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1Lt William Daniel “Laddie” Bernier
Monument

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1Lt William Daniel “Laddie” Bernier Veteran

Birth
Augusta, Lewis and Clark County, Montana, USA
Death
10 Apr 1944 (aged 28)
Madang, Papua New Guinea
Monument
Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines Add to Map
Plot
Wall's Of The Missing ~ with a "Rosette"
Memorial ID
View Source
The remains of two missing airmen have been accounted for 70 years after they disappeared when their
plane went down over Papua New Guinea during World War II, U.S. military officials said. 1st Lts.
William Bernier and Bryant Poulsen were identified through DNA and other evidence collected
from the crash site in a forest on the Pacific island nation, said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Melinda Morgan
with the Defense Prisoner of War-Missing Personnel Office. Bernier was from Augusta and Poulsen
from Salt Lake City, Utah. On April 10, 1944, their B-24-D Liberator nicknamed "Hot Garters"
took off from an air base in eastern Papua New Guinea. It was one of 60 B-24s tasked with bombing anti-aircraft positions around Japanese airfields, according to PacificWrecks.com, a nonprofit group that documents details on military personnel missing in action from the Pacific Theater. Poulsen piloted the 28-ton bomber while Bernier was the bombardier, stationed in a glass cockpit in the aircraft's nose and responsible for sighting and releasing its bombs. Their plane went down after being hit by anti-aircraft fire over the city of Madang, Morgan said. Four of the 12-member crew exited the aircraft after it had been hit. Those men were captured by the Japanese and executed, Morgan said. The remaining crew, including Poulsen and Bernier, went down with the aircraft. Their remains were accounted for using mitochondrial DNA — which can be compared to DNA from living relatives — and "circumstantial evidence," according to Morgan. Further details were not provided. Several other crew members also have been recently accounted for, but their names and other specifics were not immediately released because relatives have not yet been notified, Morgan said. The entire crew was officially declared dead the day of the mission. S/Sgt Donald C. Crotteau, the gunner, was executed as a POW on April 24, 1944. The missing are memorialized on the tablets of the missing at Manila American Cemetery.

Bernier's niece, Sandi Jones, said she plans to bury his remains in Augusta in September. She said that after his disappearance, Bernier's mother refused to discuss the matter, hoping that he would one day return to the family's ranch. "He was a Montana boy, so that's where he should be," Jones said. Bernier, whose nickname was "Laddie," enlisted as a private in the U.S. Army Air Force on Dec. 10, 1941 — just three days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, according to his enlistment records on file with the National Archives. He was not married, worked before the war in the forestry industry and attended three years of college, the records show. Poulsen enlisted April 17, 1942. He was unmarried and had two years of college. His family declined an interview request through defense officials. The airmen will be buried with full military honors.

Burial location memorial# 80492459

The remains of two missing airmen have been accounted for 70 years after they disappeared when their
plane went down over Papua New Guinea during World War II, U.S. military officials said. 1st Lts.
William Bernier and Bryant Poulsen were identified through DNA and other evidence collected
from the crash site in a forest on the Pacific island nation, said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Melinda Morgan
with the Defense Prisoner of War-Missing Personnel Office. Bernier was from Augusta and Poulsen
from Salt Lake City, Utah. On April 10, 1944, their B-24-D Liberator nicknamed "Hot Garters"
took off from an air base in eastern Papua New Guinea. It was one of 60 B-24s tasked with bombing anti-aircraft positions around Japanese airfields, according to PacificWrecks.com, a nonprofit group that documents details on military personnel missing in action from the Pacific Theater. Poulsen piloted the 28-ton bomber while Bernier was the bombardier, stationed in a glass cockpit in the aircraft's nose and responsible for sighting and releasing its bombs. Their plane went down after being hit by anti-aircraft fire over the city of Madang, Morgan said. Four of the 12-member crew exited the aircraft after it had been hit. Those men were captured by the Japanese and executed, Morgan said. The remaining crew, including Poulsen and Bernier, went down with the aircraft. Their remains were accounted for using mitochondrial DNA — which can be compared to DNA from living relatives — and "circumstantial evidence," according to Morgan. Further details were not provided. Several other crew members also have been recently accounted for, but their names and other specifics were not immediately released because relatives have not yet been notified, Morgan said. The entire crew was officially declared dead the day of the mission. S/Sgt Donald C. Crotteau, the gunner, was executed as a POW on April 24, 1944. The missing are memorialized on the tablets of the missing at Manila American Cemetery.

Bernier's niece, Sandi Jones, said she plans to bury his remains in Augusta in September. She said that after his disappearance, Bernier's mother refused to discuss the matter, hoping that he would one day return to the family's ranch. "He was a Montana boy, so that's where he should be," Jones said. Bernier, whose nickname was "Laddie," enlisted as a private in the U.S. Army Air Force on Dec. 10, 1941 — just three days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, according to his enlistment records on file with the National Archives. He was not married, worked before the war in the forestry industry and attended three years of college, the records show. Poulsen enlisted April 17, 1942. He was unmarried and had two years of college. His family declined an interview request through defense officials. The airmen will be buried with full military honors.

Burial location memorial# 80492459


Inscription

1LT, US ARMY AIR FORCES WORLD WAR II

Gravesite Details

Entered the service from Montana.



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  • Maintained by: MAJ Jimmy Cotton
  • Originally Created by: War Graves
  • Added: Aug 8, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56786895/william_daniel-bernier: accessed ), memorial page for 1Lt William Daniel “Laddie” Bernier (11 Nov 1915–10 Apr 1944), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56786895, citing Manila American Cemetery and Memorial, Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines; Maintained by MAJ Jimmy Cotton (contributor 48803557).