Keeping fingers crossed: the wreckage of my uncle's and his crew's A-20 Havoc may have been actually found after 67 years.
http://www.cramsie.blogspot.com/
Keeping fingers crossed: the wreckage of my uncle's and his crew's A-20 Havoc may have been actually found after 67 years.
http://www.cramsie.blogspot.com/
¡Que la fuerza te acompañe!
Update: USAF to send a dive team to check the wreckage to try to establish nationality of the aircraft. If US, it may become a recovery effort.
¡Que la fuerza te acompañe!
Keep us posted. It's interesting news.
Disappointing news:
The wreckage discovered was an undocumented German bomber's crash site.
http://cramsie.blogspot.com/2012/05/...forgotten.html
¡Que la fuerza te acompañe!
Sorry to hear that. Don't give up hope.
Made some submissions to NavSource.org regarding my dad's WWII service. He was in the amphibious forces in New Guinea and the Philippine Islands. A photo album of his was unearthed with some photos and artifacts that need to be shared for history's sake:
http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/18/181071.htm
http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/15/150680.htm
I'm hopeful some of the small information I've shared (and plan to share more as I find it) with help others in their search to find out about their family member or WWII veterans in general.
¡Que la fuerza te acompañe!
How far back do these archives go in history? Just the photograph age (i.e. Civil War)? Only past WWII? Or farther?
"May the 4th be with you?" "Why yes, thank you for asking."
This is a very cool story!
http://vfwnc.org/department-news/tuskegee-airman-found/
¡Que la fuerza te acompañe!
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