Dominic Salvatore Gentile
Military
IWM, Roger Freeman Collection
Object Number - FRE 5356 - A pilot, Domenic "Don" Gentile, of the 336th Fighter Squadron, 4th Fighter Group - Debden with his P-51 Mustang, nicknamed "Shangri-La"
Don Gentile was born on December 6, 1920, to Italian parents in Piqua, Ohio. As a boy, he had always been fascinated with flying and built, as his mother remembered, hundreds of model airplanes. Don used to say to his mother, “I hope someday I'll be up there flying too.” As a teenager, he played football, baseball, and basketball and loved to swim. He was rather musically inclined and played the saxophone, drums, guitar, and clarinet. He had a sister, Edith, who was two years younger than himself.
When Gentile was old enough his father would give him ‘date money’ to take out a girl but he would bring most of it to the bank and save it. Gentile knew that if he could only get enough money to buy an airplane he would be an ace of the air. When he was 17 Gentile first flew in an airplane. “At that time,” he said, “I felt I had come to the place where I belonged in the world. The air to me was what being on the ground was to other people. When I felt nervous it pulled me together. Where things got too much for me on the ground, they never got that way in the air.” Gentile continually pestered his parents about learning to fly his father began paying for half-an-hour flying time every Sunday. After he had soloed Gentile began pressing his parents to buy him an airplane and eventually he found a homemade airplane for $300 which he bought with his own money. After finding out that the airplane was a death trap and continuing to pester his parents again, Gentile finally got a brand new airplane. From then on he began harassing the town inhabitants of Piqua by buzzing the town. “On Saturday afternoons,” he said, “I would beat up the town in my airplane, and the cops chased me . . . I could see their cars running after me, trying to get my number. I'd raise the hair on everybody's head with my propeller. I’d blow in the curtains on Betty Levering's house and make the geraniums in Marge Dill's front yard give up their petals.”
On September 1, 1939, when Hitler invaded Poland, Gentile knew he was destined to play a part in the war. Since the USAAF required two years in college he told his parents that if he could join the RAF, which didn’t require college, he could make his mark in the war. After much arguing and a whole year, Don Gentile finally got his wish and was driven to Cleveland to join up with the RAF. In September of 1940, he was flown to Canada to start his training. His instructor back home had given him a ‘better than average pilot’ rating and with that, he started RAF training. After he finished training Gentile joined the famed 133 ‘Eagle Squadron’ and claimed two kills while in the RAF during Operation Jubilee.
In August 1942 the three Eagle Squadrons were transferred to the USAAF and formed the 4th Fighter Group. Captain Don Gentile’s best scoring months were from December 1943 to April 1944 and for many of his missions, he flew with his famed wingman, Capt. Johnny Godfrey. Being a ‘publicity kid’ Gentile gained a wide amount of fame. On April 11, 1944, three days after his last three kills, Gentile was awarded the DFC and called ‘one-man air force’ by General Eisenhower.
On the last mission of his first tour the press gathered to film Gentile landing only to watch him come in too long on a buzz job and have to crash land his plane, ‘Shangri-La’. Thankfully Gentile only suffered minor shock. His commander, Don Blakeslee (who had already established the rule that anyone who ‘pranged his kite’ would be grounded and sent home), grounded him. Gentile went home on a war bonds tour to an adoring public and very happy sister Edith and parents.
Don Gentile claimed 30 air and ground kills and accumulated 350 hours of flying time. He is labeled as the ‘Ace of Aces’, ‘One-Man Air Force’, and Godfrey and he were called the ‘Damon and Pythias’ team by Winston Churchill.
Don Gentile authored his autobiography ‘One-Man Airforce’ that was published in 1944.
Connections
See how this entry relates to other items in the archive by exploring the connections below.
Units served with

- Unit Hierarchy: Squadron
- Air Force: Eighth Air Force
- Type Category: Fighter

