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Burnell Carlisle Bowers

Staff Sergeant Burnell C. Bowers was a Marine aviator who flew with VMF(N)-531.
He was reported missing in action near Green Island, Solomon Islands, on 20 February 1944.

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Branch

Marine Corps Reserve
Service Number 366415

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Current Status

Remains not recovered

Pursuit Category

This case is under ACTIVE PURSIUIT by DPAA.

Capsule History

Pre-War Life

Birth

December 22, 1920
in Oak Ridge, MO

Parents

Emery Blain Bowers
Laura Grace (Anderson) Bowers

Education

Central High School (1939)

Occupation & Employer

Salesman
Central Packing Company

Service Life

Entered Service

March 31, 1942
at St. Louis, MO

Home Of Record

1015 William Street
Cape Girardeau, MO

Next Of Kin

Wife, Mrs. Juanita (Sides) Bowers

Military Specialty

Radar operator (night fighter)

Individual Decorations

Purple Heart

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

Burnell Bowers was an early member of Marine Night Fighting Squadron 531. After completing Stateside training at Cherry Point, North Carolina (where Burnell married his high school sweetheart, Juanita Sides), the squadron deployed to the Pacific to take part in the ongoing campaign for the northern Solomon Islands. Banks and his crew – First Lieutenant Thaddeus M. Banks manning the radar, and Sergeant Gilbert Jones on the guns – flew regular patrols, hoping to be “vectored” onto an enemy aircraft and join the growing number of “Grey Ghost” crews with confirmed kills.

As the squadron prepared for its various night missions on 19 February 1944, Banks was instructed to search for a Japanese barge reported in the vicinity of Green Island. His crew boarded PV-1(N) #33089 and took off without incident at 2115 hours, disappearing into the dark for what should have been a routine search mission. No radio contacts were received after that, and all calls to the Banks plane went unanswered. When they failed to return at the appointed time, the squadron sent out search missions.

First Lieutenant Marion M. Pierce was the first to spot signs of the lost Privateer: a cabin tank, a wheel, and two parachutes in the water about fifteen miles south of Green Island. A nearby base sent out a crash boat, which identified some floating debris as belonging to the Banks crew – however, they were unable to find any trace of the men, alive or dead. Banks, Bowers, and Jones were reported missing in action effective 20 February 1944; all three were ultimately declared dead on 21 February 1945.

Banks was posthumously promoted to the rank of captain.

Burial Information or Disposition

None; remains not recovered.

Next Of Kin Address

Address of wife, Mrs. Juanita Bowers.

Location Of Loss

Wreckage from Banks’ plane was found approximately 15 miles south of Green Island.

Related Profiles

VMF(N)-531 personnel lost in the Solomon Islands
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