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SERGEANT RICHARD P. BACH SR.was born in 1917, in New Jersey to John Joseph Bach and his wife Jane R. Bach. In 1920 the family lived at 914 Lafayette Street in Elizabeth New Jersey. Joseph Bach was a machinist in a shipyard at the time. J. Joseph Bach made a career change in the 1920s, and by 1930 the family was living at 204 Pine Street in Roselle, Union County NJ. He was working as the Assistant Superintendent for an insurance company at the time, according to the 1930 census. The family later moved again, this time to 428 Browning Road in Collingswood NJ. Richard Bach was the fourth child of the Bachs. After completing two years of college, Richard Bach followed his father into the insurance business. He married Helen Kane, of Camden NJ. The 1940 Census shows him living in Manasquan, New Jersey with his wife and son Richard Jr. Richard Bach worked for the Prudential Insurance Company, and he had become the manager of the Manasquan NJ office in Monmouth County before the Army called. He was inducted into the Army on January 30, 1943, and qualified for flight duty. After receiving training in aerial gunnery, he was assigned with a bomber crew to the 718th Bomber Squadron, 449th Bomber Group. This group flew B-24 Liberator bombers, and Sergeant Bach served as a tail-gunner. The 449th Bombardment Group (Heavy) was constituted on April 6 1943. Activated on May 1, the group prepared for combat with B-24's at Davis-Monthan Field, in Arizona, Alamogordo Army Air Force Field, Alamogordo NM., and Bruning Army Air Force Field in Nebraska. The Group moved to Italy, in December of 1943, completing the move to Grottaglie, Italy on January 4, 1944. The mission of the 449th was to serve primarily as a strategic bombardment organization, attacking such targets as oil refineries, communications centers, aircraft factories, and industrial areas in Italy, Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Rumania, Bulgaria, Albania, and Greece. On January 13, 1944, Richard Bach wrote a letter home. He said that he had been on two missions. On January 14, 1944, the 718th Squadron along with the rest of the 449th Bomb Group participated in a raid on Mostar, Yugoslavia. At this point in time, the 449th had not lost a plane and crew over an enemy target. Although "two ME-109s attacked the formation" and "flak over the target was heavy and moderate," the Group's first combat loss was not directly attributable to enemy action. The Group formation "followed the route but missed the IP and missed the target -- 5 miles north" with the result that the formation "circled before the bomb run began." During the circle maneuver, the 449th formation came unglued. Aircraft lost their positions relative to each other with disastrous results. When bombs were released, ship #606 "White Fang" with Lt. Pickard's crew was directly below the bomb bay of ship #737. The first two bombs in the string struck ship #606 amidships causing the ship to explode in mid-air in a "huge ball of fire, smoke, and debris."}. Below is the official report of that mission.
Sergeant Richard Bach was among those lost over Yugoslavia on January 14, 1944. A friend in his unit wrote his family, stating that Sergeant Bach was not with his regular crew when he was lost. Initially declared missing in action, his death was reported in the Camden Courier-Post on September 1, 1944. His body was recovered after the cessation of hostilities, and he rests at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery in Nettuno, Italy. Richard Bach was survived by his parents, brother John and two sisters, Genevieve and Eleanor, his wife Florence Kane Bach, who had moved back from Monmouth County to 606 South 6th Street in Camden NJ, and two sons, one named Richard P. Bach Jr. |
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