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(12 Jul 1921 -
27 Jan 1942)
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2nd Lt. Lloyd H. Hughes
(Lloyd "Pete" Herbert Hughes, Jr. - 12 Jul 1921 - 1 Aug 1943)
Source:
Lloyd
H. Hughes and Lloyd
H. Hughes - The United States Army
HUGHES, LLOYD H. (Air Mission)
(awarded posthumously)
Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, U.S. Army Air Corps, 564th Bomber Squadron,
389th Bomber Group, 9th Air Force. Place and date: Ploesti Raid, Rumania, 1 August
1943. Entered service at: San Antonio, Tex. Born: 12 July 1921, Alexandria, La.
G.O. No.: 17, 26 February 1944. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry in action and
intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. On August
1943, 2d Lt. Hughes served in the capacity of pilot of a heavy bombardment aircraft
participating in a long and hazardous minimum-altitude attack against the Axis oil
refineries of Ploesti, Rumania, launched from the northern shores of Africa. Flying
in the last formation to attack the target, he arrived in the target area after
previous flights had thoroughly alerted the enemy defenses. Approaching the target
through intense and accurate antiaircraft fire and dense balloon barrages at dangerously
low altitude, his plane received several direct hits from both large and small caliber
antiaircraft guns which seriously damaged his aircraft, causing sheets of escaping
gasoline to stream from the bomb bay and from the left wing. This damage was inflicted
at a time prior to reaching the target when 2d Lt. Hughes could have made a forced
landing in any of the grain fields readily available at that time. The target area
was blazing with burning oil tanks and damaged refinery installations from which
flames leaped high above the bombing level of the formation. With full knowledge
of the consequences of entering this blazing inferno when his airplane was profusely
leaking gasoline in two separate locations, 2d Lt. Hughes, motivated only by his
high conception of duty which called for the destruction of his assigned target
at any cost, did not elect to make a forced landing or turn back from the attack.
Instead, rather than jeopardize the formation and the success of the attack, he
unhesitatingly entered the blazing area and dropped his bomb load with great precision.
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. By 2d Lt. Hughes' heroic decision to complete his mission regardless
of the consequences in utter disregard of his own life, and by his gallant and valorous
execution of this decision, he has rendered a service to our country in the defeat
of our enemies which will everlastingly be outstanding in the annals of our Nation's
history.
Related link: The
History of
the Medal of Honor
First published:
Jaunary 13, 2002
Last updated:
January 02, 2010
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