Missing information?

Do you have any additional information you would like to share about a soldier?

Submit

Personal info

Full name
DE MATTEIS, Rae Guy
Date of birth
20 August 1924
Age
21
Place of birth
Altoona, Blair County, Pennsylvania
Hometown
Altoona, Blair County, Pennsylvania

Military service

Service number
13157733
Rank
Staff Sergeant
Function
Left Waist Gunner
Unit
429th Bombardment Squadron,
2nd Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster

Death

Status
Missing in Action
Date of death
23 March 1946
Place of death
10 miles northeast of Breslau (Wroclaw), Poland

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Henri-Chapelle
Tablets of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Mary D. De Matteis (mother)

Plane data

Serial number
44-8191
Data
Type: B-17G
Destination: Ruhland, Germany
Mission: Bombing of the oil refinery
MACR: 13248

More information

S/Sgt Rae G. De Matteis attended college for one year.

He joined the Air Corps of the U.S. Army Reserve in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on 14 December 1942.

The mission took place on 22 March 1945.

Statement of Cpt Andrew F. Crane a crew member who survived:
"After the plane received direct hits, a heading of 100 degrees was established to make an emergency landing at a Russian air strip. Fighters attacked and eventually all crew members bailed out. It is believed that all crew members were fired upon while descending in their parachutes. I was fired upon twice by an enemy fighter. When I landed, I was strafed by a Me109. He missed me by 2 feet and a second time by 6 feet. He came over a third time but I managed to dive in a creek. I saw none of the boys from the moment I hit the ground. I then tried to reach a haystack. Spotted, I was fired upon three times. I threw up my hands and surrendered. Taken to quarters I was told the Russian lines were but 10 kilometers away. My co-pilot Paul Honke was brought in bleeding. He suffered four strafing attacks, two in the air and two on the ground."

Field investigations, conducted on 29 December 1947 and 20 September 1949, failed to locate the remains of the eight casualties or of the crash site. It was revealed that an identification tag belonging to crew member S/Sgt De Matteis was turned in to American authorities at Bremen by a German refugee. Attempts were made upon receipt of the identification tag to learn the whereabouts of the refugee whose address was unknown.

S/Sgt De Matteis was officially declared dead one day and one year after he was reported missing in action.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, Peter Schouteten, Terry Hirsch, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov, IDPF of George W. Betchley

Photo source: Peter Schouteten, www.findagrave.com - Jeff Hall