Advertisement

Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob Silverstein

Advertisement

Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob Silverstein

Birth
Middlesex County, Ontario, Canada
Death
20 Oct 1943 (aged 25)
Lanaudiere Region, Quebec, Canada
Burial
Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm, Lanaudiere Region, Quebec, Canada Add to Map
Plot
Coll. Grave. Lot GE. 34.
Memorial ID
View Source

Memorial photograph: In the Saint Donat Cemetery where the crew of RCAF Liberator 'Harry' were finally laid to rest, with full military honours, stands this CWGC Memorial-a plaque on an obelisk-(refurbished in 2018), honouring the memory of their service and sacrifice. Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob Silverstein is also honoured at a special memorial cenotaph, located at the 1943 crash site on Black Mountain--The Consolidated Liberator 'Harry' Memorial.


On 20 Oct 1943, RCAF Consolidated B-24 Liberator #3701, nicknamed 'Harry', aircraft took flight from Gander, Newfoundland, its final destination being the RCAF Base at Mont-Joli in Quebec; there were twenty-four airmen on board-4 aircrew and 20 passengers. During the flight, however, the Liberator was diverted to RCAF Dorval in Quebec because of poor weather conditions. Tragically it crashed on the west side of Black Mountain ('Montaigne Noire') near Saint-Donat in Quebec. Though a thorough search was immediately undertaken to locate the aircraft and its crew members, nothing was found until 32 months later, on 20 June 1946, when another RCAF aircraft flying over the area spotted the wreckage. In 1946 a Memorial Cairn with an attached plaque was erected at the isolated crash site on Black Mountain, near which the 24 RCAF airmen were initially laid to rest; the memorial remembered and honoured the 24 men who had lost their lives there—and 23 White Crosses and one Star Of David were placed to mark their final resting places.

In the mid-1980's, the remains of the twenty-four RCAF airmen were disinterred and carried down from the mountain site; they were re-interred in a mass grave in the cemetery in the town of Saint-Donat at the foot of Black Mountain.

The 24 airmen who perished that day in 1943, in the worst accident in Canadian military aviation, were-

Flight Lieutenant Joseph Alfred Raymond POIRIER,

Flying Officer Stephen Andrew SANDERSON,

Flight Lieutenant Robert Frank FISHER ,

Flying Officer Jay Syver JOHNSTON,

Warrant Officer 2nd Class Joseph Alexander BARABONOFF,

Warrant Officer 1st Class Franklin Elwood JENKINS,

Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob SILVERSTEIN,

Warrant Officer 1st Class Wilfred I. HOWLETT,

Pilot Officer James LAMONT,

Pilot Officer Robert William MacDONALD,

Sergeant Eric Morgan FINN,

Sergeant William Gordon MacNAUGHTON,

Sergeant Raymond Frank WARE,

Sergeant Franklin Hicks ELLIOTT,

Corporal Harold David BEATTIE

Leading Aircraftman Charles Laurie DYNES,

Corporal Alec Clare JOHNSTON,

Sergeant Stanley Albert WOOD,

Leading Aircraftman Joseph Achille Jean Paul VIELLEUX,

Leading Aircraftman Guy Ridgewood PATTERSON,

Corporal Howard Kenneth HAMBLY,

Corporal Ronald Douglas MARR,

Leading Aircraftman Edwin William READ and

Leading Aircraftman Albert James RADCLIFFE.


Military Service:-

Rank: Warrant Officer Class I

Trade: Wireless Operator/Air Gunner

Service Number: R/67673

Age: 25

Force: Air Force

Unit: Royal Canadian Air Force

Division: #10 North Atlantic Squadron

Honours and Awards: Mentioned in Despatches (MiD)


A truck driver by trade, he enlisted in the RCAF on 22 August 1940 in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. Upon enlisting, he attested using the name 'Jacob SILVERSTIEN', stating that he wished to be henceforth known by that surname; he completed an official document proclaiming his name change.

Son of Samuel and Dena (née Packer) Silverstein of Windsor, Ontario [both parents born in Russia].


Warrant Officer Class I Jacob Silverstein is commemorated on Page 213 of Canada's Second World War Book of Remembrance.

He is also commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.


On Sunday, 30 Sept 2018, to mark the 75th Anniversary of this dreadful crash and the loss of twenty-four young Canadians a commemorative ceremony took place at the Saint-Donat Municipal Cemetery in Saint-Donat, Quebec. 24 white carnations—one for each of the victims of the crash of Liberator "Harry"—and two wreaths were laid at the monument commemorating the crash of Liberator 'Harry'.

