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Robert
J. Sabol was born in 1924 to John A. and Caroline Sabol, who lived at
140 First Avenue, in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. Robert was one of four children
including Albert, Caroline and Evelyn. His father worked at the Post Office as a
mail clerk.
Robert enlisted in the Army Air Forces, and after basic and
advanced training was assigned to the 62nd Bomber Squadron, 39th Bomber Group
Very Heavy.
The 20th Air Force was divided into 20 Bomb Groups, each group
divided into 3 squadrons with 12 – 20 aircraft. Roberts Squadron flew the
B-29 Superfortress out of the base at Guam. The Group began flying combat
missions against Japan on April 12th .
Robert served on aircraft number 42-65362 nicknamed “Tian Long”
(Cantonese, interpreted Shy Dragon), on squadron crew 52. Robert was the radio
operator in the ship. # 42-Staff
Sergeant Robert J. Sabol was Killed In Action on May 24th, 1945 on a bombing
mission over Tokyo, Japan.
A description of the mission is described on the
39th web site.
On May 24, the 39th flew its first of the devastating
fire raids on Tokyo. By One AM, dozens of fires lit up the skies and huge
billows of smoke shrouded the city. The pathfinders had gone over the city
to light the way. The main bombing force had just started dropping and smoke
columns were rising to over 10,000 feet already. Twelve of the 34 planes
bombed visually, the rest, by radar. Flak, searchlights, and several
"fire-balls" plus the thermal currents made it a living hell. Frantic "May
Day" calls from crippled B-29s filled the air waves. Many would be forced to
ditch or abandon their planes.
The toll in B-29 losses was the heaviest to date.
Twenty-six Superforts went down and at least eighty others received some
degree of damage. Captain Paquette and his crew were one of those twenty-six
lost that night.
He is honored on the Tablets of the Missing in Action at the
Honolulu Memorial Cemetery, in Hawaii.
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