Greenwich, Connecticut – July 2, 1945
On the afternoon of July 2, 1945, 1st. Lt. George S. Fitch was piloting a P-47D Thunderbolt, (Ser. No. 42-8296), on a ferry mission from Michigan to Bradley Air Field in Windsor Locks, Connecticut. At about 4:20 p.m. he encountered severe weather over the area of Greenwich, Connecticut, and crashed. According to a statement released by Greenwich police, the right wing was found about a mile from the crash site. The plane came down on the farm of R. Lawrence Oakley, off Dingletown Road, and narrowly missed the house. The debris field reportedly stretched for hundreds of feet. Lieutenant Fitch was killed instantly.
Lieutenant Fitch had recently returned from overseas duty where he had served as a B-25 bomber pilot with the 489th Bombardment Squadron. He’s buried in Rushville Cemetery in Gorham, New York.
To see photographs of Lt. Fitch, click here: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/78306938/george-s-fitch
Sources:
The Greenwich Press, (Greenwich, CT.), “Army Flyer Killed When Plane Crashes Here” – “P-47 Forced Down In Storm, Misses R. L. Oakley House”, July 3, 1945, page 1.
www.findagrave.com
The Hartford Courant, “Storm Sends Plane Pilot To His death”, July 3, 1945
The Hartford Courant, “Pilot Killed In Crash At Greenwich Identified”, July 4, 1945