~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
George served as a Aviation Radioman Second Class on PBY-5A Catalina #8428, VP-52, U.S. Navy during World War II.
He resided in Florence, South Carolina prior to the war.
PBY-5A Catalina #8428 took off from Namoai Bay on a night mission against the Japanese shipping on November 22, 1943.
Off New Ireland Island, New Ireland Province, Papua New Guinea they discovered Japanese shipping and attacked. They were hit by ship anti-aircraft fire which caused a fire on their PBY. The pilot, Lieutenant Commander John M. Arbuckle, decided to ditch since they had ordinance on board that he feared would explode if he didn't.
They ditched off the southwest coast of New Ireland, in the Bismarck Archipelago of New Guinea. This PBY was seen burning in the water by observers. 3 of the crew perished in this ditching. The rest of the crew all became POW's of the Japanese.
George was declared "Missing In Action" in this ditching during the war.
He was awarded the Purple Heart.
Service # 5522326
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Those who perished from PBY-5A #8428:
Blanchard, Richard ~ AMM1C, RI
Bradbury, Arthur R, Jr ~ AMM2C, OH
Furman, George E ~ ARM2C, SC
Hamilton, William S, Jr ~ ARM1C, PA ~ POW
Kirk, James J ~ AOM1C, PA ~ Executed
Mannon, Paul M ~ AMM2C, MT ~ POW
Morgan, Carl L ~ AMM2C, MD ~ POW
Phillis, Phillip K ~ ENS, KY ~ Executed
Ryder, John F ~ ENS, NH ~ POW
Thompson, Raymond B ~ LTJG, WA ~ POW
Lieutenant Commander John M. Arbuckle, who was from State College, Pennsylvania, became a POW of the Japanese in this crash and was the only survivor of the war from this PBY.
( Bio & Crew Report by: Russ Pickett )
(Crash info submitted by : John Donne)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
George served as a Aviation Radioman Second Class on PBY-5A Catalina #8428, VP-52, U.S. Navy during World War II.
He resided in Florence, South Carolina prior to the war.
PBY-5A Catalina #8428 took off from Namoai Bay on a night mission against the Japanese shipping on November 22, 1943.
Off New Ireland Island, New Ireland Province, Papua New Guinea they discovered Japanese shipping and attacked. They were hit by ship anti-aircraft fire which caused a fire on their PBY. The pilot, Lieutenant Commander John M. Arbuckle, decided to ditch since they had ordinance on board that he feared would explode if he didn't.
They ditched off the southwest coast of New Ireland, in the Bismarck Archipelago of New Guinea. This PBY was seen burning in the water by observers. 3 of the crew perished in this ditching. The rest of the crew all became POW's of the Japanese.
George was declared "Missing In Action" in this ditching during the war.
He was awarded the Purple Heart.
Service # 5522326
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Those who perished from PBY-5A #8428:
Blanchard, Richard ~ AMM1C, RI
Bradbury, Arthur R, Jr ~ AMM2C, OH
Furman, George E ~ ARM2C, SC
Hamilton, William S, Jr ~ ARM1C, PA ~ POW
Kirk, James J ~ AOM1C, PA ~ Executed
Mannon, Paul M ~ AMM2C, MT ~ POW
Morgan, Carl L ~ AMM2C, MD ~ POW
Phillis, Phillip K ~ ENS, KY ~ Executed
Ryder, John F ~ ENS, NH ~ POW
Thompson, Raymond B ~ LTJG, WA ~ POW
Lieutenant Commander John M. Arbuckle, who was from State College, Pennsylvania, became a POW of the Japanese in this crash and was the only survivor of the war from this PBY.
( Bio & Crew Report by: Russ Pickett )
(Crash info submitted by : John Donne)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Explore more
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement