Author Topic: Crashed B-24D  (Read 375 times)

Offline Shuffler

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Crashed B-24D
« on: February 11, 2011, 04:07:31 PM »
The U.S. Department of Defense on Thursday identified remains discovered in the South Pacific seven years ago as those of 11 airmen who had been missing since World War II.

The remains of Army Air Force Tech. Sgt. Charles A. Bode of Baltimore are to be buried Friday at Arlington National Cemetery. Bode was 23 when he was declared missing. A second burial service for the remaining 10 servicemen is scheduled to take place at the same site March 24.

The 11 servicemen had been missing since November 20, 1943, after the crew's B-24D Liberator left an airbase in Port Moresby, New Guinea. The crew was 20 miles north of the airfield when ground control lost contact with the plane.

Searches for the craft and its crew were unsuccessful, and in 1949, the missing servicemen were declared unrecoverable.

In 1984, U.S. officials were notified of the discovery of a World War II crash site in a ravine in the Morobe Province of Papua New Guinea. However, the threat of landslides prevented the recovery of the craft and remains. Twenty years later, search teams obtained human remains collected by local villagers.

The other crew members whose remains have been identified are: 1st Lt. Richard T. Heuss, 23, of Berkley, Michigan; 2nd Lt. Robert A. Miller, 22, of Memphis, Tennessee; 2nd Lt. Edward R. French, 23, of Erie, Pennsylvania; 2nd Lt. Robert R. Streckenbach Jr., 21, of Green Bay, Wisconsin; Tech. Sgt. Lucian I. Oliver, Jr., 23, of Memphis; Staff Sgt. Ivan O. Kirkpatrick, 36, of Whittier, California; Staff Sgt. William K. Musgrave, 24, of Hutsonville, Illinois; Staff Sgt. James T. Moran, 21, of Sloatsburg, New York; Staff Sgt. James B. Moore, 21, of Woburn, Massachusetts; and Staff Sgt. Roy Surabian, 24, of Medford, Massachusetts.
80th FS "Headhunters"

S.A.P.P.- Secret Association Of P-38 Pilots (Lightning In A Bottle)

Offline 1Boner

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Re: Crashed B-24D
« Reply #1 on: February 11, 2011, 04:18:03 PM »
Jeeeez, all so young.

 :salute :salute
"Life is just as deadly as it looks"  Richard Thompson

"So umm.... just to make sure I have this right.  What you are asking is for the bombers carrying bombs, to stop dropping bombs on the bombs, so the bombers can carry bombs to bomb things with?"  AKP

Offline Dichotomy

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Re: Crashed B-24D
« Reply #2 on: February 11, 2011, 04:29:33 PM »
 :salute

Welcome home
JG11 - Dicho37Only The Proud Only The Strong AH Players who've passed on :salute

Offline druski85

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Re: Crashed B-24D
« Reply #3 on: February 11, 2011, 04:41:15 PM »
Jeeeez, all so young.

 :salute :salute

Certainly too young, but most were at the time.  I know anecdote does not equal evidence, but my grandfather flew B-25s in Italy.  He was the pilot, and his flight crew called him "old man" since he had them all beat by several years.  He was 27.  I wonder if anyone can dig up credible evidence on average flight crew ages during the conflict?  I've read 26 was the average age for all services, combined. 

 :salute


Offline Nefarious

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Re: Crashed B-24D
« Reply #4 on: February 11, 2011, 04:46:01 PM »
Great story!  :salute
There must also be a flyable computer available for Nefarious to do FSO. So he doesn't keep talking about it for eight and a half hours on Friday night!

Offline 007Rusty

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Re: Crashed B-24D
« Reply #5 on: February 11, 2011, 04:46:07 PM »
 :salute
C.O. 444TH AIR MAFIA
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Offline Maverick

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Re: Crashed B-24D
« Reply #6 on: February 11, 2011, 05:34:26 PM »
Welcome home. Rest in Peace. Thank you for giving your tomorrows for our todays.

Fair skies and tail winds forever.
 :salute
DEFINITION OF A VETERAN
A Veteran - whether active duty, retired, national guard or reserve - is someone who, at one point in their life, wrote a check made payable to "The United States of America", for an amount of "up to and including my life."
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