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The FReeper Foxhole Profiles Lieutenant George H. Gay, Jr., USNR, (1917-1994) - May 21st, 2004
see educational sources

Posted on 05/21/2004 12:01:08 AM PDT by snippy_about_it



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.



...................................................................................... ...........................................

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Lieutenant George H. Gay, Jr., USNR




George H. Gay, Jr. was born in Waco, Texas, on 8 March 1917. He entered the Navy in 1941. After completing flight training and receiving his commission in September 1941, Ensign Gay was assigned to Torpedo Squadron Eight (VT-8). On 4 June 1942, while operating from USS Hornet (CV-8) during the Battle of Midway, his squadron was wiped out while making an unsupported torpedo attack on the Japanese carrier force. Gay was the only survivor of the thirty pilots and radiomen in that attack. While swimming after his plane went down, he observed the dive bombing attack that destroyed three of the four Japanese carriers present.

Ensign Gay was rescued by a seaplane the following day. After recovering from his injuries, he served in Torpedo Squadron Eleven (VT-11) during the Guadalcanal Campaign, and was later a flight instructor. He was also active making public appearances in support of the war effort. Following the end of World War II, he remained in the Naval Reserve into the 1950s and was a pilot with Trans-World Airlines for thirty years. George Gay died on 21 October 1994.




Oral History - Battle of Midway
Recollections of Lieutenant George Gay, USNR -- sole survivor of Torpedo Squadron Eight (VT-8) -- describing his experiences during the Battle of Midway. He was subsequently awarded the Navy Cross and the Presidential Unit Citation for his actions in the battle.

Adapted from Ensign George Gay, USNR, interview in box 11 of World War II Interviews, Operational Archives Branch, Naval Historical Center.


Lt. Gay:
Well, as you know Torpedo [Squadron] 8 was organized in Norfolk [Virginia] and I think you know the history of the [aircraft carrier USS] Hornet [CV-8] and where we went and what we did. I won't go into that but I will say a little bit about Torpedo 8 and the things that they did before the Battle of Midway and before we lost the half of it that was in that battle, stationed aboard ship.

One thing we'd like to clear up right to begin with, Lt. Larson and his half of Torpedo 8 stayed in Norfolk when we left there in order to get TBF's [single-engine "Avenger" torpedo bombers] and get the bugs out of them and get them fixed up for combat and they were to bring them out and join us aboard ship. However, it happened that we were in the Battle of Midway, he came out on the [aircraft carrier USS] Saratoga [CV-3] and they requested six planes from him to go to the Island of Midway and they participated in the battle that day, however, the bulk of the TBF's attached to Torpedo 8 at that time were in Honolulu [Hawaii] and missed the Battle of Midway. They later went to Guadalcanal and I came home on sick leave.

I might just as well start down. Well, Torpedo 8 had a difficult problem, we had old planes and we were new in the organization. We had a dual job of not only training a squadron of boot [inexperienced] Ensigns, of which I was one of course, we also had to fight the war at the same time, and when we finally got up to the Battle of Midway it was the first time I had ever carried a torpedo on an aircraft and was the first time I had ever had taken a torpedo off of a ship, had never even seen it done. None of the other Ensigns in the squadron had either.



Quite a few of us were a little bit skeptical and leery but we'd seen [Lieutenant Colonel James H.] Doolittle [USA] and his boys when they hadn't even seen a carrier before and they took the B-25s [twin-engine "Mitchell" bombers] off, we figured by golly if they could do it, well we could too. It turned out the TBD [Douglas "Devastator" Torpedo Bomber] could pick up the weight, so it was easy. We learned everything that we knew about Japanese tactics and our own tactics from Commander Waldron and Lt. Moore and Lieutenant Owens as they gave it to us on the blackboards and in talks and lectures. We had school everyday and although we didn't like it at the time, it turned out that was the only way in the world we could learn the things we had to know, and we exercised on the flight deck, did all kinds of things that we'd have to do artificially because we couldn't do our flying most of the time.

In the Coral Sea Battle we tried to get there and missed out on most of it but we were able along about that time to get in some bombing practice and to do some submarine patrol. However, the squadron didn't get to fly near as much as we should have. In the actual battle do you want me to say anything about the actual Battle at Midway and what we had there?

