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1LT Orville Aaron “O.A.” Jones

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1LT Orville Aaron “O.A.” Jones Veteran

Birth
Mount Sterling, Brown County, Illinois, USA
Death
5 May 1944 (aged 22)
Morrill, Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska, USA
Burial
Mount Sterling, Brown County, Illinois, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
O.A. Jones Mount Sterling Brown County Illinois, USA
Death: May 5, 1944 Morrill Scotts Bluff County Nebraska, USA Morrill, NE Bomber Crash, May 1944

Posted November 15th, 2009 by Stu Beitler

SIX FLIERS DIE IN PLANE CRASH. Scotts Bluff, Neb. (AP) -- Six of the crew, including the pilot and co-pilot, were killed and three men injured Friday in the crash of a Liberator bomber from the McCook, Neb., air base, 13 miles northeast of Morrill, Neb. Straight Townsend, Scottsbluff county attorney, and Deputy Sheriff Steve Warrick who investigated the crash, said that the big plane broke in two after striking the ground and the fore part burst into flames. The fire burned grassland for a half mile around the wrecked plane. Three crewmen were hospitalized here. Council Bluffs Nonpareil Iowa 1944-05-06 Morrill May 5, 1944 A B-24 (42--100124) from the McCook Army Air Field was conducting low-level gunnery training at the Scottsbluff Gunnery Range north of Morrill. The pilots chose to fly lower to the ground than what was a safe altitude. An unexpected rise in the ground caught the bottom of the plane and it skidded along and caught fire. Six of the airmen were killed while two others survived. The site was originally visited on May 19, 2007, along with a couple of area landowners. The exact location was only vaguely known by the landowners. No physical evidence was found at the site during the first trip. A return trip on December 12, 2008, proved to be a huge success. Not only was the crash site found, but also over thirty scattered white stones which I had been told once marked the site in the form of a cross. Crew Members In Memory Sgt. Billy Dean Queen, gunner, St. Joseph, Mo. Second Lt. O. A. JONES, pilot, Mt. Sterling, Ill. Second Lt. Kenneth L. Hutzel, copilot, Sanborn, N.Y. Flight Officer Walter L Jensen, bombardier, St. Paul, Minn. Staff Sgt. Charles W Runnion engineer, Benton, Tenn. Staff Sgt. Robert D Harris, radioman, Dravosburg, Pa. Survivors of the crash were: Second Lt. WILLIAM N. SALOMON, navigator. Cpl. WILLIAM F. KILKEARY, gunner, Pittsburgh, Pa. __________________ Researched and Transcribed by Stu Beitler. Thank you, Stu!

Photo Caption for Jones Boys photo:
"The Jones' Boys." Front l-r: Sgt. Ted Mezyunski, Sgt. Wm. F. Kilkeary, Sgt. Robert D. Harris, Sgt. Billy D. Queen and Sgt. John Riehl. Back l-r: Lt. Wm. N. Salomon, Lt. Kenneth L. Hutzel, Lt. O. A. Jones, F/O Walter L. Jensen and Sgt. Charles Winston Runnion. Sgt. Mezyunski and Sgt. Riehl were not on the plane at the time of the crash. Photo courtesy Bill Kilkeary shared with PCHGS by Jerry Penry.

Contributor: Craig Pryor (49393238)
O.A. Jones Mount Sterling Brown County Illinois, USA
Death: May 5, 1944 Morrill Scotts Bluff County Nebraska, USA Morrill, NE Bomber Crash, May 1944

Posted November 15th, 2009 by Stu Beitler

SIX FLIERS DIE IN PLANE CRASH. Scotts Bluff, Neb. (AP) -- Six of the crew, including the pilot and co-pilot, were killed and three men injured Friday in the crash of a Liberator bomber from the McCook, Neb., air base, 13 miles northeast of Morrill, Neb. Straight Townsend, Scottsbluff county attorney, and Deputy Sheriff Steve Warrick who investigated the crash, said that the big plane broke in two after striking the ground and the fore part burst into flames. The fire burned grassland for a half mile around the wrecked plane. Three crewmen were hospitalized here. Council Bluffs Nonpareil Iowa 1944-05-06 Morrill May 5, 1944 A B-24 (42--100124) from the McCook Army Air Field was conducting low-level gunnery training at the Scottsbluff Gunnery Range north of Morrill. The pilots chose to fly lower to the ground than what was a safe altitude. An unexpected rise in the ground caught the bottom of the plane and it skidded along and caught fire. Six of the airmen were killed while two others survived. The site was originally visited on May 19, 2007, along with a couple of area landowners. The exact location was only vaguely known by the landowners. No physical evidence was found at the site during the first trip. A return trip on December 12, 2008, proved to be a huge success. Not only was the crash site found, but also over thirty scattered white stones which I had been told once marked the site in the form of a cross. Crew Members In Memory Sgt. Billy Dean Queen, gunner, St. Joseph, Mo. Second Lt. O. A. JONES, pilot, Mt. Sterling, Ill. Second Lt. Kenneth L. Hutzel, copilot, Sanborn, N.Y. Flight Officer Walter L Jensen, bombardier, St. Paul, Minn. Staff Sgt. Charles W Runnion engineer, Benton, Tenn. Staff Sgt. Robert D Harris, radioman, Dravosburg, Pa. Survivors of the crash were: Second Lt. WILLIAM N. SALOMON, navigator. Cpl. WILLIAM F. KILKEARY, gunner, Pittsburgh, Pa. __________________ Researched and Transcribed by Stu Beitler. Thank you, Stu!

Photo Caption for Jones Boys photo:
"The Jones' Boys." Front l-r: Sgt. Ted Mezyunski, Sgt. Wm. F. Kilkeary, Sgt. Robert D. Harris, Sgt. Billy D. Queen and Sgt. John Riehl. Back l-r: Lt. Wm. N. Salomon, Lt. Kenneth L. Hutzel, Lt. O. A. Jones, F/O Walter L. Jensen and Sgt. Charles Winston Runnion. Sgt. Mezyunski and Sgt. Riehl were not on the plane at the time of the crash. Photo courtesy Bill Kilkeary shared with PCHGS by Jerry Penry.

Contributor: Craig Pryor (49393238)


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  • Maintained by: Craig Pryor Relative Grandparent
  • Originally Created by: R&C
  • Added: Sep 21, 2016
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/170293505/orville_aaron-jones: accessed ), memorial page for 1LT Orville Aaron “O.A.” Jones (3 Feb 1922–5 May 1944), Find a Grave Memorial ID 170293505, citing Mount Sterling City Cemetery, Mount Sterling, Brown County, Illinois, USA; Maintained by Craig Pryor (contributor 49393238).