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Capt William J “Bill” Cullerton Sr.

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Capt William J “Bill” Cullerton Sr.

Birth
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Death
12 Jan 2013 (aged 89)
Downers Grove, DuPage County, Illinois, USA
Burial
Oak Brook, DuPage County, Illinois, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.8193583, Longitude: -87.9391722
Memorial ID
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Bill Cullerton was born on June 2, 1923, in Chicago, Illinois.
He enlisted in the Aviation Cadet Program of the U.S. Army Air Forces on September 11, 1942, and was commissioned and awarded his pilot wings on January 7, 1944.
He was assigned to the 357th Fighter Squadron of the 355th Fighter Group in August 1944 and he was credited with destroying 5 enemy aircraft in aerial combat plus 15 more on the ground and 9 damaged.
Cullerton was shot down by flak on April 5, 1945, and was captured by a Waffen-SS Officer who shot him in the stomach and left him for dead.
After being found by American forces, he was hospitalized and returned to the United States shortly after the war in Europe ended.
Captain Cullerton received an honorable discharge on December 9, 1945.
Bill Cullerton hosted the Great Outdoors Show on Chicago's WGN-Radio from 1979 to 1999. He was inducted into the International Sport Fishing Hall of Fame, the Illinois Military Aviation Hall of Fame, and he is enshrined in the Champlin Fighter Aces Museum in Mesa, Arizona.
Bill and his wife Elaine "Steve" (1923-2015) had five children and 19 grandchildren together.
Bill Cullerton died on January 12, 2013, and was buried at Bronswood Cemetery in Oak Brook, Illinois."William J. "Bill" Cullerton Sr. (January 1, 1923 – January 12, 2013) was an American World War II flying ace, entrepreneur, radio show host, and outdoors man. Cullerton destroyed twenty-seven Axis planes during the war, including twenty-one destroyed in low-altitude attacks on the ground, ranking him as the third-highest strafing ace in the 8th Air Force. He was the last surviving member of the 355th Fighter Group ("Dragon Squadron"), which flew missions out of Steeple Morden, England, during World War II.

Cullerton was born in Chicago and raised on Oak Park, Illinois, graduated from Fenwick High School. His grandfather, Bill Jamison, owned a firm which still manufactures collectible fishing lures today. Cullerton worked for his grandfather as a teenager.

He was a relative of several Chicago area political figures, including Edward "Foxy" Cullerton (first elected to the Chicago City Council in 1871); his cousin, the current President of the Illinois Senate John Cullerton; and former Chicago assessor under Mayor Richard J. Daley P.J. "Parky" Cullerton.

Cullerton graduated from Fenwick High School in Oak Park. He attended college for a short time, but left soon after to enlist during World War II.

Cullerton enlisted in the Army Air Forces during World War II. He flew P-51-D Mustang fighters as part of the Dragon Squadron, headquartered at the RAF Steeple Morden airfield near Steeple Morden, England.

Cullerton, a flying ace, destroyed twenty-seven Luftwaffe planes during the war. He shot down six German fighters during aerial dogfights. Cullerton also destroyed twenty-one planes on the ground in strafing attacks, ranking him as the third-highest strafing ace in the 8th Air Force.

Cullerton was covered extensively by Chicago newspapers during World War II. Headlines featuring Cullerton included "Chicago Pilot Bags Eight Nazi Planes in One Day's Fights," "Germans Find Chicago Ace Too Hot to Handle" and "Cullerton has 18 'Kills'."

On April 1, 1945, Cullerton was shot down over Germany near the end of the war, crashing on a hillside near German forces. Cullerton was found and shot in the stomach by a German stormtrooper using his own gun. Cullerton described the attack in an interview years later, "They had a short meeting, and the guy came back to me, holding my gun in his hand, and he said to me, 'For you, the 'war' is over' — and he shot me in the belly."

He was discovered wounded in a field by a German farmer, who mistakenly believed he was a German pilot, rather than an American. Cullerton was taken to a German hospital, where he was tortured by German forces." A Jewish doctor helped him escape the hospital, telling him to jump from a window into a heap of sheep manure. Cullerton did as he was instructed and managed to escape. American and Allied troops later discovered Cullerton wounded and hiding under a bridge near Feuchtwangen, Bavaria. The Allied forces were unsure if Cullerton was an American or a German impersonating an American pilot. To test Cullerton on his nationality, the Americans asked him ""Who is Ted Williams?". Cullerton correctly identified Williams as the "Splendid Splinter" of the Boston Red Sox, proving that he was an American before collapsing. Chicago area newspapers reported his rescue as with headlines like "Capt. Cullerton's Return Hailed as Near Miracle."

