Advertisement

COL Charles Wright Bundy

Advertisement

COL Charles Wright Bundy Veteran

Birth
Somerville, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
12 Dec 1941 (aged 51)
Inyo County, California, USA
Burial
Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 6, Gravee 9673-NS
Memorial ID
View Source
Colonel Bundy was one of eight men killed
when U.S. Army Air Corps B-18 Bolo #36-306
struck a mountainside, in the Sierra Nevada,
fifteen miles south of Bishop, California.

The bomber was transporting Major General
Herbert Dargue, Colonel Bundy and other high
ranking Army officers to Hawaii to investigate,
at the direction of Secretary of War,
Henry Stimson, why the United States was
unprepared for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

He was posthumously awarded the
Army Distinguished Service Medal:

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918, takes pride in presenting the Army Distinguished Service Medal (Posthumously) to Colonel (Coast Artillery Corps) Charles W. Bundy, United States Army, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services to the Government of the United States, in a duty of great responsibility. Serving as an advisor during the conference between the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of England off Argentina during August 1941, and as a member of the mission sent by the President to London and later to Moscow during September 1941, Colonel Bundy displayed superior judgment, force of character and a keen insight into the complexities of the problems presented in the formulation of joint plans vital to the security of his country. Colonel Bundy was again on a mission of great importance shortly after the outbreak of war, when the plane in which he was a passenger crashed. He was denied by this unfortunate circumstance the rank of Brigadier General for which he had been selected. His splendid character, zealous devotion to duty and outstanding military attainments earned for him the esteem and respect of his comrades and afford a fine example of the highest soldierly qualities.

General Orders: War Department, General Orders No. 57 (1942)

Killed in the air crash were:

Capt. James G Leavitt, pilot
Col. Charles W. Bundy
Maj. Gen. Herbert A Dargue
Col. George W Ricker
Lt. Col. Hugh F McCaffery
1st Lt. Homer C Burns
S/Sgt. Stephen W Hoffman
PFC Samuel J Van Hamm, Jr
Colonel Bundy was one of eight men killed
when U.S. Army Air Corps B-18 Bolo #36-306
struck a mountainside, in the Sierra Nevada,
fifteen miles south of Bishop, California.

The bomber was transporting Major General
Herbert Dargue, Colonel Bundy and other high
ranking Army officers to Hawaii to investigate,
at the direction of Secretary of War,
Henry Stimson, why the United States was
unprepared for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

He was posthumously awarded the
Army Distinguished Service Medal:

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918, takes pride in presenting the Army Distinguished Service Medal (Posthumously) to Colonel (Coast Artillery Corps) Charles W. Bundy, United States Army, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services to the Government of the United States, in a duty of great responsibility. Serving as an advisor during the conference between the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of England off Argentina during August 1941, and as a member of the mission sent by the President to London and later to Moscow during September 1941, Colonel Bundy displayed superior judgment, force of character and a keen insight into the complexities of the problems presented in the formulation of joint plans vital to the security of his country. Colonel Bundy was again on a mission of great importance shortly after the outbreak of war, when the plane in which he was a passenger crashed. He was denied by this unfortunate circumstance the rank of Brigadier General for which he had been selected. His splendid character, zealous devotion to duty and outstanding military attainments earned for him the esteem and respect of his comrades and afford a fine example of the highest soldierly qualities.

General Orders: War Department, General Orders No. 57 (1942)

Killed in the air crash were:

Capt. James G Leavitt, pilot
Col. Charles W. Bundy
Maj. Gen. Herbert A Dargue
Col. George W Ricker
Lt. Col. Hugh F McCaffery
1st Lt. Homer C Burns
S/Sgt. Stephen W Hoffman
PFC Samuel J Van Hamm, Jr

Inscription

COL, US ARMY WORLD WAR II




Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement