On December 30th, 1944, Member of Parliament Lee A.McAllister Sr.,
a veteran of WWI in France and deputy for the State of Oregon in
the late ‘20s, telegraphed his friend James W.Mott, member
of the US Congress asking him about his eldest son lost on the italian
front during an air mission which had taken place on the first days
of that month.
Mr.Mott replied on January 4th, 1945 assuring his friend that he
had requested informations concerning Lee McAllister Jr. from the
Liason Officer of the War Department and that he was hoping to receive
the news that McAllister Jr. was safe and sound.
At this time nobody knew that Lt.Lee A.McAllister Jr. was being
held in the district prison of Valdagno and that he had only 5 days
of life left.
The following is his history.
Mission No.716
The “monstruous” air superiority of
the allies in Italy was utterly clear in the Fall-Winter of 1944-45,
when allied medium bombers began to systematically strike and destroy
the roards of Valle Padana in order to prepare the final offensive
of the following Spring. Nearly every day, mediums and fighter bombers
attacked rail and road bridges, roads, M/Ys on the Val d’Adige
(on the Brenner Pass way) weakening the difence of the Germans.
In the Val d’Adige, howewer, Luftwaffe had an excellent anti-aircraft
defence (Flakartillerie) which pretected the main rail for trasporting
provisious Wehrmacht troops on the Gothic Line and, at the same
time, defended the most important retrat route of the Army Group
“C” of Fielmarshall Albert Kesselring to “fortezza
alpina”, the last german defence on the italian front.
Mission No.716 was for 1st Lt.Lee McAllister the thirtieth. It started
in the early morning od December 10th 1944, when twenty-two B-25
Js from the 310th Bomber Group of the Twelfth Air Force took off
from his airbase nearby Ghisonaccia, a village on the west cast
of Corsica Isle and headed stright north-west to Liguria.
The target of the mission was to destroy a rail bridge on the River
Adige, near Dolcè in Val Lagarina. The formation was made
up of 10 ships from the 380th Squadron, 12 from the 428th and 4
anti-flak ships with specific orders to destroy a highly-trained
anti-aircraft artillery which was considered a difficult, dangerous
stronghold. The ships carried M65 bombs of 1,00 lbs each to destroy
the bridge and each of the anti-flak B-25s carried 22 white phosphorus
bombs of 100 lbs each.
The anti-flak formation usually consited of three B-25s, but at
times could consist of six. Arriving a few seconds earlier than
the other ships, they had to attack the Flak positions.For nearly
the whole Year 1944, the anti-flak planes had used M1 bombs of 128
lbs. However, that strategy was insuccessful because, whenever the
ships arrived over the target, the artillerymen hid and their guns
did not fire so that they were not spotted – then, as son
as the “pin bombs” exploded, the artillerymen jumped
out of their “holes” just in time to fire at the following
formation of bombers which had to destroy the target. Towards the
end of 1944, in order to ward off this “drawback”, the
anti-flak formations were equipped with white phosphorus bombs.
Thei fuses were timed so that some bombs exploded about 30 feets
high over Flak positions, and some other bombs exploded on impact
to the ground. In the case the bombes exploded in mid-air, thousands
of white-hot splinters fell onto the enemy postings and as many
were jetted out all around on impact to the ground. Consequently
the artillerymen were forced to stay in their “holes”
for a longer time and the ships managed to drop their bombs without
being aimed by anti-aircraft artillery.
On that day , after reaching Liguria, at Levanto, the formation
headed for Lake of Garda. As soon as the ships reached Gardone,
the Initial Point for the bombing on Dolcé adopting the usual
tactics, the anti-flak planes shead followed by those which had
to strike the bridge. But during that bombing attack something went
wrong.
B-25 J “Donna Marie II”
Once the raid was carried out, the report of the
428th Squadron stated :
“Excellent concentration of RR tracks just north of target.
Direct hits reported on fill. Other bombs cut tracks just south
of target. Anti.flak ships reported effective hits in area of gun
battery. Moderate, heavy,accurate flak from target. Two aircraft
lost. Four others holed and one man wounded”.
On of the two aircraft shot down was the leader of the 4 anti-flak
formation , 1st Lt. Lee A.McAllister. His ship # 44-28937, nicknamed
“Donna Marie II”, was hit before it had dropped the
phosphorus bombs, but it kept on flying westwards. Soon after, however,
it lost an engine and, a few minutes later, crashed on the Lessini
Mountains. Apart from McAllister, the crew was made up of:
2nd Lt.Derril C. McMorris Co-Pilot
Capt.Jerry N.Baraniuk Bombardier
T/Sgt.Robert J.Baccus Radio-gunner
S/Sgt.Leonard G.Raple Tail gunner
S/Sgt.Everett C.Thompson Turret gunner
After the end of war 2nd Lt.McMorris told exactly
that the aircraft had headed for Dolcé separately before
the formation started bombing. After being hit the interphone broke
down and the crew embers could no longer communicate to each other.
