Saturday, March 3, 2018

WW2 Normandy Fallen - Joe Bundy, 82nd Airborne Division, and brother Ed

Sgt. Joe Bundy, 82nd Airborne, was killed in Normandy. His brother Ed died as a German prisoner of war.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56642818/joe-bundy
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56642817/ed-g-bundy 
Joe Bundy never had a chance to reach 100 years old today. Instead, he sacrificed his life for our freedom.

He was born on March 3, 1918 in Kentucky. His parents John and Mary Augusta were also both born in Kentucky. His father worked as a sawmill sawyer. Joe had four older brothers, two older sisters, two younger sisters and one younger brother Ed, who also served in the war. His father died in 1929. 

By 1940 Joe had already already enlisted in the army. He would eventually volunteer for paratrooper training. He became a staff sergeant in Company H, 2nd Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division.

Younger brother Ed enlisted in the army in September 1941 as soon as he was 18 years old. He would also become a staff sergeant. He served in Company B, 1st Battalion, 422nd Infantry Regiment, 106th Infantry Division.

Sgt. Bundy jumped into Normandy with his unit in the early hours of D-Day. Encountering heavy clouds, the 508th PIR troops were mostly scattered miles away from their drop zones. Despite being short on weapons, the 82nd Airborne kept the Germans from closing in on Utah Beach.
Sgt. Bundy was killed on June 9, 1944 when the 508th PIR was holding off the Germans to allow the 90th ID, arriving from Utah Beach, to pass through to press the attack.

Sgt. Ed Bundy was still in America when he heard about his brother Joe's death. His unit would not be in a combat zone until December 1944. As a green unit, the 106th ID was assigned a quiet area in the Ardennes Forest. After five days on the line, it was overrun by lead German units in the Battle of the Bulge. More than 6,000 men were captured, including Ed Bundy. He died at Stalag 4B while a prisoner of war on March 1, 1945.

Joe Bundy's grave is at Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial in Colle-sur-Mer, France. Brother Ed is buried in the same cemetery. 

Thank you Joe and Ed for your sacrifice. Let's Earn It for the Bundy brothers.

Arthur Kornberg
Born on the same day as Joe Bundy was Arthur Kornberg. Kornberg would win the Nobel Prize for  Medicine in 1959 for isolating the first DNA polymerizing enzyme. 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Kornberg
His parents were Polish Jewish immigrants. Kornberg earned his M.D. from University of Rochester in 1941. During the war he served as a ship's doctor for the US Coast Guard. He died in 2007, 63 years after the Bundy brothers. 

Last year on this date I profiled USNR Charles Brogan, aviation radio technician. You can read about Charles here.

On behalf of the fallen, if you would like to see more people become aware of this project to honor the WW2 fallen, be sure to share with others on Twitter, Facebook, etc. Thanks for your interest!

I created this video to explain why I started this project: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vXt8QA481lY.

Follow on Twitter @ww2fallen100
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WW2 Fallen 100 is supported by

The Greatest GENERATIONS Foundation

“Where Every Day is Memorial Day”

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