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PFC Nicholas M Zompetti

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PFC Nicholas M Zompetti Veteran

Birth
Massachusetts, USA
Death
2 Dec 1942 (aged 20)
Soda Springs, Caribou County, Idaho, USA
Burial
Marlborough, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Private First Class Zompetti was an assistant radio operator aboard B-17F Flying Fortress #42-5197, serving with the 339th Bomb Squadron, 96th Bomb Group from the Pocatello Army Airfield, Idaho.


During an evening navigational training flight, the bomber flew through stormy winter clouds and fog. Coming out of cloud cover, the pilots realized they were on a collision course with the 8,500-foot Wasatch mountain range, and made a sudden, steep climb. But the plane stalled, rolled over and plunged to earth in a near-vertical dive.

It disintegrated upon impact, killing all ten airmen aboard instantly. The wreck site was not located for two days. It was found about thirteen miles south of Soda Springs, n a heavily forested area of Eight Mile Canyon.


Full recovery was not possible due to heavy snowfall, and not completed until the spring of 1943.


The airmen lost on the flight were:


2nd Lt. Harold K Simpson, pilot

2nd Lt. Wendell L Sims, co-pilot

2nd Lt. Chalmers G Wenrich, bombadier

2nd Lt. Thomas J Wymond, navigator

S/Sgt. John E Lazansky, radio operator

Sgt. Neal L Slinker, asst. engineer

Cpl. Charles L Walker, Jr, engineer

PFC Nicholas M. Zompetti, asst. radio operator

Pvt. Joseph R Hughes, gunner

Pvt. Donald W Seaney, gunner

~

Entered the service from Massachusetts; ASN 11027424

Private First Class Zompetti was an assistant radio operator aboard B-17F Flying Fortress #42-5197, serving with the 339th Bomb Squadron, 96th Bomb Group from the Pocatello Army Airfield, Idaho.


During an evening navigational training flight, the bomber flew through stormy winter clouds and fog. Coming out of cloud cover, the pilots realized they were on a collision course with the 8,500-foot Wasatch mountain range, and made a sudden, steep climb. But the plane stalled, rolled over and plunged to earth in a near-vertical dive.

It disintegrated upon impact, killing all ten airmen aboard instantly. The wreck site was not located for two days. It was found about thirteen miles south of Soda Springs, n a heavily forested area of Eight Mile Canyon.


Full recovery was not possible due to heavy snowfall, and not completed until the spring of 1943.


The airmen lost on the flight were:


2nd Lt. Harold K Simpson, pilot

2nd Lt. Wendell L Sims, co-pilot

2nd Lt. Chalmers G Wenrich, bombadier

2nd Lt. Thomas J Wymond, navigator

S/Sgt. John E Lazansky, radio operator

Sgt. Neal L Slinker, asst. engineer

Cpl. Charles L Walker, Jr, engineer

PFC Nicholas M. Zompetti, asst. radio operator

Pvt. Joseph R Hughes, gunner

Pvt. Donald W Seaney, gunner

~

Entered the service from Massachusetts; ASN 11027424


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  • Created by: Tim Cook
  • Added: May 24, 2015
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146939666/nicholas_m-zompetti: accessed ), memorial page for PFC Nicholas M Zompetti (9 May 1922–2 Dec 1942), Find a Grave Memorial ID 146939666, citing Immaculate Conception Cemetery, Marlborough, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Tim Cook (contributor 46481904).