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Showing posts with label World War II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World War II. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

8 January 1943 - Cambria City Youth Prisoner of Japs, His Mother Learns

Clipping from The Johnstown Tribune - 8 January 1943. The tragic story of Edward J. Wisz from Cambria City.
I did some further research and found the following on: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56769380/edward-j-wisz.
Edward Wisz became a Prisoner of War when Bataan was surrendered to the Japanese on April 9, 1942, and took part in the death march. He was held as a POW at Camp O'Donnell and Cabanatuan. In October 1944, he was selected for transport to Japan, from the Philippines. His POW detachment was sent to the Port Area of Manila. The ship his detachment was scheduled to sail on was ready to depart, but the entire detachment had not arrived. Another POW detachment was not ready to sail but their ship was. The Japanese swapped POW detachments so the ship could sail.

1803 Prisoners of War were boarded onto the Arisan Maru on October 11, 1944. The ship sailed and anchored in a cove off Palawan Island. It returned to Manila ten days later where it sailed as part of a convoy. On October 24, 1944, late in the day, the ship was in the Bashi Channel of the South China Sea. The POWs, on deck preparing dinner, watched the Japanese run to the bow of the ship a torpedo past in front of the ship. Moments later, the guards ran to the stern as another torpedo passed behind the ship. The ship shook and came to a stop. It had been hit by two torpedoes amidships. The POWs were forced back into the holds and the Japanese covered the hatch openings with their covers. They then abandoned ship.

After the Japanese were gone the POWs climbed onto the deck. Most had survived the attack. Those POWs who could not swim raided the food lockers. They wanted to die with full stomachs. For two hours, the ship got lower and lower in the water. At some point, it broke in two. POWs took to the water on anything that floated. Some swam to nearby Japanese ships, but they were pushed away by Japanese sailors with poles. Five men found an abandoned lifeboat that had no oars. During the night, they heard the cries for help which faded away until there was silence. Only nine men survived the sinking. Eight survived to the end of the war.

Cpl. Wisz is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

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Friday, December 7, 2018

World War II - Johnstown Scrap Book

To read larger - CLICK HERE. Some unknown person dropped this off to me - so I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
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 Pfc. Paul Fuiek, Pfc. Joseph Haines, Pfc. Robert Stombaugh, Pvt. Robert Spisak, Staff Sgt. Harold Rummel, Pfc. Clarence Rummel, Ernest Rummel and Frank Rummel.
Cpl. Harold Wise
 Pvt. Alex NaBuda, Sgt, Frank NaBuda, Pvt. John NaBuda and Ralph NaBuda
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 Pfc. Michael Dolinsky and Pfc. John NaBuda.
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Lt. Col. Boyd (Buzz) Wagner, Sgt. Norman Forte, Sgt. Harold (Red) Varner, Tech. Sgt. Fred Bewak, 2nd. Lt. Michael Longazel, Staff Sgt. James Kaufman, First Lt. James McCarthy, Lt. William Thomas Jr., Joseph Sauro, William Bosserman, Gene Kimmel. Bernard Gacka, Lt. Lenore Critchfield, Lt. Irene Gabroylok, Staff Sgt. Robert Kaufman, Staff Sgt. Fred Gilmour Jr., Lt. George Henry and Sgt. John Stefanchick.
 Pvt. Andrew Cyran
Lt. Richard Ross, Pfc. Edward Cigich, Lt. John Fuiek.
St. Therese Church - Decker Avenue
Lt. Col. Joseph Perrin

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Killed In Action - WWII - Remembering Staff Sergeant Harry E. Hancock - Richland Township


