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FReeper Canteen ~ Hall of Heroes: David Kingsley ~ January 7, 2013
Serving The Best Troops and Veterans In The World !! | StarCMC

Posted on 01/06/2013 5:05:36 PM PST by Kathy in Alaska


Our Troops Rock!  Thank you for all you do!
 
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~ Hall of Heroes ~

David Kingsley

Info from this website.

ArmyPatch small   NavySeal small   Air Force Seal   Marines Seal small   Coast Guard Seal small (better)
KINGSLEY, DAVID R. (Air Mission)

Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, U.S. Army Air Corps, 97th Bombardment Group, 15th Air Force.
Place and date: Ploesti Raid, Rumania, 23 June 1944.
Entered service at. Portland, Oregon.
Birth: Oregon. G.O. No.: 26, 9 April 1945.

Citation:


For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty, 23 June 1944 near Ploesti, Rumania, while flying as bombardier of a B17 type aircraft.

On the bomb run 2d Lt. Kingsley's aircraft was severely damaged by intense flak and forced to drop out of formation but the pilot proceeded over the target and 2d Lt. Kingsley successfully dropped his bombs, causing severe damage to vital installations. The damaged aircraft, forced to lose altitude and to lag behind the formation, was aggressively attacked by 3 ME-109 aircraft, causing more damage to the aircraft and severely wounding the tail gunner in the upper arm. The radio operator and engineer notified 2d Lt. Kingsley that the tail gunner had been wounded and that assistance was needed to check the bleeding. 2d Lt. Kingsley made his way back to the radio room, skillfully applied first aid to the wound, and succeeded in checking the bleeding. The tail gunner's parachute harness and heavy clothes were removed and he was covered with blankets, making him as comfortable as possible. Eight ME-109 aircraft again aggressively attacked 2d Lt. Kingsley's aircraft and the ball turret gunner was wounded by 20mm. shell fragments. He went forward to the radio room to have 2d Lt. Kingsley administer first aid. A few minutes later when the pilot gave the order to prepare to bail out, 2d Lt. Kingsley immediately began to assist the wounded gunners in putting on their parachute harness. In the confusion the tail gunner's harness, believed to have been damaged, could not be located in the bundle of blankets and flying clothes which had been removed from the wounded men. With utter disregard for his own means of escape, 2d Lt. Kingsley unhesitatingly removed his parachute harness and adjusted it to the wounded tail gunner. Due to the extensive damage caused by the accurate and concentrated 20mm. fire by the enemy aircraft the pilot gave the order to bail out, as it appeared that the aircraft would disintegrate at any moment. 2d Lt. Kingsley aided the wounded men in bailing out and when last seen by the crewmembers he was standing on the bomb bay catwalk. The aircraft continued to fly on automatic pilot for a short distance, then crashed and burned. His body was later found in the wreckage. 2d Lt. Kingsley by his gallant heroic action was directly responsible for saving the life of the wounded gunner.
Friday, October 22, 2004
The gift of life
  By Todd Kepple
Courtesy of the Herald and the News of Oregon


 Phyllis Kingsley Rolison, sister of Second Lieutenant David Kingsley, touches a section of the plane in which her brother died 60 years ago  in Bulgaria. Rolison paid her first visit to the site where Kingsley's  B-17 bomber crashed in 1944. Debris from the plane was used in
construction of a memorial in Suhozem, Bulgaria.




'Second Lieutenant Kingsley made his way back to the radio room, skillfully applied first aid to the wound, and succeeded in checking the bleeding. ...

A few minutes later when the pilot gave the order to prepare to bail out, Second Lieutenant Kingsley immediately began to assist the wounded gunners.'

The Opissonya was struggling to maintain altitude as it flew away from its bombing target at Ploesti, Romania.

The B-17 Flying Fortress carrying Second Lieutenant David Kingsley and eight other members of the U.S. Army Air Force had dropped its payload on an oil storage facility, but had sustained damage from an anti-aircraft shell.

Its number 1 engine was out, and the plane had become separated from the formation of other bombers, leaving it vulnerable to enemy fighters. At some point, cables giving the pilot control over the tail section of the plane were severed.

