Everything about Pappy Boyington totally explained
Colonel
Gregory "Pappy" Boyington,
USMC, (
December 4,
1912 -
January 11,
1988) was an American fighter
ace. Boyington flew initially with the
American Volunteer Group ("The Flying Tigers") in the
Republic of China Air Force during the
Second Sino-Japanese War. He later commanded the famous
U.S. Marine Corps squadron,
VMF-214 ("
The Black Sheep Squadron") during
World War II. Boyington became a
prisoner of war later in the war. For his U.S. Marine Corps service he was awarded the
Navy Cross and the
Medal of Honor.
Early life
Boyington was born in
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho to the
Sioux Nation (Sioux are not native to the area), grew up in the nearby logging town of
St. Maries, Idaho and later,
Tacoma, Washington where he was a
wrestler in high school. He took his first flight when he was six years old, with
Clyde Pangborn, who later flew the
Pacific non-stop.
In
1930, Boyington entered the
University of Washington where he participated in the
ROTC and became a member of the
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He was a member of the college wrestling and swimming teams, and at one time held the Pacific Northwest Intercollegiate middleweight wrestling title. He graduated in 1934 with a
B.S. in
aeronautical engineering.
He spent his summer vacations working in his home state. He worked in a mining camp and a logging camp and with the Coeur d'Alene Fire Protective Association in road construction and lookout work.
He married his first wife, Helene, shortly after his graduation, after which he worked for
Boeing as a
draftsman and
engineer.
In his youth, Boyington went by the surname of Hallenbeck, after his stepfather. It wasn't until he decided to apply for flight training that he obtained his birth certificate and learned that his father was one Charles Boyington, and that his parents had divorced when he was a child. The discovery was fortuitous: since there was no record that Gregory Boyington had ever been married, he was free to become a cadet pilot in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Military career
Boyington started his military career in college, as a member of the
Reserve Officers Training Corps in which he became a cadet captain. He was
commissioned a
second lieutenant in the Coast Artillery Reserve in June 1934, and served two months of active duty with the 630th Coast Artillery at
Fort Worden, Washington. On
13 June 1935, he enlisted and went on active duty in the Volunteer Marine Corps Reserve. He returned to inactive duty on
16 July.
On
18 February,
1936, Boyington accepted an appointment as an aviation cadet in the
Marine Corps Reserve. He was assigned to the
Naval Air Station, Pensacola,
Florida, for flight training. He was designated a naval aviator on
11 March 1937, then was transferred to
Quantico,
Virginia, for duty with Aircraft One,
Fleet Marine Force. He was discharged from the Marine Corps Reserve on
1 July 1937 in order to accept a second lieutenant's commission in the regular
Marine Corps the following day.
He was sent to The
Basic School in
Philadelphia in July 1938; on completion of the course, Boyington was transferred to the 2nd Marine Aircraft Group at the
San Diego Naval Air Station. He took part in
fleet problems off the aircraft carriers
USS Lexington and
USS Yorktown. Promoted to
first lieutenant on
4 November 1940, Boyington returned to Pensacola as an instructor the next month.
Boyington resigned his commission in the Marine Corps on
26 August 1941 to accept a position with the
Central Aircraft Manufacturing Company (CAMCO). CAMCO was a civilian organization that contracted to staff a Special Air Unit to defend
China and the
Burma Road. The unit later became known as the American Volunteer Group (AVG), the famed
Flying Tigers of China. During his months with the "Tigers", Boyington became a flight leader. He was frequently in trouble with the commander of that outfit,
Claire Chennault. As a member of the AVG 1st Squadron, Boyington was officially credited with 3.5 Japanese aircraft destroyed in the air and on the ground, but AVG records suggest that one additional "kill" may have been due to him. (He afterward claimed six victories as a Tiger, but there's no substantiation for that figure.) In the spring of
1942, he broke his contract with the American Volunteer Group, and was dishonorably discharged.
Boyington wangled a major's commission in the Marines, which were in great need of experienced combat pilots. He was assigned to
Marine Aircraft Group 11 of the
1st Marine Aircraft Wing, where he became
Executive Officer of
VMF-121 operating from
Guadalcanal. While assigned to VMF-121, Boyington didn't shoot down any enemy planes. Later, he became
Commanding Officer (CO) of
Marine Fighter Squadron 214, better known by its nickname, the "
Black Sheep Squadron."
