S/Sgt. Maynard M. Reese Biography-1
S/Sgt. Maynard M. Reese Biography-1
Staff Sgt. Maynard M. Reese
B-25 "Air Apaches" Turret Gunner
Shot Down over New Guinea -- Only His Watch Survived...
Staff Sgt. Maynard Reese (1922–1943) was a turret gunner on a WW2 B-25 bomber named “Little Stinky”. His plane was shot down over the New Guinea jungles on Dec 22, 1943 while on a mission against a Japanese airfield.
Maynard and three other crewmen were ordered to bail out by the pilot. They landed in a dense jungle; their bodies were never found. Maynard and his fellow crewmen were classified MIA, but were not declared legally dead until January 24, 1946.
Maynard was raised in Warren Point, NJ. He married high school sweetheart Mary Jo Matarrese shortly after enlisting in the Army Air Corps in May, 1942. On Feb 2, 1943 -- shortly before Maynard was shipped out to the Pacific -- his young, 19-year-old bride bought him an Accro wristwatch, engraved with their initials and Maynard's unique Army Serial Number:
M. J. R ~ To ~ M. M. R. ~ 2. 2. 43 ~ 12078267”
(Mary Jo Reese To Maynard M. Reese...)
How did Maynard's combat-worn, battered (but working) watch survive and show up for sale on eBay 80 years later?
Maynard's Watch Returned to His Family
Maynard & Mary Jo's watch was returned to his great-niece Diana in March 2024; Maynard and Diana's grandfather Albert Reese were brothers.
Pvt. Paul R. Thomer Biography-1
Paul Thomer's Watch Returned to His Family - Sept 2023
On Sept 9, 2023, Pvt. Thomer’s watch was returned to his daughter Deborah and her four siblings, exactly 80 years after Paul purchased it. They will treasure it as a tangible memory of their courageous Dad. Semper Fi.
Pvt. Paul Thomer -- 1942 Guadalcanal Marine & His Watch
Private Paul R. Thomer (1923–1992) fought at Guadalcanal as a member of the famed 1st Marine Division. Paul was from Pittsburgh PA, and enlisted in the Marines in January 1942.
The 1st Marine Division sailed from San Francisco in June, and landed on the island of Guadalcanal on Aug 7, 1942. This was the first major US amphibious landing of World War II. The invasion ignited a ferocious struggle with Japanese forces, marked by seven major naval battles, numerous clashes ashore, and almost continuous air combat through December 1942.
The fighting at Guadalcanal took a terrible toll; the 1st Division suffered 650 killed in action and 1,278 wounded, with a further 8,580 contracting malaria and other diseases. As one Marine recalled, ”the Division suffered 100% casualties, with the dead, wounded, and those sick from malaria, dengue fever, jungle rot, malnutrition and combat fatigue… “.
Battle-weary and in poor health following the Guadalcanal campaign, the men of the First Marine Division were shipped to Melbourne Australia for nine months recuperation in January 1943. “They were greeted with warm hospitality; these 15,000 young American men found a home away from home”.
On Feb 10, 1943, Paul Thome purchased a steel-cased wristwatch from a local Melbourne jewelry store, and had it engraved “Paul R. Thomer ~ U.S.M.C. ~ 343824 ~ Australia ~ 2-10-43”.
The 1st Division returned to combat in the South Pacific in October 1943, leading the December offensive at Cape Gloucester, New Britain. “The action they found there has been described as the toughest man has ever endured.” In July 1944, the 1st Division returned to the US for stateside duty. Paul was honorably discharged in 1945.
In 1954, Paul married Frances Mary LaRoche in Pittsburgh; in 1962, they moved to California. Paul and Frances had five children – two sons and three daughters. Paul died on February 16, 1992, and is buried with Frances in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills, CA.