John A. Long Crew (original) (raw)

| | | 360th Long CrewJohn A. Long, Pilot | | ------------------------------------------ | ---------------------------------- |

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JOHN A. LONG CREW - 360th BS
(crew assigned 360BS: 27 Oct 1943 - photo: Rapid City, SD, 22 Aug 1943)

(Back L-R) Capt John A. Long (P)(KIA), 1Lt Amon E. "Butch" Earhart (CP),
1Lt George M. Carroll (N), 1Lt Guiseppe Cascio (B)

(Front L-R) S/Sgt Albert J. Ledley (AE/LWG)(KIA), S/Sgt Anthony T. Orlando (TG)(POW),
T/Sgt Ralph T. Jennings (R), T/Sgt Clarence G. Wilson (E)(KIA),
S/Sgt Mace Henson (RWG)(KIA), S/Sgt Frank C. Logan (AR/BTG)(KIA)

Ranks and Grades at time of last combat mission


JOHN A. LONG CREW - 360th BS
(crew assigned 360BS: 27 Oct 1943 - photo: 21 Nov 1943)

(Back L-R) Capt John A. Long (P)(KIA), 1Lt George M. Carroll (N),
1Lt Guiseppe Cascio (B), 1Lt Amon E. "Butch" Earhart (CP)

(Front L-R) S/Sgt Anthony T. Orlando (TG)(POW), S/Sgt Albert J. Ledley (AE/LWG)(KIA),
S/Sgt Mace Henson (RWG)(KIA), T/Sgt Ralph T. Jennings (R),
T/Sgt Clarence G. Wilson (E)(KIA), S/Sgt Frank C. Logan (AR/BTG)(KIA)

Ranks and Grades at time of last combat mission

Twenty-seven dispatched and credited combat missions flown by Capt John A. Long:
82 (16 Nov 1943), 83, 86, 88, 89, 92, 93, 94, 95, 97, 100, 101, 102, 103, 107, 116, 118, 119, 123, 128, 129, 132, 135, 140, 141, 146, 151 (11 May 1944)
For mission dates, targets and mission reports see Combat Missions.

Eleven B-17Gs flown by Capt John A. Long on his twenty-seven dispatched combat missions:

Crew Notes - Original Capt John A. Long crewmen:

Crew Notes - Five KIA or POW crewmen used on 11 May 1944 (Mission 151):

Mission Note:

11 May 1944 (Mission 151) to Saarbrucken, Germany in B-17G 42-97260 Bow-Ur-Neck Stevens (360BS) PU-Q. Aircraft named after Col Kermit D. Stevens, Commanding Officer 303rd BG(H). Absorbed a flak hit which set the No. 1 engine ablaze and knocked the B-17 out of the formation. Capt Long forced his aircraft back into the formation by straining the three remaining engines. Just after the bombs were released another flak burst tore the #3 engine and propeller off the B-17, throwing it completely out of control. It flipped over on its back and went down in a dive, pulled out of this dive and almost immediately pulled into another dive and crashed near Saarbrucken, Germany. Four crewmen were able to parachute from the stricken B-17 and became POWs. The other seven crewmen were Killed in Action in the aircraft crash. (Missing Aircrew Report 4868).

[top photo courtesy of George M. Carroll, second photo from the 303rdBGA Archives] [Purple Heart photo courtesy of Jonathan Dray] [Researched by Harry D. Gobrecht, 303rdBG Historian Emeritus]