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Personal info

Full name
FABER, Kenneth
Date of birth
11 June 1918
Age
26
Place of birth
Buffalo, Erie County, New York
Hometown
Erie County, New York

Military service

Service number
32551563
Rank
Sergeant
Function
Radio Operator/Gunner
Unit
832nd Bombardment Squadron,
486th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
4 August 1944
Place of death
Borkum, east Frisian Islands, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
B 11 2

Immediate family

Members
Otto Faber (father)
Myra Faber (mother)
Donald Faber (brother)
Paulina A. Faber (wife)

Plane data

Serial number
43-37909
Data
Type: B-17G
Nickname: Various
Mission: Hamburg, Germany
MACR: 7711

More information

Kenneth Faber enlisted from Buffalo, New York on 5 October 1942.

A/C 43-37909 was hit by flak, nosed over and collided with another plane. Lt Ingerson and Sgt Rachak were able to bail out over sea before the A/C went into a dive, that trapped the rest of the crew inside. 2nd Lt Walthall was able to bring the plane back under control and landed on the East Frisian Island of Borkum, Germany. After landing the remaining 7 crew members were captured and taken to the Ostland Flak Battery. Following their interrogation, the crew was ordered to march through the town of Borkum, with their hands up, to an airfield on the southern end of the island. During this march they were abused and assaulted by civilians and workers of the Reichs Arbeits Dienst (similar to the US's Civilian Construction Corps).
A German soldier, a private of the Wehrmacht, who had lost his family during an earlier raid on Hamburg, also heard of the column of American airmen making its way through town. He was filled with rage and saw an opportunity to avenge the deaths of his wife and three children. The German private, Erich Langer, set out to intercept the Americas and caught up with the group of airmen. He shot all 7 men, without being intervened by the guards that accompanied the crew.
Meanwhile Lt Ingerson and Sgt Rachak were taken prisoner. Lt Ingerson landed near a German Panzer (armored) unit and was initially placed at Stalag III. Sgt Rachak was captured by a "home guard" unit and was being transported to Stalag IV. Early 1945 both Stalag III and IV were evacuated and the men had to march through the cold winter to other POW camps. Both Lt Ingersonand Sgt Rachak however survived the war and, eventually, were repatriated to the USA.
Following the war, civilians and military personnel were taken into custody and charged with violating the "Customs of War" and the Geneva Convention Article 2, for their assault and murder on the 7 POW. Three defendants were sentenced the death, others received prison sentences, some to life.

Source of information: Terry Hirsch, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.486th.org - Walthall's crew, www.archives.gov, www.ancestry.com - U.S., Headstone and Interment Records for U.S. Military Cemeteries on Foreign Soil / 1930/1940 Census, WWII Draft Card

Photo source: Jac Engels, Michel Beckers/Robin Smith (Historican & Webmaster) 486th BGA, www.findagrave.com - Cindy Nekvasil Hester