| Bio: Bob was born on May 1, 1924 in
Minneapolis, MN. He moved to Eau Claire, WI in 1938. He enlisted on
October 30, 1942, the beginning of his senior year in High School.
He received basic training at Kessler Field and more training.
From Hamilton Field they went to West Palm Beach, FL and on to Trinidad
where they waited for repair to their damaged plane. They moved on
to Belem, Brazil o the mouth of the Amazon River and from Belem on to
Natal, Brazil. They left Brazil on Jan. 16 for Dakar, Africa and
then on to Marrakech, Morocco, Africa and then to Oudna Air Base, 20 miles
south of Tunis.
The first part of February, they moved on to Cerignola, Italy and it
was from Cerignola, Bob flew 15 missions. He bailed out of the badly
damaged plan over Hungary on April 23, 1944 after assisting in the escape
of the ball turret gunner who was trapped in the jammed turret. He
was captured by civilians from a small village in Hungary - Rabatamasi.
Here he spent the night in a cell with lights burning all night and men
coming in to denounce Roosevelt and Churchill, spitting on the floor to
demonstrate their hatred. The next night was spent in Cyor, Hungary
and then was taken by train to Budapest where he was put in solitary
confinement. In the middle of may, he was moved to Stalag Luft 3 in
Sagan in what is now Poland.
Bob was held in Sagan until January 1945 when the men were marched out
because of the Russian advance. They marched in the bitter
cold until they reached Chemnitz where they were loaded and crowded into
40 and 8 box cars that took them to Stalag 7A, Moosburg, Germany. He
was in Moosburg until he was liberated on April 29, 1945 by General
Patton's army. He was discharged at San Antonio, TX on Oct. 31, 1945
Bob received the Distinguished Flying Cross in September1987 - 40 years
late because of confusion in paperwork.
In 1985 he learned that the plane from which he parachuted returned to
their base and made 2 attempts to effect a crash landing. The pilot did
not have sufficient control of the ship to set it down so four members of
the crew parachuted to safety and the aircraft was headed to the Adriatic
Sea with the A-5 rudder control set in.
He was a service technician at Sears Roebuck in Eau Claire, WI
for 15 years and was a building and heating inspector for the City
of Eau Claire until his retirement in 1987. He is married and has 2
sons, a daughter and 4 grandsons.
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