- Unit Hierarchy: Group
- Air Force: Eighth Air Force
- Type Category: Fighter

- Unit Hierarchy: Squadron
- Type Category: Fighter
People

- Military/Civilian/Mascot: Military
- Nationality: American
- Unit: 4th Fighter Group 336th Fighter Squadron
- Service Numbers: 38100448
- Highest Rank: Staff Sergeant
- Role/Job: Crew Chief

- Military/Civilian/Mascot: Military
- Nationality: American
- Unit: 336th Fighter Squadron
- Highest Rank: Staff Sergeant (3rd Grade)
- Role/Job: Assistant Crew chief

- Military/Civilian/Mascot: Civilian
- Nationality: American
Aircraft

- Aircraft Type: P-47 Thunderbolt
- Nicknames: Missouri Mauler
- Unit: 4th Fighter Group 336th Fighter Squadron

- Aircraft Type: P-47 Thunderbolt
- Nicknames: Reggie's Reply / Lucky, Donnie Boy
- Unit: 404th Fighter Group 4th Fighter Group 336th Fighter Squadron 506th Fighter Squadron

- Aircraft Type: P-47 Thunderbolt
- Nicknames: Donnie Boy
- Unit: 358th Fighter Group 4th Fighter Group 336th Fighter Squadron 367th Fighter Squadron
- Aircraft Type: P-51 Mustang
- Unit: 4th Fighter Group 336th Fighter Squadron
- Aircraft Type: P-51 Mustang
- Unit: 496th Fighter Training Group 4th Fighter Group 335th Fighter Squadron 336th Fighter Squadron 554th Fighter Training Squadron
Missions
- Date: 26 September 1942
- Date: 19 August 1942
- Official Description:
Places

- Site type: Airfield

- Site type: Airfield

- Site type: Airfield
- Known as: "Duckpond"

- Site type: Memorial
Events
Event | Location | Date | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Born |
Piqua, OH, USA | 6 December 1920 | Son of Pasquela and Josephine M Gentile. |
Other Operation Jubilee |
Dieppe, France | 19 August 1942 | Claimed first two kills. |
Other Crashed - Morlaix tragedy |
Bolt Head, Salcombe, Devon TQ8, UK | 26 September 1942 | BS445 slated for Morlaix mission, flown down to departure field, Bolthead. P/O Dominic S Gentile, Blown tire on takeoff, crashed into ditch. Scratched from mission. |
Died |
Forestville, MD, USA | 28 January 1951 | Killed whilst on a traing flightin a T-33 jet, near Andrews AFB, Maryland. |
Enlisted |
Cleveland, OH, USA | Joined the Royal Canadian Air Force | |
Other Joined No. 133 (Eagle) Squadron RAF |
RAF Coltishall, Norwich, Norfolk NR10, UK | Joined No. 133 (Eagle) Squadron RAF. | |
Based |
Debden | 28 April 1944 | Transferred to US Army Air Force, 4th Fighter Group, based at Debden. |
Buried |
Saint Joseph Cemetery Lockbourne, Franklin County, OH | Saint Joseph Cemetery Section 18 (St. Agatha), Lot 434 |
Revisions
Added a Buried event per Find-a-grave Memorial ID 22996.
Source: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22996/dominic-salvatore-gentile
Added a connection to the FG mission to Dieppe, France for 19 Aug 1942.
Fixed minor spelling and grammar errors in biography
Personal research and 'The Debden Eagles' by Garry L. Fry.
Personal research & 'Eighty-One Aces of the 4th Fighter Group' by Frank Speer
John Korovilos, via American Air Museum Memory Book Correspondence.
Incorporated information from a record for 'Donald S Gentile' which used the following sources:
The records of the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force, Savannah, Georgia / Fighter Aces of the U. S. A. and Mustang Aces of the Eighth Air Force
Freeman, The Mighty Eighth, p. 275.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominic_Salvatore_Gentile
http://acesofww2.com/USA/aces/gentile/
Drawn from the records of the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force, Savannah, Georgia / Fighter Aces of the U. S. A. and Mustang Aces of the Eighth Air Force
Drawn from the records of the National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force, Savannah, Georgia / Ted Damick, VIII Fighter Command pilots list / http://www.4thfightergroupassociation.org/pilots.html