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Personal info

Full name
NORED, George Lawrence
Date of birth
12 November 1917
Age
25
Place of birth
Paris, Henry County, Tennessee
Hometown
Greenwood, Leflore County, Mississippi

Military service

Service number
14060975
Rank
Technical Sergeant
Function
Engineer
Unit
67th Bombardment Squadron,
44th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster

Death

Status
Missing in Action
Date of death
8 March 1943
Place of death
Sierville, France

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Tablets of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Thomas L. Nored (father)
Evelyne Nored (mother)
Thomas E. Nored (brother)
Walter F. Nored (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
41-23988
Data
Type: B-24D
Nickname: Double Playmate
Destination: Rouen, France
Mission: Bombing of the marshalling yards
MACR: 15333

More information

T/Sgt George L. Nored attended was a clerk.

He joined the Air Corps of the Regular Army in Jackson, Mississippi, on 2 October 1941.

At 1401 hours at 23,000 feet and approximately 5 to 6 miles inland from the French Coast, some 40 to 50 FW 190s attacked the formation. The attacks came from 12 o'clock, slightly below in parallel javelin formation. Aircraft number 41-23988 was hit and the #3 engine caught fire. The pilot, Lt Blaine, kept his aircraft on an even keel until the right fin and rudder broke off, at which time the aircraft went into a spin some ten miles inland from the French coast. Crews returning reported that some six parachutes were seen to open, and shortly thereafter the aircraft exploded.

Ten crew members were killed. Only the navigator survived and was taken POW. The remains of the killed crew members were interred in the Canadian Military Cemetery in Les Vertus. On 28 and 29 April 1947 the remains of eight of them were recovered as unknowns by American Search and Recovery units and later identified. Field investigations, conducted on 30 April and 14 May 1947 failed to locate the remains of T/ Sgt George L. Nored and 1st Lt Robert W. Blaine.

British records showed that T/Sgt Nored was buried in a common grave, together with a S/Sgt Byrne, but the original cemetery records that could prove this were destroyed. A body under the designated cross presumed to be Byrne was disinterred. No other remains were present.

It was heard that the cemetery was originally formed by German occupation troops and later taken over by the French authorities and in turn by Canadian and British personnel. The coffins were placed side by side in deep graves with no space between the coffins. At some later date which could not be established, the French removed the crosses from every grave, graded the entire cemetery, and then replaced the crosses along the rows.

T/Sgt Nored is remembered at Maplewood Cemetery, Paris, Henry County, Tennessee.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Astrid van Erp, Carla Mans, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com, www.ancestry.com - U.S. WWII Draft Cards Young Men, www.newspapers.com - The Greenwood Commonwealth, IDPF of Dale B. Leaf

Photo source: Astrid van Erp, www.findagrave.com - Melissa Clayton Key