Benjamin Adolph HUEBEL Jr.

“Ben”

 

hubel benjamin a

Source : Paul Webber
 
NUMBER OF SERVICE17121606
AGE21 yo
DATE OF BIRTH8 August 1922 Cape Girardeau, Cape Girardeau County, MISSOURI
ENLISTMENT STATEMISSOURI
FAMILYParents : Benjamin A & Grace HUEBEL
Brother : Harry Russell
RANK Staff Sergeant
FONCTIONEngineer 
JOB BEFORE ENLISTEMENTMachinists missouri
DATE of ENLISTEMENT13 October 1942 Jefferson Barracks MISSOURI
COMPANYCompany
BATTALIONBattalion
 SQUADRON838th Bomber Squadron
 GROUP487th Bomber Group, Heavy
ARMY8th US Air Force
DATE OF DEATH6 June 1944

hubel benjamin a

Source : Paul Webber

STATUSKIA
PLACE OF DEATHIn sea
DATA PLAN

Bombardier B-24H 42-52629 "Sweatin' It Out"

b24

Macr: 6484 

Décollage : Station 137 près de Lavenham, Suffolk

CEMETERYNORMANDY AMERICAN CEMETERY of Colleville

Map of Normandy American Cemetery

GRAVE
PlotRowGrave
------
DECORATION

Purple Heart

World War II Victory Medal

Brevet Pilot


Photo FDLM

victory medal

combat infantryman badge

 

 
usaf  8air force  487bg 838bs
STORY

Staff Sergeant Benjamin Adolph 'Ben' Huebel Jr, Army serial number 17121606, was born at Cape Girardeau, Missouri on August 8, 1922. His parents were Benjamin Adolph Huebel Sr (30 Jul 1887 – 4 Dec 1964), who was born in Missouri; and Grace (Wynes) Huebel (22 Jun 1892 – 31 Dec 1981), who was born in Illinois. He had a brother, Harry Russell Huebel (23 Oct 1918 – 1 Nov 1983). In 1940 the family lived at 1117 Main Street, Cape Girardeau, Missouri. His father worked in a shoe factory, and his brother worked at an electric plant.

He completed two years of high school, and registered for the draft at Cape Girardeau on June 29, 1942. He was 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighed 160 pounds, and had gray eyes and blonde hair. At that time he worked as a machinist in a shoe factory. He was single, without dependents, when he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps at Jefferson Barracks, Saint Louis, Missouri on October 13, 1942.

He completed Army Air Forces aerial gunnery and flight engineer training, and was assigned as engineer on the heavy bomber crew of Lt Norman E. Gross. By December 1943 the Gross crew began B-24 crew training at Davis-Monthan Field near Tucson, Arizona. In January 1944 the Gross crew was assigned to the 838th Bomb Squadron of the 487th Bomb Group at Alamogordo Army Air Base, New Mexico. There they completed B-24 crew training, and deployed with the Group to England in March 1944. They flew B-24H 42-52629 'Sweatin' It Out' from Alamogordo, New Mexico to Lavenham, England via the southern Atlantic ferry route—a journey of about 10,000 miles—and arrived at Lavenham by mid-April 1944. There is a photo of the Norman E. Gross crew that was taken at Herington, Kansas during the deployment to England. The 487th Bomb Group was based at Army Air Forces Station 137 near Lavenham, Suffolk, England, and was part of the 3d Bomb Division of the 8th U.S. Army Air Force in Europe.

Here is the roster of the Norman E. Gross crew on June 6, 1944:

hubel benjamin a

Source : Sam Hampton, Jr

Equipage du B-24H 42-52629 "Sweatin'It Out"

Markowitz Equipage

2/Lt Norman E. GROSS Pilot

- 2/Lt Willard D. HASKELL Co-Pilot

2/Lt Francis E. MOKE Navigator

S/Sgt Benjamin A. HUEBEL Jr Engineer

S/Sgt Max I. MARKOWITZ Radio

Sgt Charles Mc WILLIAMS Nose Turret

Sgt Stanley J. BENSON Upper Turret

Sgt Harold O. ALLENSWORTH Ball Turret

S/Sgt Henry B. WESTOFF Jr Tail Turret

In the early morning hours of June 6, 1944, the 487th Bomb Group dispatched two Squadrons on the first of three missions that the Group flew on D-Day. The Gross crew flew B-24H 42-52629 'Sweatin' It Out' on this mission. The 487th Bomb Group was assigned to bomb a choke point—a road junction—in Caen, France, to disrupt German transportation. The Group's assembly in the dark over England took five hours, much longer than planned. Then a complete undercast prevented the crews from bombing the target. On the return, the entire heavy bomber force was routed away from the Allied shipping area, to the west of the Channel Islands of Jersey and Guernsey. S/Sgt Huebel and his nine crewmates went missing in action when their aircraft ran out of fuel and went down in the English Channel. A station at Saffron Walden, England, received a distress call from the crew at 0842, which indicated that the aircraft was about 35 miles northwest of the Cherbourg Peninsula, and all four engines were dead. The aircraft's last reported position was 49°52'N, 02°38'W, some 20 to 25 miles northwest of the Channel Island of Alderney. Other crews almost ran out of fuel before landing at bases near the English coast.

The remains of Flight Officer Levine, the bombardier, were found by the crew of the British ship HSL 192 (High Speed Launch 192) and were buried at sea, in the English Channel, on July 3, 1944. None of the other crew members was ever found.

hubel benjamin a

New Lorimier Cemetery
Cape Girardeau, Cape Girardeau County, MISSOURI

Source : Ruth Smith

S/Sgt Huebel is memorialized along with his five enlisted crewmates on the Wall of the Missing at Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, France. The four officers on the crew are memorialized on the Wall of the Missing at Cambridge American Cemetery near Madingley, England.

S/Sgt Huebel has another cenotaph at New Lorimier Cemetery in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, where his parents are buried.


SOURCE INFORMATION & SOURCE PHOTOAad.archives.gov - Findagrave.com - Abmc.gov - Storiesbehindthestars.org - Findagrave.com
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