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Personal info

Full name
CRANK, Howell Galen
Date of birth
30 March 1910
Age
34
Place of birth
Pulaski County, Arkansas
Hometown
Tulsa County, Oklahoma

Military service

Service number
O-021665
Rank
Lieutenant Colonel
Function
Aircraft Commander
Unit
Headquarters,
305th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
2 March 1945
Place of death
Bohlen, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
C 17 17

Immediate family

Members
Samuel B. Crank (father)
Ella (Keith) Crank (mother)
Lowell G. Crank (brother)
Lila Crank (sister)
Virginia Crank (sister)
Adrienne E. (Michelson) Crank (wife)
Pamela G. Crank (daughter)

Plane data

Serial number
44-8141
Data
Type: B-17G
Destination: Bohlen, Germany
Mission: Bombing of a flak battery
MACR: 12851

More information

Lt Col Crank had been in the service since 1934 and had been overseas for about a year.

Flak was intense over the target. The aircraft was hit on the left side, close to the cockpit. It did a sharp wing-over to the left and than dove straight down for about 15,000 ft and then disintegrated.

Ten crew members were killed, one was survived and was taken prisoner.

Statement from Robert Lee Lynes, the only survivor:
"I was a crew member of a B-17 (Waist Gunner) in the 305th Bomb Group, 205th Sq., based in Chalveston, England. On 2 March 1945, we were briefed for a mission to Chemnitz, Germany, but through a letter to my parents, I later found out that the target was Bohlen, Germany. Our target time was approximately 1100, our altitude was 25,000 feet and our air speed was between 150 and 175 miles per hour. We were hit by flak and I was immediately knocked unconscious.
From what S/Sgt Philip Hester in the plane behind ours said, and a letter from the Squadron CO to my parents stated, flak hit the cockpit and the number one engine was knocked off the wing. Fire started, the plane did a left wing over and then went into a dive. I regained consciousness long enough to get out of the plane and pull the rip cord, than pass out again.
We were approximately three minutes from the target when we were hit. The letter from the War Department to my parents stated that the plane did not explode or burn, but the bombs were still in it when I left the ship. I landed in a tree and gained consciousness long enough to release myself from the harness, fall out of the tree, and then pass out again.
I was not an eye witness to the crash of the plane and cannot testify as to whether or not any of the others escaped. Later, however, I heard that there were two chutes seen that left the plane, but I cannot verify this. I think that everyone else was killed when the flak hit the plane".

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com - MACR, www.ancestry.com Family Tree / Census, Shiner Gazette 29 July 1945

Photo source: www.findagrave.com, Des Philippet, Palladium Item Sun 29 December 1940, The Pantagraph 10 January 1944