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Lieut George Ludlow White Jr.

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Lieut George Ludlow White Jr. Veteran

Birth
Iowa, USA
Death
20 Sep 1995 (aged 76)
Burial
Cremated, Location of ashes is unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
LIEUT USAAF WWII
308th BG 373rd B Sq
CoPilot

He was the son of George L White, Sr and Theo Beatrice (Maclean) White. He enlisted in the Air Corps at Richmond VA 23 March 1942 and had completed 2 years of college.


B-24E #42-7011 'The Eddie Rickenbacker' Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson Crew
This plane crashed on 04 July 1943 (shown at right)*. The ship was using fuel at an excessive rate prior to losing two engines over the Pacific off the coast of Santa Barbara. Pilot Johnson ordered the crew into their parachutes and turned the plane around, heading back towards Santa Barbara. Two airmen, Dannhardt and Prosser, not knowing they were still over the Pacific, bailed out prior to the Pilot giving the order and thus were lost at sea. The remaining eight crewmen bailed out safely once the plane had reached land over the mountains. The unmanned plane crashed 10 miles north of Santa Barbara. B-24E #42-7160 followed this plane on a search and rescue mission for the two airmen that bailed out over the Pacific, and the Instructor Pilot was Lieutenant Douglas J Thornburg, who was one of four survivors who bailed out of B-24E #42-7119 that crashed three weeks earlier. B-24E #42-7160 descended in heavy developing fog, and crashed head-on into Green Mountain on San Miguel Island, one of the three Channel Islands. A search was then initiated for this plane once it was known that they had lost contact. Eventually the search was called off and it was thought that the plane must have ditched in the Pacific. The following March, a Shepherder named Robert Brooks, one of only two people living on San Miguel Island at the time, found the plane and the remains of the twelve airmen on 800-foot Green Mountain. The plane and crew had crashed at approximately the 500-foot elevation. In 1953, additional crew remains were reported, and a Coast Guard ship was dispatched, however, it collided with the sailboat Aloha, resulting in civilian casualties. After this, the military began using the site for target practice.

This aircraft wreck site was more recently visited and documented by aviation archaeologist and wreckfinder G Pat Macha of www.aircraftwrecks.com

Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson and crew named their next plane, B-24D #42-40837 ‘Bob ‘N Pete' (shown at right) after Robert Prosser and Peter Dannhardt, the two crew members that were lost at sea. The crew had been re-assigned to the 14th Air Force, and this plane belonged to their group just prior to deployment to Yangkai, China.


Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson later became one of the most decorated airmen of WWII, and piloted B-24 #? the ‘Nip Nipper' of the 308th BG, 373rd B Sq, shown here in the photo on the right.

While on a combat mission over interior China to Bangkok, Thailand, this crew also bailed out of B-24J #42-72835 'Flamingo II' of the 308th BG, 373rd B Sq, although there were several different crew members on board that day. All bailed out safely, however, Pilot Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson reported that they 'were twenty-one days walking back to [their] base'.

As told by SSgt Gail Vanlandingham, they made it back by living off the land. Sgt Braydon Hassinger's widow Faye tells that all of the crew members had words written in Chinese sewn onto their jackets, saying they were friendly in case they went down. At one point some of the local Chinese assisted them with necessities.


*NOTE - At the time of the 4 July 1943 accident, the 34th Bomb Group was a training group only based at Salinas AAB, CA. Later, it was decided that the group would be deployed to active combat at Mendelsham UK, and the squadron numbers remained with that group. This is noted so as not to be confused with the 34th Bomb Group and Squadrons that participated in active combat in the European Theatre of operations.



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White, George L. Jr.: Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice
Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) - September 23, 1995
Deceased Name: White, George L. Jr.

