668th BS Patch

416th Bombardment Group (L)

Sgt. Harry Walter Larsen

Airplane Mechanic - Gunner,  16002519

Prisoner Of War

668th Bombardment Squadron (L)

WWII-Medal

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  Born: 23-Oct-1921, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois

Entered Military Service: Date: 1-Nov-1945 At: Miami AAF, FL
NARA Enlistment Record: Enlisted Serial # 16002519

POW summary:
Fail to Return Date: 27-May-1944
Captured: 27-May-1944, Rumigny 12 km south of Amiens, By: 2nd Armored Division
POW Camp: Unknown
Return Date: Before 31-May-1945
NARA WW II POW Data File Latest Report Date: 29-Jun-1945
NARA WW II POW Data File ID: 47114 / (PDF)

Died: 1-Jun-1960, Santa Ana, Orange County, California

On-line Memorials:
National World War II Registry
Find-A-Grave



No_Report Details



Description:
Lt Sims was hit in the arm by flak, and gave the order to his two gunners to bail out over France. The two chutes were seen to open. Lt Sims managed to jockey the plane back across the Channel and crashed on the coast. Although badly injured, and the plane completely wrecked, he did an outstanding job getting the plane back to this side of the Channel. ... The four crews were: Lt Allen W. Gullion Jr., S/Sgt Grady F. Cope, and S/Sgt Gerald L. Coffey; Lt Lucien J. Siracusa, S/Sgt James M. Hume, and S/Sgt Floyd E. Brown; Lt Harry E. Hewes, S/Sgt Joseph F. Kasper, and S/Sgt Harold E. Boyer; Lt Tommie J. Sims, S/Sgt Julius C. Williamson, and S/Sgt Harry W. Larsen.
...
The hightest award went to Second Lieutenant Tommie J. Sims. It was the DISTINGUISHED SERVICES CROSS. On 27 May 1944, after having had his plane shot up by flak on the bomb run, and having been seriously wounded himself, Lt. Sims ordered his gunners to bail out when he thought that he was about to lose conscioiusness. He continued on alone, however, forsaking all thoughts of his own safety in a vain effort to get his plane back to England, where he eventually did crash land. [August, 1944]
...
The other two were Lt Tommie J. Sims, whose injuries caused him to be invalided home [July, 1944]

(416th BG History 1944)

2nd Lt Tommie J. Sims, a newly assigned pilot flying his second combat mission, was seriously wounded and his aircraft severely damaged by enemy ground fire at the very outset of the bombing-run. Flying on one engine, the injured pilot heroically remained in formation for the duration of the run, and having released his bombs on the target, flew the ship back to England where he crash-landed. His crew, Sgt Harry W. Larsen (Mechanic-Gunner), and Sgt Julius C. Williamson Jr. (Armorer-Gunner), abandoned ship over enemy territory and are missing in action.
("668th Bombardment Squadron (L) History")

General Orders No. 94, 4 June 1944, Purple Heart is awarded to: 668th Bombardment Squadron (L), Tommie J. Sims, O-675455, Second Lieutenant, Air Corps, United States Army. For wounds received in action against an enemy of the United States on 27 May 1944, while serving as Pilot of an A-20 airplane on a combat operational mission over enemy occupied territory. Entered military service at Hollis, Oklahoma.
(416th BG Purple Heart Awards (PDF))

See also Mission # 58




Photos and Documents
1930 US Census
1940 US Census
MACR Capture document
Newspaper Clipping
Daily Times
05-Sep-1944
Newspaper Clipping
Daily Times
17-Jun-1945
Marriage Index
10-Nov-1945
Marriage Index
10-Nov-1945
Newspaper Clipping
The Miami News
16-Nov-1945
Newspaper Clipping
Jersey Journal
19-Nov-1945
Newspaper Clipping
Chicago Tribune
23-Dec-1945
Interment Control Form
Interment Control Form
Headstone
Headstone
Headstone
Headstone
WW II Honoree
 
 
 
 
 
 



See Also:
Prisoner Of War (POW) Camps
Escape & Evasion (E&E) Reports
POW/E&E Terms and Acronyms
POW/E&E Sources, References, Resources