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Personal info

Full name
MC COY, Larry D
Date of birth
21 July 1923
Age
20
Place of birth
Bolivar, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania
Hometown
Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania

Military service

Service number
13087069
Rank
Staff Sergeant
Function
Left Waist Gunner
Unit
367th Bombardment Squadron,
306th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Missing in Action
Date of death
29 July 1943
Place of death
Baltic sea, 30 miles north of Kiel, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten
Walls of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Karroll D. (Dick) Mc Coy (father)
Sara G. (Graham) Mc Coy (mother)
Ronald Mc Coy (brother)
William J. Mc Coy (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
42-3084
Data
Type: B-17F
Destination: Kiel, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the Germaniawerft U-boat yards
MACR: 121

More information

S/Sgt Larry D. Mc Coy graduated from Ligonier High School and was a clerk.

He volunteered for the Air Corps of the Army of the United States in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on 25 June 1942.

Enemy fighters were first encountered 10 minutes before the target at 0901 hrs. and continued 25 minutes out to sea at 1000 hrs. Enemy aircraft attacked head on or at the tail. The aircraft was assumed lost as a result of these attacks.

The aircraft was going down with the wheels down, with one engine on fire.

Nine crew members were killed, one was taken prisoner.

Crew members of other aircraft in the formation reported after the mission that they believed the aircraft had been shot down by fighters shortly after the bomb drop at about 9:15 hrs. The information reported at the time was not clear however and it would be many months later before the full story was known. It was only after the war and the liberation of Europe that his surviving bombardier Robert L Alexander could report the fate that befell the crew of 42-3084. In his post war additions to the Missing Air Crew Report he advised that the aircraft had been swarmed by fighter aircraft after dropping its bombs and after suffering heavy damage, one wing having been taken off, the aircraft entered a violent spin.

His brother Ronald McCoy, bombardier on a B-17, was killed over St. Nazaire, France.

S/Sgt Larry D. McCoy is remembered on the burial marker of his brother, 1st Lt Ronald G. McCoy, at Fort Palmer Cemetery in Ligonier, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Terry Hirsch, Peter Schouteten, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com, www.ancestry.com, http://www.flensted.eu.com/19430075.shtml, www.newspapers.com - The Indiana Gazette, Pennsylvania Veterans Compensation Application
Photo source: Peter Schouteten, Gerda Bronneberg - Vanderheijden, www.findagrave.com - ET