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Personal info

Full name
SHAEFFER, Clair Pershing
Date of birth
8 May 1918
Age
25
Place of birth
Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania
Hometown
Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania

Military service

Service number
33187932
Rank
Technical Sergeant
Function
Engineer/Top Turret Gunner
Unit
68th Bombardment Squadron,
44th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
21 January 1944
Place of death
Grattenoix, France

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Tablets of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Clayton J. Shaeffer (father)
Anna M. (Saylor) Shaeffer (mother)
John Shaeffer (brother)
Bessie E. Shaeffer (sister)
Cora Shaeffer (sister)
Lois M. Shaeffer (daughter)

Plane data

Serial number
42-7501
Data
Type: B-24H
Destination: Pas de Calais area, France
Mission: Bombardment
MACR: 2360

More information

T/Sgt Clair P. Shaeffer was a route salesman for Maier's Bakery, divorced with custody of his 3 year daughter.

He enlisted on 6 August 1942 at Allentown, Pennsylvania.

At 1524 hours A/C 42-7501 was hit by enemy fighters and the bombs were dropped immediately. It was observed to circle off to the left and begin burning, apparently under control. Enemy fighter attacks were so intense at this time that there was no further opportunity to observe the A/C.

Statement from Lt Milton L. Rosenblatt, Co-pilot;
'We were attacked by ME-109s while circling to find our target. Both engines on the left side were shot out, putting us in a steep left turn and rolling our plane over on its back. With both Frank (Sobotka) and me on the controls, we managed to right the plane, but couldn't pull it out of the flat spin it went into. The rudder controls were gone and the instrument panel was shot out. Frank immediatly hit the alarm bell switch alerting the crew to bail out. After a few seconds, I spotted only four chutes descending. The mess in our cabin, due to the rolling over, was unbelievable. our chest chutes, usually stowed behind our seats, had ended up in the radio compartment. I retrieved the chutes, putting Frank's in his lap and buckling mine on. Sgt Clair Shaeffer was strapped in the top turret, obviously dead, and our radio operator, Sgt Tom Capizzi was putting his chute on as well. Frank was yelling at us to jump. Capizzi and I stood at the edge of the bomb bay, so I jumped and apparently Capizzi froze up. He and Frank rode the plane down. I have no idea what had happened in the waist or nose sections of the plane, but I know I was the last one out. We were so low at the time I jumped that my chute only oscillated once before I hit the ground. I came into contact with the Underground about three days after landing. The only information they could give me about my crew was that Abe Teitel was alive and Frank Sobotka's dog tags were found in the wreckage of the plane. I have never heard from any of my crew since then, although on my return to the States, I talked to most of their families and gave them as much information as I could.'

Source of information: Terry Hirsch, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.fold3.com - MACR, www.ancestry.com - Wendy's Family Tree / 1920 Census, http://www.8thairforce.com - Lois (Shaeffer) Cianci, WWII Draft Card

Photo source: www.findagrave.com, Wendy's Family Tree, http://www.8thairforce.com - Lois (Shaeffer) Cianci