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Nutting, John M.
Air Force Captain

John M. Nutting, age 35, from North Leeds, Maine, Androscoggin county.

Service era: Korea

Date of death: Tuesday, October 23, 1951
Death details: On October 23, 1951, a B-29A Superfortress (tail number 44-94045, call sign “Able 1”) departed Kadena Air Base, Japan, carrying thirteen crew members on a bombing mission targeting Namsi Air Field in northwest North Korea. “Able 1” flew as a part of a strike force that included ten B-29s with fighter support. As the formation approached the target, it was attacked by anti-aircraft artillery fire and MiG-15 fighters. Just after “Able 1” completed its bombing run, it was hit in the right wing fuel tank, causing an explosion with a large amount of smoke. The damaged aircraft was flying under control but was losing altitude, and it eventually crashed on a mud flat near the island of Sinmi-Do. Initial searches that continued until October 26, failed to locate the missing Superfortress or its crew. On October 29, a United Nations Partisan Infantry Korea (UNPIK) team discovered the aircraft’s wreckage along with the remains of the radio operator and navigator, but the increasing enemy activity and the rising tide in the area prevented further recovery efforts that day. Returning the next day, UNPIK discovered that one set of these remains had washed away. However, the team collected another body, which they removed for temporary burial on the island of Oesun-Do. In early November 1951, the remains of a third body that was believed to be the radar operator washed ashore on Ho-Do where it was buried by UNPIK forces. Attempts to locate the Oesun-Do an Ho-Do burial sites or recovery of any of the other missing crew remains from the crash site, have been unsuccessful following the war. Captain John Mainard Nutting entered the U.S. Air Force from Maine and was assigned to the 371st Bombardment Squadron, 307th Bombardment Wing. He was the navigator aboard this Superfortress when it was lost. A partisan guerrilla unit reported to a United Nations Command liaison that the body of Capt Nutting was found near the wreckage. However, due to enemy forces in the area, they were unable to recover the remains. When they returned the next day, the body was gone. It is unknown if it was recovered by the enemy or washed out to sea, and Capt Nutting remains unaccounted-for. Today, Captain Nutting is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency

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