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Personal info

Full name
JENKINS, Cornelius Allen
Date of birth
8 September 1919
Age
23
Place of birth
Farmington, Marion County, West Virginia
Hometown
Farmington, Marion County, West Virginia

Military service

Service number
O-438521
Rank
First Lieutenant
Function
Pilot
Unit
364th Bombardment Squadron,
305th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
4 February 1943
Place of death
Filsum, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
B 17 16

Immediate family

Members
Jesse J. Jenkins (father)
Elizabeth E. Moon (mother)
Jesse J. Jenkins Jr. (brother)
Robert E. Jenkins (brother)
Etley P. Jenkins (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
41-24593
Data
Type: B17-F
Nickname: El Lobo
Destination: Hamm, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the marshalling yard
MACR: 15395

More information

1st Lt Cornelius A. Jenkins enlisted in the Army Air Corps in June, 1941.

The mission was to bomb the marshalling yard of Hamm but the city was covered by heavy clouds. Three of the four B-17 groups attacked the marshalling yard, port area and industry of Emden instead.

Coy D. Martin, the radio operator, who survived the mission, stated after the war:
'The weather was very bad and we passed over Hamm without dropping our bomb laod. We then went over the secondary target without dropping bombs. Somewhere between Osnabruck an Emden an enemy fighter plane crashed into our right wing and knocked it off almost even with the right outboard engine.
After talking with the boys who where ahead of us in formation it seemed that our ship was considerably shot up in the front part of the airplane. The windshield was knocked out and considerable damage was done but as th the fate of the pilot, co-pilot and top gunner I do not know if they were killed by gun fire or not. After we were rammed I heard the pilot say: "Hold it, hold it". Those were the last words I heard from anyone up front as we almost immediately fell off on the right wing into a spin.
As for myself I could not move while in the spin, and although trying desperately to get out of the aircraft, could not move until the plane broke into near where I was and I dived out head first. As I was falling directley under the ship and made a long delayed jump I saw the aircraft break into thousands of small pieces and some large ones of course.
Although I and the three crew members captured with me were not allowed to view te wreckage, which landed near me, there can be little doubt of the fate of the rest of the crew.'

Four crew members survived and were taken prisoner, six men were killed.

The bodies of the killed crew members were first buried at the New Cemetery of Bad Zwischenahn-Oldenburg.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Carla Mans, MACR 15395, www.fold3.com, www.ancestry.com , U.S. WWII Draft Cards Young Men

Photo source: Jac Engels, Michel Beckers / www.305thbg.com, Arie-Jan van Hees, Pilot Class Book 42-B Bakersfield, California, www.ancestry.com - U.S. School Yearbooks Farmington High School 1937