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World War II Air Crash Monument Finds Permanent Home at Fort Myer
American Forces Press Service ^ | Gerry J. Gilmore

Posted on 06/12/2009 4:56:51 PM PDT by SandRat

WASHINGTON, June 12, 2009 – A granite monument dedicated to 40 U.S. servicemembers who perished in an air crash in Australia during World War II has found a permanent home at Fort Myer, Va.

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Left to right, retired U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Bruce A. Wright; Australian Air Vice-Marshal Kym Osley, head of the Australian embassy’s defense staff; U.S. Army Secretary Pete Geren; Harry McAlpine, president of the Returned and Services League’s Washington, D.C., sub-branch; U.S. Army Col. Laura J. Richardson, garrison commander of the Fort Myer Military Community; Robert S. Cutler, executive director of the Bakers Creek Memorial Association; and David Stuart, deputy chief of mission at the Australian Embassy pose next to the Bakers Creek air crash monument during a dedication ceremony held at Fort Myer, Va., June 11, 2009. DoD photo by Gerry J. Gilmore
  

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.
Yesterday’s dedication ceremony for the Bakers Creek air crash memorial was attended by Army Secretary Pete Geren; David Stuart, deputy chief of mission for the Australian embassy; Australian Air Vice-Marshal Kym Osley, head of the embassy’s defense staff; other senior officials; and a number of relatives and friends of the accident victims.

On June 14, 1943, an Army Air Corps B-17C Flying Fortress crashed at Bakers Creek, near Mackey in Queensland. The troops aboard the bomber were being flown back to New Guinea after enjoying some leave time in Australia. Forty servicemembers died; there was just one survivor.

The monument now is located near Fort Myer’s Selfridge Gate, which enters into Arlington National Cemetery. Since November 2006, the monument had stood outside the Australian embassy here, and before that it briefly had been displayed at the World War II memorial.

Geren directed that the monument be placed on Fort Myer. The memorial, he said at the ceremony, serves to honor the passing of “40 brave American soldiers” and also celebrates “the enduring friendship between the United States and Australia.”

Due to operational security concerns at that time, Geren said, the families of the deceased servicemembers weren’t told of details of the tragedy until years later.

“Today, with Arlington Cemetery as the backdrop, we pay a long and overdue tribute to 40 brave Americans,” Geren said. “And, as we do, we honor all soldiers -- past and present, American and Australian – who answer the call to duty and offer their lives [and] offer their sacrifice for the cause of freedom.”

The monument’s placement at Selfridge Gate is a fitting location, Geren said, because the entryway is named after Army Lt. Thomas Selfridge, an aviator who perished as a result of a crash during the military’s first aircraft test flight, which took place on Fort Myer on Sept. 9, 1908. American air pioneer Orville Wright, who was aboard the aircraft with Selfridge, was injured in the crash.

Selfridge gave his life for his country, “as did the 40 brave Americans we honor today,” Geren said.

Osley said his country’s embassy has enjoyed being the custodian of the Bakers Creek monument for the past two years, but that the monument’s new location “is perfect.” Another monument dedicated to the servicemembers who died during the Bakers Creek air crash is located in Mackay in Queensland.

“It’s very heartfelt for Australians to honor these people in their own way back in Mackay and to now honor them over here,” Osley said. “They’re all very much heroes to all of us in Australia.”

The Bakers Creek crash was the worst accident involving a transport plane in the southwest Pacific theater during World War II, said Robert S. Cutler, a retired George Washington University professor and executive director of the Bakers Creek Memorial Association. Cutler’s late father, Samuel, was an Army Air Corps captain who supervised the passenger loading aboard the B-17 before its ill-fated flight.

At yesterday’s Fort Myer ceremony, Cutler said he was “elated” that the monument, which was constructed in 2003, is now permanently situated at Fort Myer. The monument’s pink granite base, he said, was donated by the Australian government.

The memorial “is something that a lot of patriotic veterans felt they needed to ‘make right,’” Cutler said.

Bob Finney, an 86-year-old military veteran from Erie, Pa., recalled at the ceremony that he was a U.S. sailor aboard a destroyer tender in the North Atlantic Ocean at the time of the death of his brother, Army Pvt. James E. Finney, in the Bakers Creek air crash.

