Advertisement

1LT John L Gage

Advertisement

1LT John L Gage

Birth
Death
18 Jun 1944 (aged 27)
Burial
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA Add to Map
Plot
A 458
Memorial ID
View Source
First Lt. John L. Gage of Montclair, believed to be a pilot of one of the Super
Fortresses that bombed Japan June 15, died in Chengdu China, after an emergency
appendectomy June 18. His mother, Mrs. William H. Gage of 64 Sunset Avenue,
Montclair, was notified of his death by the War Department yesterday.

Mrs. Gage said her son flew a B-29 to India last December and later was based with
the squadron in China. She said he wrote in his last letter he had "big news" but
that it would be censored.

Lt. Gage, 28, was born in Montclair and graduated from Montclair High School.
Before entering Army service in 1939 he was a travelling accountant for Prudential
Insurance Co. He was accepted for pilot training in 1941, and, after winning his
wings, was assigned to fly B-17s. He the received special training in flying the giant
forts.

Last Fall, Lt. Gage and his crew safely bailed out of a B-17 when it started to crack
up at 25,000 feet over Wyoming. Besides his mother he leaves a brother, William
Gage of Cambridge, Mass. His father, the late William Gage, was choirmaster and
organist in Methodist Church of Montclair.

Newark Evening News
July 1, 1944
First Lt. John L. Gage of Montclair, believed to be a pilot of one of the Super
Fortresses that bombed Japan June 15, died in Chengdu China, after an emergency
appendectomy June 18. His mother, Mrs. William H. Gage of 64 Sunset Avenue,
Montclair, was notified of his death by the War Department yesterday.

Mrs. Gage said her son flew a B-29 to India last December and later was based with
the squadron in China. She said he wrote in his last letter he had "big news" but
that it would be censored.

Lt. Gage, 28, was born in Montclair and graduated from Montclair High School.
Before entering Army service in 1939 he was a travelling accountant for Prudential
Insurance Co. He was accepted for pilot training in 1941, and, after winning his
wings, was assigned to fly B-17s. He the received special training in flying the giant
forts.

Last Fall, Lt. Gage and his crew safely bailed out of a B-17 when it started to crack
up at 25,000 feet over Wyoming. Besides his mother he leaves a brother, William
Gage of Cambridge, Mass. His father, the late William Gage, was choirmaster and
organist in Methodist Church of Montclair.

Newark Evening News
July 1, 1944

Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

  • Created by: Jeff Hall
  • Added: Jan 27, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/64775979/john_l-gage: accessed ), memorial page for 1LT John L Gage (24 Aug 1916–18 Jun 1944), Find a Grave Memorial ID 64775979, citing National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA; Maintained by Jeff Hall (contributor 47296194).