Some shots from flak hit bomb bay and some phosphorus bombs started
burning and exhaling a heavy smoke which, invading the plane, dit
not allow the airmen to see one another. Luckily they managed to
open the escape hatch so that of almost all smoke cleared and the
gunners and the bombardier were able to bale out. The pilot McAllister
gave a signal with his hand to McMorris to leave the ship. The tragedy
of “Donna Marie II” was witnessed by other crews of
the same squadron: a minute and half, after sailing over Dolcé,
tail gunner Robert Adams in another ship of the formation, saw a
B-25 with an engine on fire about 10 miles away. It was at an altitude
of about 2,000 feet heading towards the mountains in the area of
Recoaro Terme. The plane then went cut of control for some minutes
and then the right taks blew up. The ship than out of control and
crashed into the side of a mountain and exploded. The airman saw
3 chutes before the aircraft fell down. At 11,02 a.m. 1st Lt.John
Romagnac saw a B.25 flying at a distance of 5 miles from it squadron
but alongside the route of his ship. Atthough the aircraft gave
off a great deal of smoke, it looked under control. After 40 seconds
there was a burst of flame from the plane. At 11,06 a.m. the pilot
of the B-25 lost control and the aircraft, on fire, crashed on a
hillside in the south of Recoaro.
This was the aircraft that Mr.Candiago, the town – clerk of
Altissimo, a small village on the hills between Vicenza and Verona,
saw falling down near a “contrada” (a group of houses)
in his district:
“At 11,30 a.m. at Campanella, an aircraft fell down. It seemed
to be crashing on our houses and it was dread fill to see the trail
turning around the hill and than, suddendy towards us. A blaze,
a burst followed by other sinister bursts, the fall and a sudden
column of smoke from Campanella”
Father Giacomo Tonin, the parish priest of Castelvecchio, a hamlet
of Valdagno, next to Altissimo, reported the same event in the parish
register writing:
“To day a squadron of american aircrafts flew over our sky
and one of them bursted into flames and fell down on Campanella.
The pilots chuted towards Campofontana.”
On that day the town-clerk of Altissimo recived news, some detailed
and other vague, about the arrival of the parachutes from nearly
cirrywhere. At 02,30 p.m. Mr Candiago received a message from Crespadoro:
“Owing to a fire in their aircraft, two chutes (apparentely
two) dropped towards midday. Idon’t know where they landed
exactly, but one of them seemed to have landed ground at contrada
Repele and the other towards contrada Scogi near Durlo. I don’t
have any other news”.
From another source, the town-clerk heard that “one chute
was picked up at Molino (of Altissimo) by Mr.Antonio Cavaliere,
“Amleto”’s father and another was picked up at
Marana. Actually the crew of “Donna Marie II” touched
ground on the upper Valle del Chiampo but, (except for McAllister)
all crew were POW soon captured by Germans. 2nd Lt.McMorris was
captured at 08,00 a.m. on the following dat, 2 kilometres north
east of Selva di Progno towards Durlo. Capt.Baraniuk was probably
injured when he touched ground. He was captured and soon taken to
a german field hospital. On December 13th he was taken to Mantova
hospital. Later on he was trasporteded to the concentration camp
of Nuernberg-Lanwasser. On the days between December 11th and 13th,
McMorris together with 3 his fellows, Baccus, Raple and Thompson
were kept in the POW Transit Center of Verona. From a later record
, dated January 11th 1945, it resulted that they were in Dulag-Luftwaffe
West in Germany.
Lt.McAllister, on the contrary, was rescued by a patrol of partisans
of Bataillon “Giorgio Veronese” belonging to Garibaldi’s
Brigade “Stella”. After dropping last, he landed on
Altissimo, near contrada Rappanelli.. “Tiger” (the partisan
battlename of Luigi Intelvi), the Commanding Officer , remembers
that the pilot “was in a sorry plight for breathing the fire
smoke: He could haidly speak”, and “Catone” (the
partisan battlename of Alfredo Rigodanzo), the Brigade Commissioner,
states that he was not able to walk because of a bruise on his left
foot. He was carried, together with his parachute, out a sleigh
(a “brusola” used by farmers to drag faggots and other
stuff) and quickly taken to Molino of Altissimo.
The pilot spent the night hidden in a hole, under the barrels, dug
in the cellar wine of Antonio Cavaliere, the father of “Amleto”
(the partsan battlename of Giuseppe Cavaliere), the Brigade Commissioner
of “Giorgio Veronese” Bataillon. After bring examined
by Dr.Fongaro, the physician of Cresparodo, the pilot was moved
to the house of the Cavalieres and found accomodation in a room
on the first floor. Later on the USSAF Officer was examined also
by “Jan” (the partisan battlename of Dr.Gian Fdalla
Bona), physician of “Stella”Brigade.
On December 19th “Catone” wrote to his Brigade Commanding
Officer “Jura” (partisan battlename of Armando Pagnotti)
saying:
“As you know, on December 12th 1944, an american pilot, 1st
Lt.Lee McAllister Jr. # 0-759282T43-44 O, in order that you may
send to the Allied Headquarters his exact matriculation. This pilot,
together with others, took off from a B-25, air base in Corsica.
He is not fully recovered now. As sson as he feels better, he will
join his fellows.
B –25 J “El Lobo III”
The other aircraft shot down, “El Lobo III”
belonged to the 380th Squadron and was one if the ships whose task
was to destroy the bridge. I was a B-25 J #43-27693. It fell down
a few kilometers northwards the area where the “Donna Marie
II” crashed.
According to the report of the Group “the aircraft of 1st
Lt.William B:Berry was hit by flak in the sky of target, soon after
dropping its bombs. The aircraft was struck at a remarkable height
and was temporarily out of control, but the pilot managed to keep
control at about 5,000 feet and maintain the course of 94°.
It was last seen near Vestenanuova. No parachutes”.
Apart from 1st Lt.Berry, the crew was made up of:
1st Lt.Phillip W.Newhouse Co-Pilot
F/O William C.Hunt Jr. Bombardier
Cpl.James L. Noaker Radio-Gunner
Cpl.William H.Krob Turret-Gunner
Pvt.Ernest E.Young Jr. Tail-Gunner
After dropping its bombs, “El Lobo III”
was about to turn, when Lt.Newhouse saw another B-25 in front of
him (it was Lt.McAllister’s) with an engine going out a lot
of smoke. Thus, the co-pilot told, the crew to follow the aircraft
in order to count the chutes that might be around it. But suddenly
his aircraft yolted three times violently and bent on the right.
The flak had hit the mark once again. S/Sgt.William A.Lintichum,
a member of another crew of Berry’s Squadron described the
event as follows.
“I was taking pictures when the formation was hit by flak.
Jumping up to investigate our engines, I saw a burst of flak under
the right engine of Lt.Berry’s aircraft, throwing his plane
toward cure.”
Despite the shots, the ship kept on flying for 5 or 6 minutes, as
long as the “Donna Marie II”, but then it got out of
control and forced Lt.Berry to order his crew to bale out. The first
to jump was Cpl.Krob, the second, F/O. Hunt and the third Lt.Newhouse.
Commader Berry was the last to jump. Before dropping Newhouse looked
backwards where Noaker and Young were placed and as he did not see
them, he thought they had already parachuted. Instead, they had
already died hit by flak during their first and last mission. Their
bodies were found among the aicraft wreckage crashed not far from
Righi of Fongara, a hamlet of Recoaro Terme.
Reconnaisance was made by local German Military Police quartered
at S.Quirico, Valdagno. Two days later, the bodies of Noaker and
Young were taken to the local civilian cemetery where they remained
unburied for 5 days. Father Severino Giacomello, the parish priest
gave them “sub condicione” absolution: On December 15th,
1944 local German Military authorities authorized the burial of
the corpses. Cpl.Noaker and Pvt.Young were buried with a religious
cerimony and “assoluzione al tumulo”. In the parish
death registry, Father Giacomello wrote the name of James Noaker
correctly, while Young probably had lost his dog tag at the impact
and so his corpse was registered as “unknown”. Father
Giacomello, however, carefully, wrote down the numbers which were
found on thei trousers. It was the habit of the crew to write the
last four figures of their dog tag number on their uniforms.
Krob, the other gunner, was captured by the Germans and, on December
12th 1944, was already In the Transit Center Camp for POW in Verona;
on January 24th 1945 he was in Germany in the above mentioned Dulag-Luftwaffe
West. Lt.Berry, F/O.Hunt and Lt.Newhouse were rescued by the “Stella”
Brigade partisans. Hunt had probably landed in the woods northern
of Castiglieri, near the area where “El Lobo” crashed.
He remained hidden until found by the partisans, then taken to Posina
to the English “Freccia” base. He was taken separately
fro the other two airmen, Berry and Newhouse, who claimed to have
seen him at the base, “on the hills in the vicinity of Schio”,
the days after December 20th 1944. No particular details are known
about Berry’s rescue. As for Newhouse, he landed in an orchard
400 metres from a contrada (whose name was not identified) in the
Valle del Chiampo. As soon as he touched ground, a crowl of people
gathered around him. A woman approached indicating that his forhead
and hand were bleeding. The woman medicated his wounds in her house:
“It strung terribly. It was probably good brandy” said
Newhouse some years later, but it must simply good “grappa”.
In the meantime, two men with guns across their backs arrived and,
grabbing him by his arms, they hurriedly dragged him towards the
wood. As they were escaping, they heard some shots coming from the
“contrada”: the partsans had arrived only a few seconds
earlier than the Germans and rescued the airmen from capture. “Catone”,
informed of the rescue of the 3 men (McAllister, Berry and Newhouse),
immediately tried to get in touch with them, “ in order to
take them to the English “Dardo” Mission base which,
in turn, would take them to the “Freccia” Mission base
“ “When I reached “Giorgio Veronese” Bataillon
– told “Catone” – two parachutes had already
been sent to the exact destination while the third one, Lt.McAllister
stood at a family for several days because of a wrench in his ankle”.
