Home at last: Honoring the return of a Flying Tiger

  • Published
  • By Senior Airman Savannah Carpenter
  • 23d Wing Public Affairs

GREENVILLE, S.C. — For years, there was only a name and a legacy his family never let fade. On the afternoon of Dec. 14, 2025, family members and uniformed service members gathered at a cemetery, moving toward a granite headstone that had stood for more than eight decades without the man it was meant to honor.

On this day, that changed. The memorial finally met its purpose.

After being killed in action during World War II and buried overseas, 1st Lt. Morton Sher’s remains were finally accounted for. What had once been an empty marker became a place of return, bringing closure to his family and community. A name once lost to history is spoken aloud again. He is accounted for, remembered and finally home.

Sher was 22 years old, a Greenville, South Carolina, native who served as a fighter pilot in the U.S. Army Air Forces. He was assigned to the 76th Fighter Squadron, 23rd Fighter Group, 14th Air Force, the unit that carried on the legacy of the famed Flying Tigers. Sher flew combat missions during World War II as part of the Allied air effort in China, and like many of his generation, he entered the war young, trained for a dangerous role and left behind a life and a future still just beginning.

Sher’s time in China wasn’t only about the mission that would end his life, but it was also marked by moments that revealed both the dangers he faced and the connections he made along the way. Flying a Curtiss P‑40, he escorted bombers and flew hazardous combat missions in the China‑Burma theater. During an October 1942 mission, engine damage forced him down in a Chinese village, where villagers welcomed him with food and celebration. The villagers, grateful for U.S. protection from Japanese forces, celebrated Lt. Sher as a hero with a feast. He entertained 15,000 with songs and a story, received a silk banner for his missions, and was warmly escorted through nearby mountain villages back to his base. Sher later recounted the experience in an Army newsletter that was picked up by the Associated Press: “I sang a few American songs for them and they were highly pleased. The banquet turned out to be one of the biggest surprises of the trip.”

Through his letters and interviews, Sher consistently conveyed that he was where he was meant to be, fully committed to his duty and the people he served alongside. That sense of purpose and vitality has left a lasting impression on his family.

“We never knew Morton, but he was larger than life in the stories our family told us, his photos, and his writings,” said Bruce Fine, Sher’s nephew. “He was certainly a man who filled his pages of life with meaning, and he lived every day to its fullest. In fact, the day before he died, on August 19th, 1943, he wrote a letter home telling his parents ‘I let another pilot take that instructing job, for I find things too exciting here to leave right now’, and the very next day, he was gone.”

His dedication wasn’t just in words, but it was also evident in the choices he made every day in the air.

“Lt Sher was shot down on Oct. 25, 1942, and returned to the 76th Fighter Squadron to fly, fight and win another day,” said Mark Godwin, 23d Wing historian added. “He had an opportunity to return home and become an instructor pilot but chose to stay and continue the fight. He personified the last two core values: Service Before Self and Excellence in All We Do.”

In the summer of 1943, Sher’s service placed him directly in combat. Sher was killed during a mission near Hengyang City, China, when his aircraft crashed and burned in a rice paddy in Xin Bai Village. The local villagers honored his bravery by placing a memorial stone at the crash site. He was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart in September 1943, presented to his mother, Celia, at the family home in Greenville, and despite a postwar U.S. search and recovery effort, a board of review concluded on September 8, 1947, that his remains had been destroyed in the crash and officially classified him as killed in action and unrecoverable.

Even in that brief time, Sher left a lasting impact.

“Sher spent just over a year in China during World War II,” Godwin said, “He racked up three aerial victories before his untimely death. The Flying Tigers used the Chinese phrase "Ding Hao" during World War II. It means, ‘Very Good, excellent.’ The 76th FS was excellent in World War II. Sher was a part of the excellent 76th FS. He gave his life to protect his fellow Flying Tigers. He should forever be remembered for his courage and sacrifice. Ding Hao!”

Decades later, that same courage and sacrifice inspired a renewed effort to bring him home. In 2012, a private citizen contacted the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) with a photo of his memorial site in China. DPAA visited the site in 2019 but found no remains. A more extensive search in 2024 recovered the plane wreckage and Sher’s remains, which were positively identified through DNA testing using his nephew’s samples after the remains were returned to the lab in Hawaii.

After more than eight decades, Lt. Sher finally returned home to his family. The successful return of Sher’s remains reflected a shared commitment that transcended borders, with the Chinese government, local civilians, DPAA personnel and his family working together to bring him home.

​​“This was through team effort,” said Col Brett Waring, 476th Fighter Group commander. “The teams that continue to scour the earth for our missing and KIA are beyond impressive. They're part of that American commitment to individuals that endures across generations.”

