A World Conflict II airman who was taken captive by Japanese forces and died in a jail hearth after his airplane was shot down has been accounted for, army officers mentioned Wednesday.
U.S. Military Air Forces Cpl. Glenn H. Hodak, 23, was a member of the 93rd Bombardment Squadron within the nineteenth Bombardment group in March 1945, the Protection POW/MIA Accounting Company said in a news release. Hodak, of Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania, was a gunner aboard a B-29 “Superfortress” plane. These planes had a number of machine weapons, held over 20,000 kilos of bombs and had been particularly suited to fly to Japan from bases in China throughout World Conflict II, according to the National Museum of the United States Air Force.
Hodak’s airplane was shot down whereas on a mission to Tokyo. He was initially reported as lacking in motion, the DPAA mentioned, however investigators discovered he had been captured after the airplane was taken down. He was taken to the Tokyo Navy Jail.
Protection POW/MIA Accounting Company
In late Could 1945, U.S. plane closely bombed Tokyo, inflicting large fires and burning lots of of buildings, according to Military.com. One of many destroyed buildings was the Tokyo Navy Jail. Hodak was among the many service members being held there on the time. Not one of the individuals imprisoned on the facility survived the blaze, Navy.com reported. They had been buried in a mass grave.
The American Graves Registration Service disinterred 65 units of stays from the jail in early 1946, after World Conflict II ended. The service was in a position to establish 25 units of stays. One was a Japanese particular person, the DPAA mentioned. The 39 unidentified units of stays had been interred as Unknowns on the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial within the Philippines.
In 2022, the units of stays had been disinterred once more and despatched to the DPAA laboratory for evaluation. In 2024, the DPAA launched the Tokyo Jail Fireplace Undertaking. In a social media post, the company mentioned the venture “faces appreciable forensic challenges because of the burned and fragmentary situation of the stays and excessive commingling.”
Protection POW/MIA Accounting Company
To identify Hodak’s remains, DPAA scientists used dental and anthropological evaluation, in addition to circumstantial proof, the company mentioned. DNA sequencing has additionally been used to establish service members who died on the jail, the DPAA mentioned on social media.
“The Protection POW/MIA Accounting Company has had current success accounting for People from the Tokyo Jail Fireplace. We now have accounted for 2 service members up to now for this venture,” the company informed CBS Information.
Hodak’s surviving members of the family have been knowledgeable that his stays have been accounted for, the DPAA mentioned. He will probably be buried in Spring Creek, Pennsylvania, in Could.