. Waving American fLAG Waving American Flag

On this

Memorial Day

May 25, 2009

Remembering

SGT. LEONARD J. MARCUS

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UNITED STATES ARMY AIR CORPS

BALL GUNNER

B-24 LIBERATOR BOMBER (41-28983)


Army Air Corp Patch 2nd Air Force Patch
Leonard J. Marcus
Waving American fLAG Waving American Flag
SGT. LEONARD J. MARCUS
UNITED STATES ARMY AIR CORPS
DECEMBER 20, 1923 - APRIL 8, 1944

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Sergeant Stripes

Air Crew Wings
AIR CREW MEMBER WINGS

Radio Gunner Pin
AERIAL GUNNER WINGS

Enlisted Insignia
ARMY AIR CORPS ENLISTED INSIGNIA


On April 8, 1944, a B-24 Liberator Bomber (41-28983) took off from Topeka Army Air Field in Kansas. The B-24, and its crew of ten men of the United States Army Air Corps, were bound for Morrison Field in West Palm Beach, Florida. Morrison Field was a staging base for the theaters of war. After a stopover, the B-24 Liberator Bomber and its crew of ten men would have been en route to Europe via the South Atlantic Ferry Route to join the Allied effort to defeat the Nazi war machine. Shortly after takeoff, the B-24 crashed in the Millington, Tennessee area in the vicinity of the Chickasaw Ordnance Works. Nine men were killed, and one man, Sgt. Richard H. Martin Jr. from Lynchburg, Virginia, parachuted to safety and survived the crash. He was admitted to Kennedy General Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. The nine men who perished in the crash are listed as official casualties of World War II, having died in the service of their country.



From the Newspaper:

The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Sunday, April 9, 1944


"Exploding in midair with a force that tore it into three pieces, a B-24 Army Liberator carried nine of its crew members to death yesterday morning as it disintegrated over a two mile area just west of the Chickasaw Ordnance Works near Millington."



Sgt. Leonard J. Marcus, the Ball Gunner, was one of the men killed in the crash of B-24 Liberator Bomber (41-28983).



Sgt. Leonard J. Marcus is the brother of Dr. William Y. Marcus of Silver Spring, Maryland, and the uncle of Leonard J. Marcus of Roanoke, Virginia.


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Pvt. Leonard J. Marcus
PVT. LEONARD J. MARCUS


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Pvt. Leonard J. Marcus
Sgt. Leonard J. Marcus and his uncle, Pvt. Irvin Saltzman.


Pvt. Irvin Saltzman saw his nephew take off from Topeka Army Air Field on April 8, 1944. His nephew was killed in the crash shortly after takeoff. At the time of this photo, Pvt. Irvin Saltzman was with the 16th Armored Division.




Star of David

SGT. LEONARD J. MARCUS is interred at Roosevelt Memorial Park in Trevose, Pennsylvania.



Leonard J. Marcus was 20 years old.



Sgt. Leonard J. Marcus's name and memory is enshrined at the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.



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Click here to Return to B-24 Liberator Bomber Crew Tribute (41-28983)

The underlined above contains links to each man on the crew.


The Guestbook, to view or sign, is also located at the above address!


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This Web page downloads with a musical theme tribute. (WAV File)





This Site was designed, coded in HTML, and is maintained by Kurt A. Dold , of Norwood, Massachusetts, nephew of S/Sgt. Albert S. Dold who was an enlisted member of the crew with Sgt. Leonard J. Marcus.

This Web page tribute was originally published on October 1, 2000.

The last update to this page was on May 8, 2009.





My research and this Web page tribute for
Sgt. Leonard J. Marcus , as well as the other men of the crew of B-24 Liberator Bomber (41-28983) , may bring me in contact with relatives and friends of the crew.

If anyone is upset or offended by this Web page tribute, please accept my apologies, and please contact me at my E-mail address by clicking on to my underlined name at the bottom of this paragraph, and I will address your concerns.

I am merely looking for information and a good photo of each member of the crew of B-24 Liberator Bomber (41-28983). I would like to use their individual photos and information on these Web pages as my personal tribute to the men of this crew. Thank you.

Kurt A. Dold






©2000 KALBERTD ENTERPRISES