Waring said even though the security landscape has evolved and the U.S. Department of War must meet pacing challenges, moments like these where people work together for a common purpose should be treasured.

“We understand that Morton fought for the Chinese people in that war and theater, and when he was shot down, the local populace protected him when he survived the first shootdown, and then prevented the enemy from taking his aircraft and body when he was killed in action,” he said. “That speaks to the humanity that connects us all even when other circumstances point towards adversarial actions.

“It’s a personal commitment that transcends politics and nationalities,” Waring continued. “It’s a respect that allows us to understand that, should we ever be the ones at the focus of such a search, there are incredible teams that work tirelessly to ensure that we all come home. That commitment and purpose remains foundational to every crew member associated with the combat search and rescue mission as well.”

Sher was welcomed home by his family and community during a memorial that reflected the significance of his sacrifice. From remarks delivered by his nephew to the precision of the honor guard and a flyover conducted by the 476th FG, each moment underscored a long-awaited homecoming. What began as a name etched into stone more than 80 years ago became, at last, a place of remembrance, closure, and honor for a pilot who gave his life in service to his country and was never forgotten.

Sher’s homecoming not only honored his sacrifice but also connected past and present generations of service members.

“The legacy that we’re honored to carry on today was started by that generation of warriors who left home to fight for another country in a cause that they absolutely believed in,” Waring said. “It was a level of commitment that we are challenged with maintaining. It’s a legacy that goes beyond painted teeth on an airplane or a patch on our shoulder. It’s history, it’s heritage and it’s a legacy that we’re proud to carry on through our generations. With most of the WWII generation having passed on, there aren’t many opportunities to physically “touch” that history anymore. When I was a younger pilot in the 75th and 74th, the WWII pilots were still around and we could hear their stories directly from them. That time has passed us by, and now it’s up to us, whenever we have the chance as modern Flying Tigers, to carry that heritage and legacy, even as we write our own stories.

“It solidifies the commitment to one another and the enduring bond between all of us in uniform,” Waring continued. “None of us knew Morton Sher, we didn’t know his name until recently, but as soon as we learned of his coming home, we leapt at the opportunity to honor him and support his family. From the maintainers coming in to generate sorties, to Public Affairs researching facts about him, to the wing historian finding additional media and stories, to the pilots who flew the jets emblazoned with the same shark’s teeth that the 76th Pursuit Squadron dominated the skies in 1943 with, it emphatically states that the bond that we share never dies, and no one is left behind or ever forgotten.”

For years, Sher’s story existed in fragments through letters, photographs and a name carved into stone. Now, those pieces had come together, allowing his journey to move forward at last. The pilot who once left Greenville to serve his country was finally returning, not as a memory, but as a son brought home.

Sher’s homecoming closed one long chapter, but it also points to a story still unfolding. Across battlefields and oceans, thousands of service members remain unaccounted for, their families holding onto the same hope that guided Sher’s return and the same promise that continues to drive the mission to bring them home. For pilots like Sher, that hope and dedication are echoed in the skies themselves.

“I’ve topped the windswept heights with easy grace, where never lark, or even eagle flew. And, while in silent, lifting mind I’ve trod, the high untrespassed sanctity of space, put out my hand and touched the face of God.” Etched on the back of Sher’s headstone, these words come from High Flight, written in 1941 by Royal Canadian Air Force pilot John Gillespie Magee Jr. after a training flight. The poem captures the freedom, purpose, and spiritual awe of wartime flight and endures as one of aviation’s most lasting tributes to those who never returned.

As family and friends poured dirt from Israel and the surrounding ground onto Sher’s grave, the memorial was finally made whole. What once stood as a marker of loss now stands as a place of return, where absence gave way to remembrance, and sacrifice to honor.

Sher loved what he did and created a legacy that endures. His story, once unfinished, now stands a complete testament to service, sacrifice, and a nation’s promise to remember those who gave everything. That enduring legacy, woven from history, heroism, and personal courage, continues to inspire both the families who remember him and the generations who follow.

“There’s no limit to the commitment that we share with the generations that formed the legacy that we carry,” Waring added. “Up until a few months ago, I may never have known of Lt. Morton Sher. Now I’ll never forget his name, and I know that’s the same for every member of the 476th that heard his story over the last few months. They say that a warrior dies two deaths: one physical, and the second when their name is forgotten. If that’s true, then Morton lives on in the hearty laughter and boisterous camaraderie that flows from the 76th Fighter Squadron today.”

His heroism is not only preserved in the memories of his family but also carried forward by those who follow in his footsteps, ensuring that his name and story remain alive.

“Our family tree produced a real hero,” Fine said. “The kind you read about and see on the big screen except he was real! We hope his bravery and his courage will inspire the family members who follow us to believe anything you can dream can be truly possible if you’re willing to commit to it and work hard to achieve it.”