Just after 2 p.m. on August 18, 1945, U.S. Army Sergeant Anthony J. Marchione bled to death in the clear, bright sky above Tokyo. A month shy of his 20th birthday, Marchione died like so many before him had in the Second World War—quietly, cradled in the arms of a buddy. What sets his death apart from that of other Allied airmen is that the young man from Pottstown, Pennsylvania, died after the Japanese had accepted the Allied terms of surrender. He was the last American killed in air combat in World War II.
I learned Marchione’s story in the late 1990s while working on a book about the Consolidated B-32 bomber, the aircraft Marchione was flying in when he died. He had enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Forces less than two years earlier, in November 1943. The oldest of three children of Italian immigrants, he was a good-looking kid, five foot six and 125 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes. I learned from his sister,
Theresa Sell, that he had enlisted because he had expected to get drafted. “He chose the Air Corps because he’d just always wanted to fly,” she recalled in a 1997 interview. “I was still in high school when he went into the service, and with all the [patriotic fervor] at the time, my sister Geraldine and I thought it was neat that he was going.”
Marchione wanted to be a pilot, but the Army had other plans; it trained him to be an aerial gunner. In November 1944, at Davis-Monthan Army Air Field in Arizona, he joined a Consolidated B-24 Liberator crew that was being transferred to Will Rogers Army Air Force Base in Oklahoma City for training in photo-reconnaissance. While pilots Robert Essig and John Ziegler learned the intricacies of flying the F-7, the reconnaissance version of the B-24, Marchione and fellow gunners Rudolph Nudo, Frank Pallone, and Raymond Zech went through a course to become photographer’s assistants. By August 1945, their unit, the 20th Reconnaissance Squadron, had moved to Okinawa, which had been captured by U.S. forces less than two months earlier. It was there, at Yontan Airfield, that Marchione first saw a Consolidated B-32 Dominator.
The B-32s at Yontan were part of the 386th Bombardment Squadron, which conducted anti-shipping sweeps of the South China Sea and, if needed, could fly combat missions against the Japanese mainland. But Japan’s surrender in mid-August abruptly changed the squadron’s duties; crews now were to fly daytime photo-reconnaissance missions to monitor Tokyo’s compliance with the cease-fire.
But there was another, more furtive reason for the flights, according to Rudolph Pugliese, who as a young lieutenant was the 386th’s assistant intelligence officer. Besides gathering information on such things as the route that Allied occupation forces could follow into Tokyo, “the photo-recon missions were also intended to test the fidelity of the Japanese,” Pugliese told me in 1997. “According to the terms of the cease-fire, our planes were supposed to be able to fly freely over Tokyo. If they actually could, that would mean the Japanese weren’t planning any nasty surprises for the occupation forces.” U.S. commanders wanted to be assured that the Japanese would not employ their still-robust air defense system, with early-warning radar stations, air raid sirens, and a fleet of fast fighter aircraft with experienced pilots ready to scramble to protect their homeland.
While the B-32’s design included a belly camera just aft of its retractable ball turret, the 386th’s Dominator crews did not include aerial photographers. For photo-recon sorties, mission planners enlisted crews from a pool of 20th Reconnaissance Squadron photographers, gunners trained as photo assistants, and commissioned navigators who would “steer” the aircraft during the photo run by using the B-32’s Norden bombsight. Among the 20th Recon Squadron members assigned to the pool were Marchione and his F-7 navigator, Second Lieutenant Kurt Rupke. The pool system was not popular, Frank Pallone told me. “We called them ‘bastard crews,’ because guys were taken out of their regular crews and had to fly with people they might not ever have met before,” he said. “Marchione, Nudo, and I had been tent mates since the Philippines, and I think it bothered all of us that Tony was in the pool.”
The first Dominator mission to include 20th personnel flew on August 16. A B-32 named Hobo Queen II and a second aircraft were dispatched to the Tokyo area; the second Dominator had to turn back when it developed engine trouble. Hobo Queen II pushed on and, though it was “painted” by Japanese early-warning radars while approaching and leaving the Tokyo area, its crew photographed the airfields at Katori and Konoiko, east of Tokyo, without interference.


Comments
I was an instructor at Ft. Worth AAF in 1945 when several top officers from a SW Pacific B-24 Group arrived to be checked out in the new B-32's after which they were to take delivery of new "32's" and return to their Pacific Base(s). I was fortunate in that I was assigned to these men to take them through the orientation AND fly with them as they "checked-out" in the new B-32. We flew landings, formation and emergency procedures after which they were ready-- I did hear from them after their return and flying missions to Japan (Tokyo)and their comments about the B-32's "flyabilities" paralleled those contained within the article, "THE Last To Die".
Posted by Roger C. Bowlus on September 23,2008 | 02:09PM
With all the navy and airforce aircraft available in the area at the time , why did'nt these photo-recon flights have a fighter escort?
Posted by mike kohutka on September 29,2008 | 04:30PM
How many B-32s were operational with the 386th BS? What Bomb Wing were they allocated to. What little I have read about the B-32 describes the aircraft as a "widow-maker". If this is true, why didn't the unit employ F-13s for the job?
Posted by John Holt on October 16,2008 | 03:25AM
Mike, I can tell you why: for the same reason 8th Air Force bombers were sent over occupied Europe without escort -- incompetence of senior officers. In both cases, they should have been held accountable.
Posted by Philip Lanier on October 23,2008 | 02:25PM
It would almost appear that since the official armistice was not signed until Sept 2, higher echelon would have taken better care about flights into an area which might still be listed as "dangerous" and still possessing elements of enemy action.
Posted by George Spear AUS 1944-46 on October 23,2008 | 08:24PM
Does anyone know the names of the crew members of the second B-32 that went on mission 230 A-8, on August 18? I am asking because my father, who has passed, was a radio operator on a B-32 during WW II and mentioned this story to me shortly after I returned from Vietnam. I believe he may have been on the second plane.
Posted by Jim Brace on January 4,2009 | 05:46PM
As a pilot member of the F-7 squadron which arrived in the SWP in early 1944, (20TH CMS), we flew all of our missions in New Guinea and the Philipines Without fighter cover. Only time I saw a fighter was on a mission to Leyte prior to THE LANDING when we encounterd a fighter who requested clearance to hang on to us as he would like to us our navigater to provide a path home.
Posted by Bill Wrenn on April 4,2009 | 08:07AM
My father, Edwin "Ted" Angle was in the same regular crew as Tony Marchione's, and was the radio operator. He is to Tony's right in the above photo. My father never talked much about the war. He died in 1974. Yet he did talk about "Marsh". He said everyone liked him, and was so upset about his death saying "it should have never happened". Even after all these years, I still feel bad for my father--losing his friend in this way--and for Tony's family and friends and all the living he never got to do.
Posted by Sharon Angle on June 9,2009 | 09:14PM
I did not know Tony very well but my memory is that there was a group of us gathered at the Wheel House that morning and the word was that 4 th Charting needed a photographer. Tony said "I'll go," and that was all there was to it at the time. That evening we heard that he had been killed by enemy fire and that someone had asked to have the bomb bay doors opened so that they could get a better picture. we were all upset about this. Several years later I wrote to VFW Magazine about the incident. I then received a phone call and a note from the plane's copilot that we had been misinformed and that the doors had not been opened. I still remember that morning and how casual we were. The war was over--we were going home.
Posted by John A. Zinn on August 12,2009 | 03:15PM