By Terry Blain

Published: Wednesday, 29 November 2023 at 16:06 PM


One wintry afternoon not far from the end of the Second World War, the musical world lost one of its best-loved performers. But how did Glenn Miller die? Here’s the full story of that fateful December night.

Who was Glenn Miller?

Glenn Miller (full name Alton Glen Miller, 1904 – disappeared 1944) was an American big band conductor, composer and trombone player. He was at the peak of his fame from 1938 until his tragic disappearance in 1944, while an officer in the US Army Air Forces during World War Two.

Glenn Miller and His Orchestra were among the most successful bands of the 1930s/1940s ‘big band’ era. SMall wonder that we named Miller in our list of best jazz band leaders of all time.

‘In The Mood’, ‘Moonlight Serenade’, ‘Chattanooga Choo Choo’. The titles are familiar, the tunes indelible, and as the early rumblings of World War II emerged in Europe they catapulted Glenn Miller and his Orchestra to heady levels of celebrity in his native US.

The Orchestra’s euphonious brand of big-band swing music dominated the airwaves, and for its founder decades more of media celebrity seemed to beckon.

What did Glenn Miller do in World War Two?

Then Pearl Harbor happened. The Japanese bombing of an American naval base in Hawaii in December 1941 drew the US into the war, prompting the patriotic Miller to offer his services to the military effort.

Initially rejected by the Navy, by September 1942 Miller had persuaded the Army to offer him a commission. He would, he promised, ‘put a little more spring into the feet of our marching men and a little more joy in their hearts’.