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Reck Norman William

Name:
Norman William Reck
Rank:
Sergeant
Serial Number:
19077231
Unit:
860th Bomber Squadron, 493rd Bomber Group
Date of Death:
1945-02-20
State:
Oregon
Cemetery:
Rose City Cemetery, Portland, Oregon
Plot:
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
Comments:

Norman William Reck was born on October 13, 1918, in La Salle, Colorado. He was the son of Gottfried Reck and Helen A Meyer Reck.

Norman came to Portland in 1934. He was employed as a mechanic at the Arthur L. Fields Chevrolet Company before enlisting in the Army Air Force in 1941.

He served in the 860th Bomber Squadron, 493rd Bomber Group, Heavy, as a Sergeant and Radar Crewman/Radio Counter Measures on the B-17 #43-38568 "Little Davey II" during World War II. He was Killed in Action on February 20, 1945, when his plane crashed at Ramsholt, England.

That day, the B-17 43-38568 (Little Davey II) took off from Debach airfield at 9.15 am was heading for Nuremberg, Germany. Almost immediately after take-off, the no. 3 engine caught fire. The pilot, 1st Lt. Frederick E Stindt, feathered the prop and extinguished the fire, but the engine fire quickly re-established, and the right-wing also began to burn. His best hope was to ditch the plane in shallow water in the River Deben. He managed to follow the River Deben searching for somewhere suitable, which turned out to be a point almost opposite the quay at Ramsholt, or so he thought. Unfortunately, the waters were deeper than he imagined, and the plane immediately sank in eighteen feet of water. Only the pilot and Technical Sergeant Jewel K. Haynes, the top turret gunner, survived.

Sgt Reck is now buried in the Rose City Cemetery, Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, USA.

Source of information: www.findagrave.com, geograph.co.uk