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Personal info

Full name
YEATTS, Roy J
Date of birth
1 September 1923
Age
20
Place of birth
Pittsylvania County, Virginia
Hometown
Prince Edward County, Virginia

Military service

Service number
20364881
Rank
Technical Sergeant
Function
Right Waist Gunner
Unit
67th Bombardment Squadron,
44th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
1 October 1943
Place of death
Austria

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
C 29 13

Immediate family

Members
Homer Yeats (father)
Mamie Yeats (mother)
Mary L. Yeatts (sister)
Herman Yeats (brother)
William H. Yeats (brother)
Homer Yeats (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
42-41017
Data
Destination: Wiener Neustadt, Austria
Mission: Bombing

More information

T/Sgt Roy J. Yeatts joined the Regular Army on 15 August 1941 at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland.

On the day of the Wiener Neustadt mission, at approximately 1130 hours, we were heading over the target with the bomb bay doors open ready to drop our bombs when we were struck from 12 o'clock, a little high, by what seemed to be 40 to 50 or even 70 fighter planes. They flew through our formation and shot down and/or crippled a large number from our bomber force. The heavy concentration of enemy planes was a bit more than our gunners could handle. The flak was also very heavy going in toward the target.

Statement from S/Sgt Frank Paliga, Radio Operator:
"I noticed that we had two engines on fire from my position in the top turret, and soon a third engine fire erupted about that time. The bailout bell rang, and John Irwin poked me in the leg to call my attention to my chest pack that he was trying to hand me. You couldn't wear one in the turret. So I climbed down out of the top turret and took the chest pack that Irwin handed me. At that moment, the plane was in a shallow dive. While I was on the flight deck putting on my parachute, Irwin stepped down into the catwalk in the bomb bay to get ready to jump. When I got to the catwalk, John Irwin was lying face down on the catwalk next to the burning bomb bay gasoline (auxiliary) tanks with his parachute inflated out of the bomb bay and the shroud lines between the catwalk and bomb bay tank. The open chute was pulling him tightly against the catwalk and the burning tanks. I tried to pull on him to free him and drop him out of the plane, but the pressure of the inflated chute made it impossible. I was running out of oxygen and jumped, pulling my ripcord as soon as I got out of the plane.

"T/Sgt Yeatts, right waist gunner, was hit by bullets and was knocked over against me, and then fell to the floor. I helped him, got him back on his feet, and he then started shooting again. Later, he was again hit by flak or enemy machine gun fire and fell dead."

Source of information: Terry Hirsch, Carla Mans, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com, www.ancestry.com - Headstone and Interment Record / 1940 Census / Virginia U.S. Birth Records

Photo source: Peter Schouteten