TIME OF THE ACES: Marine Pilots in the Solomons
by Commander Peter B. Mersky, U.S. Naval Reserve
Combat in October
October was a pivotal month for the air campaign on
Guadalcanal. It was a time when the men who had arrived in August were
clearly at the end of their endurance, for sickness and fatigue hit them
after they had survived Japanese bullets. However, new squadrons and
crews were arriving, among them VMF-121, led by Major Leonard K. "Duke"
Davis. His executive officer, Captain Joseph J. Foss, would soon make a
name for himself.
Foss came from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and as a
boy had developed a shooting eye which would stand him in good stead
over Guadalcanal. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in February 1940 and
received his wings of gold 13 months later. Originally considered too
old to fly fighters (he was 27), he was ordered to a photo
reconnaissance squadron in San Diego. However, he kept submitting
requests for transfer to fighters and was finally sent to VMF-121.
A few days after arriving at Henderson, Foss scored
his first victory on 13 October. As an attacking Zero fired and missed,
Foss fired his guns sending the enemy fighter down. Three more Zeros
then at tacked Foss, putting holes in his Wildcat's oil system. The
newly blooded pilot had to make a dead-stick landing back at Cactus
Base.
Other veterans of the campaign had not stayed idle.
Major Smith of VMF-223 had taken his squadron up on 2 October against a
raid by Japanese bombers and fighters. The Zero escorts dove on the
climbing Navy and Marine Wildcats, quickly shooting down two fighters
from VMF-223. Smith exited a cloud to confront three Zeros. He blasted a
fighter into a ball of flame. However, the two remaining Zeros got on
his tail and peppered the struggling little blue-gray F4F with can non
and machine gun fire. Listening to a repaired radio from a damaged SBD
back at Guadalcanal, the crews of Dennis Byrd's VMSB-232 heard Captain
Carl call to his skipper. "John, you've got a Zero on your tail!" "I
know, I know," Smith replied, "shoot the SOB if you can!" Then all was
silence.
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Maj
John L. Smith, LtCol Richard C. Mangrum, and Capt Marion E. Carl pose
for photos after returning to the States. LtCol Mangrum commanded an SBD
squadron at the height of the Cactus campaign and was universally
admired. He eventually attained the rank of lieutenant general, while
Marion Carl retired as a major general after fighting in three wars
World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. Department of Defense
photo (USMC) A707812
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Smith's aircraft was mortally wounded, and he tried
to regain the field. He finally had to make a dead-stick landing six
miles from the strip and walk back, watching all the time for roving
Japanese patrols.
Second Lieutenant Charles H. Kendrick was not as
fortunate as his skipper. The Zeros had gotten him on their first pass,
and he tried to guide his stricken fighter to a crash landing. He
apparently landed close to Henderson, but his fighter flipped over on
its back, killing the young pilot.
Major Smith led a party to the crash site. They found
Kendrick still in his cockpit. They released and buried him beside his
plane. Stan Nicolay recalled, "I don't know how many we lost that day.
We re ally took a beating." Actually, six Wildcats had been shot down or
returned with strike damage. Several others required major repair.
VMF-224's skipper was also shot down. Bob Galer
bailed out over the water his third shootdown in less than three
weeks and was rescued. He had accounted for two Zeros, however.
He recalled:
I was up with six fighters, cruising about at 20,000
or 25,000 feet. Suddenly, 18 Zeros came at us out of the sun, and we
took 'em on. The day was cloudy and after a few minutes, the only other
Marine I could find was Second Lieutenant Dean Hartley. In the melee of
first contact, I heard several Jap bullets splatter against and
through my ship, but none stopped me. At about the same moment,
Hartley and I started to climb into a group of seven Zeros hovering
above us. In about four minutes, I shot down two Zeros and Hartley got a
possible. The other four were just too many and we were both shot down.
Hartley got to a field, but I couldn't make it. The Jap that got me
really had me boresighted. He raked my ship from wingtip to wingtip. He
blasted the rudder bar right from under my foot. My cockpit was so
perforated it's a miracle that I escaped. The blast drove the rivets
from the pedal into my leg. I pancaked into the water near Florida
Island. It took me an hour-and-a-half to swim ashore....I worried not
only about the Japs but about the tide turning against me, and
sharks.
Major Galer struggled ashore where he encountered
four men armed with machetes and spears. Fortunately, the natives were
friendly and took the bedraggled pilot to their village. After enjoying
what hospitality his hosts could offer, Major Galer rode in a native
canoe to a Marine camp on a beach five miles away. He made his way back
to Henderson from there.
Marine Aircraft Group 23 and the rest of its
squadrons also left the following day, having earned a rest from the
intense combat of the last two-and-a-half months. Between 20 August and
16 October, the squadrons of MAG-23 and attached Army and Navy squadrons
had shot down 244 Japanese aircraft, including 111.5 by VMF-223 and 60.5
by VMF-224. The score had not come free, though. Twenty-two pilots of
the group, as well as 33 aviators from other Navy, Marine, and Army
squadrons assigned to the Cactus Air Force, had been lost.
John Smith had seen his last engagement. He received
the Medal of Honor for his leadership during the Guadalcanal campaign
and finished the war as the sixth highest on the list of Marine Corps
aces, closely followed by his friend and rival, Marion Carl. Much to his
initial chagrin, Smith found himself on the War Bond circuit, and then
training new pilots. It was not until two years later, in 1944, that
Lieutenant Colonel Smith got a combat assignment again. As commanding
officer of MAG-32 in Hawaii, he took the group to Bougainville and the
Philippines.
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Marion Carl, now a major and commanding his old
squadron, VMF-223, made his 17th kill in December 1943, when he shot
down a Japanese Tony over Rabaul. Carl was escorting Marine PBJ (B-25)
bombers in his F4U-1 Corsair when the enemy fighter jumped the raiders.
The victory was Carl's next-to-last score. Painting by William S. Phillips,
courtesy of The Greenwich Workshop
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Marion Carl assumed command of his old squadron,
VMF-223, in the United States in January 1943 and took the newly renamed
Bulldogs to the South Pacific late in the fall. He gained two more
kills a Ki.61 Tony (a Japanese Army fighter) and a Zero, on 23
December and 27 December 1943, respectively this time in a Vought
F4U Corsair. His final score at the end of the war was 18.5 Japanese
aircraft destroyed.
The night of 13-14 October saw the Japanese pound
beleaguered Henderson Field with every gun they could fire from their
assembled flotilla offshore, as well as the entrenched artillery
positions hidden in the dense jungle surrounding the field. The
night-long barrage might very well have been the end for the Cactus
Marines.
The new day revealed that of 39 Dauntlesses, only
seven could be considered operational, only a few Army fighters could
stagger into the air, and all the TBF Avenger torpedo bombers were
destroyed or down. The only saving factor was that the fighter strip was
relatively untouched. By the afternoon, a few Wildcats were sent up to
mount a patrol over Henderson while it pulled itself together. For the
next few days, the Cactus Air Force Marine, Navy, and
Army flew as though its collective life was on the line, which it
was.
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