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| James Emerson Bush, Jr. | |
| No. 13253 11 November 1921 27 May 1944 | |
| Died when shot down by Japanese Zeros over Shinshow, China, aged 22 years | |
| Interment: Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia | |
JAMES EMERSON BUSH, JR. (Bushie to his family) now rests in peace in Section 34, Grave 2403, of Arlington Cemetery. His West Point ring, with a touch of magic, brought him there from an obscure grave in Shinshow, China.
Bushie was the first of three sons of Colonel and Mrs. James Bush to graduate from West Point. From his earliest days he had two loves West Point and sports. He was a natural leader. In sandlot sports he was the pitcher, the quarterback, the captain-of-the-team sort of guy. In school he was the popular scholar. He won a scholarship to Cranbrook School (19371939), where he excelled in sports, academics, and extracurricular activities. He won a competitive appointment to West Point from Michigan, entering a month after graduating from Cranbrook. At West Point, Bushie survived the shock of plebe year and grueling yearling academics, and, at his earliest opportunity, began to fall in love with one young lady after another. But his final love was the Air Corps.
Three years later, a West Point graduate, Harold H. Ruth, Class of 1945, was walking down a street in Seoul, Korea. He noticed a young native wearing what looked like a West Point ring. He apprehended the Korean, turned him over to local authorities, and alleged what appeared to be theft of jewelry from a U.S. officer stationed in Seoul. When the authorities tried to track down the James E. Bush whose name was inscribed in the ring, they were shocked to find that the owner had been killed three years earlier. Intensive interrogation of the prisoner revealed that the Korean had been a prisoner of the Japanese in China, had seen Bushie’s plane shot down, and was on the burial detail which dug the shallow grave and robbed the body of the ring. The most amazing part of the story is that the Korean was able to lead the Quartermaster graves registration team from Korea back into China back to the shallow grave and back out with Bushie’s remains shortly before Mao’s communist forces overran the area for good. Recovery would have been impossible had it not happened in time! So a fine airman now lies among his comrades at home. GMB ’45, his brother Originally published in ASSEMBLY March 1987 | |
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