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B-25 Crew Lost At Tien Hoa

Pilot          Capt Douglas C. Weaver  Copilot            1Lt. John B. Lyman (enlisted from Los Angeles)  Navigator                        2Lt Frederick B. Lee  Bombardier                    S/Sgt Elden E. Shirley (not shown above)  Engineer-Gunner            S/Sgt George Kelly  Radio-Gunner                S/Sgt Hubert F. Blades  PhotoGunner                  S/Sgt Thomas H. Cave (not shown above)         (Sgt. Carl W. Banston, shown on the far left in the image above

On 8 May 1943, ten B-25 bombers of the 341st Bomb Group, 11th Bomb Squadron, targeted Tien Hoa Airport, Canton. While the formation was approaching the target the plane piloted by Capt Douglas Weaver exploded just as bomb bay doors were opening.

The remaining aircraft dropped all of their bombs in the target area scoring three direct hits on the main hangar. Large fires were observed in this area with billowing black smoke columns rising 10,000 feet into the air and visible for fifty miles. Several other fires were noted in the storage area with four to six enemy planes believed destroyed.

The cause of the aircraft explosion could not be determined, but was believed to have been premature detonation of the fragmentation bombs carried in the plane. All crew were declared KIA.

It is particularly tragic in that Weaver, Lyman, Frederick, and Kelly had been part of the original cadre (Crew #30, Project 157) and flying combat missions in China since July 1942.

Click here for Missing Air Crew (#16368) Report for this incident.

CREW MEMBERS

Pilot                                  Capt Douglas C. Weaver

Copilot                             1Lt. John B. Lyman (enlisted from Los Angeles)

Navigator                        2Lt Frederick B. Lee

Bombardier                    S/Sgt Elden E. Shirley (not shown above)

Engineer-Gunner            S/Sgt George Kelly

Radio-Gunner                S/Sgt Hubert F. Blades

PhotoGunner                  S/Sgt Thomas H. Cave (not shown above)

       (Sgt. Carl W. Banston, shown on the far left in the image above, was not on that flight and thus not lost with the crew.) 

EYEWITNESS STATEMENT(S)

None on hand as of 25 Nov 08.

A marker for many of crew was placed at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery Section 82 Site 202, 2900 Sheridan Road, St. Louis, Mo. Interestingly, Lyman is not listed for reasons unknown. (Image courtesy of Eric Kreft.)
A marker for many of crew was placed at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery Section 82 Site 202, 2900 Sheridan Road, St. Louis, Mo. Interestingly, Lyman is not listed for reasons unknown. (Image courtesy of Eric Kreft.)

Image (with annotations), and much of text, courtesy of Tony Strotman.
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