Camp Edwards, Massachusetts – December 22, 1942
On December 22, 1942, a flight of three U. S. Army P-40 fighter planes took off from the Hillsgrove Army Air Field in Warwick, Rhode Island, for a tactics-training flight. All aircraft were part of the 317th Fighter Squadron, 325th Fighter Group, then stationed at Hillsgrove.
While over Cape Cod, and practicing mock attack and evasion maneuvers, one of the aircraft, (41-36510), piloted by 1st Lt. Bartholemew J. Judge, Jr., (24), went missing. Attempts to make contact by the other two aircraft were unsuccessful, and both were ordered to return to Hillsgrove.
When Lt. Judge failed to return he was declared missing. A search was instituted but nothing was found.
Three months later, on March 22, 1943, Lt. Judge’s remains were found near the wreckage of this aircraft in a wooded area of Camp Edwards, about five miles north of Otis Filed. There was evidence that he’d tried to bail out but his parachute didn’t open.
The wreckage was found by Chief Clarence Gibbs, a member of the Camp Edwards fire department, when he saw a glint of sunlight reflect off a piece of metal in a wooded area in a remote portion of the artillery range.
Lt. Judge is buried in Saint Catherine’s Cemetery, in Moscow, Pennsylvania.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/174721141/bartholemew-j-judge
Lt. Judge had survived an earlier plane crash in Stafford Springs, Connecticut on August 7, 1942. In that instance, he and an instructor were in a BT-14 trainer aircraft, (Ser. No. 40-1209).
Sources:
The Waterbury Democrat, “Pilots Injured”, August 8, 1942, page 2.
The Evening Star, (Washington, DC), “Lt. Judge, Former G.W.U. Student, Reported Missing”, December 26, 1942,page A-8
Fall River Herald, “Two Aviators Still Sought”, February 8, 1943, page 2.
The Falmouth Enterprise, “Dead Flyer Found”, March 26, 1943
Aviation Safety Network, Wikibase 102913
www.findagrave.com, #174721141