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1LT Homer C. Burns

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1LT Homer C. Burns Veteran

Birth
Washington, USA
Death
12 Dec 1941 (aged 35)
Inyo County, California, USA
Burial
Spokane, Spokane County, Washington, USA Add to Map
Plot
Mausoleum, Niche BB, 185
Memorial ID
View Source
March Field, Riverside, California.

One of eight Army men killed when B-18 Bolo #36-306 struck a mountainside, in the Sierra Nevada, fifteen miles south of Bishop, California, December 12, 1941.

The bomber was transporting Major General Herbert Dargue and other high ranking Army officers to Hawaii to investigate why the United States was unprepared for the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The last known position of the airplane was reported at 19:55 hours as two miles south of Palmdale, California. When they failed to arrive at Hamilton Field, the men were declared missing.
Despite an extensive search by both civilian and military personnel, the aircraft remained missing through the winter of 1941-1942. George Burns, the father of co-pilot Lt. Burns, discovered the wreckage of the missing Army bomber from his own airplane when enough snow had melted to reveal the location. The Douglas twin-engine bomber had struck a mountainside at the 11,000-foot level during a snowstorm near Thumb Lake a.k.a. Kidd Lake and wreckage was strewn over a 25-acre area and became buried under more than five feet of snow. Recovery of the bodies was completed by the end of July, 1942.

Killed 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

Entered the service from Washington; Service ID: O-356957.
March Field, Riverside, California.

One of eight Army men killed when B-18 Bolo #36-306 struck a mountainside, in the Sierra Nevada, fifteen miles south of Bishop, California, December 12, 1941.

The bomber was transporting Major General Herbert Dargue and other high ranking Army officers to Hawaii to investigate why the United States was unprepared for the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The last known position of the airplane was reported at 19:55 hours as two miles south of Palmdale, California. When they failed to arrive at Hamilton Field, the men were declared missing.
Despite an extensive search by both civilian and military personnel, the aircraft remained missing through the winter of 1941-1942. George Burns, the father of co-pilot Lt. Burns, discovered the wreckage of the missing Army bomber from his own airplane when enough snow had melted to reveal the location. The Douglas twin-engine bomber had struck a mountainside at the 11,000-foot level during a snowstorm near Thumb Lake a.k.a. Kidd Lake and wreckage was strewn over a 25-acre area and became buried under more than five feet of snow. Recovery of the bodies was completed by the end of July, 1942.

Killed 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

Entered the service from Washington; Service ID: O-356957.

Inscription

1LT, 31 AAF BOMB GP WORLD WAR II


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  • Created by: Tim Cook
  • Added: Feb 12, 2015
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/142519439/homer_c-burns: accessed ), memorial page for 1LT Homer C. Burns (8 Aug 1906–12 Dec 1941), Find a Grave Memorial ID 142519439, citing Riverside Memorial Park, Spokane, Spokane County, Washington, USA; Maintained by Tim Cook (contributor 46481904).