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1st Lt. Floyd H. Mason

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Floyd Mason Crew (left to right)
Standing: George Morgan - BOM, Richard Lambiotte - CP, William Dishion - NAV and Floyd Mason - Pilot
Kneeling: Ralph Ellsworth - TTE, Charles Levee - WG, Frankie Tarr, Donald Stoll - ROG
George Westlake - BTG and James E. Eubanks - WG. 
100th BG Photo Archives
 

1ST LT FLOYD H. " BUCKY" MASON P POW 28-JUL-44 MERSEBURG, OIL REFINERY
2ND LT RICHARD LAMBIOTTE CP POW 6-MAR-44 BERLIN, ELECTRICAL EQUIP.
2ND LT WILLIAM J. DISHION, JR. NAV CPT 19-SEP-44 SZOLNOK, HUNGARY
2ND LT GEORGE R. MORGAN BOM CPT 15-AUG-44 VENLO
T/SGT DWIGHT D. GUTSCH ROG CPT 25-JUL-44 ST LO (Ground Support)
S/SGT RALPH G. ELLSWORTH TTE RFS   FLEW 3 MISSIONS
S/SGT GEORGE WESTLAKE BTG CPT 15-AUG-44 VENLO
S/SGT JAMES E. EUBANKS, JR WG CPT 12-OCT-44 BREMEN, AC FACTORY
S/SGT CHARLES S. LEVEE WG CPT 15-AUG-44 VENLO
S/SGT FRANK E. TARR TG CPT 25-JUL-44 ST LO (Ground Support)

349th SQDN.. Crew joined the 100th 28 Nov 43.

Floyd Mason was Command Pilot with J. B. Noble on 28 Jul 44 when lost. Richard Lambiotte was flying CP with W. B. Murray when shot down over Berlin. The aircraft the Floyd Mason crew flew was named ONCE IN A WHILE, not MASON AND DIXON as is widely supposed. (jb)

After 6 or 8 missions, Mason was made Operations Officer of the 349th, being replaced by Mike Ehorn.

MACR#7880, Micro-fiche#2890 - A/C#42-97555

CAPT DISHION WAS TRANSFERRED TO GROUP NAVIGATION AND FLEW MANY MISSIONS AS COMMAND NAVIGATOR IN THE LEAD SHIP -- (PFF, PATHFINDER) WITH COL TOM JEFFREY -- (CO OF THE 100TH) FLYING AS COMMAND PILOT. CAPT. DISHION FLEW BOTH RUSSIAN SHUTTLE MISSIONS IN THE LEAD PLANE. ON BOTH SHUTTLE MISSIONS, HE FLEW WITH COL JEFFREY AS COMMAND PILOT. HE FLEW A TOTAL OF 36 MISSIONS AND HAD 300 FLYING HOURS...mpf

BILL DISHION WAS KILLED IN AN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT. A MERE TEN YEARS AFTER THE WAR…JB

INCOMPLETE LIST OF MISSIONS FOR CAPT WILLIAM DISHION -- (mpf…2004)

MARCH 16, 1944 AUGSBURG

APRIL 11, 1944 POSEN
-- (CAPT FLOYD MASON AS COMMAND PILOT, LT A. MIKKELSEN-PILOT, CAPT. DISHION-LEAD NAV)

APRIL 13, 1944 AUGSBURG -- (CAPT MASON-COMMAND PILOT STAPLETON-PILOT, CAPT DISHION-LEAD NAV)

MAY 9, 1944LAON -- (MAJ SUMNER REEDER- COMMAND PILOT, LT STAPLETON- PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV)

MAY 27, 1944 STRASSBOURG -- (CAPT FLOYD MASON, COMMAND PILOT, LT STAPLETON- PILOT)

JUNE 11, 1944 BERCK sur MER -- (LT COL BENNETT-COMMAND PILOT, LT H. HOWARD-PILOT, CAPT. DISHION-COMMAND NAV)

JUNE 26, 1944 DROHOBYCZ -- (COL JEFFREY-COMMAND PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV, FIRST RUSSIAN SHUTTLE MISSION)

JULY 7, 1944 BEZIERS (FR) -- (COL JEFFREY-COMMAND PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV. RETURN FROM RUSSIAN SHUTTLE MISSION)

