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name
MC LEOD, Stanley Whiteford - Date of
birth
8 October 1919 -
Age
23 - Place of
birth
Smith County, Kansas -
Hometown
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
Personal info
Military service
- Service
number
O-728012 -
Rank
First Lieutenant -
Function
Co-Pilot -
Unit
66th Bombardment Squadron,
44th Bombardment Group, Heavy
-
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal
Death
-
Status
Killed in Action - Date of
death
26 February 1943 - Place of
death
Willbroksmoor, Germany
Grave
-
Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
| Plot | Row | Grave |
|---|---|---|
| B | 33 | 10 |
Immediate family
-
Members
Robert W. Mc Leod (father)
Eoline M. (Wilson) Mc Leod (mother)
Robert W. Mc Leod (brother)
John Mc Leod (brother)
Plane data
- Serial
number
41-23777 -
Data
Type B-24D
Nickname : Maisie
Destination: Wilhelmshaven, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the U-boat yards
MACR: 16067
More information
Stanley Mc Leod attended college and was a financial institution clerk.He volunteered for the Air Corps of the Army of the United States at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas on 9 January 1942.
The aircraft was shot down by Lt Heinz Knoke in a Bf-109.
2nd Lt Wayne G. Gotke, navigator, gave this account “Our ship was under constant fighter attack from the time that we reached the Island of Texel until we were shot down. We had fought off the planes with very minor damage until we were almost to Oldenburg, then all hell broke loose. I spent most of this time with position reports trying to get short cuts filled into the flight to allow us to gain and catch the rest of the formation. However, I am reasonably sure no one was injured up to this point except for Sgt Welsh, the belly gunner, who had passed out from lack of oxygen, and as far as I know never regained his senses. When we were almost to Oldenburg fighters hit us from all sides. Sgt Vogt the engineer and top turret operator shot the first fighter down, and I shot down the next down however not until he had sent 20-mms. into the nose and cockpit. Sgt Mifflin shot down the third from his waist gun position. At this point my left gun jammed and I know at least two planes made direct hits on nose and flight deck. Some one I’m sure was hurt on the flight deck and I was hit twice in the nose of the ship operating a jammed gun. “Engines #3 and #4 had been hit and were on fire. I believe fire spread to the wing tank and caused the ship to explode. I was working on my guns when all at once it seemed someone pushed me from behind and all went black. I woke up falling through space and I pulled my ripcord and no results so I reached back and tore the back of my chute out. My last look at the altimeter showed 26,000 ft. and the Germans claim they saw my chute open at 5,000 ft."
Two crew members survived the crash. Nine men were killed. They were initially buried at the cemetery of Bad Zwischenahn, Germany.
Source of information: Peter Schouteten, Terry Hirsch, Raf Dyckmans 44th BGVA, Jim Hamilton, www.ancestry.com - McLeod Family Tree
Photo source: Jac Engels, Jim Hamilton