John R Loegering

Military

Prisoner of War (POW) crashed near Goch on 9/18/44 in P-47 'Thrup'ny Bit' #42-76587



78th FG 83rd FS: 1st Lt John Loegering, Duluth, Minn. On the17th September 1944 he had flown a successful mission with 83rd FS led by Major Joseph Myers where the group had bombed gun positions at either ends of a bridge at Haamstede. At least two direct hits were scored and there were several near misses. Fourteen bombs were dropped on these two targets. Four a/c bombed and strafed 40mm gun emplacements. About five C-47s bellied in fields northeast of Best. One C-47 crashed and burned in the same area and one ditched mid-channel beside an Air/Sea Rescue launch.



“A flight went down to between 2,500 and 2,000 feet and ‘stooged’ about to draw ground fire, then the group went down and dive-bombed and strafed the guns. Fragmentation bombs (200 pounders) proved most effective in knocking out the guns. About ten to fifteen minutes after our attack began, all the German gun positions, with the exception of one battery just south of Nijmegen, stopped firing completely. After that, the group stayed in their area looking unsuccessfully for more ground gun targets. Then they returned to the coast and picked up the C-47’s and gliders and flew along with them until they were cut loose and landed. The group intention was to neutralise any incipient ground fire, but they reported no firing on any gliders or tugs. Several flights with c-47’s carrying paratroopers, and of these C-47’s some ten to twelve were knocked down by gun positions which could not be located by the group pilots.”



The following day Lt Loegering was on a combat mission led by Lt Col Jack J Oberhansley, providing fighter-bomber support to the Second Task Force, which arrived at Haamstede at 1536 hours at 3000 ft. Here the mission was to bomb gun and flak positions. Targets of opportunity were strafed, resulting in four box cars damaged, four trucks destroyed, three trucks damaged, one flak position destroyed and eleven damaged. The weather is reported as having very poor visibility with ground haze to 5000 feet.



“The flight was at 1,000 feet in search of flak positions, when light flak opened up on us, “clobbering” Lt Loegering. He was forced to crash land moments later in the area believe to be five miles SW of Goch, Germany. On buzzing the bellied in a/c, the cockpit was empty, so I feel he at least had a good beginning to a possible successful evasion.”

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Units served with

Aircraft

  • Aircraft Type: P-47 Thunderbolt
  • Nicknames: Thrupny Bit
  • Unit: 78th Fighter Group 83rd Fighter Squadron

Events

Event Location Date Description

Born

Other

Prisoner of War (POW)

Revisions

Date
ContributorPyker
Changes
Sources

Corrected nickname of aircraft.

Date
ContributorAnne Hughes
Changes
Sources

78th FG Monthly History September 1944; Missing Aircrew Report, 1st Lt A R Jacobson; Col Gray account of Operation Market Garden.

Date
ContributorAAM
Changes
Sources

Drawn from the records of the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force, Savannah, Georgia / MACR 9002 / Paul Andrews, Project Bits and Pieces, 8th Air Force Roll of Honor database / Ted Damick, VIII Fighter Command pilots list