The Niagara Falls Review

Search to resume for lost B-17

- MICHAEL MELIA

HARTFORD, Conn. — A search for a U.S. military aircraft that disappeare­d near a Pacific island during the Second World War is getting renewed attention ahead of the 75th anniversar­y of its disappeara­nce.

The B-17, nicknamed the San Antonio Rose, was flying on a mission over New Britain on Jan. 5, 1943, when it was attacked by enemy fighters. All 11 crew members aboard the bomber were lost, including Brig. Gen. Kenneth Walker, the highest-ranking recipient of the Medal of Honor still listed as missing from the war.

His son, Douglas Walker, 84, of New Canaan, Conn., has been pushing for years to get the U.S. military to search for the crash site.

The U.S. Senate on Wednesday passed a resolution recognizin­g the lost crew and encouragin­g the continued effort to recover their remains. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, of Connecticu­t, urged the Defence Department to recommit to a search and recovery mission.

The Pentagon agency that accounts for the nation’s war dead killed on foreign soil said it plans to continue work on the case in 2018.

“This case is particular­ly difficult because of the terrain,” said Chuck Prichard, a spokesman for the Defence POW/MIA Accounting Agency. “The original thought was the plane had landed in water. There may have been some evidence it landed inland. It’s a mountainou­s area, very remote. Very few people actually live around there.”

Some searches have been conducted in the eastern section of New Britain, a jungle-covered, mountainou­s island that’s part of Papua New Guinea. The plane went down in the area during a mission to bomb a Japanese shipping convoy.

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