Lt.Newhouse’s report confirms “Catone” ‘s
adding also a few details: he had joined Berry and they were taken
to the partisan’s house where they were told that a british
Captain (probably Orr-Ewing) would arrive and organise their transfer
to the local No.1 Special Forces Headquarters, the “Freccia”.
Everything went well: after a few days the partisans escorted the
2 americans, wearing civilian clothes, to the Mission “Dardo”,
hidden in the hills over Recoaro. Orr-Ewing let them go through
the nearby Val Leogra and, from there to Posina, to the “Freccia”
Headquarters. Here, as mentioned before, on December 20th Lt.Berry
and Lt.Newhouse, instead, went castwards trying to reach Jugoslavia,
but they couldn’t get beyond Friuli Region. Here, they joined
the American Mission base (AZTEC) commanded by Capt.Joseph Benucci
who controlled the area around Belluno, and then the FRA Mission
base commanded by the english Capt. Paul Newton Brietsche. After
a failed attempt to cross the lines, they remained with the base
until the end of the war, and as they took part in several operations
of the mission, Captain Briestsche, on May 17th 1945 proposed 1st
Lt.Berry for a medal.
The colour of hellebore
If this was the fate of the 11 members of the 2
crews, what wa the fate o the twelveth? McAllister remained hidden
in the house of the Cavalieres where “the food was milk, cheese,
little bread, water, butter and garlic . McAllister, in fact, had
hearnt only two italian words: milk and cheese! On the first days
the officer was not able to get used to that kind of food which,
in addition, was rather meagre because the guests were poor. But
he was also aware of the looning danger because the house was in
the middle of the “contrada” and he could clearly hear
the Germansshout and shoot. He had seen the houses of the contradas
and the barus burnt because of the retaliations of the German. Beside
the German Police was still searching for the “missing parachutes”.
Counting those who had died and those who had been POW, the resulting
member was not that of the twelve men of the 2 crews. The rest must
have been hidden somewhere in the area and nine days after the shooting
down of the aircraft, the Germans were still mapping up the northern
Valle del Chiampo.
But despite the serious risks, the Cavaliere family kept Lt.McAllister
hidden until he was completely recovered. Then, on December 28th
“Catone” wrote to “Jura” saying: ”
the American Officer has recovered and as soon as possible, he will
be taken to that place in order to be sent to the Military Mission
base”. Unfortunately, the “Stella” Brigade partisans
couldn’t rely on the help of the “Dardo” Mission,
(as for Berry and Newhouse) which had already left the northen Valle
dell’Agno because of the above mentioned mapping up. “Catone”
could be helped by the “Romeo” Division commanded by
“Armonica” (the battle name of the partisan Benvenuto
Volpato) and by his Brigade Commanding Officer “Jura”,
who was in the area of Recoaro just on those days. As the areas
they had to go through to reach the “Romeo” Division
were intensely patrolled by the Germans and by the “Brigata
Nera” of Valdagno (fascist troops), it was necessary for them
to move with very few men. That is why Lt.McAllister was escorted
by two partisans only: “Catone” and “Amleto”,
who were the local “political” representatives of the
“Garibaldi” Divisions.
On the very evening of December 28th 1944, the three men left Molino
of Altissimo. Lt.McAllister was wraring a civilian cloth of “Amleto”’s
(on his uniform) and a “paletot” of “Tigre”’s.
Before leaving the house of the Cavalieres, McAllister gave “Amleto”
his red, gold-bordered fountain pen as a present. On the evening
of the 29th they arrived at Campotamaso, in the north west of Valdagno
where they had a rest. That very night they crossed Turigi pass
and on the following day, the 30th, tey reached contrada “Cousdana”,
a little south of Recoaro, where they stood overnight. Only on December
31st they arrived at contrada Caite, where “Catone”
hoped to meet “Jura” and the headquarters of the “Romeo”
Division: But nodoy was there. They looked for in the nearby contradas,
but unsuccessfully: “Jura” and the Partisan had abandoned
that area because of a mopping up which had taken place a few days
before. The three men, left with no help or support, were forced
to spend the last night of 1944 in a “hole” dug in the
wood, where “Catone” had already stood overnight some
time before.
The following morning, January 1st 1945, at 8 o’cloock “Catone”
left “Amleto” and McAllister in the hiding place and
went to the opposite side of the valley, on the slopes of Civillina,
where he met “Zita” (the partisan battlename of Virginia
Zuccante), a partisan courier who told him that “Jura”
and the “Romeo” Division were probably in the nearby
contradaCamonda. “Catone” got back to his two fellows
and together, they set off again for the new destination. To get
there, however, they had to cross, in broad daylight, the Recoaro-Valdagno
provincial road, which was constantly run along by the motor vehicles
of the Oberbfehl Sud-West (South West General Headquarters) of Kesselring
located in Recoaro since September 1944.