As I said, we had had no previous combat flying. We'd never been against the enemy, our only scrap with them had been in taking Doolittle to as close to Tokyo as we went and in trying to get into the Coral Sea Battle, but when we finally got into the air on the morning of June the 4th, we had our tactics down cold and we knew organization and what we should do. We could almost look at the back of Comdr. [Commander] Waldron's head and know what he was thinking, because he had told us so many times over and over just what we should do under all conditions.



I didn't get much sleep the night of June the 3rd, the stories of the battle were coming in, midnight torpedo attack by the [twin-engine patrol bomber seaplane, known as "Catalina] and all kinds of things, and we were a little bit nervous, kind of, like before a football game. We knew that the Japs were trying to come in and take something away from us and we also knew that we were at a disadvantage because we had old aircraft and could not climb the altitude with the dive bombers or fighters and we expected to be on our own. We didn't expect to run into the trouble that we found of course, but we knew that if we had any trouble we'd probably have to fight our way out of it ourselves.

Before we left the ship, Lt. Comdr. Waldron told us that he thought the Japanese Task Forces would swing together when they found out that our Navy was there and that they would either make a retirement in just far enough so that they could again retrieve their planes that went in on the attack and he did not think that they'd go on into the Island of Midway as most of the Squadron commanders, and air group commanders, figured and he told us when he left not to worry about our navigation but to follow him as he knew where he was going. And it turned out just exactly that way. He went just as straight to the Jap Fleet as if he'd had a string tied to them and we though that morning, at least I did when I first saw the Japanese carriers, one of them that was afire and another ship that had a fire aboard and I thought that there was a battle in progress and we were late.

I was a little bit impatient that we didn't get right on in there then and when it finally turned out that we got close enough in that we could make a contact report and describe what we could see the Zeros [Japanese fighter-bomber planes] jumped on us and it was too late. They turned out against us in full strength and I figured that there was about 35 of them, I understand, that is I found out later that they operated Fighter Squadrons in numbers of about 32 and I guess it was one of those 32-plane squadrons that got us. Its been a very general opinion that the anti-aircraft fire shot our boys down and that's not true. I don't think that any of our planes were damaged, even touched by anti-aircraft fire, the fighters, the Zeros, shot down everyone of them, and by the time we got in to where the anti-aircraft fire began to get hot, the fighters all left us and I was the only one close enough to get any real hot anti-aircraft fire, and I don't think it even touched me and I went right through it, right over the ship.



I think we made a couple of grave mistakes. In the first place, if we'd only had one fighter with us I think our troubles would have been very much less. We picked up on the way in a cruiser plane, a Japanese scout from one of their cruisers, and it fell in behind us and tracked us and I know gave away our position and course, and speed. We changed after he left but then I know that they knew we were coming. If we'd had one fighter to go back and knock that guy down, catch him before he could have gotten that report off, I believe the Japs might have been fooled some, quite sometime longer on the fact that our fleet was there. I think that might have been one of their first contacts warning them that we had a fleet in the vicinity and that got us into trouble, I'm sure.

Also, we went in to a scouting line out there when we were still trying to find them and didn't and the skipper [commanding officer] put us in a long scouting line which I thought was a mistake at the time. I didn't ever question Comdr. Waldron, of course, he had his reason for it and I know that he expected to find them but he wanted to be sure that we did and that is the reason that we were well trained, and when he gave the join-up signal we joined up immediately. I was only afraid that in the scouting line in those old planes we would be caught by Zeros spread out and it would be much worse. As it turned out, it didn't make a whole lot of difference anyway, but we joined up quickly and we got organized to make our attack, the Zeros got after us.

I remember the first one that came down got one of the airplanes that was over to the left. Comdr. Waldron on his air phone asked Dobbs and came out over the air if that was a Zero or if it was one of our planes and I didn't know whether Dobbs answered him or not, but I came out on the air and told him that it was a TBD. He also called Stanholpe Ring from "John E. One, answer" and we received no answer from the air groups. I don't know whether they even heard us or not, but I've always had a feeling that they did hear us and that was one of the things that caused them to turn north as I think the squadron deserves quite a bit of credit for the work that they did.


LCDR John C. Waldron, Torpedo Eight's CO, and Horace F. Dobbs, CRMP on the flight deck of Hornet in the Coral Sea.


Personally, I was just lucky. I've never understood why I was the only one that came back, but it turned out that way, and I want to be sure that the men that didn't come back get the credit for the work that they did. They followed Comdr. Waldron without batting an eye and I don't feel like a lot of people have felt that we made mistakes and that Comdr. Waldron got us into trouble. I don't feel that way at all. I know that if I had it all to do over again, even knowing that the odds were going to be like they were, knowing him like I did know him, I'd follow him again through exactly the same thing because I trusted him very well. We did things that he wanted us to do not because he was our boss, but because we felt that if we did the things he wanted us to do then it was the right thing to do.

The Zeros that day just caught us off balance. We were at a disadvantage all the way around.

Interviewer:
All right. Don't you think those Zeros would have been up there even if they hadn't run into that cruiser plane?

Lt. Gay:
I do, yes, but in our particular case I think they would have been at that altitude after the dive bombers, which I think also was one thing Torpedo 8 and the other Torpedo Squadrons should be credited for, I mean given credit for doing. They sucked those fighters down so that when the dive bombers did get there, as I was in the water, I watched them and if they didn't like to dive they were able to pull out and circle around a little bit and come on down later and if they felt like kind of individual bombing practice it was, it turned out to be beautiful bombing, because the fighters were not--I don't say that there weren't any fighters up there to get after them, there weren't nearly as many as there would have been if they hadn't come down to get us. So I think that is one thing that helped save the day as far as the battle was concerned. It was pretty rugged on the Torpedo Squadrons, there were two other ones out there that day, Three and Six, and they were shot up, one of them almost a bad as Torpedo 8, only they just didn't get the publicity, but they do deserve the credit.

Interviewer:
Year, well, it's in the O.N.I. [Office of Naval Intelligence] report. Of course wasn't one of the very bad breaks, the fact that the dive bombers didn't get there about the same time you did?

Lt. Gay:
Well, yes, of course. If it could have been a co-ordinated attack the fact that the fighters wouldn't have come down against us in strength, of course, there would have been just that many more airplanes around for them to take care of and they couldn't have concentrated on us as well as they did. Naturally, a concentrated, I mean an organized raid, if we'd been able to all get there and co-ordinate the thing we'd have come out a whole lot better. Definitely that's a fact that we, well, it's just known that co-ordinated attacks, torpedo planes always come out better if you've got that much help. It's the same way with anti-aircraft fire. The more planes you have to shoot at the better chance each one has.

Interviewer:
Do you think that the attack would have been any more successful if the planes had been more or less spread out. Wasn't Torpedo 8 rather close together as they went into the attack?



Lt. Gay:
Well, that might be true had it been that we were being shot down by anti-aircraft fire, but being jumped, as we were, by a squadron of Zeros, our beliefs were, and I think they were very well founded, that our only protection would be to stick together and let each plane's gun try and help the other plane.

In other words, in a TBD, with as few guns as they've got, the idea was to let, to stay together as a formation and fight them off as a pack rather than to try and spread out. We could have spread out all right, but they could have spread out too, and it would have been just that much worse on us.

I never have understood why it's been the general opinion in designing torpedo planes that it is not an offensive weapon. They don't seem to feel like they ought to put guns in it, and I disagree with that very thoroughly, and I can give my reasons for that.



When the Zeros attacked us that day, I was able, with my one fixed gun, to hit one; I know because I saw the tracers going into him. Of course, it couldn't hurt him with one 30 caliber [machine gun], but in fighting us since in the TBF's, I've seen them get in front of me and I've wanted in the worst way to be able to have something to shoot at them with, and I had nothing to shoot at them with. In other words, we go out and get in trouble and we have to just hope that there'll be fighters around to take care of us; whereas, if we had a way of fighting our way out, we not only would go out with a little more of an aggressive spirit, we'd get the job done a little better.

That day, I got a chance to shoot at other airplanes that just got in my way. It wouldn't have been that I would go out of my way to try and act as a fighter plane, it was just that the targets were there and they will be there every time a torpedo plane makes an attack, those targets will get in his way and he ought to have something to shoot at them with.

