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Home » Culture » Military History

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Airman returns 65 years later

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Bomber shot down in 1944; divers locate femur pieces

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS
A U.S. Air Force escort (top) carries the remains of Sgt. Robert Stinson at Ontario International Airport in Florida on Oct. 28. Stinson (left) was shot down over the Pacific Ocean and had been missing in action since 1944.
  • Military divers recovered a pair of aviator glasses (above) from the wreckage of a B-24J Liberator bomber found at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean off the coast of the island nation of Palau.
  • Family members watch as Stinson's remains arrive on a flight in Ontario, Calif. An honor guard escorted his casket, and the flag was presented to the airman's brother Richard Stinson.

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By Gillian Flaccus ASSOCIATED PRESS

HIGHLAND, Calif.

For two decades after her son's bomber went down in the Pacific Ocean during World War II, Vella Stinson faithfully wrote the U.S. government twice a month to ask if his body had been found -- or if anyone was looking.

The mother of six strapping boys went to her grave without the answer that has finally reached her two surviving sons 65 years later: The remains of Sgt. Robert Stinson are coming home.

Military divers recovered two pieces of leg bone from the wreckage of a B-24J Liberator bomber found at the bottom of the ocean off the coast of the island nation of Palau. DNA testing showed the femur fragments belonged to the 24-year-old flight engineer, who died in combat on Sept. 1, 1944.

Stinson's remains arrived under U.S. Air Force escort a week ago Wednesday and were buried two days later at Riverside National Cemetery with full military honors.

An honor guard escorted his flag-draped casket, and the flag was presented to the airman's brother, Richard Stinson, 87.

"It's an amazing day - one I never thought I'd see," said Richard Stinson, one of Robert's two surviving brothers, along with Edward Stinson, 74, the Redlands Daily Facts newspaper reported on its Web site.

For Robert Stinson, the journey home was far from a sure thing.

His family knew only that his bomber had gone down in the Pacific Ocean. The government politely responded to his mother's letters but said again and again that no new information had surfaced.

The family learned that Stinson, who joined the Air Force right out of high school, won several medals in the summer of 1944 for participating in dangerous attacks on Japanese airdromes, military installations and enemy ships. His plane was dubbed Babes in Arms.

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