Roy Alexander SHIELS

SHIELS, Roy Alexander

Service Number: QX34862
Enlisted: 20 May 1941
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 2nd/33rd Infantry Battalion
Born: Perth, Western Australia, Australia, 22 August 1910
Home Town: Brisbane, Queensland
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Frame / Cabinet Maker
Died: Injuries, New Guinea, 7 September 1943, aged 33 years
Cemetery: Port Moresby (Bomana) War Cemetery, Papua New Guinea
CWGC Grave No: Section C. Plot 1. Row A. Grave 13. Inscription: "DEEP IN OUR HEARTS A MEMORY IS KEPT OF ONE SO SADLY MISSED".
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour
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World War 2 Service

3 Sep 1939: Involvement Private, QX34862, 2nd/33rd Infantry Battalion
20 May 1941: Enlisted
20 May 1941: Enlisted Australian Military Forces (WW2) , Private, QX34862, 2nd/33rd Infantry Battalion

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Biography contributed by Stephen Bonald

On Tuesday, September 7th, 1943, at Jackson Field in Port Moresby, New Guinea, a B-24D Liberator bomber (The Pride of the Cornhuskers) from the 403rd Bomber Squadron, 43rd Bombing Group USAAF, crashed during take-off, likely due to pilot disorientation in the dark. The aircraft hit trees and slammed into a convoy of trucks carrying over 130 soldiers from D Company, 2/33 Infantry Battalion of the Australian Army, who were waiting to board C-47 transport planes to move to the front lines. The bomber’s 500-pound bombs and 2,800 gallons of fuel exploded, killing 15 Australian soldiers instantly and severely injuring 47 more, who later died. Another 90 soldiers were wounded but survived, all 11 crew members aboard the bomber (The Pride of the Cornhuskers) were killed. Private Roy Alexander Shiels – QX34862, was one of the 47 Australian Military personnel severely burned, succumbing to his injuries on the same day at the 2nd / 5th Australian General Hospital, Port Moresby .   

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