James Boylan Brown World War II Gold Star Veteran from California

On May 27, 1944 Second Lieutenant Brown was declared a casualty of World War II. He served with honor in the United States Army Air Forces. He is remembered by the people of California. May his positive example inspire us. Working together towards peace, mutual respect, and equality for all.
James Boylan Brown
World War II
World War II
California
Tuskegee Airmen
Submit Update Request
Content Integrity Note
Our displayed data concerning the life and military history of James Boylan Brown is a work in progress. We've assembled a list of elements we are in the process of researching and reviewing. This profile was last edited on 2023-06-11 19:14:44.
View Missing Items List
Missing : Core Data
· Date of tour or service
Missing : Supplemental Data
· Educational background
· Marriage history
· Parents, family history
· Expanded references and citations
▲ Show Less
Service Details
This Profile ID323436
Service IDO-814825
NameJames Boylan Brown
FromLos Angeles, Los Angeles County, California
Birth DateJune 25, 1921
Casualty DateMay 27, 1944
WarWorld War II
Service BranchArmy Air Forces
RankSecond Lieutenant
SpecialtyPilot
Unit/Group324th Fighter Group, 99th Fighter Squadron
Casualty TypeKilled in Action
LocationProssinone, Italy
BurialLincoln Memorial Park, Carson, Los Angeles County, California
Notable Awards
Air Medal
Purple Heart
Additional Details
James Boylan Brown was born in Griffin, Spalding County, Georgia and later lived in California. He was a member of the Tuskegee Airmen. He was killed in action by shell fire when he parachuted from his plane during a mission.

Auto-Generated Profile Synopsis: James Boylan Brown was serving his country during World War II when he gave his all in the line of duty. He had enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces. Entered the service via Regular Military. Brown had the rank of Second Lieutenant. His military occupation or specialty was Pilot. Service number assignment was O-814825. Attached to 324th Fighter Group, 99th Fighter Squadron.

He was born on June 25, 1921. According to our records California was his home or enlistment state and Los Angeles county has been included within the archival record. We have Los Angeles listed as his city.

During his service in World War II, Army Air Forces Second Lieutenant Brown experienced a traumatic event which ultimately resulted in loss of life on May 27, 1944. Recorded circumstances attributed to: Killed in Action. Incident location: Prossinone, Italy.
Commendations + Awards
Please note this might not be a complete or completely accurate accounting. For some awards we use probability factors based on known service details. Thanks for your understanding.
Air Medal
Purple Heart
United States Aviator Badge Army
World War II Victory Medal
American Campaign Medal
Army Presidential Unit Citation
Army Good Conduct Medal
European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign
Notable Reference Sources
These are typically links to pages on external sites that have provided specific nodes of information. In most cases the information has some assurance of being crowd-sourced and vetted by a community of users.
California Gold Star Veterans Gallery
Honoring the men and women of California who gave their all for their country. May their example of courage and sacrifice be our guide. To be strong and responsible in our lives as citizens of the world. Through honest daily actions, we honor them.
California was home to over 30,000 American Gold Star veterans from 4 wars of the 20th Century. Some significant statistics:
• 1,934 World War I
• 19,843 World War II
• 2,648 Korean War
• 5,575 Vietnam War
• 628 Prisoners of war
• 7,015 Missing in action
• 330 Pearl Harbor casualties
• 155 D-Day Normandy casualties
• 40 Medal of Honor recipients
Guardians of Honor Credits
Organizational Supporters - HonorStates.org and the National Unified Archive of American Gold Star Veterans is stringently curated. This attention to quality extends to our supporters program. We carefully research and screen prospective organizations we perceive as being suitably aligned with our mission
American Veterans Center 75th D-Day Congressional Reception National Memorial Day Parade with Spirit of 45 National D-Day Memorial San Diego Coin & Bullion
Research Contributors - Groups and individuals who have been directly responsible for curating content. Some are experienced historians and archivists, others are enthusiastic members of the public who have suggested content additions or corrections.
Honor States Admin Roy "Joker" Sarah Jo "Lady Chaos"
Primary Sources - These are repositories for artifacts, documents, diaries, manuscripts, and other information that serve as original and authoritative sources of information.
National Archives (NARA) Library of Congress (LOC) Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) Findagrave.com Ancestry.com
honoring our fallen healing together Honoring our fallen. Together. Uniting us in meaningful common cause. When we work together to honor our Gold Star veterans, we heal our nation together. It's a team effort. Everyone's invited to join as a Citizen Historian and Guardian of Honor. - learn more
Here is Some Important Information!
featured supporter
Balboa Park Veterans Museum
Located at Balboa Park in San Diego, the Veterans Museum honors the service of all who served their country in the U.S. Armed Forces. Documenting their experiences and preserving their legacy for future generations through their individual stories.
Featured National Supporter
Our Supporters are Essential Team Members! - learn more
thank you
We appreciate the generous help + encouragement from our research teams, volunteers, and foundational supporters. Each of them are essential team members contributing to the archive building progress.
progress
Honor States and the National Unified Archive of American Gold Star Veterans has an established policy of developing "most complete" datasets. These are groups, campaigns and actions of special historical significance. Some notable examples include:
impact
It's required 8+ years, 1000s of skilled labor hours, scores of active contributors, and millions of visitors to realize the value in the National Unified Archive of American Gold Star Veterans. We have not satisfied everyone. That's impossible, considering the unique + personal needs of individuals. However, our annual positivity ratings exceed 95%. It's tough to get that many people to agree on anything. So, we do seem to be on the right track.
honor
None of us would be who we are, or have what we have, if not for the strengths and sacrifices of others. Most of us enjoy lives of relative freedom. Our freedom has come at enormous cost. The price paid by those who gave their all. In service to their country, states and communities. Each of them a beloved member of our global family.
states
You meet a new friend. Common question. "Where are you from"? Alabama. Ohio. California. Grew up in the Bronx. Family lives in Pasadena. Went to school in Boston. Worked in Chicago. We have roots everywhere. These state and community identities are foundational in defining who Americans are at heart. It's the who and what we fight for when pressed.
Grace - Thank you for this tribute to our fallen veterans. They were wonderful young men who died way too young. It is sad.
Irvin - Your website is outstanding and a great tribute to the Patriots who gave all. As a Vietnam veteran, I thank you very much.
Collin - Your site is providing educational benefits. Kids especially really need to know of the supreme gifts of their freedom.
Suzanna - I commend you for creating this resource. And thanks to the volunteers for providing the extra support in crunch time:)