I had to fly right over destroyers that were shooting at me. If I had machine guns forward and plenty of them, I'd have been able to give them a little trouble. Then as I got in close enough to drop my torpedo, I could see everything on the port side shooting at me. If I had had some machine guns to shoot back them, I might not have been able to silence those guns, but I could have made the gunners a little nervous. As it was, they were just sitting there shooting at me and I wasn't shooting back at them. Then after I pulled up over the ship and did a flipper turn, I dove down right at the fantail of this big carriers where they were rearming and regassing the planes. Gas hoses were scattered all over the place out there, and I know they were full of gasoline. If I'd had forward guns, I could have set that ship afire right there myself.



I had no guns to shoot with except that one little pea shooter, the 30 caliber putt-putt and by the time I got there it jammed, it either jammed or was shot up. Then after I went out, I flew over another destroyer and every time there was a target and every time I had no guns to work on it. They seem to feel that they don't put the guns in the torpedo planes because we'll go off and fool around and get ourselves in trouble. I don't think they'll have that trouble with the pilots because I do think that they should have fire power forward and also aft to take care of themselves so that when the targets get in the way you can at least have the self satisfaction, if nothing else, of shooting at them. I really strongly recommend them forward. I find a lot of people who disagree with that, but that's my personal opinion on it.

I found out a couple of things about the Battle of Midway in talking to a few people that were aboard the ship other than some of the pilots that I've known. Of course, I talked to the pilots that came into the hospital at Midway and I was very much worried and wondered why, when I was in the water there and there were so many ships around me that were dead in the water, either damaged or picking up personnel, I've wondered why they didn't come in for a clean up. I mean our forces, why they didn't and I found out that unfortunate events had taken place.



The torpedo squadron hadn't come back to the Hornet, of course, the fighter pilots were unfortunate and ran out of gas before they got back and I think most of them landed in the water, and the dive bombers went to the Island of Midway, to land, so the ship was back there with no aircraft whatever, except their combat patrol of which there were just a few fighters, and they were worried sick and I know, I've talked to them about that afternoon, and I can imagine a ship sitting there with her air group gone and way overdue to return and nobody's come back yet. That's one of the reasons why the Task Force was leery about coming on into clean up and I think the [aircraft carrier USS] Enterprise [CV-6] and the [aircraft carrier USS] Yorktown [CV-5] probably had the same trouble and that's one way [reason] that the 60 ships that were there got away from us because we sure could have gotten some more of them. Any other questions?






FReeper Foxhole Armed Services Links




TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: freeperfoxhole; history; midway; samsdayoff; tbds; tbfs; tbms; torpedosquadron; usn; veterans; vt8
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To: E.G.C.

Morning E.G.C. Cloudy here today, looks like we got some light rain last night.


21 posted on 05/21/2004 7:29:05 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: GailA

Morning GailA. Perfect breakfast for this morning.


22 posted on 05/21/2004 7:29:33 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: snopercod

Morning Snopercod.

Do you know where the picture was taken?


23 posted on 05/21/2004 7:33:37 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: Professional Engineer

Morning PE.

Boy, those people sure look familiar. :-)


24 posted on 05/21/2004 7:34:34 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: Samwise

Hey Samwise. You're early today.


25 posted on 05/21/2004 7:35:25 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: bentfeather

Hi Feather.


26 posted on 05/21/2004 7:35:49 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: The Mayor

Good Morning Mayor.


27 posted on 05/21/2004 7:36:24 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: snippy_about_it

On This Day In History


Birthdates which occurred on May 21:
0427 -BC- Plato (Aristocles), Athens(?)
1471 Albrecht Dürer Nürnberg Germany, Renaissance painter/print maker
1527 Philip II King of Spain (1556-98) & Portugal (1580-98)
1633 Joseph de La Barre composer
1688 Alexander Pope England, poet (Rape of the Lock)
1780 Elizabeth Fry Quaker minister/prison reformer/nurse
1796 Reverdy Johnson representative (Union), died in 1876
1822 Dabney Herndon Maury Major General (Confederate Army), died in 1900
1822 Mosby Monroe Parsons Brigadier General (Confederate Army) died in 1865
1825 George Lafayette Beal Brevet Major General (Union volunteers)
1835 Newton Martin Curtis Brevet Major General (Union volunteers)
1860 Willam Einthoven Dutch physiologist/inventor (electrocardiograph)
1865 C J Thomsen Denmark, archaeologist, named Stone/Iron/Bronze Ages
1872 Henry Warren Boston MA, inventor (Telechon electric clock)
1878 Glenn Hammond Curtiss US, inventor (hydroplane)
1898 Armand Hammer New York NY, millionaire industrialist (Occidental Petroleum)
1903 Manly Wade Wellman Angola, sci-fi author (After Dark, Devil's Planet)
1904 Fats [Thomas Wright] Waller New York NY, jazz singer/composer (Ain't Misbehavin')
1904 Robert Montgomery Beacon NY, actor/director (Earl of Chicago, Yellow Jack)
1909 Guy de Rothschild French banker
1916 Harold Robbins New York NY, author (Moneychangers, Carpetbaggers, Betsy)
1917 Dennis Day New York NY, Irish tenor/comedian (Jack Benny Show, Danny Boy)
1917 Raymond Burr New Westminster British Columbia Canada, actor (Perry Mason, Ironsides, Godzilla)
1921 Andrei Sakharov Moscow, physicist, human rights worker (Nobel '75)
1935 Terry Lightfoot clarinetist/bandleader (New Orleans Jazzmen)
1941 Anatoli Semyonovich Levchenko USSR, cosmonaut (TM-4)
1941 Ronald Isley Cincinnati OH, singer (Isley Brothers-Twist & Shout)
1942 Robert C Springer St Louis, Colonel USMC/astronaut (STS-29, STS-38)
1943 Hilton Valentine rock guitarist (Animals-House of the Rising Sun)
1944 Mary Robinson President of Republic of Ireland (Labour, 1990- )
1945 Ernst Willi Messerschmid Reutlingen Germany, astronaut (STS 22)
1947 Richard Hatch Santa Monica CA, actor (Battlestar Galactica)
1948 Leo [Gerard] Sayer Shoreham-on-Sea England, singer (When I Need You)
1950 Roger Hodgson London, rocker (Supertramp-The Logical Song)
1951 Al Franken comedian/writer/actor/loser (Saturday Night Live, Stuart Saves His Family, Air America)
1952 Mr T [Lawrence Tero] Chicago IL, actor (A-Team, Rocky III, T & T)
1955 Stan Lynch Gainesville FL, rock drummer (Tommy Petty & Heartbreakers)
1959 Nick Cassavetés actor (Rosemary's Baby, Quiet Cool)
1970 Dorsey Levens NFL running back (Green Bay Packers-Superbowl 31)
1970 Roman Turek Strakonice Czechoslovakia, hockey goalie (Team Czechoslovakia Republic, Olympics-98)
1978 Kandy Marshall Miss Virginia Teen USA (1996)
1985 Frustaci Septuplets California, Patricia Frustaci gives birth to 7



Deaths which occurred on May 21:
0987 Louis V last Carlovingians King of France (966-987), dies
1254 Koenraad IV Roman Catholic-German king (1237-54), dies at 26
1481 Christian I king of Denmark/Norway/Sweden, dies
1542 Hernando de Soto dies while searching for gold, near Mississippi River
1650 James G Marquis of Montrose, Scottish general, hanged
1690 John Eliot English missionary in Massachusetts, dies at 85
1810 Charles Chevalier d'Eon de Beaumont French spy, dies at 81
1894 August A Kundt German physicist, (test of Kundt), dies at 54
1924 Bobby Franks killed by Leopold & Loeb, at 14
1935 Jane Addams a founder of ACLU (Nobel 1973), dies at 65
1952 John Garfield actor (Juarez, Air Force), dies at 39
1966 Pat O'Malley silent film actor (Wild One, Quiet Man), dies at 75
1970 Vinton Hayworth actor (General Schaeffer-I Dream of Jeannie), dies at 63
1981 Yuki Shimoda actor (Farewell to Manzanar), dies
1987 Alejandro Rey actor (Moscow on the Hudson), dies at 57
1988 Dino Conte Grandi Italy, delegate to league of nations, dies at 92
1993 John Frost English Lieutenant-Colonel (operation Market Garden 1944), dies at 80
1994 Cliff Wilson snooker player, dies at 60
1995 Les Aspin US Secretary of Defense (1993-95), dies of stroke at 56
1996 Al "Lash" La Rue cowboy actor (Lash of the West), dies at 78


