Frazier International History Museum
WWII
48 Local stories that changed the world.
October 10, 2009 - March 28th 2009
Carl George Tafel, Jr. Tafel, Jr
Louisville, KY
Carl George Tafel, JrP-51D Mustang Fighter Pilot
(cont)
The news that Carl was missing in action did not arrive at the Tafel home until January 14, 1945. His makeshift gravesite, created by a German policeman who found his downed plane, was located in August by his brother-in-law, Addison Dimmitt. The Army finally changed Carl’s status from MIA to KIA on July 14, a few months after V-E Day. Carl’s remains were later moved to a military cemetery in Luxemburg. In 1948, Carl’s family was finally able to bring him home for burial in Louisville’s Cave Hill cemetery.
In 1946, a portrait of Carl was included in an exhibition at the Speed Museum honoring those “young Louisvillans, young men of great promise who gave their lives in World War II.” In 1999, a plaque honoring Carl was placed at the Mighty Eighth Air Force Heritage Museum Memorial Garden outside Savannah, Georgia.
Which one will it be
Read the stories submitted by our visitors below. One of them will be selected at random in January 2010 and given a place of honor in the exhibit.
William Brunsman
Volunteered from his home town of Connersville, IN and sworn in at Indianapolis, IN, April 3, 1941. After basic, served on... read more
Joseph A. Kirby
In February 1944 I turned 18 and joined the Marine Corps and was on my way to Parris Island, S.C. for boot training. Next ... read more
Joseph A. Kirby
Part Two... At night we would scrape out slits in the ground and stack rocks around us. There were two men to a hole. One... read more
Russell L. (Bob) Hulsey
On August 6, 1940, my dad, R.L. Hulsey, joined the army. At the age of 19 he became the youngest Staff Sgt in the U.S. Ar... read more
ROBERT BURNS
2nd Lt. Robert "Bob" Burns was a fighter pilot with the 325th Fighter Wing, 318th Fighter Squadron, located in Miramare, I... read more