White, George L. Jr., 76, of Narragansett, R.I., formerly of Richmond, a retired Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles employee and World War II Army Air Forces veteran, husband of Alice Navas White and widower of Elizabeth Young White, father of Carolyn M. White and Susan Byrd, both of Richmond.
Edition: City
Page: B-2
Copyright (c) 1995 Richmond Newspapers, Inc.
------
LIEUT USAAF WWII
308th BG 373rd B Sq
CoPilot

He was the son of George L White, Sr and Theo Beatrice (Maclean) White. He enlisted in the Air Corps at Richmond VA 23 March 1942 and had completed 2 years of college.


B-24E #42-7011 'The Eddie Rickenbacker' Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson Crew
This plane crashed on 04 July 1943 (shown at right)*. The ship was using fuel at an excessive rate prior to losing two engines over the Pacific off the coast of Santa Barbara. Pilot Johnson ordered the crew into their parachutes and turned the plane around, heading back towards Santa Barbara. Two airmen, Dannhardt and Prosser, not knowing they were still over the Pacific, bailed out prior to the Pilot giving the order and thus were lost at sea. The remaining eight crewmen bailed out safely once the plane had reached land over the mountains. The unmanned plane crashed 10 miles north of Santa Barbara. B-24E #42-7160 followed this plane on a search and rescue mission for the two airmen that bailed out over the Pacific, and the Instructor Pilot was Lieutenant Douglas J Thornburg, who was one of four survivors who bailed out of B-24E #42-7119 that crashed three weeks earlier. B-24E #42-7160 descended in heavy developing fog, and crashed head-on into Green Mountain on San Miguel Island, one of the three Channel Islands. A search was then initiated for this plane once it was known that they had lost contact. Eventually the search was called off and it was thought that the plane must have ditched in the Pacific. The following March, a Shepherder named Robert Brooks, one of only two people living on San Miguel Island at the time, found the plane and the remains of the twelve airmen on 800-foot Green Mountain. The plane and crew had crashed at approximately the 500-foot elevation. In 1953, additional crew remains were reported, and a Coast Guard ship was dispatched, however, it collided with the sailboat Aloha, resulting in civilian casualties. After this, the military began using the site for target practice.

This aircraft wreck site was more recently visited and documented by aviation archaeologist and wreckfinder G Pat Macha of www.aircraftwrecks.com

Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson and crew named their next plane, B-24D #42-40837 ‘Bob ‘N Pete' (shown at right) after Robert Prosser and Peter Dannhardt, the two crew members that were lost at sea. The crew had been re-assigned to the 14th Air Force, and this plane belonged to their group just prior to deployment to Yangkai, China.


Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson later became one of the most decorated airmen of WWII, and piloted B-24 #? the ‘Nip Nipper' of the 308th BG, 373rd B Sq, shown here in the photo on the right.

While on a combat mission over interior China to Bangkok, Thailand, this crew also bailed out of B-24J #42-72835 'Flamingo II' of the 308th BG, 373rd B Sq, although there were several different crew members on board that day. All bailed out safely, however, Pilot Major Thorel 'Skip' Johnson reported that they 'were twenty-one days walking back to [their] base'.

As told by SSgt Gail Vanlandingham, they made it back by living off the land. Sgt Braydon Hassinger's widow Faye tells that all of the crew members had words written in Chinese sewn onto their jackets, saying they were friendly in case they went down. At one point some of the local Chinese assisted them with necessities.


*NOTE - At the time of the 4 July 1943 accident, the 34th Bomb Group was a training group only based at Salinas AAB, CA. Later, it was decided that the group would be deployed to active combat at Mendelsham UK, and the squadron numbers remained with that group. This is noted so as not to be confused with the 34th Bomb Group and Squadrons that participated in active combat in the European Theatre of operations.



------
White, George L. Jr.: Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice
Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) - September 23, 1995
Deceased Name: White, George L. Jr.

White, George L. Jr., 76, of Narragansett, R.I., formerly of Richmond, a retired Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles employee and World War II Army Air Forces veteran, husband of Alice Navas White and widower of Elizabeth Young White, father of Carolyn M. White and Susan Byrd, both of Richmond.
Edition: City
Page: B-2
Copyright (c) 1995 Richmond Newspapers, Inc.
------


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