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Personal info

Full name
GABAY, Eugene Thomas
Date of birth
15 June 1924
Age
20
Place of birth
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York
Hometown
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York

Military service

Service number
32825102
Rank
Sergeant
Function
Waist Gunner
Unit
752nd Bombardment Squadron,
458th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
9 April 1945
Place of death
Lechfeld, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten
Plot Row Grave
I 8 16

Immediate family

Members
John Gabay (father)
Mary (Fitgerald) Gabay (mother)
John R. Gabay (brother)
Veronica K. (Wheeler) Gabay (wife)

Plane data

Serial number
42-95316
Data
Type: B-24H
Nickname: Princess Pat
Destination: Lechfeld, Germany

More information

Eugen Gabay graduated from Textile High School.

He enlisted in March 1943 and was sent overseas in October 1944.

He was married to Veronica Wheeler in April 1944.

While over the target, the aircraft took a direct flak hit in the camera hatch. This burst killed both waist gunners, S/Sgt Enrico R. Ciotti and Sgt Eugene T. Gabay.

Shrapnel from this flak burst also wounded S/Sgt Robert W. Groh in the back, fragments lodging in his right lung. Controls for the rudders and ailerons were also damaged. The engineer T/Sgt Alfred J. Ebbing, receiving no answer to his calls over the interphone went back and saw the destruction in the waist area. Seeing Sgt Groh was badly wounded, Ebbing made his way back to the cockpit and informed 1st Lt Burman that they needed to land immediately. The crew let down from altitude and found an airfield on which to land. They fired red flares on the approach denoting wounded on board. As they touched down, they rolled to a stop off of the main landing strip onto a grassy area between the runways. An ambulance stopped some distance away. Ebbing exited the aircraft and waved the ambulance over, but they were beckoning to him. He ran the few hundred feet across the grass to where they waited and told them they had wounded on board. The ambulance crew said, "You lead the way." Ebbing took them back to the plane where they proceeded to give first aid to Sgt Groh. The ambulance crew later told Ebbing that the airfield had only been taken over from the Germans two days earlier and that they suspected the grassy area where the B-24 had come to rest contained land mines, but the area had not yet been cleared!

His brother, S/Sgt. John R. Gabay, completed 26 missions as a tail gunner.

Source of information: Terry Hirsch, www.newspapers.com - The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, www.ancestry.com - Headstone and Interment Record / 1940 Census, www.bklyn.newspaper.com - Brooklyn Daily Eagle, - 4 May 1945

Photo source: Peter Schouteten, www.newspapers.com - Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Michel Beckers/Darin Scorza - www.458bg.com,