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Personal info

Full name
OLIVER, Joseph William
Date of birth
11 November 1906
Age
36
Place of birth
Stanley, Mountrail County, North Dakota
Hometown
San José, Santa Clara County, California

Military service

Service number
39098765
Rank
Staff Sergeant
Function
Waist Gunner
Unit
32nd Bombardment Squadron,
301st Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
2 November 1943
Place of death
In the vicinity of Mönichkirchen, 40 km southwest of Wiener Neustadt, Austria

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
C 9 33

Immediate family

Members
Alfred A. Oliver (father)
Clara (Enochs) Oliver (mother)
Ralph A. Oliver (brother)
Marie T. Oliver (sister)
Louis L. Oliver (brother)
Willie Oliver (brother)
Ada Oliver (sister)
Ethyl M. (Peterson) Oliver (wife)
Marilyn J. Oliver (daughter)

Plane data

Serial number
42-3391
Data
Type: B-17F
Nickname: Georgia Peach
Destination: Wiener Neustadt, Austria
Mission: Bombing of the Messerschmitt aircraft factory
MACR: 1092

More information

Staff Sergeant Joseph W. Oliver was a salesman.

He enlisted on 7 August 1942 in San Francisco, California.

Statement of Sgt Harold K. Ream: "Enemy fighters came in attacking A/C 42-3391 in group of threes and set the #3 engine on fire. This happened on their first pass and A/C 42-3391 peeled off to the left and fell behind. Fighters jumped him again and he started going down in a long flat spin with his engine still on fire."
2n Lt John E. Isbell was together with 2nd Lt Willis R Moon, Co-Pilot, and 1st Lt Ormond F Fochtman, Navigator at the escape hatch. According to 1st Lt Fochtman he was uninjured at that time. 2nd Lt Moon bailed out. At that moment 2nd Lt Isbell was still preparing to bail out when the plane exploded. 1st Lt Fochtman was blown clear of the plane en was very badly injured but survived, 2nd Lt Isbell however did not make it.

A French prisoner of war, Mr. Capioux, who had an operation in the same hospital as had Radio Operator, S/Sgt Perry Damsky, and the Navigator, 1st Lt Ormond F. Fochtman, at Neunkirchen, Austria was subsequently discharged and put to work as a gravedigger. This Frenchman aided in the burial of the four men that were killed in action.

Mr. Capioux brought the names from their dog tags to Lt Fochtman. All four of them were buried in one grave at the cemetry of Mönichkirchen, Austria.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Terry Hirsch, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov, www.ancestry.com - 1930 Census / Howland and Oliver Family Tree, www.fold3.com - MACR, (Individual) Casualty Questionnaires, Statements, www.usaafdata.com, WWII Draft Cards

Photo source: Peter Schouteten