NBJ 6-42 GOVT-WASHINGTON, D.C.       OCT. 24 95 I P.
MRS. MARY BARTEK
80 BANARD STREET
FREEHOLD, NEW JERSEY
THE SECRETARY OF WAR DESIRES ME TO EXPRESS HIS DEEP
REGRET  THAT  YOUR  SON  PRIVATE JOHN F. BARTEK AIR
CORPS HAS BEEN  REPORTED MISSING IN PACIFIC THEATRE
SINCE OCTOBER 21 SEARCH BEING CONTINUED      PERIOD
ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION  WILL BE SENT WHEN RECEIVED 
                           ULIO-THE ADJUTANT GENERAL
                           919 A. OCT. 25

One of America's famous heroes of World War II was Freehold's own Johnny Bartek.

Johnny Bartek  grew  up  on 80  Banard Street  in  Freehold and attended one year of high school before "flunking out" at age 16.  For  the next couple years he worked  at various jobs,  including some time at the rug mill, but couldn't find  one
he liked so  he joined the  army at age 18.   While a private in the Army Air Force he was a  flight mechanic  assigned to the flight carrying famous   WW I  flying  ace  and Medal of Honor recipient Eddie Rickenbacker from  Hawaii to  the New Guinea headquarters of General Douglas MacArthur. 

Because  of   inadequate   navigational  equipment  and  a   faulty  weather  report,   the B-17 overshot its mark and pilot William Cherry was forced to  ditch this flight in the  Pacific Ocean near Canton Island.  Rickenbacker and Cherry's crew spent  3  weeks lost at sea in a life raft.   All but one  survived and were  rescued by Navy pilots in the Ellice Island chain 
on Friday, November 13, 1942, more than 500 miles beyond Canton Island. 

Those  lost  at  sea:   Capt.  Eddie  Rickenbacker;   Col.  Hans  Christian  Adamson   (Protocol  Officer   accompanying Rickenbacker);  Capt.  William T. Cherry,  pilot;   Lt. James C. Whittaker,   co-pilot;  Lt. John DeAngelis,  navigator; Sgt. Frank Reynolds,  radio operator;   Pvt. John Bartek, flight engineer;  and Sgt. Alex Kaczmarzyck, passenger returning to
his unit after hospitalization. 

Very few supplies were on the raft, their food ran out after three days.  One of the few items on the raft was a  Bible given
to  Johnny  by  the  First Baptist Church  of  Freehold.   The  inscription on the fly leaf says   "A sacred token, to John F. Bartek from  the First Baptist Church, Freehold, N.J.,  April 7, 1942."  Reading this Bible helped sustain the men through the  harrowing  ordeal.   On  the eighth day, a few minutes after reading  Matthew 6:31-34 from the  Freehold Bible, a sea gull landed on Richenbacker's head  (a sign from God they believed),   becoming  food and fish bait to help keep the men alive until their rescue on the twenty first day.

After  the  rescue  Johnny Bartek  became quite famous and shortly thereafter wrote a book,  Life Out There - A Story of Faith and Courage, a few paragraphs, written by co-author Austin Pardue, are copied below:

                                                          THE BARTEKS OF FREEHOLD
     Johnny  likes  his  home town.  He says that Freehold is a pretty good place. Then with that roguish glint, he once added, "You know what they say over there in Freehold. They say that George Washington put it on the map, but Johnny Bartek kept it there.

     Freehold is a hard place to get to from New York City; when you arrive you can get your  geographical bearings from the local hotel and from there on out you are on your own.  There  are no taxicabs in Freehold. The girl at the hotel desk is full of infor- mation  and  can  show  you  the place where Johnny used to buy milkshakes. The Bartek family home is about two miles out of town on Bannard Street which parallels the rail- road tracks. On the way out I stopped for a moment to look at the first Baptist Church, whose pastor gave him the Testament.

     The first house in the block is the only one that has a telephone, and Johnny said he  felt  sorry for the poor neighbors who relayed the messages when he caused so much excitement  over  being  lost and  found. Every house on his street, except one, has a service flag in the window and there isn't a single front doorway that doesn't fly the American flag. 

     Johnny's  genial father was waiting at the front door to greet me. He took my rub- bers to the kitchen to place them near the fire and returned with Johnny's mother. One look at her fine face told much of the story.

    Johnny's  mother  is  a  good housekeeper. Everything was spotless and orderly. The house  was  bright and cheerful and plants were standing on the window sills where the sun could get at them. The pictures on the walls in the living room dealt with American history, the Bible and the Barteks. Among them was a head of George Washington, an old steel engraving  of Our Lord standing before Pontius Pilate, and a head of Christ with an inscription which said, "The Lord is My Shepherd." The largest picture was that of a castle built on a rock with a quotation from Samuel saying, "The Lord is My Rock and My Fortress and My Deliverer."



Richard Conte played the part of Johnny Bartek in the 1945 movie
Captain Eddie, starring Fred MacMurray.

Other books written about this experience were:
Seven Came Through by Eddie Rickenbacker.
We Thought We Heard The Angels Sing by James C. Whittaker.

There was also a three part series published in Life Magazine in 1943.

Be sure not to miss the World War II Homefront exhibition at the                       Monmouth County Historical Association Library and Museum,
70 Court Street, Freehold. On display are Johnny Bartek's actual
Mae West Life Jacket and Bible! The Home Front exhibition will be
open to the public until July of 2006. 

Looking for a copy of the book? As far as I know it hasn't been
published since 1943 but I found a used copy at Amazon.com.

Johnny Bartek is still alive and well, and lives in New Jersey.
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