Monday, December 16, 2019

WW2 Fallen - B-24 navigator Edward Cornelius + submariner brother Theodore

Lt. Edward Cornelius was a B-24 navigator in the Pacific. His brother Theodore served on the submarine USS Scorpion.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/101278300/edward-kenneth-cornelius
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/101278065/theodore-thomas-cornelius 
Edward Kenneth Cornelius never had a chance to reach 100 years old today. Instead, he sacrificed his life for our freedom.

He was born on December 16, 1919 in New Jersey. His parents Theodore and Jennie were also both born in New Jersey. His father worked as a machine shop machinist. Edward had one older brother (Theodore) and one younger brother. His mother died in 1925. His father remarried but later divorced. He attended the University of Pennsylvania. At some point he married Catherine Foody.

He enlisted in the army in December 1942. He volunteered for the Army Air Forces and was accepted to flight school where he was trained as a navigator. He ended up with the rank of second lieutenant in the 64th Bombardment Squadron, 43rd Bombardment Group, 5th Air Force, which was equipped with B-24 Liberators. The 43rd BG was sent to Australia in March 1942. By September it was conducting mostly anti-shipping duty in the New Guinea area. Lt. Cornelius joined as a replacement in late 1943 when the 43rd BG was based out of Los Negros Island.

Around this same time Edward's brother Theodore was serving as a chief motor machinist's mate on the submarine USS Scorpion. Scorpion was sent on a mission in the Yellow Sea. After January 5, 1944, it was never heard from again. There are no Japanese claims of sinking a sub that could have been Scorpion. There were mine fields in the area, so that may be the cause of her loss.

Lt. Cornelius had flown about ten missions when he flew his final mission on June 13, 1944. He was navigating B24D #42-72881 which went by the nick name Uncle Sam. It took off on a night bombing mission to Yap and never returned. An airman in a follow-up squadron noticed a B-24 on fire in the water that night. A further air search found nothing and the entire crew was listed as missing and later classified as killed, not in combat.

The Cornelius brothers have cenotaph graves at Beverly National Cemetery in Beverly, New Jersey. Their younger brother also served and returned home. Edward's widow remarried and died in 2004. 

Thank you Edward and Theodore for your sacrifice. Let's Earn It for the Cornelius brothers.

Last year on this date I profiled Iwo Jima fallen and Navy Cross hero Paul Balducci, 5th Marine Division. You can read about Paul 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.


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WW2 Fallen 100 is supported by

The Greatest GENERATIONS Foundation

“Where Every Day is Memorial Day”

1 comment:

  1. Love this biography. Thank you for sharing it. For those that have a keen interest in submarine warfare check out On Eternal Patrol.com. The have a list of all 52 submarines that were lost during the war. They also have crew rosters with photographs and biographies on most of the crew members. These men were husbands, sons, fathers, brothers and uncles. They had faces. Thank you for posting this and helping to keep their memories alive.

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