Advertisement

SSGT Michael Philip Falcone

Advertisement

SSGT Michael Philip Falcone Veteran

Birth
Douglas, Cochise County, Arizona, USA
Death
8 Nov 1944 (aged 19)
Negros Occidental Province, Western Visayas, Philippines
Burial
Winchester, Winchester City, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
SECTION 88, SITE 4105 C-G
Memorial ID
View Source
SSGT, US ARMY AIR FORCES WORLD WAR II
----------
Staff Sergeant and aerial gunner on B-24L
Liberator #44-41421, serving with the 371st
Bomb Squadron, 307th Bomb Group, 13th Air
Force in World War II.

The B-24s departed Noemfoor, Indonesia for a
strike mission to Japanese-held airfields on
Negros Island, Philippines.

The bombers were intercepted by the Japanese
and came under intense cannon fire by the
enemy fighter planes.

A photograph of Michael's B-24 was taken at
the exact moment the right wing folded up and
the tail section disintegrated under the the
barrage of gunfire. Moments later the aircraft
plunged into a mountainside at the northern
tip of Negros and exploded. All aboard were
killed.
Three days later that photograph appeared in
many US newspapers.

Following the war, the wreck site was found
and the crew's remains recovered. All ten were
interred in a common grave in Virginia on
September 27, 1949.

They were:

1st Lt. Walter A. Scalese, Pilot, Windber, PA
2nd Lt. Stephen Fuda, Co-Pilot, Stamford, CT
Flt. Off. Joseph E. Novakovits, Navigator,
Bethlehem, PA
1st Lt. Paul H. Phillips, Bombardier,
Logan, WV
TSgt. Chester E. Matz, Radio Operator,
Wilkes-Barre, PA
TSgt. Charles H. Neville, Engineer,
Evansville, IN
SSgt. George J. Kacoyannakis, Asst. Engineer,
Tyrone, NY
SSgt. John T. Stough, Asst. Radio Operator,
Jeanette, PA
SSgt. Robert L. Dyson, Gunner, Dennison, OH
SSgt. Michael P. Falcone, Gunner, Bangor, PA
SSGT, US ARMY AIR FORCES WORLD WAR II
----------
Staff Sergeant and aerial gunner on B-24L
Liberator #44-41421, serving with the 371st
Bomb Squadron, 307th Bomb Group, 13th Air
Force in World War II.

The B-24s departed Noemfoor, Indonesia for a
strike mission to Japanese-held airfields on
Negros Island, Philippines.

The bombers were intercepted by the Japanese
and came under intense cannon fire by the
enemy fighter planes.

A photograph of Michael's B-24 was taken at
the exact moment the right wing folded up and
the tail section disintegrated under the the
barrage of gunfire. Moments later the aircraft
plunged into a mountainside at the northern
tip of Negros and exploded. All aboard were
killed.
Three days later that photograph appeared in
many US newspapers.

Following the war, the wreck site was found
and the crew's remains recovered. All ten were
interred in a common grave in Virginia on
September 27, 1949.

They were:

1st Lt. Walter A. Scalese, Pilot, Windber, PA
2nd Lt. Stephen Fuda, Co-Pilot, Stamford, CT
Flt. Off. Joseph E. Novakovits, Navigator,
Bethlehem, PA
1st Lt. Paul H. Phillips, Bombardier,
Logan, WV
TSgt. Chester E. Matz, Radio Operator,
Wilkes-Barre, PA
TSgt. Charles H. Neville, Engineer,
Evansville, IN
SSgt. George J. Kacoyannakis, Asst. Engineer,
Tyrone, NY
SSgt. John T. Stough, Asst. Radio Operator,
Jeanette, PA
SSgt. Robert L. Dyson, Gunner, Dennison, OH
SSgt. Michael P. Falcone, Gunner, Bangor, PA


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement