Charles A. Lindbergh and the
475th Fighter Group
The Lone Eagle, Charles Augustus Lindbergh. In
1927 Lindbergh's solo trans-Atlantic flight stunned
the world and turned him into an overnight hero.
Two years before the Depression struck, Lindbergh
seemed to epitomize the very essence of an ebullient
America that never looked back. His lanky good
looks, nicely muted by a shy, almost diffident
smile, proved the perfect foil to a deed of enormous
courage. The U.S. bowed happily before its new
hero, " Lucky Lindy. "
With fame and hard work, Lindbergh prospered.
His marriage to Anne Morrow, daughter of
distinguished statesman and diplomat Dwight W.
Morrow, proved long and abiding. His fortunes
multiplied, as did his family, when Anne bore their
first son on 22 June 1930, her birthday.
Novelist E Scott Fitzgerald wrote: "Show me a hero
and I will write you a tragedy. " On the night
of I March 1932, the Lindbergh’s’ child, lovingly
called "Fat Lamb" by Anne and "Buster" by Charles,
was kidnapped and murdered. The weeks of
anguish which followed embittered Lindbergh,
heightened by the intrusions of the press and
hideous crank calls that mocked his grieving.
Nothing quenched Charles' disappointment - in
America and its people. On 7 December 1935 he
made a decision, telling Anne to pack and be ready
to leave on a day's notice. They would abandon
the U.S. Fifteen days later the two set sail for
England.
Lindbergh's dalliance with Europe forever changed
his life. An earlier acquaintance and
distinguished British civil servant, Harold
Nicholson, offered Charles and Anne the use of Long
Barn Cottage, near Nicholson's castle at
Sissinghurst in southeastern England. At that
place the Lindbergh's rebuilt their lives in the
solitude of the Kentish countryside; from that place
Lindbergh ventured out into a changing world.
Over the next few years he became acquainted with a
number of people but it was through the Army Air
Corps' singular attaché in Berlin, Major Truman
Smith, that Lindbergh went to Nazi Germany. He
accepted an invitation from the Nazi Government,
initiated and forwarded by Smith, to visit Berlin.
Once there, German officialdom threw down the red
carpet and dazzled Lindbergh. The Lone Eagle
came away from that trip with a changed perspective.
At heart Lindbergh had one serious flaw. An
honest man, he believed people returned that
honesty. That others lied, the man found hard
to accept; that a government lied was beyond his
comprehension. His tour had been carefully
staged; unseen were the political camps and obvious
anti-Semitic demonstrations. Instead Lindbergh
saw a dynamic Germany churning out "defensive
weapons," awesome in numbers and quality.
The epicenter of his crises, however, devolved on a
simple fact - Lindbergh feared for the U. S. How
could the Depression-crippled nation he left behind
compete with the material and moral superiority of a
resurgent Germany?
Lindbergh returned home in the spring of 1939.
But he had seen and understood too much to remain
silent any longer. So the Lone Eagle set in
motion events that would eventually see him fly with
Satan's Angels’.
In the years following his return, Lindbergh slowly
alienated himself from the Administration and the
American people. He joined one of the
strongest Noninterventionist groups, the American
First Committee, in April 1941, and became a major
figure in its campaign to keep the U.S. neutral.
The crunch came with a series of radio talks in
which Lindbergh warned against supporting the Allies
because of a perceived German conquest of Europe.
His stature among Americans was seen as a powerful
counterweight to FDR.'s attempt to support the
Allies " short of war. "
On 29 April 1941, two days after Roosevelt impugned
his loyalty in a speech, Lindbergh resigned his
colonelcy in the Air Corps Reserve. Public
reaction that once idolized him, was no longer
sympathetic.
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor sank both ships
and isolationist aspirations. It placed
Lindbergh in a quandary but in a patriotic spirit he
offered to aid the U.S. by returning to the Air
Corps. It was too late. The
Administration refused his services and then, in a
mean spirited mood, forced Lindbergh's many aviation
employers to cancel his advisory positions,
including Juan Trippes' Pan American Airways.
Only one man resisted that move, Henry Ford, and
Lindbergh went to work for him on 3 April 1942 as a
technical consultant helping Ford convert from auto
to bomber production.
Over the next year Washington loosened a bit.
Lindbergh's undeniable expertise with aircraft and
pilots thawed the bans against him. Indeed,
his diary shows an enormously busy schedule of test
flights that solved pressing problems of new
aircraft. In that process the Lone Eagle flew,
and came to know well, almost every combat craft in
the U.S. inventory. But Lindbergh
hungered for combat and as early as January 1944 had
made inquiries as to that possibility. The
Marines responded first. Cautiously, a tour of
Corsair bases in the Pacific was arranged.
In April a friendly U-S- Navy sanctioned and covered
Lindbergh's trip. He would go to their
theater, the Pacific, as a civilian technical
assistant. Neither the White House nor even
Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox knew of this trip.
After kitting up with Navy uniforms from Brook;
Brothers (sans any insignia) and taking the usual
rounds of shots, Lindbergh left San Diego for the
War Zone.
By March he had already regularly contacted the
United Aircraft Corporation, producer of the F4U
Corsair, and had agreed to act as its liaison in the
field. Once situated at Guadalcanal, South
Pacific Area, he corrected problems of the
"bent-winged bird" established better communications
between United Aircraft and the Marines.
There, local Marine officers consented to take
Lindbergh on a patrol to Rabaul, the first of
fourteen combat missions he would fly with the
Corps. With the exception of air-to-air
combat, Lindbergh flew patrol, escort, strafing, and
dive-bombing assignments- As would later occur with
the Army Air Forces, officers winked at his
extraordinary activities by according him "observer
status." Lindbergh concluded his business on the
Canal. By 15 June he landed at Finschafen
bound for the 475th Fighter Group.
The next day Colonel Robert L. Morrissey briefed
Lindbergh on the Lightning. For all his flying
experience he had never flown the P-38. A
major motivation for the civilian's trip to New
Guinea centered around United Aircraft's interest in
the feasibility of a new twin-engine fighter.
The P-38 was the sole American representative of
that genre. He had heard that the 475th was a
hot Lightning outfit so Lindbergh sought to learn
from the best.
He announced his presence to V Fighter Command at
Nadzab. -Colonel Merian C. Cooper lunched with
Lindbergh and on Sunday. evening, 18 June, the
civilian dined with Whitehead, talking of New Guinea
developments and, doubtless, Lindbergh’s plans.
This proved later insufficient for proper
authorization in the theater. On Tuesday he
got in an hour and twenty minutes Lightning time
with 35th Squadron, 8th Group. A week later
Lindbergh flew to Hollandia and walked in on
MacDonald and Smith's checker game.
After obtaining permission to accompany the group on
the next day's mission, Lindbergh retreated to V
Fighter Command Headquarters only to be retrieved
later by MacDonald. The mission, explained the
colonel, would launch at dawn. It would be
better to rest at the 475th camp and cut down
transportation problems. Lindbergh agreed.
Meanwhile the "word" spread quickly. Lindbergh
was among Satan's Angels. In the 433rd camp,
First Lieutenant Carroll R. "Andy" Anderson tried to
summon up enough strength to write a long overdue
letter to his wife, Virginia Marie. Suddenly
friend C.J. Rieman popped in and announced, "Charles
A. Lindbergh is going to fly with us!" Letters were
quickly forgotten.
The next day's mission was to Jefman Island, now a
familiar target for the 475th. With the
possibility of interception much higher than on
Guadalcanal flights, MacDonald took no chances.
The four-craft patrol included some of the best
pilots in the group: MacDonald, with Smith in the
number two slot, followed by Lindbergh and his
wingman Mac McGuire. By that flight the
veterans already had a total of thirty-six victories
between them.
Except for flak, Jefman produced no action and so,
as had been the recent practice, the quartet of
Lightning's shot up barges and luggers on the way
home. The Japanese used the terrain to mask
their boats from air strikes. Spotting a barge
in an indentation formed by two hills leading to the
sea, Lindbergh flew up and over the nearest ridge
clearing the top by a dozen feet, shooting as he
partially straightened, and then banked hard left to
clear the opposing hill, all this at 250 miles per
hour indicated air speed. The four Lightning's
left several craft sinking or burning before turning
for home.
Later the group approved of Lindbergh is handling of
that first mission. Intelligence Officer
Dennis G. "Coop" Cooper was impressed by his
accurate and thorough observations during
debriefing. He flew well and low against the
targets. They did not realize that Lindbergh's
time on Guadalcanal had already honed his combat
skills.
A number of his missions in F4Us involved strafing
difficult targets. In that process, he learned
to fire accurately no matter what his fighter's
attitude. "I do not think about the plane's
position; that is taken care of subconsciously.
All my conscious attention is concentrated on the
sight. The tracers are going home, that's all
that matters." Further, Lindbergh was a
natural marksman. He shot trap and skeet and
while on a PT boat speeding at 26 knots, shot a
flying fish with his .45 automatic Before going
overseas he practiced air-to-air gunnery at El Toro,
California, and Hickam Field, Hawaii, and his time
at Guadalcanal allowed him to fire guns in action.
Lindbergh's modesty kept him silent about his
skills.
Lieutenant John E. "Jack" Purdy of the 433rd looked
forward to meeting Lindbergh. Eventually a
seven-victory ace, Purdy brooked no formality;
already it was "Charlie." Almost as if sensing the
stir caused by Lindbergh's appearance, MacDonald
called a meeting two days after Lindbergh's arrival.
The 475th's C.O. sought to clarify the civilian's
status among Satan's Angels. The Lone Eagle
would be accorded all officer's privileges and would
be addressed as "Mister Lindbergh" as befitting his
non-military status.
The Lone Eagle sortied regularly with the 475th and
the missions reveal two things only partially seen
by the group itself. The first concerned
changing roles. Japanese resources dwindled at this,
the closing of the New Guinea campaigns. Now
they faced the terrible mobility of Nimitz's Central
Pacific carrier task forces while MacArthur primed
for the drive north against the Philippines) Gone
were the relentless daylight air attacks.
Husbanding resources in the Southwest Pacific, the
enemy took to nocturnal raids against targets like
newly-invaded Biak. Until MacArthur moved against
the Philippines, the 475th provided aerial
protection but did little damage to Japanese
resources. This was unacceptable to Charles
MacDonald.
Satan's Angels' C.O. began ordering strafing
missions on the homeward leg of all patrols. Andy
Anderson of Possum Squadron explained that the
skipper was "a real bear for getting his money's
worth on every mission. " Thus the recent spate of
strafing attacks like the one that concluded
Lindbergh's first outing with the 475th.
On the mission slated for 30 June, his second, the
Lone Eagle took part in another of the many tactical
transformations the group witnessed in recent
months. With nil aerial opposition the group
carried 1,000-pound bombs to Noemfoor Island.
They would continue to carry "freight" for the rest
of the war and Lindbergh accompanied them on this
second such attack.
The seventeen ships lifted off the mat strip, flying
through broken clouds and out to sea by 1125. Over
the target they circled, waiting for the A-20s to
complete their runs, watching them crater the
revetment area down the entire side of the enemy
runway. The resultant smoke cleared and the 475th
began its attack. Lindbergh, the only one who
had recent dive-bombing experience, rolled off at
the edge of a squall, steadied his Lightning, and
"pickled off" his weapon at 2,500 feet. He pulled
out of the dive before the ten-second delayed bomb
touched off.
Later the group's Official History recorded all
bombs were delivered with "fair accuracy."
Lindbergh saw part of the subsequent attacks and
noted "three bombs in the target area, two in the
jungle, and three in the ocean." Experience,
however, would make the 475th as proficient with
bombs as they were with bullets.
The second and critical passage made by the group
concerned fuel consumption. With additional
fuel cells in the J model P-38, Satan's Angels had
been making six and one-half and seven-hour flights.
On I July Lindbergh flew a third mission with the
group, an armed reconnaissance to enemy strips at
Nabire, Sagan One and Two, Otawiri, and Ransiki, all
on the western shore of Geelvink Bay. Already
Lindbergh's technical eye noticed something.
After six and one-half hours flying time, he landed
with 210 gallons of fuel remaining in his
Lightning's tanks.
Two missions later, on 3 July, the group covered
sixteen heavies on a strike against Jefman Island.
Lindbergh led Hades Squadron's White Flight as they
wove back and forth above the lumbering B-25s.
After the attack the Lightning's went barge hunting.
First one, then two pilots reported dwindling fuel
and broke off for home. MacDonald ordered the
squadron back but because Lindbergh had nursed his
fuel, he asked for and received permission to
continue the hunt with his wingman. After a
few more strafing runs, Lindbergh noticed the other
Lightning circling overhead. Nervously the
pilot told Lindbergh that he had only 175 gallons of
fuel left. The civilian told him to reduce
engine R.P.M.'s, lean out his fuel mixture, and
throttle back. When they landed, the 431st
driver had seventy gallons left, Lindbergh had 260.
They had started the mission with equal amounts of
gas.
Lindbergh talked with MacDonald. The colonel
then asked the group's pilots to assemble at the
recreation hall that evening. The hall was
that in name only, packed dirt floors staring up at
a palm thatched roof, one ping pong table and some
decks of cards completing the decor. Under the
glare of unshaded bulbs, MacDonald got down to
business. "Mr. Lindbergh" wanted to explain
how to gain more range from the P-38s. In a
pleasant manner Lindbergh explained cruise control
techniques he had worked out for the Lightning's:
reduce the standard 2,200 rpm to 1,600, set fuel
mixtures to "auto-lean," and slightly increase
manifold pressures. This, Lindbergh predicted,
would stretch the Lightning's radius by 400 hundred
miles, a nine-hour flight. When he concluded
his talk half an hour later, the room was silent.
The men mulled over several thoughts in the wake of
their guest's presentation. The notion of a
nine-hour flight literally did not sit well with
them, "bum-busters" thought some. Seven hours
in a cramped Lightning cockpit, sitting on a
parachute, an emergency raft, and an oar was bad,
nine hours was inconceivable. They were right.
Later, on 14 October 1944, a 432nd pilot celebrated
his twenty-fourth birthday with an eight-hour escort
to Balikpapan, Borneo. On touching down, he
was so cramped his crew chief had to climb up and
help him get out of the cockpit.
The group’s chief concern surfaced quickly, that
such procedures would foul sparkplugs and scorch
cylinders. Lindbergh methodically gave the
answer. The Lightning's technical manual
provided all the figures necessary to prove his
point; they had been there all along.
Nonetheless the 475th remained skeptical. A
single factor scotched their reticence.
During their brief encounter, MacDonald had come to
respect Lindbergh. Both men pushed hard and
had achieved. Both were perfectionists never
leaving things half done. And both had
inquisitive minds. John Loisel, commanding
officer the 432nd, remembered the two men talking
for long periods over a multitude of topics beyond
aviation. If, as MacDonald had informed his
pilots, better aircraft performance meant a shorter
war, then increasing the Lightning's range was worth
investigating. Lindbergh provided the idea,
but it was MacDonald's endorsement, backed by the
enormous respect accorded him by the group, that saw
the experiment to fruition. The next day, the
Fourth of July, Lindbergh accompanied the 433rd on a
six-hour, forty-minute flight led by Captain "Parky"
Parkansky. Upon landing, the lowest fuel level
recorded was 160 gallons. In his journal entry
Lindbergh felt ". . . that the talk last night was
worthwhile. " The 475th had lengthened its
stride.
On 7 July Lindbergh flew back to Nadzab. The
475th continued its tasks but began to incorporate
the lessons taught by the departed aviator.
But it was not the end of their association.
They would meet again on the road to the
Philippines, a road that MacArthur had long been
anxious to travel.
MacArthur's clean-up of Eastern New Guinea took
fifteen months. With supplies, experience, and
proper tactics, he had leaped the top of the Guineas
west to Vogelkop and then north to the Moluccas in
three months. On 15 September MacArthur looked
north from Morotai. He was only three hundred
miles from the Philippines; it could have been the
moon.
Pacific plans still remained un-jelled.
Ironically this time the culprit was success.
The success that saw MacArthur's seizure of New
Guinea also sent Nimitz rampaging through the
Pacific islands. On 26 July 1944 MacArthur and
Nimitz met with President Roosevelt at Pearl Harbor.
FDR explained that Washington planners felt
encouraged to scrap the year-old "Strategic Plan for
the Defeat of Japan." This guideline posited the
securing of China's southern coast, Formosa, and
Luzon as a prerequisite to striking the Home
Islands. Now Washington boldly sought direct
attacks against Formosa, or Japan itself, thus
bypassing Luzon. The ensuing conversation was
lively.
Nimitz generally conceded the need for long-range
air cover in any attempt at taking Formosa. In
a long exegesis, MacArthur pointed out the moral
imperative: freeing the gallant Filipino people and
expunging a defeat of American arms; his defeat, the
general might have added. In an earlier
message JCS head George C. Marshall reminded
MacArthur that "personal feelings and Philippine
politics" should not cloud over the war's prime
objective, to defeat Japan. To MacArthur they
were one and inseparable. FDR reacted to those
lofty sentiments by taking an aspirin . . . and
ordering another for the morning. Nonetheless
the meeting's end saw FDR agree to support the two
commanders and push for an invasion of the
Philippines.
For the 475th, those were great - but distant -
events. Life for them still revolved around
coral, seas, and sky. Lindbergh's departure
made no dent in the 475th's regiment. On 2
July 1944 the Allies strengthened their grip on
routes to the Philippines by attacking Noemfoor,
most westerly of the Schouten Island group.
Lightning's from the group covered that landing as
well as those at Sansapor, the northwestern-most
part of New Guinea on the thirtieth of the month.
By then Satan's Angels had moved again.
Biak Island highlighted a continual problem for
Southwestern Pacific campaigns. The heart of
that dilemma involved Allied dependence on captured
Japanese airstrips. Japanese-engineered
runways lacked the polish of their American
counterparts. The lighter enemy craft could
employ runway surfaces that were thinner, their
lengths shorter. U. S. fighters had difficulty
enough, but steel matting helped convert them to
American specifications. The real problem
revolved around the heavies, B-24s and -17s.
The enemy had no such massive craft and so heavy
bomber runway facilities were hardest to develop.
The many moves completed by Satan's Angels stemmed
as much from airfields proved inadequate as from the
rapid progress of the war. Cape Gloucester,
Finschafen, and Hollandia evicted the 475th.
Biak now beckoned.
Located 275 miles west of Hollandia, Biak had been
attacked by the 41st Division on 27 May 1944.
Local defense commander Colonel Naoyuki Kuzume had
learned that Japanese troops on the waterline
inevitably died or could not retreat under
pre-invasion bombardments. He pulled his men
back into coral catacombs dotting the landscape.
The ensuing struggle for the island was one of the
worst of the war. Even as the Seabees and
engineers reconditioned strips at Owi Island, just
off Biak, and then on Biak itself, Japanese snipers
and suicide teams kept the area a combat zone.
Some of the enemy held out for months. The
475th again lodged hard on the edge of battle.
On 10 July the air echelon landed on Mokmer Strip,
Biak. Two men were missing. Crew chief
Sergeant Teddy Hanks, swinging aboard the last C-47
transporting the air echelon to Biak, noticed a 38
limping back to land, snafued. With no
mechanics left, Hanks and fellow Sergeant George A.
Brown dismounted. Brown had repaired airplanes
before the war and was one of the few men that came
to the 475th with prior experience. Together
they repaired the Lightning, telling the pilot to
buzz them on the way out. Happy to oblige, the
pilot roared in so low that a terrified earth-mover
operator bailed out onto the ground. The
entire group completed the move four days later.
Mokmer strip had been chiseled out of a hillside
overlooking the beach and sea. The runway was
white, compacted coral with good drainage in rain
and dusty in the heat. The temporary camp lay
at the eastern end of the strip. The later
"permanent" encampment at Sorido would be a mile and
a half from Mokmer, connected by a bumpy road.
Both sites spread out over the same crushed coral as
the strip, road, and island. Early on, Tokyo
Rose acknowledged the 475th's presence as the
"Butchers of Rabaul" and promised a nasty welcome.
A 432nd pilot later explained, "It's hell trying to
dig a foxhole in coral."
Foxholes were no laughing matter. The
temporary camp lay but 400 yards from the mopping up
operations and in the early weeks firefights could
be heard beyond the perimeter. Furthermore,
Japanese night bombing raids were frequent if
inaccurate, the men theorizing that the center of
the airstrip was the safest place during such
attacks. Gas masks also made them aware of the
war's proximity. Intelligence officers
worried, knowing that Colonel Kuzume had received
orders to employ poison gas in the island's defense.
Nothing came of that order but masks decorated each
American's cot for sometime to come.
General camp conditions were decent by earlier
standards. While hot, the trade winds cooled
things off in the evening and the ocean always
beckoned for a swim. Showers were available,
and while the food improved little, one could always
scrounge survival, " melt-proof" chocolate bars from
the parachute riggers who seemed to have an endless
supply. Liquor remained habitually scarce.
Yard bird Lieutenant Lloyd C. Lentz, Jr., 431st
Squadron, solved the problem in style. His
wife sent him Scotch or bourbon in medicinal
containers. On scattered Pacific atolls "are
empty Listerine bottles in island trash heaps," mute
testimony to American ingenuity and the demand for a
decent drink.
A welcomed addition arrived in the Satan's Angels'
revetment, a B-25 Mitchell. Late of the 345th
Bomb Group, it had flown its share of missions and
now served to make "Fat Cat" runs to Australia.
A silvery ship with a solid metal nose, the Mitchell
bore the title "Fertile Myrtle, " a name straitlaced
Lindbergh found objectionable. On its maiden
voyage, officers and men kicked in money for
supplies and especially fresh produce, milk, and
meat. Much to the disappointment of the EM'S,
"Myrtle" returned with liquor, most of which went to
officers' country. Later flights were more
equitably divided. Unfortunately even with
fresh provisions, their proper preparation was still
occasionally lacking. Private First Class
Curtis E Tinker, Jr., of the 432nd Squadron,
recalled that the cooks, upon receiving a shipment
of fresh eggs from a "Fat Cat" flight, promptly
fried them in Australian mutton tallow.
Air engagements grew increasingly rare as the
Japanese girded for the forthcoming struggle for the
Philippines. Except for victories in the first
four days of July, the group waited out a drought in
air fighting. By the end of the month
circumstances changed.
On 16 July Lindbergh returned to the group.
Earlier Kenney had called him back to Brisbane, the
civilian arriving by 21 July. Apparently the
problem stemmed from miscommunications, protocol,
and a genuine concern for the Lone Eagle's safety.
Conversation brought agreement and much like Marine
Corps officialdom on the Canal, Lindbergh received "
observer-status" and permission to use his guns in
self-defense because, as Kenney told him, ". . , no
one back in the States will know whether you use
your guns or not. Officially sanctioned, he
returned to the 475th.
Lindbergh easily re-entered the flow of group
activities. Despite the mandated "Mr.
Lindbergh" title, the officers and men accepted the
former Air Corps colonel as well as any outsider
could expect. They kidded him, carefully
measuring Lindbergh's response and never finding him
wanting.
Good humor, in fact, was necessary because flying
combat missions had not made him a combat pilot.
After one takeoff, Lindbergh noticed he lagged
behind the 433rd despite his best efforts to catch
up. A pilot quipped over the radio, "Get your
wheels up! You're not flying the Spirit of St.
Louis. " Lindbergh had forgotten to retract
his landing gear. Other incidents had less
humor but were met with the same unfailing grace.
Possum Squadron, the 433rd, owned and groomed an
idiosyncratic reputation, They did nothing by half
measures. Major "Louie" Lewis insisted on
sharp flying, often bringing the squadron over a
runway in precision order, each fighter trailing
ribbons of condensation from wingtips as they peeled
off to land. Lindbergh received a rude
introduction into the intricacies of squadron styles
while flying with the 433rd. Lewis employed a
rapid two-craft takeoff, the entire squadron
expected to be emplaced within a single circuit of
the field. Sound reasoning backed his method.
Long takeoffs and assemblies meant less gas in
flight, often spelling the difference between
success and failure over the target or life and
death on the long trip home. On one such
mission Lewis looked back to see a lone P-38 on the
strip, Lindbergh's. After the squadron
completed a number of circuits the Lightning ambled
off the runway, made a leisurely ascent, and joined
up with the now fretful Possums. Later Lewis
explained how the squadron operated and Lindbergh
promised to preflight before the 433rd assembled and
to "pull streamers" on takeoff. The Lone Eagle
was learning.
In support of the Sansapor invasion, a raid had been
slated for the next day but bad weather delayed the
mission until 27 July At 0745 the group lifted off
to escort the first U. S. strike on Halmahera, one
of two major islands in the Molucca Group, air
"Intel" estimating 150 aircraft scattered over three
fields, 75 to 100 probably fighters. With the
431st Lindbergh flew close cover to the B-25
strafer's, the other squadrons flying at
intermediate and high altitudes.
Now fully aware of radar's ability, the battle group
traced the sea at 2,000 feet staving off their
presence on Japanese plotting boards for as long a;
possible. Halmahera's hazy purple coastline
appeared, then cleared to white sand beaches and
verdant jungles. High cover rose above the
group and the 475th broke into its combat strings
that wove protectively above the forty gun ships.
The sweep into Galela strip, their target, took them
past an active volcano, its sulfurous fume; invading
cockpits, ashen smoke reducing visibility to a
minimum. As the leading wave of B-25s
smothered Galela in a wash of tracers and parafrags,
Lindbergh and the 433rd rose and circled the drome
watching the second line of Mitchell's do their work
before escorting the third echelon of strafer's out
to sea. In their wake the Fifth left sixty
smoldering Japanese craft. The 431st tangled
with some Oscars and despite skillful enemy flying,
shot down three, one falling to Mac McGuire.
This was his twenty-first, making him the SWPA’s
leading ace.
The next day, 28 July, the big fighters again
cleared Mokmer by 0740, target Amboina, a small
island off the southwest coast of Ceram. The
B-25s of the 345th Bomb Group had already launched
and the Lightning's easily caught them at the
McClure Gulf, forming up into airborne legions as
they swept past dead or dying enemy fields like Babo,
Kokas, and the Sagans. As they passed on, the
weather worsened until the Mitchell main force quit
and turned for home.
MacDonald and Lindbergh, flying with the Possums,
led two flights up to 18,000 feet and cleared the
thunderheads. Unnoticed, Lieutenant Herbert W.
"Herbie" Cochran's Lightning, number 186, was going
down after first the right, then the left engine
quit. Too low to bailout, Cochran successfully
ditched in the sea. So quickly had the
lieutenant gone in that later his wingman,
Lieutenant Ethelbert B. "E. B." Roberts assumed the
downed pilot had snafued and had gone back to Mokmer.
Floating in his emergency raft Cochran paddled
about. Suddenly droning engines caught his
attention, the 345th had aborted the mission and now
flew directly overhead. Only then did he
notice the open bomb bay doors. Unseen from
above, a tiny figure furiously waved an oar.
Cochran thought , "Don't drop those damn things
here. You're gonna kill me." Suddenly the air
filled with bombs which somehow all missed the
lieutenant. Later Cochran paddled ashore and,
still wet, was greeted by "What happened to you?"
Usually a calm man, he blurted out " What happened?
What happened! I darned near got killed, that's what
happened!"
Blue and Yellow Flights of the 433rd, sans Cochran,
broke free of the storm front and closed on Ceram
Island. Moving south towards enemy fields the
squadron swung into their loose, weaving formation
and upped speed to the preferred 250 mph Approaching
Amahai the cloud deck forced the squadron to just
below the billowy white at 10,000 to 13,000 feet.
Around 1000 the radio waves evidenced an unseen
fight.
Two Mitsubishi 51 Sonias, armed, two-place
reconnaissance-attack craft, returned from searching
for a comrade missing after escorting a convoy of
the 35th Division to Sorong. Part of the 73rd
Independent Flying Chutai, the Sonias were piloted
by the 73rd's C.O. Captain Saburo, Shimada and
Sergeant Saneyoshi Yokogi, doubtless happy to be
nearing home at Amahai. It was then that the
P-38s of "Captive" Squadron, the 9th Squadron of the
49th Group, dropped down on the Japanese duo.
The "49er;" had forged an enviable record in the
SWPA despite the fact that only the 9th Squadron
flew Lightning's. It was that squadron that
now squared off against the two Japanese over Amahai.
The enemy pilots were clearly veteran;. While
Sonias shared basic characteristics of other
Japanese craft- low wing loading and a high power to
weight ratio- they were still two-place airplanes
with fixed landing gear. And yet beset by the
9th's Lightning's they flew like demons stymieing
"Captive's" best efforts.
MacDonald's flights traced the 9th's growing rage
and frustration as the frantically twisting Japanese
continued to evade their P-38s' gunfire. They
listened anxiously to their radios, following the
course of events as best they could:
"Damn ! I'm out of ammunition."
"The son of a bitch is making monkeys out of us. "
"I'm out of ammunition, too. "
MacDonald keyed his mike asking for the location of
the fight, but the 9th grimly ignored the call;
enemy craft were scarce enough without competition
from Satan's Angel's. A 49er, Lieutenant Wade
D. Lewis's cannon shells caught a Sonia in the left
wing triggering a fire. As the enemy
straightened out to run, Lieutenant J.C. Haslip
finally slipped behind the green and brown mottled
ship, fired a long burst drawing smoke, the stricken
craft diving down into the sea. So died
Sergeant Yokogi.
For thirty minutes Captain Shimada fought off
Captive Squadron while MacDonald's flights
frantically searched for the fight. Banking
around a huge thunderhead, black flak drew the 475th
to the long running battle three miles off Amahai
drome. At 1045 drop tanks fluttered away as
MacDonald led the flights into a turning dive from
3,000 feet, triggering a short burst that spangled
the Mitsubishi with hits. It began to smoke.
Trapped, Shimada decided to fight. Banking
furiously, his wingtips streamed condensation as he
wracked his craft around in a wicked left-hand turn.
MacDonald's wingman and Group Operations Officer,
Captain Danforth "Danny" Miller, tried pulling lead
on the hostile fighter. Danforth caught it
briefly in his sight's reticle and then lost the
Sonia's track, his tracers falling off eighty feet
behind. By then Shimada had completed his turn
and dove on the next attacking Lightning lining up
on the second element leader, Charles Lindbergh.
For all his experience the civilian had never seen,
let alone fought, an enemy craft. Now he and
Shimmed flew at each other head-on at 500 mph.
Lindbergh instinctively sighted on the Mitsubishi is
radial engine and held down the buttons, his fighter
bucking, gunpowder fumes filling his cockpit.
The civilian's bullets and shells, six seconds
worth, slammed into the front of the Sonia, its
propeller perceptibly slowing but still Shimada
refused to break off. A moment before impact,
Lindbergh pulled hard on the yoke vaulting Chimera’s
ship by mere feet. As the stricken Mitsubishi
poured smoke, it half rolled and took its last dive.
Lieutenant Joseph E. "Fishkiller" Miller,
Lindbergh's number two, snapped out rounds that took
the Sonia in the wing, ripping off pieces.
Shimada’s gallant fight ended in a spray of foam
that briefly marked his passing. Years later
MacDonald expressed admiration for that pilot who
single-handedly out flown a squadron of P-38s only
to be killed by Charles Lindbergh.
A grinning "Fishkiller" Miller, so named for his
missed bombing strike that brought thousands of
stunned fish to the surface, carried the word back
to his comrades. Lindbergh scored his first
kill "I was there, and the old man got a Sonia fair
and square. . . . It really was something. I
blew some pieces off the wing, but it was Mr.
Lindbergh's victory." Congratulations flew through
the camp.
Three days later, on I August, Lindbergh ventured
out on a hazardous mission that almost proved his
last. In a sense the affair happened because
of boredom. Air activity had diminished and
the pilots hungered for victories. Hades
Squadron's Diary entry for July 1944 reflected a
general frustration with the lack of combat. A
mission on the twenty-seventh brought hostile
contact and the squadron took on two Japanese
fighters. Air discipline broke down and ". . .
a general melee followed in which there occurred
more danger from midair collision of friendly
attacking aircraft than from enemy action. "
It was from this hunger for victories that the Palau
raid was born.
