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Nassi Albert Phillip

Name:
Albert Phillip Nassi
Rank:
Sergeant
Serial Number:
14052649
Unit:
838th Bomber Squadron, 487th Bomber Group, Heavy
Date of Death:
1944-07-17
State:
Massachusetts
Cemetery:
Orleans Cemetery, East Orleans, Massachusetts
Plot:
Lot 441
Row:
Grave:
Decoration:
Comments:

Albert Phillip Nassi was born at Worcester, Worcester County, Massachusetts on October 26, 1919. His parents were Thomas Gregor Nassi (23 Mar 1892 – 21 Dec 1964) and Olympia Berishi (Tsika) Nassi (15 May 1902 – 23 Jan 1999), who were both born at Darda (Dardhλ in Korηλ County), Albania. His father immigrated to the United States in 1910, and his mother in 1916. His parents married at Malden, Middlesex County, Massachusetts on February 2, 1919. He had two younger sisters: Madeline L. (Nassi) Watt (30 Nov 1920 – 2 Sep 1987), who was born at Boston, Massachusetts; and Carmen A. (Nassi) Bartlett (13 Sep 1923 – 23 Dec 2017), who was born in Albania.

His parents were musicians and pioneering music educators. Thomas Nassi attended the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts from 1916 to 1918, majoring in flute performance and conducting. During that time he performed with the Boston Symphony as a flutist and conducted. He developed liturgical music for the Albanian Orthodox Church, and in 1916 organized the first choir at Saint George Cathedral in South Boston, Massachusetts. In September 1917 he organized the first Alabanian-American Band "Vatra" (The Hearth) at Worcester, Massachusetts. In 1918 he joined the U.S. Army and served as leader of a military band at Camp Devens, Massachusetts. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen on September 20, 1919. In 1920 he was discharged from the U.S. Army, and took the Vatra band to Albania to support the Albanian Independence movement. He took Olympia and their two children with him. The Vatra band toured Albania to support morale, and introduced the people to Western music. Thomas and Olympia Nassi organized Albania's school music system. Their third child, Carmen A. Nassi, was born at Tirana, Albania in 1923. Thomas Nassi returned from Albania with his wife and three children in May 1926. They lived initially at 65 Highland Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. In 1930 the family lived at 38 Glenwood Square in Brockton, Massachusetts, and Thomas Nassi was a music teacher in his own school, Nassi Music School. The family later moved to Chatham, Massachusetts. In 1931 Mr. George Goodspeed organized a band in Chatham, and hired Thomas Nassi as its first director. By 1935 the family lived at 180 Main Street, Orleans, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, and Thomas Nassi taught music at the Orleans public school. Thomas and Olympia Nassi founded the musical education system for virtually the entire Lower Cape Cod region. Thomas Nassi also founded the Cape Cod Philharmonic Orchestra, forerunner of the present Cape Cod Symphony.

Albert Nassi was an accomplished violinist by age 11. He graduated from secondary school in Orleans, Massachusetts about 1938, and enrolled at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. He registered for the draft at Barnstable County, Massachusetts on July 1, 1941. He was 5 feet 9 inches tall, weighed 140 pounds, and had brown eyes and brown hair. He was single and had completed three years of college, when he enlisted in the Army Air Corps Enlisted Reserve at Orlando Air Base, Florida on May 23, 1942.

In 1943 he was called to active duty and completed Army Air Forces radio operator training (site unknown). In December 1943 he completed aerial gunnery training at Harlingen Army Air Field, Texas, and was assigned as radio operator on the heavy bomber crew of Lt Harold D. Borchert. The Borchert crew completed B-24 crew training at Biggs Army Air Field, El Paso, Texas in May 1944. They were then transferred to Topeka Army Air Field, Kansas, where they were assigned a new B-24J aircraft and deployed to England.

In England the Borchert crew was assigned as a replacement crew in the 838th Bomb Squadron of the 487th Bomb Group at Army Air Forces Station 137 near Lavenham, Suffolk, England. They arrived at Station 137 by June 21, 1944, and became part of the 8th U.S. Army Air Force in Europe.

Sgt Nassi and the crew's copilot, 2Lt Joyal L. Isaacson, were killed in action on July 17, 1944, when their aircraft, B-24H 42-52581, crashed on approach to Lavenham Airfield after returning from a mission to Gien, France.

The Borchert crew flew in the number 11 position of the Lead Squadron on this mission to bomb the railroad bridge at Gien, France. The bridge was destroyed. On the return, Lt Borchert lost his number 2 engine while in the landing pattern, and was unable to maintain altitude and directional control. The aircraft crashed near the east end of runway 27, and skidded across the runway into a field. One observer reported, "Borchert's plane 'fell in' on landing and really got smashed up. They have been penned up inside the wreck all afternoon while efforts were made to get them out." Sgt Nassi was killed outright, and Lt Isaacson died later that day in hospital. The survivors were all severely injured. Sgt Schult, the nose gunner, lost a foot.

He was buried at Cambridge American Cemetery near Madingley, England. His remains were returned to the United States and reinterred at Orleans Cemetery in Orleans, Massachusetts on August 4, 1948.

B-24H 42-52581 crew:
• Borchert, Harold D – 2/Lt – Pilot – Safe
• Isaacson, Joyal L – 2/Lt – Copilot – KIA
• Taylor, Harold J – 2/Lt – Navigator – Safe
• Thompson, O C – Sgt – Top Turret Gunner – Safe
• Nassi, Albert P – Sgt – Radio Operator – KIA
• Schult, Charles A – Sgt – Nose turret gunner – Safe
• Wright, Richard G – S/Sgt – Ball Turret Gunner – Safe
• Helmer, Clyde W – S/Sgt – Waist Gunner – Safe
• Moore, Richard A – Sgt – Tail Gunner – Safe

Source of information: Paul M. Webber, www.findagrave.com