He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and the Silver Star for valor.

Author John J. Kevil Jr. wrote a biography on Cullerton, "The Last Dragon of Steeple Morden."

Cullerton married his wife, Elaine Stephen, after the war. He often called his wife "Steve" or "Miss Steve" in a reference to her original maiden name. A Chicago newspaper covered the wedding under the headline, "Chicago's Army Ace is Downed by Cupid's Dart." The couple raised their children in Elmhurst, Illinois, a Chicago suburb. He also rejoined his grandfather's fishing lure business following the war.

Cullerton founded the Cullerton Co., in the 1950s. The company represents manufacturers of outdoor and fishing products Bill Cullerton is considered to be an early pioneer of the fishing travel industry. He also supported the growth of outdoor shows.

Cullerton hosted a popular Chicago Sunday morning show radio show called "Great Outdoors" on WGN Radio for twenty years before his retirement in December 1999. Charlie Potter succeeded Cullerton as host of "Great Outdoors," which still airs on WGN as of 2013.

An outdoor enthusiast and conservationist, Cullerton advocated for environmental preservation in Illinois and surrounding states. Cullerton advocated for the restoration of the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, now a United States National Grassland in Wilmington, Illinois. He championed an effort to install an artificial reef off the coast of Chicago in Lake Michigan to improve the habitat available for native fish.

He was a founding member of the Illinois Conservation Foundation and was later named to its hall of fame. He was inducted into the Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in Hayward, Wisconsin.

On May 9, 2000, the Illinois Beach State Park and North Point Marina in Zion, Illinois, was dedicated as the William J. Cullerton Complex in recognition of his conservation efforts. The ceremony, which was attended by then-Governor George Ryan and Illinois First Lady Lura Lynn Ryan, included a flyover by two P-51 Mustang planes. The William J. Cullerton Complex includes the 4,160-acre Illinois State Park and the North Point Marina on Lake Michigan, which is capable of holding approximately 1,500 boats.

Cullerton died at Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove, Illinois, on January 12, 2013, at the age of 89. He was survived by his wife, Elaine, three daughters and three sons. A longtime resident of Oak Brook, Illinois, Cullerton and his wife also owned a second home in Marco Island, Florida. He lived in Warrenville, Illinois, in 2000."

-- Courtesy of Wikipedia
Bill Cullerton was born on June 2, 1923, in Chicago, Illinois.
He enlisted in the Aviation Cadet Program of the U.S. Army Air Forces on September 11, 1942, and was commissioned and awarded his pilot wings on January 7, 1944.
He was assigned to the 357th Fighter Squadron of the 355th Fighter Group in August 1944 and he was credited with destroying 5 enemy aircraft in aerial combat plus 15 more on the ground and 9 damaged.
Cullerton was shot down by flak on April 5, 1945, and was captured by a Waffen-SS Officer who shot him in the stomach and left him for dead.
After being found by American forces, he was hospitalized and returned to the United States shortly after the war in Europe ended.
Captain Cullerton received an honorable discharge on December 9, 1945.
Bill Cullerton hosted the Great Outdoors Show on Chicago's WGN-Radio from 1979 to 1999. He was inducted into the International Sport Fishing Hall of Fame, the Illinois Military Aviation Hall of Fame, and he is enshrined in the Champlin Fighter Aces Museum in Mesa, Arizona.
Bill and his wife Elaine "Steve" (1923-2015) had five children and 19 grandchildren together.
Bill Cullerton died on January 12, 2013, and was buried at Bronswood Cemetery in Oak Brook, Illinois."William J. "Bill" Cullerton Sr. (January 1, 1923 – January 12, 2013) was an American World War II flying ace, entrepreneur, radio show host, and outdoors man. Cullerton destroyed twenty-seven Axis planes during the war, including twenty-one destroyed in low-altitude attacks on the ground, ranking him as the third-highest strafing ace in the 8th Air Force. He was the last surviving member of the 355th Fighter Group ("Dragon Squadron"), which flew missions out of Steeple Morden, England, during World War II.

Cullerton was born in Chicago and raised on Oak Park, Illinois, graduated from Fenwick High School. His grandfather, Bill Jamison, owned a firm which still manufactures collectible fishing lures today. Cullerton worked for his grandfather as a teenager.

He was a relative of several Chicago area political figures, including Edward "Foxy" Cullerton (first elected to the Chicago City Council in 1871); his cousin, the current President of the Illinois Senate John Cullerton; and former Chicago assessor under Mayor Richard J. Daley P.J. "Parky" Cullerton.

Cullerton graduated from Fenwick High School in Oak Park. He attended college for a short time, but left soon after to enlist during World War II.