The evening of 10 July brought no hint of future
events. MacDonald and Lindbergh played
checkers, Meryl Smith tossed cards at a hat, while
Major A.R. "Sam" Fernandez, Group Adjutant Officer,
brewed powdered coffee for an honored break called
"smoke" or "smoko." The field telephone sounded.
Danny Miller announced the next day’s mission,
escorting a B-25 raid back to Amboina on Ceram
Island. Dropping the receiver in its holster,
MacDonald glanced up at the wall map, focusing on a
small group of islands 600 miles from Biak, the
Palaus.
The colonel turned to Lindbergh. " You know, "
he mused, ". . . with what you've taught us about
fuel economy, we could go to Palau and stay at least
an hour. " Lindbergh enthusiastically agreed.
"Smitty " Smith broke in, reminding them of the
morning's mission. Everyone forgot the
suggestion, everyone but MacDonald.
The raid was postponed the next morning for an hour
when F-5 "recco'' Lightning reported Ceram sealed in
clouds. Half an hour later word came down, the
mission had been scrubbed. MacDonald turned to
Lindbergh, Smith, and Miller, "Do you want to go to
Palau?" They agreed. At 0927 their Lightning's
raised coral dust as they lifted free of Mokmer.
The northerly Palaus had been slated as a future
invasion target but more than that, meteorological
reports gave an atypical green light for passage to
and from the target. Recent intelligence
sightings estimated over 150 enemy craft secreted at
various dromes, targets enough for all. And in
a sense MacDonald also complimented Lindbergh by
inviting him along. The four would make a
1,200-mile, over-water flight to an untested target.
This would not be the usual "milk run" mission
reserved for beginners.
On the sweep north the civilian dove on a reef,
clearing guns as he checked the bore sighting on his
borrowed Lightning. MacDonald, navigating
skillfully with only a compass heading and a
wristwatch, climbed to 8,000 feet and lit a
cigarette, prepared for the long haul ahead.
Despite frontal disturbances the flight crossed the
southern portion of the islands, Peleliu,
approximately two and one-half hours later.
Climbing to 15,000 feet the marauding Lightning's
skirted the eastern fringe of the islands as they
moved north.
MacDonald was trying to pick off hostile craft in
isolation but when none crossed his path the colonel
decided "'to ring the doorbell." Slanting down into
a fast, shallow dive, the four ships drew ack-ack
fire over Koror Town hall-way up the island chain.
Circling back to the coast they flew north to
Babelthuap, the largest of the Palaus. Again
crossing the surf divide they moved inland, now at
combat speed, weaving through scattered clouds
returning south. The Americans dived to the
deck hunting the enemy. Skimming a lagoon they
spotted several small boats and promptly strafed
them.
Suddenly Meryl Smith radioed, "Bandits two o'clock
high!"
Lindbergh's untrained eyes failed to see the pair of
Zero floatplanes, "Rufes," that patrolled the far
end of the convoy. Thus he later expressed
some surprise when the lead elements drop tanks
tumbled away. Following suit, he felt a slight
bump as they cleared his ship. Instinctively
hands reached out turning mixture full rich,
brightening the gun sight light to compensate for
the sun's glare, a glance showing 2,600 R.P.M.'s and
forty-five inches of manifold pressure.
Swinging starboard, the four Lightning's swept after
one of the Mitsubishi’s low on the water.
Lindbergh saw its partner to the left but held
station, fully aware that the Palaus' overwhelming
air defenses now knew that intruders threatened.
MacDonald moved in behind the floatplane as it
headed for the clouds, cut across its wild left bank
and fired. The Rufe caught fire and a second
later broke up on the sea's surface. Now freed
from guarding the attacking element, Lindbergh
radioed that he was going after the lone survivor.
The last time he saw Smith, the major flew wing
position but as the civilian made his final stalk an
indistinct motion caught his eye to the left.
Instinctively he turned to the threat and snap fired
at too great a distance. It was Smith.
Fortunately Lindbergh missed and dutifully lined up
behind the major as the 475th pilot took the Rufe
under fire.
MacDonald watched from above. Suddenly he
noticed four, not three, craft above the water: the
Mitsubishi, Smith's and Lindbergh's Lightning's, and
a Japanese Hamp that simply materialized from above
and behind. Before the C.O. could warn
Lindbergh, Smith opened fire, bright motes of tracer
bullets searching out, then catching the Rufe.
It hit the water at a shallow angle, skipped, and
then blew up as Smitty hit the fighter a second
time. Fire walling his P-38, MacDonald warned
Lindbergh, "Zero on your tail!"
Apparently Lindbergh either did not hear or
misunderstood the warning because he never mentioned
the event in his otherwise meticulously-kept
journal. MacDonald dropped hard astern the
Hamp. The Japanese, seeing him, pulled up into
a sustained vertical climb that carried him to
safety in some clouds. The time spent in
combat, coupled with the hostile fighter, served
notice that things would only worsen. The
475th's C.O. gathered the flight and withdrawing,
spotted an enemy dive-bomber. With Smith and
Lindbergh as high guard, he dove and sent the craft
down in flames. After thirty minutes over the
Palaus, MacDonald extracted the quartet of P-38s,
taking advantage of cloud cover by flying east
before resuming a course south to Biak.
