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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers The Cactus Air Force - Guadalcanal - Feb. 4th, 2003
http://www.military.com/Content/MoreContent?file=PRcactus ^ | Don Hollway

Posted on 02/04/2003 5:34:11 AM PST by SAMWolf

U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

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The FReeper Foxhole is dedicated to Veterans of our Nation's military forces and to others who are affected in their relationships with Veterans.

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In the FReeper Foxhole, Veterans or their family members should feel free to address their specific circumstances or whatever issues concern them in an atmosphere of peace, understanding, brotherhood and support.



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The Cactus Air Force


A small group of die-hard aviators fended off Japanese invaders at Guadalcanal, code-named "Cactus."

The Japanese Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero fighter swept in low over the sweltering jungle of Guadalcanal, as if to land on the nearly completed, crushed-coral runway at Lunga Point. Once the air base was completed, the Japanese planned to fly long-range bombers from it to cut off Australia from the east.

But as the Zero buzzed the field, the pilot was startled to see enemy troops on the runway -- 10,000 U.S. Marines had landed the day before, August 7, 1942, and now held the field. He hastily climbed away, leaving this little clearing in the jungle to become the objective of the pivotal campaign of the war in the Pacific.

Birth Of The Cactus


Believing the amphibious assault to be a temporary, diversionary raid (and seeing that they were outnumbered 3-to-1), Japanese ground forces on Guadalcanal initially withdrew into the jungle, expecting air attacks to drive the Americans off. Over the next two days, land-based Japanese navy planes, including Mitsubishi G4M bombers (Allied code name "Betty") and Zero ("Zeke") fighters, downed 20 percent of the U.S. Navy fighters sent against them but lost nearly half their own. The loss of four cruisers and a destroyer in the sea battle of Savo on the night of August 9, combined with the continuing threat of daylight air attack, caused the U.S. Navy to withdraw. The Marines were left on "the Canal" with what they referred to as the only unsinkable aircraft carrier in the Solomon Islands -- the Guadalcanal airfield. They used captured construction equipment to finish the 2,600-foot runway, adding an extra 1,200 feet for good measure.


Major John L. Smith scored 19 aerial victories and earned the Medal of Honor over Guadalcanal. (National Archives)


Although bereft of taxiways, revetments, drainage and radar, the airfield -- christened Henderson Field after Marine Major Lofton Henderson, who died leading a dive-bomber attack in the June 4 Battle of Midway -- boasted Japanese hangars, machine shops and radio installations, a pagodalike control tower complete with a warning siren for air raids, and even an ice plant. But not until August 20 did Guadalcanal -- code-named "Cactus" -- take delivery of 12 Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bombers and their escort of 19 Grumman F4F-4 Wildcat fighters, the advance squadrons of Marine Air Group (MAG) 23. "I was close to tears and I was not alone," said Maj. Gen. Archer Vandergrift, the Marine ground commander, "when the first SBD taxied up and this handsome and dashing aviator jumped to the ground. 'Thank God you have come,' I told him."

Within 12 hours the fledgling "Cactus Air Force" helped finish off a Japanese infantry assault. The next day, the American fliers gave an enemy bomber raid from Rabaul, New Britain, a rude welcome. In his first combat engagement, Captain John Lucien Smith, commanding Marine Fighter Squadron (VMF) 223, and four F4Fs met the fighter escort, 13 Zeros of the crack Tainan Kokutai (naval air group) led by Lieutenant Shiro Kawai, head-on. All four Wildcats survived, though two were badly damaged and one cracked up attempting a dead-stick landing. No Zeros were destroyed, but Smith thought the skirmish "did a great deal of good" by giving the Marines a better idea of the Zero's capabilities while giving them confidence in the performance and durability of their own Wildcats. Later that week, Captain Marion Carl, who had downed a Zero at Midway, got two Bettys and another Zero. Carl and Smith were to become friendly rivals.

Building Up The Fighter Force


The balance of power on Guadalcanal seesawed with the waxing and waning of fighter strength at Henderson. By the end of August the Cactus Air Force included 14 Bell P-400 Airacobra fighter-bombers (export versions of the company's P-39) of the 67th Fighter Squadron, U.S. Army Air Forces (USAAF), and 19 F4Fs of VMF-224, under Major Robert E. Galer.

(In less than two weeks Galer would knock down four enemy planes, go down in the water and swim ashore. His gallantry would eventually garner him 13 kills and the Medal of Honor.)



By the afternoon of September 10, however, only three P-400s remained, with 22 SBDs and 11 F4Fs. (Among the missing was Marion Carl.) Two dozen Navy Wildcats hurriedly flew in to reinforce them; the Airacobras proved barely enough to help repulse an attack on Bloody Ridge, just south of the airfield.

During the course of the Bloody Ridge battle, Henderson received 60 planes, including 18 more F4Fs,12 SBDs and six Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bombers, but the Japanese reinforced Rabaul with 60 fighters and 72 medium bombers.

Stopping Them Cold


By mid-October, 224 Japanese planes had fallen to the Cactus Air Force, including 111 1/2 to VMF-223 and 19 to Smith, who, as the highest-scoring American airman to date, was awarded the Navy Cross and the Medal of Honor. His erstwhile opponent as top gun, Carl, had actually made it back to Henderson after spending five days with the natives, only to find that Smith had pulled ahead of him in victories. ("Dammit, General," he urged Brig. Gen. Roy S. Geiger, the Marine air commander, "ground him for five days!") Carl finished with 18 1/2 kills and a Navy Cross.


Joe Foss (standing second from left) and pilots of VMF-121 at Henderson Field in February 1943. By that time, Captain Foss was in command of the squadron and had earned the Medal of Honor. (National Archives)


Seven of the pilots who had arrived with Smith and Carl in August went out as aces; six were killed and six wounded. Of the Dauntless squadron, only the commander, Lt. Col. Richard C. Mangrum, was able to walk away when he was evacuated on October 12; all his men had been killed, wounded, or hospitalized.

"These guys had stopped [the Japanese] cold," said Captain Joseph J. Foss, who would become Cactus' premier ace, "and now it was our turn." Foss -- "Smokey Joe" for his cigar habit -- was executive officer of Major Leonard K. "Duke" Davis' VMF-121, which moved up to relieve VMF-223 on October 9.

Terrible Conditions


"We were fired upon by Japanese troops as we landed," recalled Lieutenant Jefferson J. DeBlanc of VMF- 112, some of whose pilots arrived a month later in transport planes. "We were always under fire on takeoffs and landings."

Pilots were quartered in mud-floored tents in the frequently flooded coconut grove called "Mosquito Grove," between the airstrip and the beach. The latrine was a trench, with a log for a seat; the bathtub was the Lunga River. There were only two meals a day -- dehydrated potatoes, Spam, cold hash and captured Japanese rice -- and cigarettes. Malaria, dysentery, dengue fever, beriberi and myriad lesser known tropical diseases stalked the garrison. No man could get out of duty with less than a 102-degree fever, but by October more than 2,000 had been hospitalized.



Working conditions were also daunting. Fuel had to be hand-pumped out of 55-gallon drums (and strained through chamois, since native porters sometimes cooled their feet in it) into 12-quart buckets before being poured into airplanes. There were plenty of bombs but no bomb hoists; the SBDs' 500-pounders had to be hand- loaded. The Wildcats' turbochargers, not to be engaged below 10,000 feet but wired open anyway, wore out the engines in 25 to 50 flying hours.

Enemy Strikes


"Almost daily," wrote the 67th Squadron historian, "and almost always at the same time -- noon, 'Tojo Time' -- the bombers came." Advance notice arrived from coastwatchers up the archipelago or, once incoming Japanese bombers learned to detour out of their sight, via Henderson's new long-range SCR (signal corps radio) 270 radar. The Wildcats, the Dauntlesses and the P-400s scrambled to take off two at a time -- through a blinding pall of dust or, if it had rained, through wheel-sucking mud -- on a treacherous runway pocked with half-filled bomb and shell craters and rutted by the solid rubber tail wheels of carrier aircraft. Almost invariably one or two planes failed to take off.

The "ground pounders," the SBDs and P-400s, scuttled off over the treetops to work over enemy ground positions -- or at least to keep out of the way of the impending airstrike. The Wildcat pilots had their work cut out for them just raising their landing gear (which took 29 turns of a hand crank), struggling to form up, trimming their aircraft and testing their guns. (Early Wildcat guns had a tendency to jam during hard maneuvers; furthermore, if the oil necessary to prevent rust on the guns in the humid sea-level air was not removed before takeoff, it froze at altitude, jamming the actions.) Most important, the pilots had to reach the Japanese bombers' altitude before the Zekes fell on them.



In his first combat mission, attempting to intercept bombers at 24,000 feet, Lieutenant James Percy of VMF-112 suffered a partial turbocharger failure 10,000 feet short of the enemy formation. "I continued to climb very slowly on low blower, but it was obvious I wasn't going to reach [the enemy's] altitude in time to intercept," Percy recalled. "As the bombers passed about 3,000 feet over me, I noticed their bomb bay doors were open. As I grasped what that meant, their bombs started falling toward me. All I could do was duck my head and pray. Bombs passed all around me, but I was not hit." (Percy's luck held; in June 1943 he survived a 2,000-foot fall with a shot-up parachute into the waters off the Russell Islands.)

Down below, a black flag would go up at the "Pagoda" -- air raid imminent -- and the triple-A (anti-aircraft artillery) would open up. Around the runway, slit trenches and bomb shelters rapidly filled (a sign over one shelter entrance read, "Beneath these portals pass the fastest men in the world") as the first bombs began to fall at one end of the field, and the explosions "walked" across to the other side.

Taking A Dive


Diving, whether to attack or to escape, was the one maneuver at which the Wildcat bested the Zero. "The Zeros had superior maneuverability," said 2nd Lt. Roger A. "Jughead" Haberman, a division leader in Foss' flight who ultimately scored seven victories. "In two-and-a-half turns against a Wildcat they could have you boresighted. But our planes were heavier than theirs, so if you got into trouble, you could dive earthward away from them."

Usually.



In Foss' first combat on October 13, he was jumped by a Zeke flown by Petty Officer 1st Class Kozaburo Yasui of the Tainan Kokutai. Foss later recalled: "That bird came by like a freight train and gave me a good sprinkling, but I knew I had him. I pulled up and gave him a short burst, and down he went." But while Foss was credited with the kill, Yasui in fact survived (he would bring his own score up to 11 before he was killed over Guam on June 19, 1944) -- and his two wingmen, Petty Officer 2nd Class Nobutaka Yanami and Seaman 1st Class Tadashi Yoneda, bounced Foss. Their bullets hit his oil cooler, and his engine seized. "The only thing I could do to get out -- I was right over the field -- was to just wheel over and dive straight down," Foss recalled. He plunged from 22,000 feet right down to the deck. "I'd read that a Zero couldn't follow such a dive; its wings would come off trying to pull out. Well, whoever wrote that was a fiction writer because those boys just kept on my tail, pumping lead!" Anti-aircraft gunners cleared the Zekes from his tail, and Foss coasted in to a dead-stick crash landing.

The Americans knew the Japanese had the edge in experience. Most Yanks were straight out of flying school, with less than 300 hours in training aircraft. "Some of the pilots," wrote Percy, "barely had enough time in the F4Fs to get safely airborne." Many Zero aces, veterans of the Sino-Japanese War, counted 800 hours of flying time even before the United States entered the war.



TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: cactusairforce; freeperfoxhole; guadalcanal; joefoss; veterans; wwii
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To: AntiJen
I tried twice. You have not removed me. Please remove me from your list.
21 posted on 02/04/2003 6:55:28 AM PST by Chemnitz (Protect the weakest of the weak - the unborn)
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To: AntiJen
LOL! I saw that this morning. I had to give up my computer to my daughter so she could fill out her Student loan forms.
22 posted on 02/04/2003 6:56:40 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: HiJinx
It was sad to hear about Joe Foss's passing.

He was an amazing man.
23 posted on 02/04/2003 6:58:44 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: Chemnitz
I've removed you from the list. Sorry you had to ask more than once. I had computer problems and had to re-format my hard drive and lost the most up-to-date ping list in the process, and I lost my dad just over a week ago. I won't ping you again. Have a good day. Jen
24 posted on 02/04/2003 7:01:12 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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To: SAMWolf
Thanks again.
25 posted on 02/04/2003 7:03:28 AM PST by Afronaut
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Comment #26 Removed by Moderator

To: coteblanche
Good Morning Cote,

Thank you for the daily poem.
27 posted on 02/04/2003 7:05:47 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: HiJinx
Woman's intuition? hehehe

Let's see... which family visit might you be referring to? I've been back and forth to AL several times since my dad got so sick and the funeral. Being with my family was good, but sad under the circumstances. I'm heading to AL again today to spend the night with my mom. All the out-of-state kinfolk have gone home, so she's alone now. I plan to come home tomorrow night unless she talks me into staying longer.
28 posted on 02/04/2003 7:06:20 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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To: Afronaut
You're welcome.
29 posted on 02/04/2003 7:06:23 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: AntiJen; SAMWolf
Hi guys!

I stumbled across a whole site devoted to the Cactus Air Force.

Another VMF-121 group photo A picture of VMF-121 pilots that went back to Cactus after the first tour. Most of VMF-121 was sent to Samoa in a large pilot swap in early December. The pilots are (l to r) Haberman, Freeman, Furlow, Foss, Loesch, Presley, Marontate, and Bate.

A Tribute to The Cactus Air Force

Has detailed history and great photo's.

Left as a decoy
P-39/P-400 number 12 got a flat tire while taxing and became a victim of Japanese Zeros strafing the airfield. It was left in position as a decoy and often drew the fire of strafing Zeros. September 1942.

30 posted on 02/04/2003 7:07:22 AM PST by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: SAMWolf
Oh suuuuuurrrrrrre! What a lame excuse for leaving a (*supposed*) FRiend all alone in a Foxhole!!! ;-)

I'm just kidding...

31 posted on 02/04/2003 7:08:35 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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To: facedown
Great find! Thanks.
32 posted on 02/04/2003 7:09:33 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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To: SAMWolf; All
Good morning all!


Click on the pic


33 posted on 02/04/2003 7:10:15 AM PST by Aquamarine
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To: facedown
Thanks for the link to the Cactus Air Force Tribute site.

There is a lot of good info there.
34 posted on 02/04/2003 7:10:34 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: AntiJen
I was in the next Foxhole down the line. I had your flank covered and what a nice flank it is too.
35 posted on 02/04/2003 7:12:02 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: Aquamarine
Good Morning Aquamarine. Beautiful picture of our Eagle!
36 posted on 02/04/2003 7:13:02 AM PST by SAMWolf (To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
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To: AntiJen
Sorry to hear about your Dad Jen.


37 posted on 02/04/2003 7:17:01 AM PST by Aquamarine
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To: Aquamarine
Thanks Aqua for the beautiful soaring eagle pix and the music. Let me dust off my Foxhole Radio I just built so I can listen to it.


38 posted on 02/04/2003 7:18:38 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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To: SAMWolf
Sam! Does that mean what I think it means??? *blush*

I sure hope so... hehehehe

39 posted on 02/04/2003 7:20:11 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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To: Aquamarine
Thank you AM, he was a great guy and an Air Force veteran like me!
40 posted on 02/04/2003 7:21:07 AM PST by Jen ("Home is where you dig it.")
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