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Personal info

Full name
PACKARD, Ray Delbert
Date of birth
25 March 1924
Age
20
Place of birth
Salem, McCook County, South Dakota
Hometown
Orange County, California

Military service

Service number
O-766666
Rank
Second Lieutenant
Function
Pilot
Unit
428th Fighter Squadron,
474th Fighter Group
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
26 August 1944
Place of death
Near Angy, France

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Tablets of the Missing
* This soldier has been accounted for. A rosette has been placed next to his name.

Immediate family

Members
Ralph D. Packard (father)
Inez V. (Allard) Packard (mother)
Darrel E. Packard (brother)
Lola I. Packard (sister)
Vera M. Packard (sister)

Plane data

Serial number
42-67526
Data
Type: P38-J10
Destination: Laon Chambry, France
Mission D/B Strafing
MACR: 8238

More information

2nd Lt Ray D. Packard was employed at Bressa Brevanda Construction Company.

He joined the Air Corps of the U.S. Army Reserve on 9 October 1942 at Minter Field, California.

On 25 August 1944, Lt Packard was a pilot in a flight of 22 P-38 Lightning fighter aircraft that left the allied airfield at St. Lambert, France, to attack an enemy airfield near Laon-Chambry, France. En route to their target, the fighter group was intercepted by more than 80 German fighters near Beauvais, France. During the ensuing dogfight, 11 P-38s were shot down, including Packard's which crashed 15 miles south of Beauvais near the town of Angy. Five of the pilots escaped and evaded enemy capture, and two were taken prisoner of war. Of the four men who were missing in action, three were later recovered and identified, but Packard remained unaccounted for.

In 1951, a U.S. Army Grave Registration Command team investigated the incident and interviewed a French citizen who said he recovered human remains from a P-38 crash site in Angy. The team also interviewed the mayor of Angy who said that the remains had been buried in a local cemetery, but had later been exhumed, and he didn't know what happened after the disinterment. The team went to the crash site, but only found small pieces of aircraft wreckage.

In 2006, a Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command team traveled to Angy, to investigate the incident. The team interviewed the son of the French citizen who had been interviewed in 1951. He turned over human remains and other non-biological evidence recovered from the crash site. The team interviewed another French citizen, an aircraft wreckage hunter, who turned over remains and other evidence from an excavation that he conducted at the site.

In 2006 and 2007, JPAC teams conducted two excavations and recovered more human remains, aircraft wreckage and material evidence including Packard's identification tag. Among other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from JPAC used dental comparisons in the identification of Packard's remains.

The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office announced that the remains of a U.S. serviceman, missing in action from WWII, had been identified and were returned to his family for burial with full military honors.
Lt Ray D. Packard was buried on 22 October 2008 at Prescott National Cemetery in Prescott, Yavapai County, Arizona.

Source of information: Terry Hirsch, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com - MACR, www.findagrave.com, WWII Draft Card

Photo source: FOHF, www.ancestry.com, www.americanairmuseum.com, Arie-Jan van Hees - Pilot 44-B, Williams Field, Arizona, www.findagrave.com - D & J Altman