Robert Rosenthal (USAAF officer)

Officer

Birthday June 11, 1917

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Brooklyn, New York, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2007-4-20, Rye, New York, U.S. (89 years old)

Nationality United States

#10517 Most Popular

1917

Lieutenant Colonel Robert "Rosie" Rosenthal (June 11, 1917 – April 20, 2007) was an American lawyer and Army officer.

A highly decorated B-17 commander of the Eighth Air Force of the United States Army Air Forces in World War II, Rosenthal was a recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross and two Silver Stars.

Although bomber crews were initially only required to complete 25 combat missions in a combat tour to earn the right to rotate home, Rosenthal flew a total of 52 missions and was shot down twice.

After the war, Rosenthal served as an assistant to the U.S. prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials.

Rosenthal was born to a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, and grew up in the Flatbush neighborhood.

1938

He was the captain of the baseball and football teams of Brooklyn College, graduating in 1938.

1941

He graduated from Brooklyn Law School summa cum laude, and had been working at a law firm in Manhattan when the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.

He enlisted in the United States Army on December 8, and requested to be trained for combat.

1943

In August 1943 he joined the 418th Bombardment Squadron, 100th Bombardment Group, stationed at RAF Thorpe Abbotts in England, as a pilot and aircraft commander of a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crew.

On the October 10, 1943 mission over Münster, Germany, only the third mission for Rosenthal's crew with the 100th Bombardment Group, the B-17F s/n 42-6087, nicknamed Royal Flush, that the crew were flying was the only plane out of 13 from the group that reached Münster to return to base.

Royal Flush landed back in England with two engines dead, the intercom and the oxygen system non-functional, and with a large ragged hole in the right wing.

Later the ground crews found an unexploded cannon shell in one of Royal Flush 's wing tanks.

Rosenthal would receive his first Silver Star for this mission.

1944

On 8 March 1944, Rosenthal's crew, nicknamed Rosie's Riveters, completed their 25-mission combat tour, although the B-17F (s/n 42-30758) that they usually flew bearing the same name was shot down while being flown by a different crew during the 4 February 1944 mission to Frankfurt, Germany.

The crew returned to the United States, but Rosenthal extended his tour, eventually flying a total of 52 missions.

In May 1944, he took command of the 350th Bombardment Squadron.

On 10 September 1944, Rosenthal's B-17G Terrible Termite (s/n 42-97770), flying on a mission to bomb Nuremberg, was hit by flak and crash-landed around Reims in German-occupied France.

Along with all the officers on his plane he was seriously injured.

Suffering from a broken arm and nose, he was pulled from the cockpit unconscious by Free French, flown back to England, and woke up at a hospital in Oxford.

Rosenthal would receive his second Silver Star after this mission.

He returned to duty as soon as he had healed.

1945

On his last combat mission on February 3, 1945, Rosenthal, commanding the 418th, was part of a thousand-plane raid against Berlin.

His B-17G (s/n 44-8379), the lead bomber, suffered a direct flak hit which killed two of his crew.

Although his plane was in flames, he continued to the target to drop his payload, then stayed with the plane until after the rest of the crew had bailed out, just before it exploded at an altitude of only about 1000 ft. He was recovered by the Red Army and again returned to duty.

Rosenthal would earn the Distinguished Service Cross for this mission.

Among the buildings hit in the raid was the "People's Court", killing Roland Freisler, the notorious "hanging judge" of the Third Reich's Volksgerichtshof.

By the end of his service he had a earned a total of 16 decorations, including the Distinguished Service Cross, the Silver Star (with cluster), the Distinguished Flying Cross (with cluster), the Air Medal, (with seven clusters), the Purple Heart (with cluster), plus the British Distinguished Flying Cross and the French Croix de Guerre.

After the war, Rosenthal served as an assistant to the U.S. prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials, where he interrogated Hermann Göring.

2007

Robert Rosenthal married Phillis Heller (1918–2011), whom he met on the ocean voyage to Germany, who served as a WAVE, and was also another lawyer on the prosecutorial staff for the trials, in Nuremberg, and they had 3 children (Peggy, Steve & Dan); he died on April 20, 2007, at age 89 in White Plains, New York.

He was interred in the Sharon Gardens division of Kensico Cemetery.

2010

Rosenthal was assigned to a desk job at wing headquarters, but he managed to return to the 100th Bomb Group and take command of his old squadron, the 418th.