Cullerton enlisted in the Army Air Forces during World War II. He flew P-51-D Mustang fighters as part of the Dragon Squadron, headquartered at the RAF Steeple Morden airfield near Steeple Morden, England.

Cullerton, a flying ace, destroyed twenty-seven Luftwaffe planes during the war. He shot down six German fighters during aerial dogfights. Cullerton also destroyed twenty-one planes on the ground in strafing attacks, ranking him as the third-highest strafing ace in the 8th Air Force.

Cullerton was covered extensively by Chicago newspapers during World War II. Headlines featuring Cullerton included "Chicago Pilot Bags Eight Nazi Planes in One Day's Fights," "Germans Find Chicago Ace Too Hot to Handle" and "Cullerton has 18 'Kills'."

On April 1, 1945, Cullerton was shot down over Germany near the end of the war, crashing on a hillside near German forces. Cullerton was found and shot in the stomach by a German stormtrooper using his own gun. Cullerton described the attack in an interview years later, "They had a short meeting, and the guy came back to me, holding my gun in his hand, and he said to me, 'For you, the 'war' is over' — and he shot me in the belly."

He was discovered wounded in a field by a German farmer, who mistakenly believed he was a German pilot, rather than an American. Cullerton was taken to a German hospital, where he was tortured by German forces." A Jewish doctor helped him escape the hospital, telling him to jump from a window into a heap of sheep manure. Cullerton did as he was instructed and managed to escape. American and Allied troops later discovered Cullerton wounded and hiding under a bridge near Feuchtwangen, Bavaria. The Allied forces were unsure if Cullerton was an American or a German impersonating an American pilot. To test Cullerton on his nationality, the Americans asked him ""Who is Ted Williams?". Cullerton correctly identified Williams as the "Splendid Splinter" of the Boston Red Sox, proving that he was an American before collapsing. Chicago area newspapers reported his rescue as with headlines like "Capt. Cullerton's Return Hailed as Near Miracle."

He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and the Silver Star for valor.

Author John J. Kevil Jr. wrote a biography on Cullerton, "The Last Dragon of Steeple Morden."

Cullerton married his wife, Elaine Stephen, after the war. He often called his wife "Steve" or "Miss Steve" in a reference to her original maiden name. A Chicago newspaper covered the wedding under the headline, "Chicago's Army Ace is Downed by Cupid's Dart." The couple raised their children in Elmhurst, Illinois, a Chicago suburb. He also rejoined his grandfather's fishing lure business following the war.

Cullerton founded the Cullerton Co., in the 1950s. The company represents manufacturers of outdoor and fishing products Bill Cullerton is considered to be an early pioneer of the fishing travel industry. He also supported the growth of outdoor shows.

Cullerton hosted a popular Chicago Sunday morning show radio show called "Great Outdoors" on WGN Radio for twenty years before his retirement in December 1999. Charlie Potter succeeded Cullerton as host of "Great Outdoors," which still airs on WGN as of 2013.

An outdoor enthusiast and conservationist, Cullerton advocated for environmental preservation in Illinois and surrounding states. Cullerton advocated for the restoration of the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, now a United States National Grassland in Wilmington, Illinois. He championed an effort to install an artificial reef off the coast of Chicago in Lake Michigan to improve the habitat available for native fish.

He was a founding member of the Illinois Conservation Foundation and was later named to its hall of fame. He was inducted into the Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in Hayward, Wisconsin.

On May 9, 2000, the Illinois Beach State Park and North Point Marina in Zion, Illinois, was dedicated as the William J. Cullerton Complex in recognition of his conservation efforts. The ceremony, which was attended by then-Governor George Ryan and Illinois First Lady Lura Lynn Ryan, included a flyover by two P-51 Mustang planes. The William J. Cullerton Complex includes the 4,160-acre Illinois State Park and the North Point Marina on Lake Michigan, which is capable of holding approximately 1,500 boats.

Cullerton died at Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove, Illinois, on January 12, 2013, at the age of 89. He was survived by his wife, Elaine, three daughters and three sons. A longtime resident of Oak Brook, Illinois, Cullerton and his wife also owned a second home in Marco Island, Florida. He lived in Warrenville, Illinois, in 2000."

-- Courtesy of Wikipedia


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  • Created by: Sam
  • Added: Jul 4, 2016
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/166443002/william_j-cullerton: accessed ), memorial page for Capt William J “Bill” Cullerton Sr. (2 Jun 1923–12 Jan 2013), Find a Grave Memorial ID 166443002, citing Bronswood Cemetery, Oak Brook, DuPage County, Illinois, USA; Maintained by Sam (contributor 46539242).