Making matters worse, German ME-109 fighter planes scrambled from an air field at Karlovo, Bulgaria, and pursued the crippled Opissonya.

As the fighters attacked from the rear, 20-millimeter cannon fire hit tail gunner Mike Sullivan, injuring his head and shoulder, and damaging his parachute harness.

Sullivan crawled from the tail to the mid-section of the plane. Kingsley was asked to dress his wounds.

Kingsley removed the damaged parachute from Sullivan, and managed to stem the flow of blood from his wounded arm.

Kingsley's bomber, the Opissonya, sits at a base before its fateful final mission.

In an effort to keep the faltering plane aloft, the crew began throwing out unnecessary equipment, but the damage was too severe. The pilot struggled to maintain control, but knew that if the plane began a nosedive, it would be increasingly difficult for its crew to escape.

He signaled for the crew to bail out.

With Sullivan's parachute damaged, and perhaps lost in the confusion, Kingsley took his own parachute off and strapped it on Sullivan. He then helped Sullivan to the bomb bay, and made sure Sullivan jumped safely.

"Carrying me in his arms, Lieutenant Kingsley struggled to get me through the door into the bomb bay," Sullivan told the Oregonian newspaper the following year, when Kingsley was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.

"He told me to be sure and pull the rip cord after I had cleared the ship," Sullivan continued.

"I did and as I was floating down I saw the Fort fall off and go into a spin. It crashed, exploded and burned.

"The last time I saw Lieutenant Kingsley, he was standing on the catwalk over the open bomb bay doors."

All eight crewmen who jumped from the plane made it to the ground safely. Seven were captured and held as prisoners of war, while one was hidden by Bulgarians sympathetic to the allied cause.

Sullivan, circa 1995 'Carrying me in his arms, Lieutenant Kingsley struggled to get me through the door into the bomb bay. ... The last time I saw Lieutenant Kingsley, he was standing on the catwalk over the open bomb bay doors.'

The B-17 crashed near the village of Suhozem, a tiny remote village.

A Bulgarian air commander on the ground watched the plane go down and went to the crash site. He found Kingsley's body in the cockpit.

Witnesses on the ground said the plane circled before coming down, indicating Kingsley may have tried to save his own life by making a crash landing in a field.

Bulgarian villagers buried Kingsley in a makeshift grave. He was later reinterred at Arlington National Cemetery.

Two months after the crash of the Opissonya, Russian forces captured the heavily damaged oil field at Ploesti. The captured members of the Opissonya were held as prisoners until being released on September 10, 1944.

Kingsley was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor on May 4, 1945. The award was presented to his brother, Navy Pharmacist's Mate First Class Thomas Kingsley, in a ceremony at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Portland. The ceremony was followed by a high mass.

The Klamath Falls municipal airport, which had served as a naval air station during World War II, was taken over by the Air Force in 1957. It was named Kingsley Field on July 3 of that year.

The U.S. Department of Defense closed its base at Kingsley Field in 1978, but the Oregon Air National Guard reopened the facility in 1980.

Three members of the Opissonya crew gathered for a reunion at Kingsley Field in June 1995. They were pilot Edwin "Andy" Anderson, ball turret gunner Stanley Kmiec, and tail gunner Mike Sullivan, whose life was saved by Kingsley.

Kmiec is the only member of the crew still living.

Over the past 60 years, the Kingsley family cherished fond memories of a brother and the military honored him as a hero.

But there was also mourning in Bulgaria, which became a satellite nation of the Soviet Union. While the story of Kingsley's sacrifice was memorialized in America, it's rarely mentioned that the crash killed members of a Bulgarian family on the ground.

Villagers who knew the family are expected to be among those attending the dedication of a memorial Saturday at the tiny village of Suhozem, Bulgaria.

More about David Kingsley at Home of the Heroes.

Please remember the Canteen is here to honor, support and entertain our troops and their families.  This is a politics-free zone!  Thanks for helping us in our mission!