“I think this is wonderful to have their names on that monument out there and knowing at least somebody has thought of them and finally recognized what they have done,” Finney said.
Biographies:
Pete Geren

Related Articles:
World War II Air Crash Victims Honored at Australian Embassy Event



TOPICS: Australia/New Zealand; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; US: New Jersey; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: arlingtonva; fortmyer; home; honours; monument; wwii

1 posted on 06/12/2009 4:56:52 PM PDT by SandRat
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To: Aussie Dasher; naturalman1975

Ping


2 posted on 06/12/2009 4:57:36 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country! What else needs said?)
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To: SandRat

My god, how did they fit 40 guys into one B-17? I have been inside a couple of them, not as much room as you might think.


3 posted on 06/12/2009 5:05:03 PM PDT by Lockbar (March toward the sound of the guns.)
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To: zot; grey man

USAAF ping


4 posted on 06/12/2009 5:26:53 PM PDT by GreyFriar (Spearhead - 3rd Armored Division 75-78 & 83-87)
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To: Lockbar
My son & I recently had an opportunity to fly in the Nine-0-Nine - I can't imagine more than half that number in that plane.

Those poor guys had to have been packed cheek to jowl. No wonder it crashed.

5 posted on 06/12/2009 5:27:29 PM PDT by skeeter
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To: GreyFriar

Thanks for the ping. I find it a little odd that they are repeatedly called “brave men.”


6 posted on 06/12/2009 5:56:50 PM PDT by zot
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To: zot; skeeter; grey man; SandRat; Aussie Dasher; Lockbar

The memorial at Bakers Creek itself.

Text:

ON JUNE 14 1943, A VH-CBA B-17C AIRCRAFT OF THE
UNITED STATES ARMY AIR FORCE CRASHED SHORTLY
AFTER TAKE-OFF APPROXIMATELY 1 KM N OF
HERE ON THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF BAKERS CREEK
NEAR THE SITE WHERE THE MEATWORKS NOW STANDS.
ON BOARD WERE FIVE CREW AND THIRTY-EIGHT
PASSENGERS WHO WERE RETURNING TO NEW GUINEA
AFTER COMPLETING "R & R" IN MACKAY. THERE WAS
ONLY ONE SURVIVOR.

THE AIRCRAFT WAS OPERATED BY THE 46TH TROOP
CARRIER SQUADRON, OF THE 317TH TROOP CARRIER
GROUP WHICH FORMED PART OF THE 5TH AIR FORCE.
THE CRASH OF THE B-17C WAS THE WORST ACCIDENT
INVOLVING A TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT IN THE
SOUTH WEST PACIFIC DURING WORLD WAR II.
THIS MEMORIAL WAS CONSTRUCTED BY THE
PEOPLE OF THE MACKAY DISTRICT IN HONOUR OF
THE FORTY-TWO UNITED STATES MILITARY
PERSONNEL WHO WERE KILLED AND THE ONE
SURVIVOR AND WAS DEDICATED ON THE 11TH MAY 1992.

PERSONNEL ON BOARD

CREW

1/LT VERN J GIDCUMB (PILOT)
F/O WILLIAM C ERB (CO-PILOT)
2/LT JACK A OGREN (NAVIGATOR)
S/SGT LOVELL DALE CURTIS (CREW CHIEF)
S/SGT FRANK E WHELCHEL (CREW CHIEF)
SGT DAVID E TILESTON (RADIO)

PASSENGERS

PFC JEROME ABRAHAM
CAPT JOHN O BERTHOLD
T/5 WILLIAM A BRIGGS
SGT DEAN H BUSSE
T/SGT JAMES A COPELAND
SGT CARL A CUNNINGHAM
T/5 GEORGE A EHRMAN
PVT JAMES E FINNEY
SGT LEO E FLETCHER
T/SGT ALFRED H FREZZA
PFC NORMAN J GOETZ
S/SGT ROY A HATLEN
S/SGT JOHN W HILSHEIMER
PFC VERNON JOHNSON
SGT DONALD B KYPER
SGT CHARLIE O LARUE
PVT RAYMOND D LONGABAUGH
PFC KENNETH W MANN
CPL MARLIN D METZGER
PVT CHARLES D MONTGOMERY
PFC JOHN W PARKER
PFC FRANK S PENSKA
MAJ GEORGE N POWELL
SGT ANTHONY RUDNIK
CPL CHARLES W SAMPSON
PFC ARNOLD SEIDEL
CPL JACOB O SKAGGS JNR
CPL FRANKLIN F SMITH
CPL RAYMOND H SMITH
PFC FREDERICK C SWEET
CPL EDWARD TENNY
PFC DALE VAN FOSSON
PVT RUBEN L VAUGHN
PFC CHARLES M WILLIAMS

7 posted on 06/12/2009 8:23:22 PM PDT by naturalman1975 ("America was under attack. Australia was immediately there to help." - John Winston Howard)
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