John Edmond Bakalar was born in 1920 and was raised in Hammond, Indiana. He enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps as an Aviation Cadet on January 27, 1942. About a month later he married the former Dorothea Jean Daily.
Bakalar received his pilot’s wings and an officer’s commission in October of 1942, and was assigned to a training unit.
He arrived in England in May 1944 and was assigned to the 353rd Fighter Squadron, flying the P-51 Mustang – just in time to fly combat missions in support of the invasion of Europe.
On August 16, 1944 in the skies over France, Lieutenant Bakalar engaged and destroyed three enemy planes even though he was outnumbered. For his heroism, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
From Military Times’ Hall of Valor:
As Bakalar’s citation notes, he did not live to receive his medal. He was shot down and killed over France on September 1, 1944. His three victories of August 16 were the only “kills” of his service.
In 1954, the United States Air Force renamed Atterbury Air Base in Columbus, Indiana for this fallen flyer. The base closed in 1972, but is still in use today as Columbus Municipal Airport.
Bakalar rests in peace beside 4,408 of his comrades in the Brittany American Cemetery and Memorial in France.