Researchers Help Locate Lost Heroes from World War II

The University of Delaware’s Mark Moline knew that his grandfather, O. Karl Olander, was a Navy chaplain in the Pacific during World War II. But it wasn’t until his mother shared his grandfather’s journal and scrapbook that Moline realized his grandfather had been on the USS Princeton, one of the aircraft carriers that attacked Palau in March 1944.

Written byTeresa Messmore andUniversity of Delaware
| 4 min read
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During World War II, the western Pacific islands of Palau were a hotbed for combat. The Japanese wanted to use the islands for battle preparation and refueling grounds — and so did the Allies. Numerous aircraft were lost in the waters of Palau, submerged for decades with little closure for the families of fallen airmen. 

Moline, director of the School of Marine Science and Policy within UD’s College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment, and a colleague at Scripps Institution of Oceanography began working with the non-profit BentProp Project in 2013 to apply underwater robotics technologies in search of lost U.S. airmen.

“About the time that we realized we were at the limit of our capabilities, we met the folks from Scripps and University of Delaware. Their technology changed everything,” said BentProp founder Patrick Scannon.

The collaboration led to the discovery of two long-lost planes earlier this year. The mounted camera company GoPro released a video about the work on its YouTube channel today in advance of Veterans Day. Click here to watch the GoPro video

The work also is scheduled to be profiled in an upcoming segment on the CBS news magazine 60 Minutes.

Underwater discovery

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