Edward Hunter BRENNAN

 

BRENNAN_Edward_H

University of Dayton, 1946
Source : Hudson Louie
 
NUMBER OF SERVICEO-752802 (35005865)
AGE28 yo
DATE OF BIRTH21 August 1915 Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OHIO
ENLISTMENT STATEOHIO
FAMILY

Single

RANKFirst Lieutenant
FONCTIONBomber
JOB BEFORE ENLISTEMENTSalespersons  NE
DATE of ENLISTEMENT24 January 1941 cleveland OHIO
 SQUADRON766th Bomber Squadron
 GROUP461st Bomber Group, Heavy
ARMY15th US Air Force
DATE OF DEATH12 July 1944

BRENNAN_Edward_H

Source : Andy

STATUSMIA
PLACE OF DEATHIn sea
DATA PLAN

B - 24 H - 15 - CF 41-29337 

Dwatted wabbit

B 24 Liberator

Macr : 6808

Mission : Nîmes, gare de triage

 
CEMETERYRHONE AMERICAN CEMETERY and MEMORIAL of Draguignan

Map of Rhône American Cemetery

GRAVE
PlotRowGrave
Wall of the missing
DECORATION

Air Medal

Purple Heart

World War II Victory Medal

Badge Officier Bombardier


am

Photo FDLM

victory medal

combat infantryman badge

 

usaf 15af 461bgh 766th_Bombardment_Squadron
STORY

BRENNAN_Edward_H

Source : Andy

 

He was on board the aircraft flown by 2Lt William Barnes

Mission #60
12 July 1944
Target: Nimes, Marshalling Yard, France

By the 12th of the month several of the crews had completed their fifty sorties. Upward of 100 combat crew members had been sent back to the United States on a rotation basis. Other crews were at rest camps. The number of crews available, consequently, was limited. For this mission it was decided to fly a formation of four flights instead of the customary six flights.

 

BRENNAN_Edward_H

Nose art on his aircraft on which he was the bombardier

Source : Andy

For the first time in its history the 461st Group was really hit on the bomb run by a formation-concentration of enemy fighters. Twenty-eight enemy fighters hit the last flight of six planes and knocked down four of them.

Three of the planes went down over the target at Nimes, France, and the fourth apparently failed in an effort to ditch within the sight of Toulon. The planes lost over the target were those piloted by 1st Lt. Richard S. Fawcett, 2nd Lt. Frederick L. Dunn, and 2nd Lt. Chester A. Ray Jr. Lt. Fawcett's plane was in bad shape when last seen. From all three planes, never the less, chutes were seen to open. 2nd Lt. William J. Barnes, the youngest officer in the Group, was pilot of the plane which attempted to ditch in the Gulf of Lion.

The fighter attack split up the bomb run with the result that the mission was scored only 24 percent on the big Marshalling Yard. Seven enemy planes were shot down. It was apparent to all that evil days had at last caught up with the hitherto invincible 461st.

BRENNAN_Edward_H

Source : Fold 3


SOURCE INFORMATION & SOURCE PHOTO b24bestweb.com - Aad.archives.gov  - Findagrave.com - Abmc.gov
PROGRAMMEREric, Henri, Garrett, Clive, Frédéric & Renaud
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