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Thomas Meehan III

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Years of service
  
1941-1944

Name
  
Thomas III

Other work
  
Artist

Name
  
Thomas Meehan III

Rank
  
First Lieutenant

Service/branch
  
United States Army


Born
  
July 8, 1921Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (
1921-07-08
)

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Battles/wars
  
World War IIBattle of Normandy

Awards
  
American Campaign Medal*Purple Heart*European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal*World War II Victory Medal

Relations
  
-Anne (wife)-Barrie Meehan Meller (daughter)

Died
  
June 6, 1944, Normandy, France

Place of burial
  
Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, Lemay Township, Missouri, United States

Unit
  
E Company, 506th Infantry Regiment

Battles and wars
  
World War II, Invasion of Normandy

Thomas meehan iii


First Lieutenant Thomas Meehan III (July 8, 1921 – June 6, 1944) was a commissioned officer with Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, in the 101st Airborne Division of the United States Army during World War II. He was killed on "D-Day" when the aircraft he was aboard was shot down by ground fire.

Contents

Thomas Meehan III Jason O39Mara Lieutenant Meehan Photo Gallery

Meehan was portrayed in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers by Jason O'Mara.

Youth

Thomas Meehan III httpsfarm1staticflickrcom91219317162d39711

He enjoyed drawing and painting as a hobby. After graduating from Germantown High School in 1939, he completed two years at the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art to become a commercial artist, but the war intervened before graduation. Meehan enlisted in his hometown of Philadelphia Pennsylvania on March 16, 1941.

Military service

Thomas Meehan III Lieut Thomas Meehan III 1921 1944 Find A Grave Memorial

After serving in Company "B" (Baker) after arriving in the United Kingdom, Meehan transferred to Company "E" (Easy) to replace Captain Herbert Sobel, who had been transferred to command a parachute training school for non-combat officers.

Thomas Meehan III Jason O39Mara Remembering Meehan

Before takeoff, Meehan wrote a letter and handed it out the door of the C-47 to be sent to his wife:

Dearest Anne:

  In a few hours I'm going to take the best company of men in the world into France. We'll give the bastards hell. Strangely, I'm not particularly scared. But in my heart is a terrific longing to hold you in my arms.

  I love you Sweetheart – forever.

Lt Meehan and the 16 members of Easy Company's HQ Section flew to Normandy aboard a C-47 Skytrain of the 439th Troop Carrier Command, one of thirty-six forming Serial 12 of Mission Albany, and was headed for Drop Zone C (1 mile West of Sainte Marie-du-Mont).

The aircraft was hit by German anti-aircraft fire. An eyewitness in another aircraft said "the plane left the formation and slowly initiated a right turn. I followed it with my eyes and noticed its landing lights coming on, I thought it was going to be all right. Then, suddenly, it came crashing down [into] a hedgerow and instantly exploded." The plane crashed near the village of Beuzeville-au-Plain (approximately 2 miles northeast of the town of Sainte-Mere-Eglise), killing the crew and the paratroopers aboard, including Company "E"'s entire company headquarters group. The wreckage of the plane wasn't confirmed found until the early 1950s; until that time he and all the men on the plane were declared missing in action. A memorial was later erected near the site.

Interment

Meehan's remains were returned to the United States in 1952 and are now buried at the Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery (Plot 84 25) at mass grave area on Circle Drive, just south of St. Louis, Missouri. He shares a grave site with the C-47 aircrew and fellow paratroopers of that flight.

On June 6, 2000, a memorial was dedicated in the Beuzeville-au-Plain church to Meehan and the other men that were killed when the plane was shot down.

References

Thomas Meehan III Wikipedia


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