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  1. Killed in action. Byron Darnton (November 8, 1897 – October 18, 1942) was an American reporter and war correspondent for The New York Times in the Pacific theater during World War II . He was killed in 1942 by a bomb dropped from an American B-25 Mitchell bomber, the tenth American war correspondent killed in action in the war.

  2. 16 de out. de 2005 · Our father, Byron Darnton, a war correspondent for The New York Times, was killed off the coast of New Guinea in October 1942. At the time, Bob was 3* and I was 11 months.

  3. The Byron Darnton was one of these ships. She was launched from the Bethlehem Fairfields, Baltimore, USA on 16th December 1943 (Yard No 2296). Her dimensions were 441.0′ x 57.0′ x 27.0′ and her tonnae was 7176 gross tons, 4380 net tons. She was powered by a triple expansion steam engine by General Machine Corporation, Hamilton, Ontario.

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  4. 15 de mar. de 2011 · On March 9, 1947, Anthony Leviero, a Times reporter who had served as an intelligence officer in the war, filed an article calling Byron Darntons death “perhaps the first of a number of...

  5. 20 de out. de 2005 · Our father, Byron Darnton, a war correspondent for The New York Times, was killed off the coast of New Guinea in October 1942. At the time, Bob was 3 and I was 11 months.

  6. 7 de abr. de 1996 · The last Times reporter to be killed while working on a story was his father, Byron Darnton, who died in New Guinea fifty-four years ago while covering the war in the Pacific.

  7. 28 de jun. de 2018 · While the United States military was eager to have stories about “Allied troops,” John said, Byron Darnton, who went by Barney, always wrote and fought for the use of “Australian troops.”