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Cianfichi Americo

Name:
Americo Cianfichi
Rank:
Technical Sergeant
Serial Number:
36235813
Unit:
323rd Bomber Squadron, 91th Bomber Group, Heavy
Date of Death:
1943-07-30
State:
Wisconsin
Cemetery:
Opijnen Protestant Churchyard, Netherlands
Plot:
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
Purple Heart
Comments:

T/Sgt Americo Cianfichi was born on August 30, 1915. He was from Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. He enlisted in the USAAF on 24 February 1942.

He was Engineer/Top Turret gunner on Lt. Keene C. McCammon’s crew, flying the B17 41-24399 'MAN-O-WAR' with the 91st Bomb Group (H), flying out of Bassingbourn.

On July 30, 1943 Lt. McCammon’s crew participated in a bombing mission to Kassel. In this ‘maximum effort’ mission, 186 bombers bombed the Messerschmidt plants near this city in central Germany. It was the crew’s first mission.

The outbound leg, to the target, proved uneventful. The formation did not meet with the Luftwaffe. The weather was excellent, and the target was found without difficulty. It was subsequently bombed with good results.

On the way back to Bassingbourn, their luck turned. They were intercepted and attacked by FW190 fighters of JG26. A fierce fight ensued during which the ‘MAN-O-WAR’ and a second B17 (‘Yankee Dandy’, commanded by 1Lt. Robert M. Miles) were forced to leave the relatively protective realm of the bomber formation. The ‘Man-O-War’ was last seen leaving the formation, burning from under the wings with both inboard (no. 2 & 3) engines out and going into a dive. The German fighters pressed home their attacks on the ‘straggler’. After fierce fighting from both sides, Lt. Johannes Neumann, a leading fighter pilot with JG26, finally claimed the ‘MAN-O-WAR’ 5 kilometers south of Est, close to Opijnen. The entire crew of ten bailed out, but were strafed by German fighters while under parachute. Eight of the ten crew were killed, while the remaining two were captured by German forces on the ground and taken to a POW camp. The eight aircrew members killed are buried in Opijnen and their graves are maintained by the village residents to this day.