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Remember...Clarence Lewis Dragoo
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![]() Students at Copper Fork School. Clarence is in second row, second from right; sister Bernice is in the second row, far left. |
Clarence attended Copperfork Grade School and graduated from Gilmore High School in May 1941. While attending Gilmore High School, he was the treasurer of the FFA, the editor of the yearbook, and was involved in the Drama Club. |
| After high school, Clarence attended Capital City Commercial College in Charleston, where he served as president of the Pi Rho Zeta fraternity. While in college, he was involved in the Drama Club and a member of a local band, which performed on Charleston’s WCHS Radio Station. Clarence also worked as a local bookkeeper. After two years, Clarence left college and joined the US Air Corps. He was inducted in Huntington on January 19, 1943 and entered into active duty on January 26, 1943 at Fort Thomas, Kentucky. Clarence accepted a commission and was appointed second lieutenant. | ![]() |
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Clarence left for overseas service on October 21, 1944. He was a member of the 716th Bombardment Squadron, 449th Bombardment Group. On February 28, 1945, Clarence, a Navigator aboard a B-24J Liberator, carried out his last military combat mission. They departed from Grottagile, Italy and flew toward their target: the Isarco-Ables Railroad Bridge in Northern Italy. While over the target, the aircraft sustained serious damage from enemy anti-aircraft fire, which knocked out two engines. The plane stayed in formation as long as possible, then eased off to the right of the formation and eventually lost altitude heading towards the Adriatic Sea. All eleven soldiers aboard the Liberator perished that day. Several of the bodies, including Clarence Lewis Dragoo, were never recovered. On March 16, 1945, James and Stella Blanch Dragoo received a Western Union telegram notifying them that Clarence was officially missing in action. He was never to return to West Virginia again. |

West Virginia Archives and History welcomes any additional information that can be provided about these veterans, including photographs, family names, letters and other relevant personal history. For more information contact Constance Baston at (304) 558-0230.