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Personal info

Full name
LAKIN, Grant Edward
Date of birth
21 January 1925
Age
19
Place of birth
San Diego, San Diego County, California
Hometown
San Diego, San Diego County, California

Military service

Service number
39699618
Rank
Staff Sergeant
Function
Radio Operator/Gunner
Unit
350th Bombardment Squadron,
100th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
31 December 1944
Place of death
Osenhorst, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
D 24 10

Immediate family

Members
Grant Lakin (father)
Johanna (Anderson) Lakin (mother)

Plane data

Serial number
43-38436
Data
Type: B-17G
Mission: Hamburg, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the oil refineries
MACR: 11361

More information

S/Sgt Grant E. Lakin attended Hoover High School.

He enlisted in Los Angeles, California on 15 June 1943.

The aircraft was hit by fighters after it left Hamburg and started the return flight home. The first group knocked out the oxygen and one of the engineers. Some of the crew had already left the ship when the aircraft went into a spin and the nose and a section of the side tore off. One of the crewmembers said that just before he bailed out he saw (Lt. Webster) helping Lt. Whitt out of the cockpit. Duke and Lakin stood in front of Richard Meehan to save him as he had no flak suit on. They got it and were killed right in front of him and he crawled out on his hands and feet over their dead bodies to get to the door. Then it wouldn't open, it was frozen. He wasn't able to walk so he made it to the other side of the ship and then bailed out. The sky was so thick with flak that you couldn't hardly see anything. The Germans met them that day with everything they had. So when Meehan left (Lt. Webster) was in the ship still, getting them all out and Whitt was then shot in the leg and Webster was putting his chute on Whitt. He said the ship went on fire just when he got out.... the way he told it, it was the 13th mission on New Year's Eve, and Webster had a place all hired for a big party for the crew when they got home that night." This information was provided by Anne Webster

Five crew members were taken prisoner. Four were killed and were initially buried at the cemetery of Osenhorst.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Terry Hirsch, www.fold3.com - MACR, www.8thafhs.com, 1940 US Census

Photo source: Michel Beckers, 100thBombGroup