From that moment on a tragic doom awaited 1st Lt.McAllister. Oon
that very evening “Catone” informed “Jura”
about the events, as follows:
“Dear Jura, I guess you hair heard the intense shotting from
an armoured car towards the left side of the Agno, today that was
caused by Amleto, McAllister and myself. We were crossing the main
road, Ameto and I had just reached the other side and we were about
todescend along the left bank of the river ( aactually it was the
wright bank), when a German car arrived at full speed. All three
had reached the Agno when they began to shoot. Seeing the danger,
we began to run while McAllister stopped and went back towards the
Germans possibly fearing being hit and taken prisoner. We could
have saved him if we had shot at the Germans, but this action would
have caused retaliation and the consequent ruin of the area”.
Lt.McAllister was captured by the Germans and was not taken to their
headquarters, but to the Valdagno prison since he was not considered
a war prisoner, but a “bandit” captured while trying
to run off the provincial road together with other “bandits”.
Here the McAllister Case begins. “Catone”, in fact,
says that under the “paletot” and the civilian cloth
Lee Antony was wearing the uniform. It is known that at the prison
the american officer gave his name and the number of his dog tag.
His name was not written down correctly (Amo or Max Allisberg) in
the prison registry. He probably appealed to the Ginevra Convention
regarding war prisoners.
But 1st Lt.Lee A. McAllister Jr. was treated as a “bandit”
to the end. Why? Some hypotheses are possible: first, the Germans
might have really believed he was a “bandit”, because
of his civilian clothes and his attempt to escape together with
the other two men. Secondly, once they realized he was an american
officer, he was probably associated with the two B-25s shot down
20 days before. But, unlike the other pilots, (who were taken prisoners
by the Germans or picked up by the partisans and guided to the “Freccia”
Mission base some days later) McAllister was protected and hidden,
for quite a long time, by those the Germans called “bandits”.
This condition made him a possible source of information about the
partisans he met and their “bases”, all the more so,
they sound a note on which “Catone” unwisely had written
his address in order to keep in touch with the officer at the end
of the war. Thirdly, McAllister on his way back to the english Mission
base had passed in the proximity of the OBSW. He had been captured
in an area near the strategically important german defence for the
italian front, almost immediately after the Command had discovered
that for the several months preceding they had been spied on by
the “Dardo Mission.
Probably due to all these reasons German Military Police personally
dealt with the case of the Office/”bandit” with particular
cruelty excluding the local fascists. The airman was kept in custody
for 8 days, during which he was tortured to force him to reveal
the names of the partisans who had helped him. However he was not
always in the ire of the German Military Police, but somehow he
was helped by the partisan couriers who were prisoniers in the same
jail. Lee Antony di not reveal any names (the Cavaliere family was
never an object of retaliation), but even if he had revealed them,
he would not have escaped death. He was doomed to die because, after
treating him as a “bandit”, the Germans could no longer
recognize him as a prisoner of war without being charged for violating
the international agreement. Lt.McAllister could not live as an
“American Officer”, but had to die as a “bandit”.
And this is what exactly happened.
At 03.30 p.m. on January 9th, 1945 two german military polices arrived
at the office of the town-clerk of Recoaro, Mr.Antonio Maroso, stating
that they had shot a bandit who was trying to run off the provincial
road. Mr.Maroso, together with the town Doctor Cuileddu, immediately
went to the place pointed out by the two germans, to Facchini di
Destra. In his stament, written at 04,30 p.m. for the Public Prosecutor’s
Office and for the lower-court judge, Mr.Maroso wrote:
“I found the corpse of a man who appeared to be about thirty-five,
straight brown hair, a sshaved face except for a pointed, sparse
beard, brown eyelashes and eyebrowns a regular face, nose, month
and chi, no particular signs, height 1.70 m. (5’10’’)
wearing long military trousers, a cotton flannel, military rubber-soled
shoes, carrying no documents.”
From the examination of the corpse immediately done by the doctor,
it resulted that the “unkown person” must have died
at about 03,00 p.m. due to wounds provoked by bullets which had
penetrated in the nape of the neck and gone out the right eye and
left gan. It was a real execution, and Dr.Cuiòeddu said his
death was sudden. The place, the same where he had ben captured,
and the time had benn chosen intentionally by the Germans to intimidate
the partisans who were known to be present in the surrounding mountains.
They had to “see” the end awaiting them. They had to
understand that if an American Officer had been treated like that,
they were not to espect anything less. When Mr. Maroso handed over
his report to the Public Prosecutor’s Office the following
day, he wrote:
“From information now obtained through Mr.Olinto Randon, prefect
commissioner, of Valdagno, it has been ascertained that the dead
man, aMax Allinberg, pilot, had been taken away from prison by German
Police the day before, in the afternoon. Max Allinberg is supposed
to be an american citizien”
The dead body was put in a closet next to the Recoaro parish curch
sacristy. It stay there for 2 days because for the burial they had
to have a permit from the Valdagno lower-court judge. But someone
pitied that abandoned dead man: it was Father Giovanni Dall’Armellina
who privately gave “absolution alla salma” and in front
of the door and among the window bars of that plain/simple mourtuary
chapel someone placed 3 bunches of hellebore. The Germans were deeply
irritated by this act.