The CO earned the nickname "Gramps" because, at age 31, he was a decade older than most of his men. (Nicknames of this type are common within the armed forces, especially since the commanding officer of a unit is often referred to as "the old man".) It became "Pappy" in a song composed by one of his pilots, and this version was picked up by war correspondents.
Boyington is best known for his exploits flying the
Vought F4U Corsair in VMF-214. During periods of intense activity in the
Russell Islands-
New Georgia and
Bougainville-
New Britain-
New Ireland areas, Boyington added to his total almost daily. During his squadron's first tour of combat duty, the major shot down 14 enemy fighter planes in 32 days. On
17 December 1943, he headed the first Allied fighter sweep over impregnable
Rabaul. By
27 December his record had climbed to 25.
A typical daring feat was his attack on Kahili airdome at the southern tip of Bougainville on
17 October 1943. He and 24 fighters circled the field where 60 hostile aircraft were based, goading the enemy into sending up a large force. In the fierce battle that followed, 20 enemy aircraft were shot down while the Black Sheep returned to their base without loss.
Boyington’s squadron, flying from the island of
Vella Lavella, offered to down a
Japanese Zero for every baseball cap sent to them by major league players in the
World Series. They received 20 caps and shot down many more enemy aircraft.
He tied the American record of 26 planes on
3 January 1944 over
Rabaul, but was shot down himself later the same day. The mission had sent 48 American fighters, including one division of four planes from the Black Sheep Squadron, from Bougainville for a fighter sweep over Rabaul. Boyington was the tactical commander of the flight and arrived over the target at eight o'clock in the morning. In the ensuing action, the major was seen to shoot down his 26th plane. He then became mixed in the general melee of diving, swooping planes and wasn't seen or heard from again during the battle, nor did he return with his squadron. (In later years, Masajiro "Mike" Kawato claimed to have been the pilot who shot down Boyington's plane. He described the combat in two books and numerous public appearances (often with Boyington), but this claim was eventually "disproven," though Kawato held to his story until his death. It is a matter of record that Kawato was present during the action in which Boyington was downed, as one of 70 Japanese fighters which engaged approximately 30 American fighters.)
Following a determined but futile search, Boyington was declared
missing in action. He had been picked up by a Japanese
submarine and became a
prisoner of war. (The sub was sunk 13 days after picking him up, though not before dropping him off.) He spent the rest of the war, some 20 months, in a Japanese
prison camp, during which time he was selected for temporary promotion to the rank of
lieutenant colonel. A fellow American prisoner of war was Medal of Honor winning submarine captain Richard O'Kane.
During mid-August 1945, after the atomic bombs and the Japanese capitulation, Boyington was liberated from Japanese custody at
Omori Prison Camp near
Tokyo on
29 August and arrived in the United States shortly afterwards. On
6 September, he accepted his temporary lieutenant colonel's commission in the Marine Corps.
Shortly after his return to his homeland, as a lieutenant colonel, Boyington was ordered to Washington to receive the nation's highest honor — the
Medal of Honor — from the President. The medal had been awarded by the late president,
Franklin D. Roosevelt in March 1944 and held in the capital until such time as he could receive it. On
4 October 1945, Boyington received the
Navy Cross from the
Commandant of the Marine Corps for the Rabaul raid; the following day, "Nimitz Day," he and other sailors and Marines were decorated at the
White House by President
Harry S Truman.
Following the receipt of his Medal of Honor and Navy Cross, Boyington made a
Victory Bond Tour. Originally ordered to the Marine Corps Schools, Quantico, he was later directed to report to the Commanding General, Marine Air West Coast, Marine Corps Air Depot, Miramar, San Diego, California. He retired from the Marine Corps on
August 1,
1947, and because he was specially commended for the performance of duty in actual combat, he was promoted to full colonel.
In addition to the Medal of Honor and Navy Cross, Boyington held the
American Defense Service Medal,
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal,
American Campaign Medal, and the
World War II Victory Medal.