Reported: MISSING in ACTION

1965 BRACE ERNEST C.
[03/73 RELEASED BY PL,ALIVE AND WELL IN 98]
1966 BUCKLEY LOUIS---DETROIT MI.
1966 THACKERSON WALTER A.---TALLADEGA AL.
1967 SIMPSON WALTER S.---TRENTON NJ.
1967 WROBLESKI WALTER F.---FREEHOLD NJ.
1968 LEMCKE DAVID E.---HILTON NY.
1970 ALBERT KEITH A.---THIBODAUX LA.
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY PRG,ALIVE IN 99]

POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA.


On this day...
0143 Earliest known date in America-pre Mayan king Harvest-Bergvorst installed
0685 Battle at Nechtansmere: Picts beat Northumbrians
0996 Pope Gregory V crowns his cousin Otto III German emperor
1420 Treaty of Troyes-French King Charles VI gives France to English
1502 Portuguese Admiral Da Nova discovers St Helena
1602 Martha's Vineyard 1st sighted (Captain Bartholomew Gosnold)
1674 General John Sobieski chosen King of Poland
1804 Lewis & Clark Expedition begins
1819 1st bicycles (swift walkers) in US introduced in NYC
1832 1st Democratic National Convention (Baltimore)
1846 1st steamship arrives in Hawaii
1856 Lawrence KS captured, sacked by pro-slavery forces
1861 North Carolina is 10th state to secede from Union
1861 Richmond VA is designated Confederate Capital
1863 Siege on Port Hudson, Louisiana begins
1864 Gen. David Hunter takes command of Department of West Virginia
1871 French regular troops attack Commune of Paris; 17,000 die
1881 American Red Cross founded by Clara Barton
1891 Boxers Peter Jackson & Jim Corbett fight to a draw in 61 rounds
1897 Yerkes Observatory 40" (1 meter) refractor used for 1st time
1904 Federation Internationale de Football Association (Soccer) forms in Paris France
1906 Louis H Perlman patents a demountable tire carrying rim for cars
1908 1st horror movie (Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde) premieres in Chicago
1914 Greyhound Bus Company begins in Minnesota
1916 Britain begins "Summer Time" (Daylight Savings Time)
1917 Leo Pinckney, 1st American drafted during WWI
1918 House of Representatives passes amendment allowing women to vote
1921 Oldest radio station west of Mississippi River licensed in Greeley CO
1924 Leopold and Loeb kidnap Bobby Franks for fun
1925 Canadians allow to beer sales
1925 Roald Amundsun leaves Spitsbergen with 2 seaplanes to North Pole
1926 White Sox Earl Sheely hits a record 6th consecutive double
1927 Lindbergh lands in Paris France, after 1st solo air crossing of Atlantic
1929 Automatic electric stock quotation board installed, NYC
1929 Sergei Prokoviev's ballet "Prodigal Son" premieres in Paris France
1930 Max Bishop draws 8 walks in a doubleheader
1930 New York Yankee Babe Ruth hits 3 consecutive homers
1932 1st transatlantic solo flight by a woman (Amelia Earhart) lands
1933 Mount Davidson Cross lit by FDR via telegraph
1934 Oskaloosa IA, becomes 1st US city to fingerprint its citizens
1940 AVRO-chairman Willem Vogt fires all Jewish employees
1940 Reynaud forms French Government
1941 1st US ship sunk by a U-boat (SS Robin Moore)
1941 Singer Johan Heesters visits Dachau concentration camp
1943 Fastest 9 inning American League baseball game (89 minutes), White Sox beat Senators
1945 German war criminal Heinrich Himmler captured
1945 Lauren Bacall & Humphrey Bogart wed
1948 New York Yankee Joe Dimaggio hits for the cycle (single, double, triple, homerun)
1950 Vietnamese troops of Ho Chi-Minh attack Cambodia
1954 Amendment to give 18-year-olds right to vote is defeated
1955 1st transcontinental round-trip solo flight-sunrise to sunset
1956 US explodes 1st airborne hydrogen bomb over Bikini Atoll
1959 Cleveland Metroparks Zoo Children's Petting Farm opens
1961 Governor Patterson declares martial law in Montgomery
1964 1st nuclear-powered lighthouse begins operations (Chesapeake Bay)
1964 US begin intelligence flights above Laos
1966 "Downtown" by Mrs Miller hits #82
1966 "Louie Louie" by The Kingsmen reentered the chart & hits #97
1966 Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay) TKOs Henry Cooper in 6 for heavyweight boxing title in London
1968 Cubs Billy Williams sets outfielder record of 695 straight game
1968 US nuclear-powered sub (Scorpion), with 99 men, reported missing & is later found at the bottom of the ocean off Azores
1969 After 9,015 at bats Hank Aaron is lifted for a pinch hitter, Mike Lum, who doubled in a 15-3 victory over the New York Mets
1969 Robert Kennedy's murderer Sirhan Sirhan sentenced to death
1970 National Guard mobilized to quell disturbances at Ohio State University
1971 National Guard mobilized to quell riot in Chattanooga TN
1975 Trial against Baader-Meinhof-group begins in Stuttgart
1979 Dan White convicted of manslaughter death of San Fransisco mayor Moscone
1980 "Empire Strikes Back" premeires
1980 Ensign Jean Marie Butler is 1st woman to graduate from US service academy
1981 François Mitterrand becomes President of France
1981 Kim Seelbrede, (Ohio), crowned 30th Miss USA
1987 Military coup in Fiji Islands under Lieutenant Colonel Sitivani Rabuka
1988 "Fat" by Weird Al Yankovic hits #99
1990 Last episode of "Newhart" airs on CBS-TV; It was all a dream
1991 Ethiopia's Marxist president (Mengistu Haile Mariam) resigns
1992 New Jersey senate overrides Governor Florio's veto & lowers sales tax to 6%
1993 Opposition leader Xanana Gusmao of East-Timor sentenced to life
1994 South Yemen secedes from Yemen
1996 Ken Griffey Jr, 26, is 8th youngest to hits 200 homeruns
1996 Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens beats Yankees for his 200th win
1998 Weeks of demonstrations led to the resignation of autocratic Indonesian President Suharto.
2001 The Supreme Court ruled, six-to-three, that a radio host cannot be sued for airing a phone conversation taped illegally by a third party.


Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

Ancient Rome : Agonalia
Chile : Battle of Inquique/Navy Day (1879)
Macedonia, Greece : Anastenarides Feast-dance barefoot on hot coals
Yugoslav Air Force Day.
New York : Armed Forces Day
US : Lindbergh Flight Day (1927)
National Pickle Week (Day 6)
Revise Your Work Schedule Month


Religious Observances
Orthodox : Feast of SS Constantine & Helen
Lutheran : Commemoration of John Eliot, missionary to the Indians
Jewish : Shavuot (celebration of 10 commandments) (Sivan 6, 5759 AM)


Religious History
1536 The General Assembly of Geneva, Switzerland officially embraced Protestantism by accepting the evangelical faith of the Swiss reformers.
1739 Methodist hymnwriter Charles Wesley, 31, on the first anniversary of his religious conversion, penned the hymn, "O For a Thousand Tongues."
1740 English revivalist George Whitefield wrote in a letter regarding Jesus' character; 'He was God and man in one person, that God and man might be happy together again.'
1864 Belgian missionary priest Father Damien, 24, was ordained on the Island of Hawaii. Born Joseph de Veuster, the Picpus Father began a work among the lepers on the island of Molokai in 1873. Contracting the disease in 1884, Father Damien succumbed to it five years later.
1944 German Lutheran theologian and Nazi martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote in a letter from prison: 'God alone protects; otherwise there is nothing.'

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.


Thought for the day :
"Obviously crime pays, or there'd be no crime."


Actual Newspaper Headlines...
Cold Wave Linked to Temperatures


Why did the Chicken cross the Road...
Senator Edward Moore "Teddy" Kennedy:
I panicked


Dumb Laws
Baltimore Maryland:
It is not legal to take a lion to the movies.


What an employee Really Means...
"MY PERTINENT WORK EXPERIENCE INCLUDES:"
I hope you don't ask me about all the McJobs I've had.


