Sweet Bombing
Class 43-14, Midland Army Air Field, Midland, Texas
Direct link to this page:
https://aafcollection.info/items/list.php?item=000786
Authors:
- Norman N. Loney, Editor
Contributors:
- Ben Guttery
- Marty Upchurch
Published: 1943
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Item: 000786
Viewed: 116 times
Comments: 1 (see below)
Categories:
- Bombardment
- Class Books
- Training
Class/Unit Number:
- 43-14: Class 43-14
Special Features:
- Hometowns - Includes cadets' hometowns
Locations:
- Midland Army Air Field; Midland, Texas, USA
Contributors:
- Ben Guttery
- Marty Upchurch
Repositories:
- Private Collection
Added: July 31, 2016
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To Cite this website as a research source:
Army Air Forces Collection, "Sweet Bombing: Class 43-14, Midland Army Air Field, Midland, Texas" (item 000786), AAF Collection, https://AAFCollection.info/items/list.php?item=000786 (accessed 25 April 2024).
Class book for bombardier class 43-14 at Midland Army Air Field, Midland, Texas.
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Curator: Mike Voisin
Army Air Forces Collection Item 000786 is licensed by Mike Voisin under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. |
[1] Paul Webber (11-Mar-2020 04:30 PM)
I found eleven veterans of the 487th Bomb Group in this book. They were all commissioned on October 7, 1943:
1. Thomas S. Mackie, 956 Anchor Street, Philadelphia
2. Francis W. Moan, 229 Auburn Street, Auberndale, Massachusetts
3. Stanley A. Slusarczyk, 248 Pringle, East Carnegie, Pennsylvania
4. Cecil J. Smith, Nemaha, Iowa
5. Theodore G. Tatsios, 122 Dummer Street, Lowel, Massachusetts
6. Franklyn Richard Theriault, Goshen Road, Salem, Ohio
7. Norman Tipograph, 1316 East 8th Street, Brooklyn, New York
8. Arthur R. Wright, 295 South Main Street, Warsaw, New York
9. Vitold A. Zalneraitis, 221 So. Common Street, Lynn, Massachusetts
10. Rudolph J. Zebora, 15 Hobart Street, Meridan, Connecticut
11. Walter V. Zmud, 322 Saratoga Street, Cahoes, New York
Four of these men were killed in action: Thomas S. Mackie, Stanley A. Slusarczyk, Cecil J. Smith, and Rudolph J. Zebora. One of these men, Vitold A. Zalneraitis, became a prisoner of war.