Lt. Lawrence Grubisich was a bombardier in the 490th Bombardment Group https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/81077440/lawrence-edward-grubisich https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/490th_Bombardment_Group |
Lawrence was born on July 8, 1920 in Illinois. His parents Lawrence and Vincenca were both born in Croatia, Austria-Hungary. They came to America before 1900. His father worked as a coal miner. Lawrence had three older brothers and two older sisters. By 1940 Lawrence had completed four years of high school. He was still living at home and was working as a carpenter.
He enlisted in the army in January 1942 and volunteered for the Army Air Forces in November 1942 and applied to become an officer. He eventually became a second lieutenant in the 848th Bombardment Squadron, 490th Bombardment Group, 8th Air Force which was equipped with B-17 Flying Fortresses. The 490th BG arrived in England in April 1944 and began flying bombing missions in May.
On October 6, 1944, Lt. Grubisich was the bombardier on B-17 43-38180 on a mission to bomb Berlin. His plane was shot down by flak and crashed at Spandau. He was originally listed as missing in action. Four of the crew were captured by the Germans. Lt. Grubisich and four others were killed.
His grave is at Saint Joseph Cemetery in Canton, Illinois.
This is one of the final 100 stories (57) to be written as part of this project which ends on September 2, 2020, the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II. At that time more than 1,370 men and women will have been profiled. The project will live on in an expanded program to write the stories of all 400,000+ US World War II fallen. Visit www.storiesbehindthestars.org to learn more. We welcome your continued support and interest and encourage you to help write some of these stories.
Last year on this date I profiled B-17 pilot John McGarry. You can read about John 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.
Please consider joining the public Facebook group to increase the exposure of this project. Go to: WW2 Fallen 100
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