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Starr Robert L.

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Robert L. Starr is honored on the following 1 monument(s) in our database:

B-26 #41-17999 ''Chickasaw Chief'' Monument

Name:
Robert L. Starr
Rank:
Second Lieutenant
Serial Number:
O-792320
Unit:
452nd Bomber Squadron, 322nd Bomber Group, Medium
Date of Death:
1996-03-20
State:
Pennsylvania
Cemetery:
Lewisburg Cemetery, Lewisburg, Union County, Pennsylvania, USA
Plot:
1774
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
POW Medal
Comments:

Robert L. Starr was born on February 12, 1920, in Winfield, Union County, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Robert S. Starr and Mae Simmons Davis. He was married to Regina Ann Lutz Starr. He graduated from Selinsgrove High School in 1938 and attended Albright College in Reading, Pennsylvania. He entered the U.S. Army Air Corps in January 1942, completed pilot training, and was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in September 1942 before being assigned to a bomber squadron. In February 1943, he was deployed overseas, first to North Africa and later to England. He served in the 452nd Bomber Squadron, 322nd Bomber Group, Medium, as a Co-pilot of B-26B #41-17999 nicknamed ''Chickasaw Chief'' during World War II.

On the morning of 17 May 1943, eleven B-26 Marauder bombers of the 452nd Bomb Squadron, 322nd Bomb Group, departed RAF Rougham, England, on a low-level mission to attack power facilities at Velsen and IJmuiden in the German-occupied Netherlands. The objective was to disrupt the electrical infrastructure supporting the German war effort. Shortly after takeoff, one aircraft was forced to return because of mechanical problems, leaving ten bombers to continue the mission. As the formation crossed the Dutch coast, it was detected by German radar and came under heavy attack from anti-aircraft defenses and fighter aircraft. The mission soon turned tragic. Two Marauders were shot down near Maassluis and Rozenburg, and at approximately 11:58 a.m., two others, B-26B 41-18080 (DR-K) and B-26B 41-17991 (DR-S), collided in mid-air over the Noordzijderpolder north of Bodegraven. Both aircraft disintegrated and crashed into nearby fields, resulting in the deaths of eight airmen and serious injuries to four others. Nearby was B-26B 41-17999 "Chickasaw Chief." During the collision, debris from the two stricken bombers struck the aircraft, causing substantial damage. Despite the situation, pilot 1st Lt. David V. Wurst successfully maintained control of the crippled Marauder and guided it toward open farmland near the hamlet of De Meije. There, he carried out a successful forced landing, allowing all six crew members to escape the aircraft alive. Although the crew survived the emergency landing, they were soon captured by German authorities and taken prisoner. They remained prisoners of war until the end of World War II.

2Lt Starr was held at Stalag Luft 3 Sagan, Silesia, Bavaria. He was honorably discharged in December 1945. He died on March 20, 1996, and is now buried in the Lewisburg Cemetery, Lewisburg, Union County, Pennsylvania, USA.

Source of information: www.findagrave.com, en.wikipedia.org