Meet Staff Sgt. Harry Hancock who was killed in the line of duty in 1944 in a mid-air collision in England.
Reader Karen Largent sent in this story about her Great-Uncle who was born in 1919 and raised on this ten acre farm in Richland Township. Credit for most of the research goes to Harry Edgar Pontius III and Beverly Hancock Pontius.
Here is a present day shot of the old homestead.
His father was a farmer and his mother was from Bedford County. He was the youngest of five children and went to school in the Richland School District.
Harry served as a Staff Sergeant and Flight Engineer/Ball turret Gunner on B-17 "Rikki-Tikki-Tawi-II" #42-29747, 526th Bomber Squadron, 379th Bomber Group, Heavy U.S. Army Air Force furing World War Two. 
Harry was normally a member of the 527th Bomber Group but was assigned to the 526th on 5 January 1944 for this flight.
His B-17 had just taken off from Molesworth/Station 107 in Cambridgeshire, England for a night bombing raid in Germany and was assembling into flight formation when they were involved in a mid-air collision with another B-17. Harry along with 10 other airmen aboard both planes were killed in action. He was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart.

A few weeks before he died - he sent the following VMail letter home.
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The following sheds more light on the death of Harry.


Madingley Cemetery - England









Friday, November 10, 2017

World War Two Vet - Sgt. Harry Englehart

In honor of Veterans Day - I am starting a new site that honors our own local vets from all wars. I hope to add new stories from time to time in this new series. First up - World War Two and the story of Sgt. Harry Englehart from Johnstown - who later became a well-known teacher in the area. CLICK HERE to see and read the story of his war service while serving under Gen. Patton in the Europe Theater of war.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Drops Last Bomb

F/O William Schreck of Uniontown credited with dropping the last Super-Fort bomb on Japan.

Peace to the World

Block's - Moxham's Big Department Store

Monday, July 13, 2015

Good Luck Parade

VJ Repeat - Good Luck Parade
Pvt. Albert Kasterko, Pvt. John Chanda, Pvt. Charles Tkacik and Pfc.Edward Sukenik. In car - Joseph Kuby, Pvt. Steve Tabaka and Jim Venet.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

The Proper Place...

The Johnstown Tribune - May 1945 - Foster's Corner

Saturday, July 4, 2015

It's Over...

The Johnstown Tribune - May 1945 - Penn Furniture

Friday, July 3, 2015

Good Luck Parade

VJ Repeat - 'Good Luck' Parade - Morrellville - just leaving Virginia Avenue heading to Fairfield.

The Torch of Freedom

The Johnstown Tribune - May 1945 - The Torch of FREEDOM Lights up Europe - Sanitary Dairy.

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Monday, June 29, 2015

An Eternal Warning

The Johnstown Tribune - May 8, 1945: Let this day be an eternal warning to all men who would defy human rights and outrage human decency - Glosser Bros Ad.

Monday, February 23, 2015

February 23, 1945

The most famous picture to come out of World War II or any war for that matter - taken by photographer Joe Rosenthal on Iwo Jima on this date 70 years ago today - February 23, 1945.

The front four are - left to right: Ira Hayes, Franklin Sousley, John Bradley, Harlon Block.
The back two are Sgt. Michael Strank (behind Sousley) and Rene Gagnon (behind Bradley).
Strank, Block and Sousley would die shortly after this picture was taken. Bradley, Hayes and Gagnon  went on to become national heroes with weeks.


Sunday, February 22, 2015

Our Flag Still Waves

What a great crowd at the War Memorial for the premiere of the new Sgt. Michael Strank documentary - honoring one of Franklin's finest on the 70th Anniversary of the Flag Raising on Iwo Jima. The folks at Wix Pix along the Veterans Memorial Monument, Inc., Conemaugh Valley Veterans, Franklin VFW and Marine Corps League Detactment #287 came up with a plan to erect the Strank Monument in Franklin and also pooled their resources to make the documentary possible.
Sorry for the quality of the video - I was having some camera issues....but I think this will give you some idea of just how many Johnstown folks showed up in the middle of a snow storm. Here is a clip from the new documentary. Speaking is Sgt. Strank's sister - Mary.
For more on the project just go to Strank.org.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

TIME OUT

WAVES - on the left is Seaman Helen Freidline of Vickroy Avenue.