Branch of Service
U.S. Army Air Force
Hometown
Portland, Maine
Honored By
Orville L. Kline
Rank: Second Lieutenant. On February 24, 1941, he was inducted into the United States Army Air Corps at Rumford, Maine. After his graduation from Boot Camp, he was selected to attend the Flight Aviation Training Program. Served as a Copilot in a B-24 ‘Liberator’ Bomber in the European Theater of Operations, assigned to the Seventh Bombardment Squadron, Thirty-Fourth Bombardment Group; U.S. Eighth ‘Mighty Eighth’ Army Air Forces. His unit was based at the Royal Air Force Station Mendlesham, near the village of Stowmarket, England. Reported missing in action Sunday, July 9, 1944 during a bombing mission to France. A formation of bombers from his group was dispatched to bomb German V-1 Rockets launching pads that were targeting London, England. The pads were Camouflaged, and sheltered in a large forest in Northern France, located near the village of Juvincourt. His bomber was hit by German anti-aircraft ground fire flak, and severely damaged while leaving the target. The pilot was forced to crash-land into the English Channel near the village of Selsey Bill, England with the loss of seven lives. His name is permanently inscribed in the tablets of the missing, memorialized at the Cambridge American Cemetery in Cambridge, England. He received the following awards posthumously: Air Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster and the Purple Heart. The Air Medal awarded for meritorious achievement while participating in aerial flight. This American Patriot was awarded the Purple Heart, for his ultimate sacrifice in defense of his country.