1st Lt.Lee A.McAllister Jr. was buried in the Recoaro cemetery on
January 11th 1945 with no cerimony and no coffire by order of the
German Police.
On February 26th, the lower-court judge Mencarelli regarding the
killing of “A.M.Allisberg”, asked prefect commissioner
Recoaro to record in a report the statements of town Doctor Mario
Cuileddu referring to the exact cause and location of the wounds
found on the corpse, the cause of death, the kind of weapon which
provoked the wounds and probable distance of shooting. Of corse
some of the judges from the Salò Republic neir trying to
maintain some law and indipendence, in fact, despite the statements
from the German Police, they considered the killing of McAllister
not an action of war, but a murder, probably precceded by tortures
because the low-court judge had to distinguish between “lesion”
(the nature and location described thoroughly) and mortal wounds
made by a fire-arm. Two days later the Prefect Commissioner sent
the low-court judge the requested medical certificate properly authenticated.
The long way back
At the end of the war, in compliance with Government
Decree date 3 Semptember 1944 regarding the location of graves of
dead american military personell, the socialist Mayor of Recoaro,
Antonio Pozza, wrote to the Carabinieri (Italian Military Police):
“I hereby inform that the corpses of 3 American pilots are
buried in the territory controlled by this town: two of them in
Fongara Cemetery, one in the Recoaro Cemetery. Those buried at Fongara
were killed in action in the neighbourhood of Campetto on December
10th 1944 at 11.00 a.m.. Reconnaisance had been made, at the time
by local German Military Police quartered at S.Quirico, Feld Post
no.11445 E, on December 15th 1944 authorized the burial of the corpses.
Number found on the trousers are 10616 and J 3129 respectively.
The one who was buried at Recoaro, was shot by German Police at
Facchini di Destra on January 9th 1945. Local german police officer
was 1st Lt.Volmer. It appares, the name of the man who was shot
is Amo or Max Allimberg. He dhad been taken from Valdagno jail,
where he had been sent following his capture by aforsaid Geman Military
Police”
The letter from the Mayor confirmed what had been written by the
town-clerk on January 9th and 10th, 1945, thai is to say the Germans
were responsible for the killing of McAllister and it also contained
the name of their commanding officer. Mayor Pozza enclosed 3 copies
of the documents so that the Carabinieri could send them to the
Allied Headquarters.
As son as they got the information, on Januray17th, the Americans
sent Sgt.Harry Basham to Fongara where he had the bodies of Noaker
and Young disinterred. Soon after also the body of McAllister was
disnterred from the local civilian cemetery and reburied in the
US Military Cemetery at Mirandola, Italy on June 16th in the unknown
soldier’s grave No. 447. Some weeks later, on July 9th, probably
urged by the Americans, “Catone” completed a previous
report on the McAllister Case with a few variations. It contained
the letter of January 1st 1945 (the original had been sent to the
English Command) and some further details:
Report of the case of US Army Air Force Pilot Lee
Antony McAllister (California USA) 1875 For Street – Salem
–Oregon.
“I, the undersigned Rigodanzo Alfredo, commissioner of the
“Stella “Brigade living in Cornedo Vicentino (Vicenza),
do declare the following.
Between the end of November and early December 1944, Us Airman Officer
Lt. Lee Antony McAlllister bailed out of a B-25 plane, which crashed
to the ground after it had been hit by flak of Ala (Verona). The
officer parachuted in the area of Marana-Crespadoro (Vicenza). The
other members of the crew were found by the partisans ( actually
we know that they were the 3 members of El Lobo III crew) and sent
to the “Freccia”Mission vase. Lt.McAllister was logded
at and cured by the family of Giuseppe Cavaliere /”Amleto”)
in Molino di Altissimo (Vicenza). He stayed there for exactly one
month, until the evening of December 29th 1944. Not yet completely
recovered he decided to join the “Freccia” Mission and
left his hosts on December 28th 1944 together with Giuseppe Cavaliere
and the undersigned.We walked for several hours at night and we
stopped in the evening of the 29th at Campotamaso (Vicenza). There
we left again and reached Recoaro (Vicenza) where we spent the night
at Contrada Cousolana: As the day before there had been a mopping
up and the headquarters of the “Romeo” Division had
been transferred elsewhere. I decided to leave McAllister and “Amleto”
ina shelter and look for the above mentioned headquarters of the
divison to which I had to entrust the officer, who had to reachthe
“Freccia” Mission base. Onve I had found the headquarters
of the “Romeo”Division on the cast side of the Agno
Valley I came back and getched McAllister and Cavaliere with whom
I set out again towards the headquarters. On January 9th 1945, at
about 09.00 a.m., while we were crossing the Recoaro – Valdagno
road we were seen by 3 german officers driving along the road. Immediately
we ran down the bank of the river trying to hide. The car stopped
and soldiers ordered us to stop. We decided to separate in order
to increase our possibilities of escape. The Germans, with their
authomatic weapons fired to which we did not respond because we
only had one gun. Lt.McAllister, wearing his uniform under a civilian
attire and “paletot”, allowed, himself to be captured,
knowing that he would be treated as a prisoner of war, as he told
me several times.