28 posted on 05/21/2004 7:36:40 AM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: bandleader

Good Morning Bandleader.

Midway had to be a miracle, so many things had to "come together" at just the right time for us to pull a major victory from that battle.


29 posted on 05/21/2004 7:39:22 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: GATOR NAVY
Those guys had balls-I mean big brass ones hanging down past their knees-to fly Devastators aginst Japanese carriers at that stage of the war.

I'll say. The navy took all of the remaining ones off the line immediately after Midway & never used them again.

30 posted on 05/21/2004 7:49:10 AM PDT by skeeter
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To: Valin
1993 John Frost English Lieutenant-Colonel (operation Market Garden 1944), dies at 80

Arnhem. John Frost Bridge.

The majority of the 2nd Parachute Battalion under command of Lieutenant-Colonel John Frost managed to reach the Arnhem Bridge in the evening of 17th September by way of the most southern route from the dropping zone. The 600 odd men entrenched themselves around the northern ramp of the bridge. Awaiting for the 30 Corps they managed to hold the bridge for seven days. At the end there was a great shortage of ammunition, food and water. The number of casualties were numerous and finally the bridge was "A bridge too far".

On the bridge one can find a plaque which commemorates the actions of 2nd Parachute Battalion.

It contains the following description:

This is the bridge for which JOHN D. FROST fought
leading his soldiers persistent and brave
went a bridge too far which they tried to save
the bridge is now with his name proudly wrought.

31 posted on 05/21/2004 7:52:53 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: skeeter

Morning Skeeter.


32 posted on 05/21/2004 7:53:47 AM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: SAMWolf

No. It looks like it was onboard a carrier. If so, it would have had to have been on of the ones mentioned in my dad's diary. USS Antietam or perhaps the Bennington?


33 posted on 05/21/2004 8:32:24 AM PDT by snopercod (Freedom can be preserved only if it is treated as a supreme principle which must not be sacrificed)
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To: SAMWolf
You're early today.

The house was empty. I needed company. I had trouble sleeping last night. It's the first time I've been alone all night since the hobbit lass was born. :^( But I'm OK now; she's home, and she and the dog are making all kinds of noise. :^)

34 posted on 05/21/2004 8:46:28 AM PDT by Samwise (The new media motto: All the news that fits our agenda.)
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To: SAMWolf

Mornin' Sam....Have you ever considered doing a thread about the Submarine Memorial at Pearl Harbor?..It's a little known, little publicizes, andsadly, little visited memorial..there's a WW II fleet sub at anchor, and next to it, on a small point of land, a stone monument for each of the 52 ( I think) subs and crew still "on eternal patrol".

Little realized factoid... The submarine service suffered the highest % of KIA of any unit of the US military in WW II. Second was the 8th AF bomber command...


35 posted on 05/21/2004 8:46:41 AM PDT by ken5050 (Ann Coulter needs to have children ASAP to propagate her genes.....any volunteers?)
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To: GATOR NAVY

All's forgiven. Sam and I are a team and we answer each other's posts, sometimes with a similar answer. LOL.

This was really long and I held off finalizing it with the pictures but I couldn't find anyway to make it shorter and wanted to tell the story for the very reasons you say. These guys were something else. They were bold, brave and understood the mission. Our troops are today too I think. The difference is in WWII they weren't held back when it came to attacking the enemy and winning the war.

The next couple of weeks the History Channel is running good shows, the first five about the Western Front in Europe up to the D-Day Special on the 1st of June through the 6th. They covered some of the D-Day landing and also Monte Cassino last night. One of the American soldiers who had moved on past the beaches said "We didn't take prisoners, I mean even if they surrendered, we shot them. We were upset about what had happened on the beaches."

It's going to be a great couple weeks on the tv!


36 posted on 05/21/2004 8:57:19 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: GATOR NAVY

P.S. You were the first in again!


37 posted on 05/21/2004 8:58:07 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: Aeronaut

Good morning Aeronaut.


38 posted on 05/21/2004 8:59:30 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: E.G.C.

Good morning EGC.


39 posted on 05/21/2004 9:01:49 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: GailA

One biscuit and a cup of joe. MMMMMM. Hits the spot. Good morning Gail.


40 posted on 05/21/2004 9:02:37 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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