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Harold James Smith

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Harold James Smith Veteran

Birth
Death
13 May 1946 (aged 24)
Florida, USA
Burial
Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec: 10, Site: 10664
Memorial ID
View Source
US Naval Academy Class of 1944
Harold was lost in a mid-air collision of two Navy Hellcat fighter planes during a storm over the Everglades. The other pilot, Lt(jg) Walter E. Mattis, survived.

From the Baltimore Sun on May 15, 1946:
Lieut. Harold James Smith, of 522 Chateau avenue, was killed Monday afternoon when the navy fighter plane he was flying crashed after a collision with another aircraft near the Miami Naval Air Station, his parents were informed by the Navy Department yesterday.

Lieutenant Smith, 24, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Smith, of the Chateau avenue address. After winning four battle stars as a line officer aboard a destroyer in the Pacific, he had just recently won his wings as a navy flyer and was on a training flight at the time of the crash, his family was informed.

Named To Naval Academy
As a youth, Lieutenant Smith was a leader of his class in Baltimore City College, where he was vice president of the senior class in 1939. He was also All-Maryland center on the football team, and held the interscholastic wrestling championship, according to Major Albert H. Smith, Jr., his brother.

From City College, young Smith went to the Bullis Preparatory School at Silver Spring, Md., and while there he won, by-competitive examination, an appointment to the Naval Academy.

The appointment came in 1940, and the young midshipman took an accelerated wartime course, to receive his commission in 1943.

Served In Pacific
Nevertheless, he played football for the Navy for two years, and also was a member of the wrestling team.

Lieutenant Smith's first war assignment was aboard the destroyer Ralph Talbot, his brother said. He won his battle stars at New Guinea, Saipan, New Britain, and the Philippines, and was flown back to begin his flying training in Texas in 1945.

Major Smith, elder brother of the flyer, said he was told by the commanding officer of the station that two Hellcats, navy fighting planes, collided in a storm over the Everglades yesterday afternoon.

14 Miles From Station
One pilot, Lieut. (jg) Walter E. Mattis, of Atlantic City, N.J., reported he was unaware of the crash, and was able to bring his craft to a safe landing, although a wing had been smashed.

Lieutenant Smith's body and wreckage of the second plane were found 14 miles from the station.

Under the escort of a naval officer, Lieutenant Smith's body will be brought by train to Washington Friday, and will be buried with naval honors in Arlington Cemetery.

Besides his parents and Major Smith, survivors are two younger brothers
US Naval Academy Class of 1944
Harold was lost in a mid-air collision of two Navy Hellcat fighter planes during a storm over the Everglades. The other pilot, Lt(jg) Walter E. Mattis, survived.

From the Baltimore Sun on May 15, 1946:
Lieut. Harold James Smith, of 522 Chateau avenue, was killed Monday afternoon when the navy fighter plane he was flying crashed after a collision with another aircraft near the Miami Naval Air Station, his parents were informed by the Navy Department yesterday.

Lieutenant Smith, 24, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Smith, of the Chateau avenue address. After winning four battle stars as a line officer aboard a destroyer in the Pacific, he had just recently won his wings as a navy flyer and was on a training flight at the time of the crash, his family was informed.

Named To Naval Academy
As a youth, Lieutenant Smith was a leader of his class in Baltimore City College, where he was vice president of the senior class in 1939. He was also All-Maryland center on the football team, and held the interscholastic wrestling championship, according to Major Albert H. Smith, Jr., his brother.

From City College, young Smith went to the Bullis Preparatory School at Silver Spring, Md., and while there he won, by-competitive examination, an appointment to the Naval Academy.

The appointment came in 1940, and the young midshipman took an accelerated wartime course, to receive his commission in 1943.

Served In Pacific
Nevertheless, he played football for the Navy for two years, and also was a member of the wrestling team.

Lieutenant Smith's first war assignment was aboard the destroyer Ralph Talbot, his brother said. He won his battle stars at New Guinea, Saipan, New Britain, and the Philippines, and was flown back to begin his flying training in Texas in 1945.

Major Smith, elder brother of the flyer, said he was told by the commanding officer of the station that two Hellcats, navy fighting planes, collided in a storm over the Everglades yesterday afternoon.

14 Miles From Station
One pilot, Lieut. (jg) Walter E. Mattis, of Atlantic City, N.J., reported he was unaware of the crash, and was able to bring his craft to a safe landing, although a wing had been smashed.

Lieutenant Smith's body and wreckage of the second plane were found 14 miles from the station.

Under the escort of a naval officer, Lieutenant Smith's body will be brought by train to Washington Friday, and will be buried with naval honors in Arlington Cemetery.

Besides his parents and Major Smith, survivors are two younger brothers

Gravesite Details

LT US NAVY


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