Above & Beyond: A Bougainville Mystery
- By Paul A. Roales
- Air & Space magazine, November 2006
(Page 2 of 4)
Later, I would learn that on September 10, 1943, fellow 339th Fighter Squadron pilot Darrell Cramer wrote Rist’s mother a letter that read in part: “We were greatly outnumbered and Bob dove into the whole enemy force and broke them up long enough for our force to run to safety. I saw the whole thing and it was the most courageous action I have ever seen… . I never saw Bob’s plane again but I heard him on the radio so I know he survived the original dive on the enemy but his plane was damaged… .”
Neither Rist nor his aircraft was ever recovered.
According to the Web site of the American Battle Monuments Commission (abmc.gov), Rist was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the Purple Heart, and the Distinguished Flying Cross. The citation for the latter commends Rist’s “aggressiveness, courage and devotion to duty.”
I set out to find a member of Robert Rist’s family and share information. Rist’s enlistment records, in the National Archives (aad.archives.gov/aad/), show that at the time of enlistment he lived in North Dakota. The 1930 U.S. Census records list Robert P. Rist as the son of J. Arthur and M. Ann Rist. Robert had one brother and three sisters. The family lived in a coal mining camp in Park County.
Next I consulted the Social Security death records and found someone whose name and age matched the Census data: James Rist—born October 1893, died October 1972—could be Robert’s father. If so, that left the mother and siblings as possible survivors. M. Ann Rist had been born about 110 years earlier, so she was probably deceased. According to the Social Security records, Robert’s brother had died in 1954. And as for the sisters, if they had married, I did not know their married names.
On the Web, I connected with a genealogy group in the region where Robert’s father died: Hennepin County, Minnesota. Charlie Peasha located an obituary for James A. Rist. It gave the married names of Robert’s sisters.
I posted a query on the genealogy site, and the next day, a woman e-mailed me the address of an Ellajane Rist Knott, Robert’s youngest sister. I sent her a letter and she e-mailed me four days later.
“You surely know how to knock the wind out of my sails!” she wrote. “It was so wonderful to hear my brother’s name again. The piece you sent me describing Bob’s final moments in the air over Bougainville was moving, he died as he was just beginning life. It is wonderful to know how much he accomplished in his last hours.”
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Comments (2)
Col. H. G. McNeese is my grandfather. I have read Samuel Walker's novel "Up the Slot" about 20 times since it was published, it recounts Rist's heroism, but fails to mention whether Rist was ever found. Only five of the 9 crew members on 'Mac's plane survived the ditching, but even that was a miracle for the mission in which Rist perished because of the 3 other aircraft lost that day, no crew survived. The Liberator pilots were always grateful for their P-38 shadows and their sacrifices.
Col. McNeese returned to the US after the war, married and had 2 children by his first marriage, and then married my grandmother.
Thanks so much for writing this story.
Posted by Theodore Vaida on September 2,2008 | 12:14 AM
I'm trying to get any info I can about my uncle Lt.R.E.Hardaway, a P-38 pilot and member of the 339th who was KIA on Oct.10, 1943. I've contacted the 339th veterans association-no luck there however. Any suggestions?
Posted by James Hardaway on July 25,2009 | 12:41 PM