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eteran Tributes <br /> H <br /> 4ir <br /> onoring Those Who Served <br /> Hone view 1i.uutes Request a it,t,st_ ,, <br /> Jack A. Bade <br /> i <br /> Major 0-4, U.S. Army Air Forces <br /> opor- <br /> • � <br /> U.S. Army Air Forces 1942-1945 <br /> World War II 1942-1945 <br /> L111011 <br /> Jack Bade was born on October 9, 1920,in Minneapolis, <br /> Minnesota.He entered the Aviation Cadet Program of the U.S. • <br /> Army Air Forces on January 5, 1942,and was commissioned a 2d <br /> Lt and awarded his pilot wings at Luke Field,Arizona,on July 26, <br /> 1942.After completing advanced fighter training,he was <br /> assigned to the 44th Fighter Squadron of the 18th Fighter Group • <br /> ti u r' <br /> in the Pacific in December 1942.Lt Bade was credited with <br /> destroying 5 enemy aircraft in aerial combat plus 1 probable <br /> before returning to the U.S.in September 1943.He served as an `* <br /> instructor pilot until leaving active duty at the end of the war.Jack <br /> Bade became a test pilot for Republic Aviation after the war,and <br /> was killed in an aircraft collision while flying an F-105D <br /> Thunderchief on May2, 1963.He is buried at the Long Island <br /> National Cemetery in Farmingdale,New York. <br /> His Distinguished Service Cross Citation reads: ,�y <br /> The President of the United States takes pleasure in presenting 00 <br /> the Distinguished Service Cross to Jack A Bade,Second <br /> Lieutenant(Air Corps),U.S.Army Air Forces,for extraordinary <br /> heroism in connection with military operations against an armed <br /> enemy while serving as Pilot of a P-40 Fighter Airplane in the 44th <br /> Fighter Squadron,18th Fighter Group,THIRTEENTH Air Force,in <br /> aerial combat against enemyforces on 13 February 1943,in the <br /> Southwest Pacific Theater of Operations.While leading part of a <br /> fighter sweep preceding a bombing raid on hostile shipping in the <br /> Shortland-Kahili area,First Lieutenant Bade fought back <br /> desperately against intercepting Zeros which struck from behind <br /> and below.When his crippled wingman fell off in a smoking dive, <br /> he followed him down until his own plane was tailed by four <br /> Japanese fighters whose disintegrating fire riddled his wings and <br /> fuselage and jammed his guns.Immediately afterward.although <br /> bleeding profusely from a deep head wound,he flew to the <br /> defense of several of our bombers which had been stripped of <br /> fighter cover and were being attacked by a swarm of Zeros. <br /> Undeterred by complete lack of fire power and suffering great <br /> pain,he put his damaged plane through a series of headlong <br /> passes with such formidable aggressiveness that the Japanese <br /> airmen broke off their fight and fled.His heroic perseverance and <br /> superb flying skill were in keeping with the highest traditions of ,�,. <br /> the United States Naval Service. ', 1.121:4 <br /> III Mil MI <br />