2nd Lt. Lloyd H. Hughes
(Lloyd "Pete" Herbert Hughes, Jr. - 12 Jul 1921 - 1 Aug 1943)
Source: Personal papers. Newspaper
article from Pages 1 and 4 of the
Lackland Talespinner,
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, USA,
dated 30 May 2008
Remembering
Those Who Served
By Alan Boedeker
Photo caption: A Soldier places an American flag on the
gravesite of 2nd Lt. Lloyd Hughes, a Kelly Field aviator, prior to the Memorial
Day celebration at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery in San Antonio. Nearly
100,000 flags were placed on the graves in honor of those who have served the
United States in the armed forces. For a feature story on Lieutenant Hughes, see
Page 4.
Page 4:
Lt. Hughes: The history of Kelly Field aviator
By Alan Boedeker
37th Training Wing Public Affairs
Thousands of members of Lackland cross Hughes Avenue every day,
many not knowing its name or who it’s named after.
Once a main artery of Lackland, the avenue is now dissected into
a few blocks for traffic at each end, but one section is devoted and elevated
for the “road less traveled,” and serves as a route for the Airman’s Run.
Hughes Avenue is named after 2nd Lt. Lloyd Herbert “Pete” Hughes
Jr., who was born in Alexandria, La, but moved to Texas in 1939.
Lieutenant Hughes graduated from Refugio High School in Refugio,
117 miles southeast of San Antonio.
After attending Del Mar College and briefly attending Texas A&M
University, Lieutenant Hughes enlisted in the Army Air Forces as a private in
San Antonio.
Because of his college credits, he was appointed as an aviation
cadet on the same day and entered the Air Corps Replacement Training Center at
Kelly Field.
Lieutenant Hughes was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant
on Nov. 10, 1942, after becoming a rated pilot.
He was immediately called to active duty with the Army Air
Forces with the 564th Bombardment Squadron.
Lieutenant Hughes was stationed at Lowry Army Air Base in May
1943 and was assigned to a B-24 heavy bomber with the aircraft number
42-40753
J; the aircrew later renamed it the “Ole Kickapoo.”
During a flying mission on Aug. 1, 1943, Lieutenant Hughes and
crew engaged in what was their fifth and last bombing mission in the Ploesti Oil
Fields of Romania, an extreme low-level bombing mission over the Campina oil
refinery, labeled the “Red Target.”
Knowing there was no way to save his aircraft, the lieutenant
held his bomber’s course long enough to preserve the integrity of the formation
and to drop his bombs.
After successfully bombing the objective, his aircraft emerged
from the conflagration with the left wing aflame.
Only then did he attempt a forced landing, but because of the
advanced stage of the fire enveloping his aircraft the plane crashed and was
consumed.
On
April 18, 1944, Lt. Gen. Barton Kyle Yount presented Lieutenant Hughes’ widow,
Hazel Dean Ewing Hughes, with the Medal of Honor.
In 2006, Lieutenant Hughes’ Medal of Honor was donated to the
Refugio County Museum. It now is on permanent display at the Corps of Cadets Center at
Texas A&M University.
For more information on Lieutenant Hughes, go to
www.rajordan.com/pete.
First published: July 21, 2008
Last updated:
May 30, 2011 |