Medal of Honor citation
The
President of the United States in the name of
The Congress takes pleasure in presenting the Medal of Honor to
MAJOR GREGORY BOYINGTON
UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS RESERVE
for service as set forth in the following CITATION:
For extraordinary heroism above and beyond the call of duty as Commanding Officer of Marine Fighting Squadron TWO FOURTEEN in action against enemy Japanese forces in Central Solomons Area from 12 September 1943 to 3 January 1944. Consistently outnumbered throughout successive hazardous flights over heavily defended hostile territory, Major Boyington struck at the enemy with daring and courageous persistence, leading his squadron into combat with devastating results to Japanese shipping, shore installations and aerial forces. Resolute in his efforts to inflict crippling damage on the enemy, Major Boyington led a formation of twenty-four fighters over Kahili on 17 October and, persistently circling the airdrome where sixty hostile aircraft were grounded, boldly challenged the Japanese to send up planes. Under his brilliant command, our fighters shot down twenty enemy craft in the ensuing action without the loss of a single ship. A superb airman and determined fighter against overwhelming odds, Major Boyington personally destroyed 26 of the many Japanese planes shot down by his squadron and by his forceful leadership developed the combat readiness in his command which was a distinctive factor in the Allied aerial achievements in this vitally strategic area.
/S/
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
Later life
Boyington was a tough, hard-living character who was known for being unorthodox. He was also an
alcoholic, which plagued him in the years after the war, and contributed to multiple divorces as well as disciplinary problems with the Marines. He worked various civilian jobs, including refereeing and participating in
professional wrestling matches.
Many people know of him from the 1970s television show
Baa Baa Black Sheep (also known as
Black Sheep Squadron), a drama about the Black Sheep squadron based very loosely on Boyington's memoir of the same name, with Boyington portrayed by
Robert Conrad. Like
Chuck Yeager in the movie
The Right Stuff, Pappy had a short walk-on role, as a visiting General during the second season of the show. Many of Boyington's men were very irate over this show, charging it was mostly fiction and presented an overly glamorized portrait of Boyington. At least on the television show, Boyington was depicted as owning a
bull terrier dog, named "Meatball." However, he was heard commenting at a 1970s EAA airshow book signing that if he did have a dog at the time, it wouldn't have been such "an ugly" dog. Boyington frequently informed interviewers and audiences that the television series was fiction, and only loosely related to actual history, calling it "hogwash and Hollywood hokum". (It's also worth noting that the character played by John Wayne in the 1942 film
Flying Tigers, Capt. Jim Gordon, is called "Pappy" by some of his men.)
In addition to his autobiography, Boyington wrote a novel about the AVG.
Tonya is a spy story with characters who evoked actual individuals, sometimes by transposing the syllables of their names ("Ross Dicky" for Dick Rossi, for example).
While artist depictions and publicity photos often show Boyington with aircraft number 86 ("LuluBelle") covered in victory flags, this wasn't his combat aircraft. In fact, he rarely flew the same aircraft more than a few times. It has been said that he'd choose the F4U in the worst shape, so none of his pilots would be afraid of flying their own aircraft.
He visited the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum Garber Restoration and Storage facility, coincidentally just as the Museum's F4U Corsair left the restoration shop. According to tour guides who witnessed the incident, Boyington climbed into the cockpit "for old time's sake" and attempted to start the engine. He did autograph the Corsair with a magic marker in one of the landing gear wells. Years later that same Corsair hangs from the ceiling at the
NASM Dulles Annex, and Boyington's autograph is visible from floor level to the sharp-eyed.
Boyington was an absentee father to three children by his first wife. One daughter committed suicide; one son graduated from the
United States Air Force Academy in 1959.
Death
Boyington died of cancer on
January 11,
1988 at the age of 75 in Fresno, California.
He was buried in
Arlington National Cemetery on
January 15,
1988, in plot 7A-150 with full honors accorded to a Medal of Honor recipient, including a
missing man fly-by conducted by the
F-4 Phantom IIs of the
Marine detachment at
Andrews Air Force Base. Before his flight from
Fresno, California VMA-214 (the current incarnation of the
Black Sheep Squadron) did a flyby. They intended to do a
missing man formation, but one of the four aircraft suffered a mechanical problem.
After the burial service for Boyington one of his friends, Fred Losch, looked down at the headstone that he was standing next to, the boxing legend
Joe Louis, "Ol' Pappy wouldn't have to go far to find a good fight."
