ROBERT R. KORNEGAY, LCDR, USN
Robert Kornegay '58
Lucky Bag
From the 1958 Lucky Bag:
ROBERT ROACH KORNEGAY
Centreville, Alabama
Bob came north after a year of civil engineering at the University of Alabama, ready to set all the Yankees straight on who really won the Civil War. His pre- Academy "book-larnin" helped him breeze through the academics and enabled Bob to spend a lot of his time in which to elaborate on the glories of his beloved Dixie and to help the lightweight football team win a couple of championships. His slow drawl and cheerful smile will long be remembered by his classmates; we wish him the very best of everything in his quest for Navy wings.
He was also a member of the 4th Battalion staff (winter).
ROBERT ROACH KORNEGAY
Centreville, Alabama
Bob came north after a year of civil engineering at the University of Alabama, ready to set all the Yankees straight on who really won the Civil War. His pre- Academy "book-larnin" helped him breeze through the academics and enabled Bob to spend a lot of his time in which to elaborate on the glories of his beloved Dixie and to help the lightweight football team win a couple of championships. His slow drawl and cheerful smile will long be remembered by his classmates; we wish him the very best of everything in his quest for Navy wings.
He was also a member of the 4th Battalion staff (winter).
Loss
William was lost on March 15, 1967 when the A-3B Skywarrior he was piloting crashed during approach to Lockbourne AFB, Columbus, Ohio. He and two other men aboard were flying from China Lake, California, to Quonset Point, Rhode Island.
Other Information
From the May 1967 issue of Shipmate:
LCdr. Robert R. Kornegay, USN, who was serving with the Naval Air Facility at China Lake, Calif., died in a military plane accident near Lockbourne Air Force Base, Columbus, Ohio, on 15 March. The plane was on an operational flight at the time of the accident. A memorial service was held at the Protestant Chapel at China Lake, with military services and interment held at Centreville, Ala., on the 20th.
LCdr. Kornegay, who was born in Alabama, attended the University of Alabama before entering the Naval Academy. He was graduated with the class of 1958, and was designated a naval aviator at Pensacola. He was assigned to China Lake in June 1966 and held the positions of Pilot Indoctrination and Air Navigation Officer at the Naval Ordnance Test Station.
Survivors include his widow, the former Diane Jamieson of Vancouver, Canada, who is living at 54-B Ringgold St., China Lake, Ca. 03555; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kornegay of 136 Cooper St., Centreville, Ala. 35042; three brothers, George Kornegay of Montevallo, Ala., Stanley Roy Kornegay of Atlanta, Ga., and James Kornegay of Centreville, and a sister, Mrs. Cora Mae Flam of Oak Ridge, Tenn.
He is buried in Alabama.
Photographs
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