Memorial photograph: In the Saint Donat Cemetery where the crew of RCAF Liberator 'Harry' were finally laid to rest, with full military honours, stands this CWGC Memorial-a plaque on an obelisk-(refurbished in 2018), honouring the memory of their service and sacrifice. Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob Silverstein is also honoured at a special memorial cenotaph, located at the 1943 crash site on Black Mountain--The Consolidated Liberator 'Harry' Memorial.


On 20 Oct 1943, RCAF Consolidated B-24 Liberator #3701, nicknamed 'Harry', aircraft took flight from Gander, Newfoundland, its final destination being the RCAF Base at Mont-Joli in Quebec; there were twenty-four airmen on board-4 aircrew and 20 passengers. During the flight, however, the Liberator was diverted to RCAF Dorval in Quebec because of poor weather conditions. Tragically it crashed on the west side of Black Mountain ('Montaigne Noire') near Saint-Donat in Quebec. Though a thorough search was immediately undertaken to locate the aircraft and its crew members, nothing was found until 32 months later, on 20 June 1946, when another RCAF aircraft flying over the area spotted the wreckage. In 1946 a Memorial Cairn with an attached plaque was erected at the isolated crash site on Black Mountain, near which the 24 RCAF airmen were initially laid to rest; the memorial remembered and honoured the 24 men who had lost their lives there—and 23 White Crosses and one Star Of David were placed to mark their final resting places.

In the mid-1980's, the remains of the twenty-four RCAF airmen were disinterred and carried down from the mountain site; they were re-interred in a mass grave in the cemetery in the town of Saint-Donat at the foot of Black Mountain.

The 24 airmen who perished that day in 1943, in the worst accident in Canadian military aviation, were-

Flight Lieutenant Joseph Alfred Raymond POIRIER,

Flying Officer Stephen Andrew SANDERSON,

Flight Lieutenant Robert Frank FISHER ,

Flying Officer Jay Syver JOHNSTON,

Warrant Officer 2nd Class Joseph Alexander BARABONOFF,

Warrant Officer 1st Class Franklin Elwood JENKINS,

Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob SILVERSTEIN,

Warrant Officer 1st Class Wilfred I. HOWLETT,

Pilot Officer James LAMONT,

Pilot Officer Robert William MacDONALD,

Sergeant Eric Morgan FINN,

Sergeant William Gordon MacNAUGHTON,

Sergeant Raymond Frank WARE,

Sergeant Franklin Hicks ELLIOTT,

Corporal Harold David BEATTIE

Leading Aircraftman Charles Laurie DYNES,

Corporal Alec Clare JOHNSTON,

Sergeant Stanley Albert WOOD,

Leading Aircraftman Joseph Achille Jean Paul VIELLEUX,

Leading Aircraftman Guy Ridgewood PATTERSON,

Corporal Howard Kenneth HAMBLY,

Corporal Ronald Douglas MARR,

Leading Aircraftman Edwin William READ and

Leading Aircraftman Albert James RADCLIFFE.


Military Service:-

Rank: Warrant Officer Class I

Trade: Wireless Operator/Air Gunner

Service Number: R/67673

Age: 25

Force: Air Force

Unit: Royal Canadian Air Force

Division: #10 North Atlantic Squadron

Honours and Awards: Mentioned in Despatches (MiD)


A truck driver by trade, he enlisted in the RCAF on 22 August 1940 in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. Upon enlisting, he attested using the name 'Jacob SILVERSTIEN', stating that he wished to be henceforth known by that surname; he completed an official document proclaiming his name change.

Son of Samuel and Dena (née Packer) Silverstein of Windsor, Ontario [both parents born in Russia].


Warrant Officer Class I Jacob Silverstein is commemorated on Page 213 of Canada's Second World War Book of Remembrance.

He is also commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.


On Sunday, 30 Sept 2018, to mark the 75th Anniversary of this dreadful crash and the loss of twenty-four young Canadians a commemorative ceremony took place at the Saint-Donat Municipal Cemetery in Saint-Donat, Quebec. 24 white carnations—one for each of the victims of the crash of Liberator "Harry"—and two wreaths were laid at the monument commemorating the crash of Liberator 'Harry'.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

  • Created by: SJB Hearn
  • Added: Jul 13, 2013
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/113753925/jacob-silverstein: accessed ), memorial page for Warrant Officer 1st Class Jacob Silverstein (20 Mar 1918–20 Oct 1943), Find a Grave Memorial ID 113753925, citing Cimetière de Saint-Donat, Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm, Lanaudiere Region, Quebec, Canada; Maintained by SJB Hearn (contributor 46864594).