Colonel MacDonald and Danny Miller led a mile ahead
as the flight headed out to sea. Suddenly
Lindbergh announced "Zero at six o'clock! Diving on
us." A Zero plunged through a scattering of clouds
curving towards Smith. Lindbergh responded too
quickly, banking to intercept the bandit before the
Japanese pilot had fully committed himself' to
pursuing the major. Instantly the Mitsubishi
broke off its initial attack and cut inside
Lindbergh’s turn, coining out on the American's
tail.
The situation could not have been worse. The
flight had retreated at a low altitude and the enemy
had accrued a speed advantage through his dive.
Lindbergh could not out climb or out sprint the Zeke
and help looked distant, MacDonald and Miller a mile
ahead. Smith, still believing himself the
target, climbing hard for the clouds.
MacDonald had already turned back but the Mitsubishi
flew for the kill. Lindbergh rammed rpm
forward and throttle; to the firewall; the Lightning
surging forward but the enemy craft still grew
larger in his mirror, now within gun range.
Realizing the futility of trying to outrun the Zero
and too low to dive, the civilian continued turning,
denying a no deflection shot at his pursuer while he
hunched low in the seat and its armor plating.
Lindbergh remembered his family with startling
clarity as the Zero; nose and wings sparkled with
gunfire.
MacDonald saw he was too late. Still far out
of range he saw the Zero fire, delicate tendrils of
tracers reaching out and enfolding Lindbergh’s
fighter. Apparently, America had no monopoly
on bad gunnery. Lindbergh's P-38 never
faltered. lnstead it began a high speed turn,
responding to MacDonald's call "Break right Break
right!" Slowly the Lone Eagle led his pursuer in
front of MacDonald's element, the colonel tightening
his turn, ship groaning, buffeting, the tiny lighted
"pipper'' in the sight sliding through the Japanese
craft until proper lead had been established.
Putt Putt Maru's gun package erupted bullets and
shells; the Zero pulled hard for altitude.
Smith flashed in for a quick shot, then Danny
Miller, banking at the vertical, caught the climbing
enemy with a full burst that drew plumes of black
smoke. Critically low on fuel the flight left
the crippled fighter and flew for home, landing at
Mokmer at 1600.
Upon their arrival V Fighter Command summoned
MacDonald on 2 August 1944, a day after Lindbergh
almost died over the Palaus. Word of the
mission had spread. Colonel Bob Morrissey, the
civilian's contact at headquarters, phoned a day
after MacDonald arrived. Unhappily he informed
Lindbergh that the 475th's C.O. had been
reprimanded and grounded for sixty days.
Most assumed MacDonald drew a reprimand for risking
Lindbergh on a dangerous mission. While true
MacDonald shouldered direct responsibility for
Lindbergh's safety, one could argue that the free
and easy liberties granted the civilian in both
Marine and Army areas of operation lent an air of
permissiveness to his stay. The extent of
Lindbergh’s aerial involvement came clear two days
before when he shot down a hostile craft, and yet no
official prohibition surfaced then. The
reasoning behind MacDonald's punishment further
weakened in the following days. Lindbergh
continued to fly combat. From 3 to 13 August
he flew live operational missions that saw fighters,
flak, and strafing runs. Not until the latter
date did Kenney ground Lindbergh, by then on the
verge of returning stateside.
Lindbergh, himself, suggested another reason for the
V Fighter Command's peevishness:
It seems that the bombers have been requesting
fighter cover for their Palau raid; for some time
past and they have been turned down by Fighter
Command on the grounds that the distance was too
great and the weather too bad. Since our
flight somewhat refutes this claim. Fighter
Command feels that it has placed them in an
embarrassing position, which they do not appreciate.
MacDonald had stumbled into a political tangle not
of his own making and paid the price.
In recognition of his outstanding record, both as a
pilot and a leader, Kenney softened the blow by
simultaneously granting the 475th's C.O. a two-month
state-side leave, a chance to go home to his wife
and a son. MacDonald had never seen. His
comrades rejoiced at the well deserved rest, but it
carried unspoken assumptions. He would
probably miss the culmination of MacArthur's
campaign, the invasion of the Philippines, and it
would mar an otherwise distinguished record.
Just before departing for the U. S. Lindbergh flew a
mission touched by tragedy. On the morning of
4 August the same day MacDonald began the first leg
of his trip home, Lindbergh accompanied the 43lst on
a bomber escort mission back to Amboina Island.
Through a mix-up in signals the civilian lost
contact with Hades Squadron, so he tacked on as a
number four man to a flight of Lightning's.
The target lay almost completely shrouded in
overcast, strata pierced by spires of huge cumulus
clouds.
Over Piroe Bay Lindbergh saw two bogies to the
starboard. External fuel cells dropped away
but as his flight wheeled to intercept, more than a
dozen Lightning's converged on the enemy and a melee
began. Captain Bill O'Brien, whose cool-headed
leadership brought the 431st through "Black Sunday",
spotted a Zero and dove for the kill. The
enemy pilot spotted the approaching P-38 and pulled
hard on the stick, attempting a loop either to come
out on O'Brien's tail or, with half a roll at the
top, to reverse his course and escape.
One or both pilots misjudged their actions. As
the Zero went up, over, and straightened out,
O'Brien flew head-on into the still inverted enemy
fighter. Over a mile away Lindbergh saw a
flash of light that meant only one thing, a midair
collision. As the falling ball of flame burned
out, thin black smoke rained fragments no larger
than a Lightning's tail surface. Despite a
search by the 431st the next day, O'Brien never
returned and it was on that sad note that the
civilian took leave of the group eight days later.
Mr. Lindbergh was going home.
From the book "LIGHTNING STRIKES".