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Free Republic
KEYWORDS: canteen; heroes; military; troopsupport
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To: Kathy in Alaska

The David R Kingsley Memorial greets us every morning just beyond the front gate at Kingsley Field. The memorial is made of actual wreckage from his B-17 retrieved from Bulgaria. We also got to tour his former fiancee around the base.


81 posted on 01/07/2013 7:47:23 PM PST by Archie Bunker on steroids (The fear of the lord is the beginning of wisdom (Psalm 111:10))
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To: Kathy in Alaska

His former fiancee, in her 90s now, never married! David R Kingsley made the ultimate sacrifice for his fellow man.


82 posted on 01/07/2013 7:52:15 PM PST by Archie Bunker on steroids (The fear of the lord is the beginning of wisdom (Psalm 111:10))
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To: Archie Bunker on steroids
Welcome to the Canteen, Archie....thank you so much for adding more information.

Oregon Veteran's Medal of Honor Memorial


83 posted on 01/07/2013 9:00:00 PM PST by Kathy in Alaska ((~ RIP Brian...heaven's gain...the Coast Guard lost a good one.~))
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To: Archie Bunker on steroids
His former fiancee, in her 90s now, never married!

Good morning. I know this is yesterday's thread but I had to add: WOW! That's amazing. Did she ever say why?

84 posted on 01/08/2013 3:42:55 AM PST by beachn4fun (Wanted: thread volunteers)
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To: Archie Bunker on steroids; Kathy in Alaska

Nice!

Thanks Archie for adding some personal tidbits to the thread.


85 posted on 01/08/2013 3:47:19 AM PST by beachn4fun (Wanted: thread volunteers)
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To: beachn4fun
I was wrong she did marry and her late husband accidently threw letters between them into the furnace....here is a local news article describing the visit

Harriet Zalabak was at a loss for words when she tried to describe what visiting the memorial dedicated to her belated fiancé meant to her. It was even more powerful when she reflected on what Second Lt. David Kingsley did to earn that memorial.
“No one who knew him was surprised at what he did,” Zalabak, 93, said while visiting the site Thursday morning. The trip was sparked by a chance visit to Klamath Falls by Zalabak’s friend Jill Cress. She was on her way to the Running Y Ranch when she saw the downtown mural dedicated to Kingsley. She instantly recognized the name from the stories she was told about Zalabak’s former war hero boyfriend. After being refused at the base, Cress found a few airmen in the Klamath Falls Airport restaurant. She explained her connection to the field’s namesake and was put in touch with Air National Guard base historian Capt. Ryan Bartholomew. From there, it was simply a matter of finding the right date.
The memorial is a small site near the entrance to Kingsley Field. It contains four placards surrounding a piece of wreckage from the aircraft Kingsley was shot down in.
As she visited each of the placards, Zalabak recounted how Kingsley took her to movies in Portland and taught her how to ice skate. She laughed at her nickname at the time, “Peanut,” and how she was one of the few people who saw Kingsley’s soft side.
The two met when they were teenagers at a dance in Portland. Their engagement was like a movie. A troop train was rolling through Sacramento. She went to say goodbye to Kingsley. She fell into a panic at the station, unable to find him in the crowd.
Just before the train left, the two spotted each other. He ran to her, picking her up in his arms as the train whistle signaled its departure. Kingsley hopped onto the steps of a moving train car.
“Will you wait for me?” he asked as the train rolled away.
“I’ll wait for you,” she responded.
It was the last time the two would see each other.
The story of David Kingsley lives through her family lore. Now in her elder years, she’s happy to have had such an interesting life, she said. Visiting the memorial was one more thing she could cross of her list, honoring her late fiancé.
“If I didn’t make it now, I don’t know if I ever would,” she said.

86 posted on 01/08/2013 9:18:43 PM PST by Archie Bunker on steroids (The fear of the lord is the beginning of wisdom (Psalm 111:10))
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To: Archie Bunker on steroids

Another WOW moment.

Thanks again.


87 posted on 01/09/2013 3:33:31 AM PST by beachn4fun (Wanted: thread volunteers)
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To: LUV W

Congratulations, Luvvy, She is beautiful.


88 posted on 01/09/2013 5:59:08 PM PST by TASMANIANRED (Viva Christo Rey)
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