Martin Patrick, Jr. Bulger is honored on the following 1 monument(s) in our database:
B-24 (42-64438) 'Ramblin Wreck' Memorial -445th Bomber Group
Martin Patrick Bulger Jr. was born on April 27, 1920, in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan. He was the son of Martin Patrick Peter Bulger Sr. and Margaret Heron Bulger. He graduated from Annunciation High School. He was employed as a shipping and receiving clerk before enlisting in the service on October 10, 1941. He served in the 700th Bomb Squadron, 445th Bomb Group, Heavy, as a Second Lieutenant and Bombardier of B-24H #42-64438 nicknamed “Snow Goose'' aka ''Ramblin Wreck'' during World War II.
On December 22, 1943, the aircraft took off from RAF Tibenham in Norfolk, England, as part of a bomber formation assigned to attack the railway yards at Osnabrück, Germany, an important transportation center used by the German military during World War II. Although the bomber successfully reached the target area, a technical malfunction prevented the crew from releasing their bombs. Still carrying the full bomb load, the aircraft turned back toward England and began the hazardous return flight across occupied Europe. While flying over Friesland in the Netherlands, the B-24 was intercepted by two German fighters. A fierce aerial engagement followed as the American crew fought to defend the bomber from repeated attacks. The Liberator’s gunners returned fire, but the aircraft sustained heavy damage from German cannon and machine-gun fire. Severely damaged and engulfed in flames, the bomber began rapidly losing altitude. The crew attempted to make an emergency landing near Bolsward, close to the Witteveen family farm known as Spreeuwenstein. At approximately 2:30 PM, the aircraft crashed about one kilometer south-southeast of Bolsward. The bomber exploded on impact and continued burning for several hours as the onboard bomb load detonated. None of the crew survived.
2Lt Bulger was critically wounded in both legs by enemy gunfire during the aerial battle. In the hope that he might survive if he reached the ground safely, his fellow crewmen parachuted him from the damaged bomber near Bozum, a measure sometimes taken during the war for severely injured airmen. Tragically, he died shortly after landing. He is now buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery and Memorial, Margraten, Eijsden-Margraten Municipality, Limburg, Netherlands. He is buried next to his brother, Pvt Robert John Bulger who was killed one year later while serving with the 346th Infantry Regiment, 87th Infantry Division.
Source of information: www.findagrave.com, www.wandelpaden.com, www.abmc.gov
