On April 7, 1943, Medal of Honor recipient and Marine fighter ace James E. Swett shot down 7 Japanese bombers, taking out four all on his own after he became separated from his wingmen.
He was also on his first combat patrol.
Born on June 15, 1920 in Seattle, Washington, Swett grew up in San Mateo, California and attended college there in 1939, where learned to fly. After the Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Swett enlisted in the Naval reserves. He began flight training at Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas in 1941 and graduated at the top 10% of his class, according to the Los Angeles Times. Following his graduation from flight training, Swett accepted a commission in the Marine Corps as a second lieutenant.
In December of 1942, Swett shipped out to the Pacific where he served in the skies over Guadalcanal, the scene of brutal jungle warfare between entrenched Japanese forces and beleaguered U.S. Marines.
After returning from a routine patrol off the coast of the island word came down that 150 Japanese fighters were heading toward the Marines’ position from the north.
According to his Medal of Honor citation, Swett took to the air in his Wildcat fighter and “unhesitatingly hurled his 4-plane division into action against a formation of 15 enemy bombers and personally exploded 3 hostile planes in midair with accurate and deadly fire during his dive.”
During the dogfight, Swett became separated from his three fellow pilots, but continued fighting, destroying four more enemy bombers. Though his aircraft’s left wing had been hit and badly damaged during the fighting, Swett engaged an eighth enemy bomber, but its tail gunner opened fire on him, shattering his windshield and damaging his engine.
In total, the battle lasted just 15 minutes, and though Swett had downed a number of enemy aircraft, he wasn’t clear of danger.
“I was cut up around the face by flying glass,” Swett told told The Oregonian, the newspaper in Portland, in 1991, reports the New York Times. “I made a good water landing, but my shoulder straps were too loose and I hit my head on the instrument panel and broke my nose. I struggled to get out of the cockpit as the plane sank, but my parachute straps got caught and dragged me under. I don’t know how deep I was before my life raft inflated and popped me to the surface.”
Fortunately, a Coast Guard vessel was nearby and came to his aid. As the ship approached Swett, one of the crewmen called out:
“Are you an American?”
To which Swett replied, “Damn right I am.”
Afterward he was taken to a nearby harbor and given Scotch and morphine to ease the pain.
Swett retired from the Marines in 1970 as a colonel and on Jan. 24, 2009, he passed away of congestive heart failure at Mercy Medical Center in Redding, California. He was 88.
Read the Original Article at Task and Purpose
Be Sure and Subscribe to Medal of Honor: Oral Histories YouTube Channel for more Amazing Stories Like this one!
His story is what’s important; however, it irks me no end that whoever made the video, used images of an F-6F Hellcat fighter twice, instead of the F-4F Wildcat Swett flew, to “dramatize” the event. What Swett accomplished that day was drama enough.
LOL, you and me and maybe a few others are most likely the only ones who picked that glitch up.
I was planning on a post for Swett as well during this intermission phase of mine. Maybe I should just reblog yours? The WWII photos included in the short video are great!
I would be honored GP to be featured on Pacific Paratrooper!
Good to know – see ya tomorrow!
Reblogged this on Pacific Paratrooper and commented:
This short video, which includes WWII photos, is a prime example of that Great Generation !
Thank you, Steven.
No Worries GP. Thanks for creating Pacific Paratrooper, a First Class Blog on the Pacific Theater during WW2!
wow –
Thank you very much. All I can say is – I try my best.
Well take it from a Vet and from somebody who knows what great sacrifices were made during ALL the Wars by our Military men and women, THANK YOU!! you are doing an awesome job in remembering the Pacific Campaign in WW2.
Much appreciated!
Please encourage all your fans to subscribe to my blog and LIKE my post GP…it helps me out and I have and will always do the same for Pacific Paratrooper as you know!!
The reblogs i do should bring you new readers. Do your best to keep in touch with them. I found this is best way to meet and maintain friendships.
Thanks GP!!
Some people have the amazing gift of making the impossible look easy!
Amazing Man…What gets me is how calm he is. A true Warrior..Real Class.
GP, I need some advice: A buddy wants a couple of true story non-fiction books about fighter pilots in WW2 in the Pacific theater. I told him about Baa Baa Black Sheep, which I read when I was like 10 years old, but he wants some more current ones. any ideals?
Great story. Thanks
Thanks Please subscribe…I am a WW2 and Cold War Amateur Historian, so I will have lots of similar stories coming up.
Wow! Talk about a profile in courage along with an account of what can be accomplished with a good heart and a brilliant mind! Your post is very well written.
I would like to take credit for that, but it was actually a re-post from Task and Purpose, I credit them at the bottom.
Let’s see what I can up with for you…
1) – This one might be cheaper from the author’s daughter than Amazon that wants $225.
For information about Quentin’s personal documentary, “A Fighter Pilot’s Story,” you can email Quentin’s daughter at his boldtiger address.
Check the website.
2) – this site might help with some others
http://www.interesting.com/directory/WorldWarII/Non-FictionBooks/
3) – this is my favorite site for books, very reliable.
http://www.thriftbooks.com/browse/?b.search=WWII%20history#b.oos&b.f.t%5B%5D=12110
I’ll continue to think on it, Steven.
Thanks a Million GP! I have a ton of pacific theater WW2 History books I could loan him but I really don’t have any on JUST a story about fighter pilots experience, most of them are on a certain battle. I think I will pass on what you have sent me plus tell him to subscribe to Medal of Honor: Oral Histories Channel on You Tube..Some GREAT stories on there, some of them fighter pilots…I spent 3 hours yesterday listening to almost all the WW2 stories, gonna listen to the Korea ones tonight!
I did a fair amount of research into Korea upon request of some of the readers a while back – it’s going to break your heart.
I have read 3 books on Korea, one of them was about the Marines at Chosin Resevoir and I had trouble finishing some part of it to be honest.
Oh boy, you went straight to the heart of it!!
Reblogged this on Owl Works – The Scribblings of M.T. Bass.