I assume he wanted to be hit by doing that Cavaliere and I managed
to escape and found shelter in a hiding place at Contrada Zuccante,
in Rovegliara of Recoaro. An immediate mopping up took place, but
with no results. On that very evening my father was arrested because
he German police had found in McAllister’s pockets my address,
which he insistently had asked ne to give him in order to get in
touch at the end of the war. Regarding McAllister’s death,
I hereby enclose two testimonies signed Campanaro Maria and Benetti
Carmela.”
On August 16, Lt.Col.E.B.Wassworth of the Headquarters
of the USAAF Mediterranean Theater of Operations, sent to the Personnel
Department of Washington a burial reort on the corpse, temporarily
identified as that of Lt. McAllister 310th Bomb Group, considered
MIA on December 10th 1944. In his letter the officer asked for the
dental chart and other data in order to be able to confirm the identity
of the remains.
A note from the Headquarters of the Mediterranean Theater of August
23th reported information from USAAF Intelligence Section stating
that Lt.McAllister had been captured on January 1st and there was
also a report by the local Carabinieri according to which two Germans
had shot a bandit who was trying to run off the provincial road
and some witnesses stated that he had been taken from the Valdagno
prison on or about 03.00 p.m. on January 9th 1945 and killed. His
body had then been disnterred from the local civilian cemetery and
reburied in the US Military Vemetery at Mirandola. This information
was not considered sufficiently conclusive, some data was missing,
such as the role of the “Stella” Partisan Brigade and
the Cavaliere family between December 10th 1944 and January 1st
1945. Besides, the nationality of those who had picked up Lt.McAllister
from the Valdagno jailwas not even mentioned. Here the Americans
investigation of the McAllister case bguis, which for some reasons
was not less troubled and complex than the italian one.
In Jue 1945, Lee’s realtives were informed that their next
of kny was no longue considered MIA, but KIA. The war Department,
howeverdid not release any details about the circumstances of death
or the burial location. Even thought the Army didn’t give
them any details. Lee’s family acquired information thourgh
a friend of the “Donna Marie II” Pilot. In the light
of this information Lee McAllister Sr., towards the end of September
1945 wrote again to his friend James W.Mott.
“Dear James,
The Army has at long last notifief us that our oldest boy, Lt. Lee
McAllister Jr. died in Italy. The Adyutant General informs us that
further details are supposed to come from his commanding officer
in Italy or his Chaplain, But I doubt this very much. I wrote his
commanding officer, about four months ago, but received no reply.
About five months ago a friend of Lee’s told us the terribile
details of how Lee had saved every member of his crew by holding
the plane steady while they bailed out after it had been repeateddly
hit by insistence and accurate ground fire on December 10, 1944
over Brenner Pass. When Lee went out the escape hatch his clothing
caught fire, but he put it out on the way down by not releasing
the parachute rip-chord until the last second. He was picked up
by a group of Italians who kept him in custody until January 8,1945.
On that date one of their member, supposedly guinding him to Switzerland,
treacherously led him into another group of Italians. Lee was captured,
the so called guide, of course, got away. Tey questioned him that
night, but he would tell them nothing – without mentioning
the terrible details will say that the next day he passed away.
The Army has now admitted that he died in action on January 8, 1945,
29 days after bailing out of his plane. The Army will give us none
of the details, they only pass the buck down to somebody else who
may put it off for months, if they write at all. “
The information given to McAllister Sr. by his
son’s friend was not only “terrible”, but, also
so misleading that the factual reality was turned upside down: the
Germans, the real responsible for Lee’s death were never mentioned
while the so called “group of Italians” were given the
role of murderers and traitors. McAllister Sr. obviously ignored
the fact that in Italy people had fought a “liberation war”,
in some aspects similar to a civil war. He viewes the Italians as
the Salò Republic, collaborators of the Germans and was not
aware of the partisans /”groups of Italians”) who, after
September 8th had fought together with the Allies against the Germans.
At that point only the Army could supply a conclusive statement
on the whole matter. Urged by James Mott, the Adjutant General sent
the file to the Personnnel Department which, on October, 19 communicated
that the burial document had not been sent to the right office,
but an investigation was being condicted. McAllister Se.’s
fear of receiving no reply or of receiving it too late seemed to
be confirmed. It was then that Mrs.Frances, Lee’s wife took
the initiative and in early November wrote again to the hightest
ranks of the Army. Despite the pessimism of her father-in-law, this
time the Adjutant General Office of the War Department replied immediately
sending a copy of what little information they had including a note
dated August 23 without any further explanation:
“Information secured from the Military Army Air Force Intelligence
Section states that Lieutenant McAllister was captured on or about
January 1st 1945 in the vicinity of Verona, Italy. This information
was not considered sufficiently conclusive to render a change in
casuality status from missing in action to prisoner in causality
status from missing in action to prisoner of war and was suspended
in the overseas headquarters pending more authentic information.
