Missing information?

Do you have any additional information you would like to share about a soldier?

Submit

Personal info

Full name
WOLLSTEIN, Richmond Sello Jr
Date of birth
2 April 1921
Age
23
Place of birth
Garland, Miller County, Arkansas
Hometown
Arkansas

Military service

Service number
O-692597
Rank
First Lieutenant
Function
Pilot
Unit
786th Bombardment Squadron,
466th Bombardment Group, Heavy
Awards
Distinguished Flying Cross,
Purple Heart,
Air Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
13 August 1944
Place of death
At the railroad tracks
Orival, France

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Plot Row Grave
D 35 11

Immediate family

Members
Richmond S. Wollstein (father)
Nelle Wollstein (mother)
John Wollstein (brother)
Kathleen Wollstein (sister)
Bernice Wollstein (sister)
Leo Wollstein (brother)

Plane data

Serial number
42-52529
Data
Type: B-24H
Nickname: Sully's Saloon (right side) and Wild Princess (left side), also Wild Pussy
Destination: Lisieux, France
Mission: Bombing of the routes through and around the city
MACR: 7912

More information

1st Lt Richmond S. Wollstein Jr. graduated from Rome High School and attended Little Rock Junior College and the University of Arkansas.

S/Sgt Albert W. Pittman stated after the war that a burst of flak hit the front part of the airplane when they were 45 seconds from the second Mean Point of Impact. Interphone communications were destroyed. S/Sgt Clark, Schroeder, Melin and himself bailed out successfully and he saw the plane circling furiously and crashing into what appeared to be a river bed and exploding upon impact.

On the ground he was brought together with the bombardier, 1st Lt Fred Riebe and they compared notes. His idea was that Lt Ovens was seriously wounded and in desperation jumped without a parachute. At that moment they supposed that all others in the flight deck perished with the plane, which wasn't.

Also T/Sgt Schroeder gave a statement and he believed there were still three men in the plane when it hit the ground, The pilot Lt Wollstein, the co-pilot Lt Smith and the bombardier Lt Owens. Because of the fact that the remains of Lt Owens and Lt Wollstein couldn't be identified seperately and that their remains are buried together at Ardennes, it is certain his statement must be right.

Except those three men, the rest of the crew survived. Clark, Vejda, Tighe and Schroeder evaded and escaped capture (with help from the French resistance). Melin, Pittman and Riebe were captured by the Germans; all of them survived as prisoners of war and made it back to the USA.

Lt Smith is buried at the Oak Hill Cemetery in Plymouth, Marshall County, Indiana.

Source of information: Peter Schouteten, Raf Dyckmans, Terry Hirsch, WWIIMemorial.com, WWII Draft Card

Photo source: Peter Schouteten, http://www.americanairmuseum.com, University of Arkansas 1941