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John Henry Schillinger, Jr.

Staff Sergeant John H. Schillinger, Jr., was a Marine aviation gunner who flew with VMTB-233.
He was shot down on a mission to Simpson Harbor, Rabaul, on 30 January 1944.

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

Branch

Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 356949

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

Current Status

Remains Not Recovered

Pursuit Category

The DPAA has not publicized this information.

Capsule History

Pre-War Life

Birth

May 8, 1917
at Hartford, CT

Parents

John Henry Schillinger, Sr.
Mary Frances (Wenzel) Schillinger

Education

Loomis-Chaffee Institute (1934)
John Fitch High School

Occupation & Employer

Hanson-Whitney Machine Company

Service Life

Entered Service

January 6, 1942
at Springfield, MA

Home Of Record

918 Windsor Avenue
Windsor, CT

Next Of Kin

Parents, John & Mary Schillinger

Military Specialty

Turret gunner

Primary Unit

VMTB-233

Campaigns Served

Northern Solomons (two tours)

Individual Decorations

Air Medal
Purple Heart

Additional Service Details

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

On 30 January 1944 took off from Piva Airfield in TBF1-C #24406 (Squadron Number 120), with Captain Paul E. Lamale as pilot and Sergeant Benjamin P. Wikera as radioman. The mission called for bombing and strafing Japanese shipping at Rabaul; reports of an aircraft carrier in Simpson Harbor turned out to be false, so the strike force attacked other targets of opportunity afloat and ashore.

Japanese defense forces put up a screen of anti-aircraft fire from dozens of positions; a battery on North Daughter Mountain was known to be particularly “intense and accurate.” One of these guns hit TBF 120 as it approached the harbor, and Lamale was seen to “peel off suddenly and spin toward the water out of control.” An unknown Marine officer reported:

I flew wing on Lamale in the dive, diverting most of my attention to watching him for signals and trying to stick close to him. At an altitude of 6,000 feet, Paul's plane went out of control. I followed as closely as was possible and saw the plane crash into the mountainside North of the city. Due to the dense jungle, I was unable to see any of the wreckage.

Lamale, Schillinger, and Wikera were posted as missing after the mission, and ultimately declared dead on 13 January 1945.

Burial Information or Disposition

None; remains not recovered

Next Of Kin Address

Address of parents, John & Mary Schillinger.

Location Of Loss

The Lamale TBF crashed on North Daughter (Toyanumbatir) Mountain.

Related Profiles

Crew of TBF1-C #24406
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