Howard Rudolph CodyCaptain1ST AIR COMMANDO SQDN, 34TH TAC GROUP, 13TH AF United States Air Force 05 September 1934 - 24 November 1963 Gulfport, Mississippi Panel 01E Line 035 |
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The database page for Howard Rudolph Cody
REMEMBEREDby his wife,Myrna Cody mcody@cableone.net |
A Note from The Virtual WallThe B-26 Invader was a World War 2 vintage twin-engined ground attack aircraft. The 1st Air Commando Squadron flew B-26s as well as other propeller-driven aircraft like the A-1 Skyraider and the T-28 Trojan - and these "antiquated" aircraft proved themselves very well suited to the air-to-ground operations required in Vietnam.On 24 Nov 1963, a B-26B (tail number 44-35703) from the 1st ACS provided air support to ARVN troops operating south of Ca Mau in An Xugen Province. The ARVNs were up against a well-armed and well dug-in VC force and were making little progress, impeded particularly by several machinegun emplacements. The B-26, crewed by Capt Howard R. Cody, 1stLt Atis K. Lielmanis, and a Vietnamese officer, made several attack runs against the machineguns. The VC responded by directing their fire against the B-26, thereby revealing their positions to other supporting aircraft - but 44-35703 was itself hit and on fire. Captain Cody broke off his attack and headed for the nearest runway, that at Cau Mau, but the B-26 went down about 24 kilometers south of Ca Mau. Ground impact was into the bank of a canal, where the forward part of the fuselage buried itself in the canal wall. Ground searches of the crash site were conducted between 25-27 Nov 1963 and the remains of two crewmen - 1stLt Lielmanis and the Vietnamese officer - were recovered. Captain Cody's body was not found. The Library of Congress has been directed to make public certain documents regarding POW/MIA personnel. A June 1998 message from Joint Task Force-Full Accounting reports on the excavation of the crash site and the recovery of B-26 aircraft components and possible human remains. An August 1998 JTF-FA message reports the prospective repatriation of the recovered remains, while a July 2001 message provides an analysis of the materials recovered from the site during in 1998 and during a second excavation in 2001. To date, though, there has been no public announcement regarding the recovery and identification of Captain Cody's remains.
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The point-of-contact for this memorial is his wife, Myrna Cody mcody@cableone.net |
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With all respect
Jim Schueckler, former CW2, US Army
Ken Davis, Commander, United States Navy (Ret)
Memorial first published on 19 Feb 2008
Last updated 02/26/2008