The Italian Carabinieri (native police) are in receipt of a report
from two Germa soldiers that they had shot a bandit who was trying
to run off the provincial road. However other testimony discloses
that Lieutenant McAllister was taken from the Valdagno prison on
or about 3 o’clock on the afternoon of 9 January 1945 and
killed. His body was disinterred from the local civilian cemetery
and reburied in the US Military Cemetery at Mirandola, Italy. Iwish
to advise that special troops have been assigned the task of making
investigation and inquiries in order to ascertain the persons resonsible
for such acts and you may be assured, Mrs McAllister, that justice
will be done with identified individuals who commited these atrocities”
The letter increased the relatives discontent . Once again the nationality
of those who captured Lee Antony had not been mentioned. Not with
whom and where he had spent the preceeding twenty days. Thw basic
informationn regarding Lee’s “partisan2 period) without
which the rest of General Witsell’s statement was incomprehensible,
was still missing. His abrupt reference to a “bandit”
killed by the Germans while escaping sounded completely absued to
the relatives and intolerably offensive to the honor of an American
Officer. As a consequence Mr.McAllister Sr. wrote an indignant letter
to Honorable Guy Cordon, Oregon Senator, on March 16th 1946:
“(Our son) was not a”bandit” as the Acting Adjutant
General insers in his “double talk” letter of November
17, 1945. I will desy anyone to interpret that sentence with the
sentence that follows in the Acting Adjutant General’s letter
“
Besides , as witsell did not mention the nationality of those who
had taken and killed Lee, McAllister Sr. drew a logic conclusion
which, however, ws the exact opposite of what had occurred.
“our son was murdered in cold blood while a prisoner of war
by the Italians”.
General Witsell’s letter was at least clear on one point,
the burial location. This , on the basis of that information, Lee’s
wife, Frances, on January 22, 1946, asked the War Department to
have the remains of her husband returned to the United States. The
request caused some troubles in the offices of the War Department
of Washington. On february 28, in fact, Maj. James L. Prenn of the
Staff Department, warned the Adjutant General’s Office not
give out any information to the relatives about the burial. On that
very day Maj. Prenn wrote to Mrs. Frances McAllister.
“It is with deep regret that you are advised that, up to the
present time, definite information pertaining to the burial of the
remains of gone husband has not been received in this office. An
investigation is still being conducted to establish the identity
of this remains. It is the policy of this office that, unless remains
which have been recovered are identified to the extend that we can
stak irrevocably that those particular remains are those of a specific
person, the next of kin is not informed that the remains of the
deceased have been recovered. I trust that you will not find it
difficult to understand the reason for this policy”.
McAllister Sr., in his letter to Senator Cordon exaspirately wrote
:
“Really I do not know how to straighten out this thing, we
do want Lee’s remains shipped hme, but the Staff Department
says that an investigation is still being conducted to establish
the identity of his remains, while, his remains had been placed
in the Mirandola Cemetery with a marker with his name for more than
a year?”
In a Memorandum dated April, 4 1946 to Major General Persons, chief
of Legislative Division, the Staff Department confirmed:
“this office is in receipt of a Burial Report for an unknown,
buried in the United States Military Cemetery, Mirandola, Italy,
with certain information there on which seads this office to believe
the remains to be that of Lieutenant McAllister, however, up to
the present time, positive identification of these remains has not
been established”.
Senator Cordon’s intervention made the investigation quicker.
The official document reporting the identification was signed on
June 1946. The english summary of all Italian documents (quoted
in the previous pages) were enclosed in the identification document,
except for “Catone”’s letter and report which
never appeared in the file.
In particular , the town clerk’s and the Recoaro Mayor’s
letters were summe up: McAllister “was shot by the German
Police at Facchini di Destra on Jaunuary 9th 1945. Local German
Police Officer was a 1st Lt. Wolmer by name. It appears, the name
of the man who was shot is Amo or Max Allimberg. He had been taken
from Valdagno jail (where he had been sent following his capture)
by Germa Military Police”.
In order to clear up the matter, the American document reported:
“the discrepancy in the name on the statements and letters
is due to the fact that the Germans probably did not understand
his bname correctly when he was captured”.
Truth was finnaly restored, at least about Lee Antoni’s last
days: those responsible for his murder were the Germans not the
Italians. It is not known if and when the family were informed af
all this. However they had to wait, for almost a year and a half
to receive the official information that McAllister Jr. had been
buried at Mirandola “with military honors”. The relatives
were also informed that according to bill no.383 special plans had
been formulated to return the remains of all known American dead
and that all expenses incident to reburial in private or war cemeteries
would be borne by the Government.
Another year and half passed begore the remains of Lee Antony McAllister
Jr., accompained by military escort on train no.12, Southern Pacific
Railroad arrived at Salem. It was 09.48 a.m on April 6th 1949. The
remains of the Commanding Officer of B-25 J “Donna Marie II”,
the officer rescued by the partisans and the “bandit”
kiled bt the Germans, now rests in the Mt.Crest Abbey Mausuleum,
Salem, Oregon, USA.