JULY 19, 1944 SCHWEINFURT -- (LT COL BENNETT-COMMAND PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV, FLYING PFF A/C))

JULY 24, 1944 ST LO -- (COL JEFFREY-COMMAND PILOT, LT EHORN-PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV)

AUG 8, 1944 ST SYLVIAN -- (COL JEFFREY-COMMAND PILOT, LT N.P. SCOTT-PILOT, CAPT

DISHION-COMMAND NAV)* SEE BELOW

SEPT. 18, 1944 WARSAW -- (COL JEFFREY-COMMAND PILOT, CAPT DUNLAP- PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV. PFF A/C)

SECOND RUSSIAN SHUTTLE MISSION

SEPT 19, 1944 SZOLNOK (HUNGARY)
-- (COL JEFFREY-COMMAND PILOT, CAPT DUNLAP-PILOT, CAPT DISHION-COMMAND NAV, PFF A/C)

*Capt. Dishion was in Lead Plane on Aug 8, 1944 with Col Tom Jeffrey & Lt N. P. Scott leading the 13 CBW which lead both the 3rd Air Division and 8th Air Force. According to the mission critique, On August 8, 1944 the target was German Ground defenses around St Sylvian. The 100th Bomb Group "A" Group was leading the 13th CBW -- (Combat Wing) which lead the 3rd Air Division and the 8th Air Force. The lead Group consisted of 13 aircraft lead by Col Tom Jeffrey -- (Commanding Officer of the 100th BG) and Lt Neal P. Scott. The 100TH BG "B" Group also consisted of 13 planes and they were flying Low Group in the 13th CBW. They lost one aircraft -- (Lt J. P. Keys) and the Lead plane crash landed behind allied lines.
 
Capt Floyd H. Mason (349th Ops Officer)COM/PPOWMerseburg
1st Lt James B. NoblePPOWMerseburg
2nd Lt Robert P. LippsCPPOWMerseburg
1st Lt Edmund J. KauffmanRAD/NPOWMerseburg
1st Lt Robert W. BarryNAVPOWMerseburg
2nd Lt Marcus M. HertzBOMPOWMerseburg
T/Sgt Frank Cruz, Jr.TTEPOWMerseburg
T/Sgt Russell F. EllisROGPOWMerseburg
S/Sgt Arthur L. Roberts RWKIA Merseburg
S/Sgt William P. McNally LWKIA Merseburg
S/Sgt Frederick F. SchwartzTGPOWMerseburg

Of the above, Noble, Cruz, Ellis, Roberts, McNally, and Swartz appear to be from the original Noble crew. Lipps was from the M. C. Rumley crew. Kaufman from the R. A. Wegrzyneck crew. Barry from the H. E. Bethea crew. Mason had joined the 100th with his own crew on 28/11/43 and may have been on his 2nd tour.

Eyewitness Report:
" At 0850 hours near 5043N-0802E,A/C #555 nosed down twice and the group followed hen the wheels were lowered and fire was seen in the radio room. Looked as if it might be a flare fire. The A/C peeled off to the right. A small explosion was seen in the right wing between #3 engine and the fuselage. Ono man bailed out before the A/C left the formation. The others followed. Nine chutes were seen to open and the tenth had not opened when the man disappeared into the undercast. The fire in the A/C appeared to be out when it plunged into the undercast flying steadily under AFCE control."

On 4/3/46 Capt. Robert W. Barry gave the following statement: SUBJECT: Casualty Information of Crew Members.

Activities before leaving aircraft: - Captain Mason was the first crew member to leave the A/C via a front exit. He departed with his harness on, but not fastened, and his parachute in his left hand, approximately 2 1/2 minutes after the explosion. Sgt. Roberts, who was the engineer and top turret gunner and not the right waist gunner (as shown on questionnaire), had not left at time of my departure; however, according to information as given to me by the bombardier, at a subsequent date, there was no one left in front end of the ship when he left. It can be therefore assumed that Sgt. Roberts succeeded in bailing out. Sgt. McNally, being a waist gunner, would bail out via the rear exits. All communication with the back of the ship had gone dead at the time of the explosion. I have no way of stating whether this crew member ever left the ship from personal knowledge. However ,from information received from Capt. E. J. Kaufman, Radar Navigator, McNally bailed out at about the same time as he did.

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