Jr. and Cecil G. Buttram were killed in action. AMM 3rd Class Ben H. West Jr. enlisted Dec. 1, 1940, and was killed in action at Guadalcanal, Jan. 1, 1943, as a result of a plane crash. He was Crossville's first death in World War II. Tech. Sgt. Cecil G. Buttram, who enlisted Jan. 7, 1941, was KIA ten days later on Jan. 11, 1943, in North Africa.
H.O. Cox Jr. was enrolled in his second year at Tennessee Polytechnic Institute; however, he left college to enlist in the US Army Air Corps on Jan. 22, 1943, and was among the first to receive his pilot's silver wings at George Field, Illinois. He served in the 388th Bombardment Group (Heavy), 8th Air Force, 3rd Air Division, 45th Combat Wing, Station 136, Knettishall, England. This group flew 333 total missions from 1943 to 1945, 306 being combat missions. Henry O. Cox Jr. was a pilot in the 567th Bomb Squadron on a B17-F (Flying Fortress), the "Sondra Kay," named for the baby of one of the crew members.
The 8th Air Force Historical Society lists an engagement on Sept. 16, 1943, as follows, 93 of the 148 B-17s, after bombing the German U-Boat pens at LaPallice, and Luftwaffe installations, destroying 22 German aircraft, headed back to England. On the return flight, the formations had to break up and return independently due to inclement weather. Four B-17 aircraft were lost, with 44 crew members killed in action. One plane crashed into the Black Mountains, one on Exmoor, one made a forced landing on three engines at Shobden.
1st Lt. Henry Oren Cox Jr.'s aircraft, short of fuel and in poor visibility, crashed near Rhayader, England. 1st Lt. Cox was buried at the American Military Cemetery in Cambridge, England. He was posthumously awarded an Army Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster.
Mrs. Amy Cox was approached about bringing her son's body back from England at the end of the war, but she wanted him to stay with his crew members. Amy made a compromise and placed a memorial marker in the Crossville City Cemetery that tells where 1st Lt. Henry Oren Cox Jr. is buried.
Memorial erected on the 60th anniversary of this wartime fatal air crash of the 'Sondra Kay', a B17 Fortress which crashed on 16th September 1943 near Upper Cilgee Farm, Llanyre.

Cenotaph Crossville City Cemetery.

Inscription

1LT, 562 AAF Bomb SQ, 388 Bomb GP
Tennessee



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  • Maintained by: Just Searching
  • Originally Created by: War Graves
  • Added: Aug 6, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56288827/henry_oren-cox: accessed ), memorial page for 1LT Henry Oren Cox Jr. (28 Jan 1921–16 Sep 1943), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56288827, citing Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial, Coton, South Cambridgeshire District, Cambridgeshire, England; Maintained by Just Searching (contributor 48308223).