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SSGT Willard S. Schrader

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SSGT Willard S. Schrader

Birth
Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, USA
Death
24 Jan 1943 (aged 23)
Alamogordo, Otero County, New Mexico, USA
Burial
Brooklyn Park, Hennepin County, Minnesota, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Historical note: January 24, 1943 was the deadliest day in U.S. Army aviation history,
when 12 separate fatal airplane crashes in the United States killed 51 personnel


Staff Sergeant Schrader was a passenger aboard U.S. Army Air Forces B-24D Liberator #41-24037. He was one of eleven airmen who were killed in a crash in the White Sands National Monument, approximately ten miles west of the airbase at Alamogordo, New Mexico, on a training flight during World War II.
There was only one witness to the accident. The aircraft was observed to come out of cloud cover about 5,000 feet above terrain, in a slight downward path. It then levelled out, then banked to the right and went into a flat spin. Investigators could not determine an exact cause, but the bomber was in a near recovery when it impacted terrain. Encountering turbulence may have induced an engine stall.

The crew members killed aboard were:

2nd Lt. William A Ebert, Pilot
2nd Lt. Arthur M Thomas, Co-pilot
2nd Lt. Stanley G Netz, Bombardier
2nd Lt. Paul Vistuba, Navigator
Sgt. Billie D Francis, Gunner
S/Sgt. Robert A Garrett, Radio Operator
Sgt. Howard G Lilley, Gunner
S/Sgt. Glenn M McKnight, Flight Engineer
Sgt. John J Mikolich, Gunner
Sgt. Joseph P Rafac, Radio Operator
Sgt. Willard S Schrader, Passenger

Last Rites Held for Soldier Air Victim: Services were held today for Sgt. William S. Schrader, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Schrader, 3500 Humboldt Avenue N. who was killed in an airplane crash at Alamogordo, New Mexico last Sunday.

After graduation from North High School in 1937, he worked for Douglas Aircraft Corp., Los Angeles. There he enlisted as an airplane mechanic. He received his training at Wichita Falls, Texas, and graduated from the aviation school there last April. Burial was in Crystal Cemetery.

● MTK
Historical note: January 24, 1943 was the deadliest day in U.S. Army aviation history,
when 12 separate fatal airplane crashes in the United States killed 51 personnel


Staff Sergeant Schrader was a passenger aboard U.S. Army Air Forces B-24D Liberator #41-24037. He was one of eleven airmen who were killed in a crash in the White Sands National Monument, approximately ten miles west of the airbase at Alamogordo, New Mexico, on a training flight during World War II.
There was only one witness to the accident. The aircraft was observed to come out of cloud cover about 5,000 feet above terrain, in a slight downward path. It then levelled out, then banked to the right and went into a flat spin. Investigators could not determine an exact cause, but the bomber was in a near recovery when it impacted terrain. Encountering turbulence may have induced an engine stall.

The crew members killed aboard were:

2nd Lt. William A Ebert, Pilot
2nd Lt. Arthur M Thomas, Co-pilot
2nd Lt. Stanley G Netz, Bombardier
2nd Lt. Paul Vistuba, Navigator
Sgt. Billie D Francis, Gunner
S/Sgt. Robert A Garrett, Radio Operator
Sgt. Howard G Lilley, Gunner
S/Sgt. Glenn M McKnight, Flight Engineer
Sgt. John J Mikolich, Gunner
Sgt. Joseph P Rafac, Radio Operator
Sgt. Willard S Schrader, Passenger

Last Rites Held for Soldier Air Victim: Services were held today for Sgt. William S. Schrader, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Schrader, 3500 Humboldt Avenue N. who was killed in an airplane crash at Alamogordo, New Mexico last Sunday.

After graduation from North High School in 1937, he worked for Douglas Aircraft Corp., Los Angeles. There he enlisted as an airplane mechanic. He received his training at Wichita Falls, Texas, and graduated from the aviation school there last April. Burial was in Crystal Cemetery.

● MTK

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Son
S/SGT. 459TH SQD. 330TH BOMB GR.



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