|
2nd LT Robert L. Estes |
P |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
2nd LT Frank J. Marchun |
CP |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
2nd LT William R. Lewis |
NAV |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
F/O Dale W. Giebelhaus |
BOM |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
SGT Bernard Slavkin |
ROG |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
SGT Robert A. Crawford |
TTE |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
SGT Lester E. Weber |
BTG |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
SGT Lashbrook D. Cook |
WG |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
|
SGT Floyd C. Mitchell |
TG |
KIA |
5 APR 45 |
NURNBURG |
418th Sqdn. This crew joined the 100th on 22 Mar 45.
A/C #43-37636 -- MACR #13849 -- FICHE #5055
EYEWITNESS REPORT:
"This A/C was last seen near Liege on the route from the
target; formation dispersed going through clouds. There appeared to be
nothing wrong with the A/C, may have been a fuel problem. Nothing was seen
or heard from this A/C after it entered the clouds. The body of F/O Dale W. Giebelhaus was
washed ashore sometime later."
The following burial information courtesy of Jack O'Leary
(12/18/04)
- William R. Lewis is memorialized on the Wall of the Missing at
Cambridge, England.
- Frank J. Marchun and Robert A. Crawford are buried in the Ardennes
American Cemetery.
- Bernard Slavkin is buried in the Luxembourg American Cemetery.
- Floyd C. Mitchell was buried in Liege, Belgium. His remains were
returned to the United States and reburied in a family plot near his
hometown in Calhoun County, Arkansas (According to Mitchell's sister)
Re: Frank Marchun, 351st Squadron
Posted by Michael Faley on 7/6/2001, 7:09 pm, in reply to "Frank
Marchun, 351st squadron"
Hi Joe. We also have very little information on the events surrounding
the loss of this aircraft and crew. Everything we have on this crew can
be found on our website by entering Lt Estes in the Search engine on the
front page. I can tell you that the crew did hit the target and the
group did encounter flak. The last time this plane was sighted was going
into the clouds and never being seen again. The A/C appeared to be under
control and showed no visible signs of damage before entering the cloud
cover. There were no bright flashes or explosions witnessed by members
of the group during let down through the clouds. My best guess would be
that the pilot became disoriented in the clouds and plunged into the
North Sea or a fuel problem as speculated below. Your relative was part
of the 418th Bomb Squadron not the 351st. Now I did get an interesting
bit of info from another relative's family from the crew, She said the
plane was named "Malfunction Junction".
A/C 43-37636 was a B-17G built by Boeing. She was natural finish
(Silver) and her call sign was LD (for 418th Bomb Squadron) W (call
sign). She was assigned to the 100th Bomb Group at Thorpe Abbotts on
June 20, 1944. She completed a tour of duty with the Crew of Lt
Schaffhausen in November 1944 (unconfirmed reports say that the this
crew called her "Miss Conduct". We have no other info as to which Crews
flew the plane up until your Brother's (F/O Dale Giebelhaus) Crew took
her. |
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