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Personal info

Full name
MITCHKO, Albert H
Date of birth
1919
Age
unknown
Place of birth
New Jersey
Hometown
Boonton, Morris County, New Jersey

Military service

Service number
O-807765
Rank
Second Lieutenant
Function
Pilot
Unit
352nd Bombardment Squadron,
301st Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
15 November 1944
Place of death
Oberer Lanschitzsee Mountain Lake, Austria

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Lorraine
Plot Row Grave
B 31 6

Immediate family

Members
Andrew Mitchko (father)
Susan Mitchko (mother)
Andrew Mitchko (brother)
Annie Mitchko (sister)
John Mitchko (brother)
William Mitchko (brother)
Elizabeth Mitchko (sister)
Lizzie Mitchko (sister)
Helen Mitchko (sister)
Jennie Mitchko (sister)
George Mitchko (brother)
Edwin Mitchko (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
42-97728
Data
Type: B-17G
Destination: Linz, Austria
Mission: Bombing of the tank works
MACR: 10081

More information

2nd Lt Albert H. Mitchko graduated from Boonton High School before he enlisted in Trenton, New Jersey on 18 July 1941.

2nd Lt Harry P. Hillhouse:
While flying at 30,000 feet at 10:42 AM, the bomber's radio operator - Staff Sgt Robert Haglund - reported having engine problems. In his distress call, he claimed the severe weather had caused the no. 2 engine to freeze up. It had begun to leak oil. A couple of minutes later he reported that yet another engine had quit working and the aircraft was in trouble. Suddenly the instruments were failing; the plane began spinning out of control. The crippled airplane spiraled into the Schöneck Mountain near Kleinsölk, Austria at 8,000 feet. That was the last anyone heard from them.

After the war, the navigator, Lt Harry Hillhouse stated that the plane went down due to several conditions: a run-away prop in No. 2 engine that could not be feathered, oil leak in No. 4 engine and extremely bad iceing in which diving or climbing could not relieve the situation. The plane went out of control and started into a power spin from an altitude of 32,500 feet, from which it failed to pull out.

Source of information: Peter Schouteten, Raf Dyckmans, Terry Hirsch, www.abmc.gov, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov – WWII Enlistment Record, www.ancestry.com - Headstone and Interment Record / Yankoski Family Tree, www.fold3.com, www.findagrave.com

Photo source: Boonton High School Yearbook 1937