Posthumous
The
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho airport was renamed in August 2007 to
Coeur d’Alene Airport–Pappy Boyington Field in his honor.
University of Washington Boyington Memorial
In February 2006, a resolution recommending a memorial be erected to honor Boyington for his service during WWII was raised at the
University of Washington (Boyington's alma mater) during a meeting of the Associated Students of the University of Washington's Student Senate. Several themes emerged in the Student Senate's debate on February 7. People were concerned about whether the Senate was in a place where it could decide who among the several UW alumni Medal of Honor recipients deserved to be memorialized. Also, some were concerned about how the legislation was worded to refer to many specific acts of violence and destruction (specifically in Boyington's Medal of Honor citation, the full text of which was originally included in the resolution), and whether that was appropriate for a Student Senate resolution. Some didn't believe that all financial and logistical problems around installing a memorial were fully addressed by the sponsor, and some were questioning the widely-held assumption that all warriors and acts of war are automatically worthy of memorialization.
Ultimately, the resolution was debated upon and resulted in a tie vote (45-45), broken by the Student Senate Chair, defeating the motion. This resulted in a nationwide controversy that was debated through internet "
blogs" and many conservative news outlets. Many members of the public balked when hearing this and sent large amounts of negative feedback, a significant portion of which were derogatory to the senators involved. As a result, several student senators have received thousands of malicious e-mails.
Discussion in these media centered around two statements that were made by student senators during the meeting. One senator (Ashley Miller) said that the UW already had many monuments to "rich, white men" which created perceptions of
racism,
classism and
sexism among several of the resolution's proponents and the media covering the story, because of the statement's perceived implication that the UW therefore need not honor any more. This sentiment came across as particularly petty considering that Boyington was of
Sioux ancestry and hardly rich. Another student senator (Jill Edwards) questioned whether the UW should memorialize a person who killed others, and this notion was summarized in the minutes as saying "she didn’t believe a member of the
Marine Corps was an example of the sort of person UW wanted to produce." This created a large outcry among the military community and other military-friendly people, media and organizations.
Since the eruption of the controversy, a new version of the original resolution was submitted that called for a memorial to all five UW alumni who received the
Medal of Honor after attending the UW. On
April 4,
2006, the resolution passed by a vote of 64 to 14 with several abstentions, on a
roll call vote. However, despite the fact that the memorial was approved by the student senate, the memorial could take several months or years to complete, as it'll have to be approved by the
University of Washington administration, and the funds for the memorial, likely to be in the tens of thousands, will all have to be raised privately.
AVG victory claims
There is some controversy surrounding Boyington's AVG victory claims. His official CAMCO account showed 3.5 for enemy aircraft destroyed, of which just one was an air-to-air victory. However, AVG records suggest that Boyington was short-changed of an air-to-air victory during his tour of duty at
Mingaladon airport in
Rangoon. Boyington also felt that the AVG staff wrongly calculated claims from a raid on
Chiang Mai,
Thailand. Six pilots were involved in a raid that supposedly destroyed 15 Japanese aircraft on the ground, giving each man 2.5 victory credits for the raid. Boyington apparently decided that the two pilots who flew top cover shouldn't have shared in the bounty, though it was often the case that when a pilot was shot down victory credits were equally shared among all taking part in the raid. Boyington evidently calculated his AVG score this way:
- Confirmed air to air victories: 2 (this is what the US military officially acknowledges normally)
- Chiang Mai Raid: 3.75 (15 aircraft destroyed divided by 4 shooters)
- Total: 5.75
He then rounded it up to 6, and convinced the Corps to officially acknowledge it. This was probably good for the Corps' image during the final days of the tour as Boyington neared the record of 26 victories held at the time by
Joe Foss and
Eddie Rickenbacker. He ultimately tied the record on the same mission in which he was shot down.
Boyington's total score recognized by the American Fighter Aces Association is 24: 2 with the AVG and 22 claimed with the Marine Corps.
Many sources, such as the back of the Bantam Books edition of his autobiography, claim that he shot down 28 planes (6 with the AVG, 22 with the Marines),
After the war, Boyington insisted on the term "victories" rather than "kills", and was known to lose his temper over the issue.
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