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Lest We forget-Vet Special
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PVT STEVEN LUCHUCK(1917-1942)
PVT STEVEN LUCHUCK(1917-1942)
By: Ruth Gregori(2011)
Steven Frederick Luchuck was born May 13, 1917 in Byrnedale, a son of Michael and Katherine (Kalusny) Lalusiak,
later changed to Luchuck. In 1928, the family moved to Mill Run. The children were Kate, Adam, Mike, Sue, Steve and
Mary. Steven was known as "Abe" from childhood.
Abe attended a one- room school in Mill Run and graduated from Huston Township High School with the Class of 1935.
His classmates characterized him as a "jokester" and "always playing around." After graduation, Abe worked on the
family farm and in the coal mines.
His niece, Evelyn Fauls, remembers Uncle Abe as being fun. He would pick her up high over his head to touch the
ceiling. What fun for a child! Abe's mother was not even five feet tall and he would swing her around until she
would shout "STOP" in Slovak.
At age 24, Abe enlisted in the Army Air Corps on June 6, 1941. He went to basic training at Bolling Field near
Washington D.C. His sister, Sue, was a nurse in Pittsburgh and would send him a dollar or two to buy stamps or
personal items. Sue kept all the letters that Abe wrote to her. Those letters tell of a young man who missed his
family, but who wanted to do a good job. He was assigned as a ground crew member of HQ Squadron of the 27th
Bombardment Group (Light) when his unit was sent to Savannah, Georgia for dive-bomber and ground staff training.
Hostilities between the United States and Japan were escalating. In late November 1941, the pilots and ground crew
members of the 27th were sent to the Philippines to prepare for the arrival of their planes which were coming by
ship.
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 and the Philippines on December 8, the planes had not
yet arrived. Then the ship was diverted to Australia due to the attack. After the invasion of the Philippines,
General Douglas Mac Arthur and the pilots were evacuated by submarine to Australia to prepare for battle.
Abe was able to send a telegram in December 1941 to wish his parents a Merry Christmas and tell them he was well.
His last letter to his parents, dated February 8, 1942, was censored, but he tried to reassure them and tell them
not to worry. He said, "Everything is in God's hands".
When the Japanese had invaded, the American and Filipino soldiers had retreated to the Bataan Peninsula. Supply
boats were unable to reach them. Without adequate food and medical supplies, the men became sick with tropical
diseases, such as malaria and dysentery. Their food supplies were cut in half and then in half again.
The ground crew of the 27th that were left behind formed the 2nd Battalion Provisional Infantry
Regiment (Air Corps). It became the only Air Force unit in history to fight as an Infantry Regiment. The airmen of
the 27th would later be awarded the Philippine Presidential Unit Citation and the pilots were among the most
decorated of World War II.
With little hope left and exhausted, both physically and mentally, from months of constant bombardment from the
Japanese and lack of proper rest, food and medical supplies, General Edward King surrendered his troops at Bataan
on April 9, 1942.
The prisoners were then forced to march 60 miles to the Prison Camp in the tropical heat without food or good
water. Those men unable to keep up either died right there or were killed by the Japanese. The harsh treatment
and deaths of so many prisoners caused this march to be known as the "Infamous Bataan Death March". When the
Philippines were surrendered on June 10, 1942, Steven Luchuck was then reported as "missing in action". After
two years, the War Department declared his death as May 8, 1944.
His Gold Star mother died November 7, 1944, never really knowing the fate of her son. Worrying about him had caused
serious health issues.
After the War ended, Abe's father received a letter in September 1945 that officially declared Pvt. Steven F.
Luchuck had died June 10, 1942 from dysentery at Camp O'Donnell while a prisoner of the Japanese. He was
posthumously awarded the Purple Heart Medal and the Prisoner of War Medal.
In a letter to the family, General Douglas MacArthur wrote," You have my consolation in the memory that he, along
with his comrade-in-arms, who died at Bataan, Corregidor and in prison camps, gave his life for his country. It
was due to their magnificent courage and sacrifices which stopped the enemy in the Philippines and gave us time
to arm ourselves for our return to the Philippines and the defeat of Japan."
Pvt. Steven Luchuck is buried in the U.S. Armed Forces Cemetery located in Manila, P.I. The cemetery is dedicated
to the memory of the dead of World War II. His name is also on the Battling Bastards of Bataan Memorial that
commemorates all the Americans who died on that Death March and in the Prison Camps at Camp O"Donnell.
Thank you for your sacrifice and service to our country.
The names of Steven, Michael and Suzanne Luchuck are on the Veterans of World War II Honor Roll in Hollywood. A
memorial stone with Steven's name is in the St. Joseph's Cemetery in Force. Abe's brother Mike also served in the
Army Air Corps during World War II. His sister Suzanne enlisted in the Army Nurse Corps and retired as a Lieutenant
Colonel in 1965, having served during World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Their brother Adam had died tragically in
1930. Two young men returning home at night found his dismembered body on the railroad tracks. It was assumed he
had tried to catch a ride on the train and missed. The sister, Kate Thomas, died in DuBois at age 99. His sister,
Mary Rio, now lives in Bellefonte.
Lest we forget…..
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