On April 7, 1943, 22-year-old Marine pilot James Swett, with zero combat missions and only 450 hours of civilian flying time, achieved seven confirmed victories in just 15 minutes during Operation I-Go over Tulagi Harbor, Guadalcanal, becoming an ace in less than 15 minutes on his first combat mission. Despite being shot down by friendly fire and suffering a broken nose, he water-landed his damaged F4F Wildcat, was rescued, and went on to earn the Medal of Honor for this extraordinary first-day performance that demonstrated that combat experience meant nothing compared to skill, courage, and the ability to apply training under extreme pressure.
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Henderson Field, Guadalcanal, April 7th, 1943, 1400 hours. First Lieutenant James Swett, strapped into an F4F4 Wildcat, as a coast watcher's report came through the radio room. 177 Japanese aircraft bearing down on Tulagi Harbor, 30 miles out and closing fast. 22 years old, zero combat missions, zero kills. The Japanese strike force included 67 Aichi D3A Val dive bombers, escorted by 110 Mitsubishi Zero fighters. The largest enemy formation to hit the Solomons since Guadalcanal fell to American forces 2 months earlier. Swett had 450 hours of civilian flying time before the war. He'd finished in the top 10% of his naval flight training class at Corpus Christi. He'd spent 3 months at Henderson Field flying combat air patrols over empty ocean. But on April 7th, Operation I-Go, Admiral Yamamoto's counteroffensive to destroy American shipping in the Solomons, finally arrived. And Swett's division of four Wildcats was already airborne when the warning came through. The squadron intelligence officer had briefed them that morning. The Vals were slower than Wildcats. Their rear gunners carried twin 7.7 mm machine guns. Effective range maybe 300 yards. The Zero escorts were faster, more maneuverable, longer range. Japanese pilots had been flying combat since China in 19 37. Some had over a thousand hours of combat time.
Swett's wingmen were experienced. His element leader had 12 missions. His section leader had 19. They knew the radio frequencies. They knew the hand signals. They knew how to spot a Zero coming out of the sun at 400 miles per hour. Swett knew textbook tactics from training films at Quantico. He'd fired his guns twice at towed target sleeves off San Diego. He'd never seen a Val dive bomber except in recognition manuals. His F4F4 carried six.50 caliber Browning machine guns, 240 rounds per gun. The armament officer had explained the problem during pre-flight inspection. Earlier Wildcats carried four guns with more ammunition per gun.
The F4F4 added two more guns but reduced ammunition to keep weight down. Result, roughly 20 seconds of continuous fire before the guns went silent. 20 seconds to become an ace or die trying. The radio crackled. His division leader's voice came through. "Form up on my wing." Swett pushed the throttle forward. His right R-1830 engine roared.
The Wildcat climbed through 15,000 ft.
Below, Tulagi Harbor spread out like a map. American destroyers and transports sat at anchor, perfect targets. Then he saw them. The Val formation came in from the northwest, neat lines of three.
Their fixed landing gear hung down like claws. The lead section be- gan their dives. Bomb bay doors opened. Swett's division leader called the bounce. "Go, go, go." Swett rolled inverted and dove.
His airspeed indicator climbed past 300 mph. The first Val filled his gunsight.
He pressed the trigger. Six streams of.50 caliber tracers reached out. The Val's left wing disintegrated. The bomber snapped into a spin and hit the water near Florida Island. His first kill, 11 seconds of trigger time. Two more Vals crossed his nose. He fired.
The second Val exploded midair. The third tried to pull up. Swett followed.
His tracers walked up the fuselage. The Val's engine caught fire. It cartwheeled into Tulagi Harbor. Three down. 16 seconds of ammunition remaining. Swett had 16 seconds of ammunition and six Japanese bombers running for home. A like on this video helps us keep bringing stories like his back from the archives. Please subscribe so you don't miss what happens next. Now, back to Swett. American anti-aircraft guns opened fire from the destroyers below.
Black puffs of flak filled the sky.
Swett pulled hard left to avoid the barrage. Something punched through his left wing. A ragged hole appeared 2 ft from his cockpit. Not enemy fire, friendly fire. His own side had just shot him. His wingmen were gone. Radio silent. Sky full of zeros and Vales and American fighters tangled together. No time to look for friendly aircraft.
Swett spotted six more Vales pulling out of their dives, heading northwest in a loose trail formation. Their bomb loads gone, running for home. He turned after them. His damaged wing shuddered.
Hydraulic fluid streaked across his canopy, but the engine held power. The guns still had ammunition, and seven Japanese bombers were about to learn that combat experience meant nothing if you couldn't see the rookie coming up behind you. The six Vales flew in loose trail formation at 8,000 ft. Distance, 2 mi and closing. Swett's airspeed indicator showed 320 mph. The Vales were doing maybe 230. He'd overtake them in 90 seconds. His left wing still had the hole from American anti-aircraft fire.
Hydraulic pressure held steady. Oil temperature normal. Engine running smooth. The right radial had taken worse punishment in testing and kept flying.
Grumman built the Wildcat to absorb battle damage. Now, Swett would find out if the engineers were right. He closed to 800 yd. The rear gunners hadn't spotted him yet. They were watching for zeros coming from above, not a lone Wildcat coming up from the harbor behind them. 600 yd. The trailing Vale's gunner turned his twin 7.7 mm mount. Too late.
Swett pressed the trigger. 3-second burst. The Vale's right stabilizer sheared off. The bomber rolled inverted and dove into the jungle below. Four kills. 13 seconds of ammunition left.
The formation scattered, no radio discipline, no defensive weaving, just six pilots pushing throttles forward and running. Swat picked the second Val, close to 400 yards, two second burst.
Tracers hit the engine cowling, orange flames erupted. The Val nosed down trailing black smoke. Five kills, 11 seconds remaining. Marine Corps doctrine taught deflection shooting, lead the target, account for closure rate, fire in short controlled bursts. The gunnery instructors at Quantico had drilled it into every student pilot. Swat remembered the formula. He also remembered that formula assumed you had time to set up each shot perfectly. He didn't have time. Third Val tried to dive away. Swat followed. Negative 4 Gs pushed him against his shoulder straps.
His vision narrowed. He ignored it. The Val filled his gun sight at 350 yards, one second burst. The Val's left wing folded. The bomber tumbled end over end into the sea north of Guadalcanal. Six kills, 10 seconds of ammunition. Fourth Val broke hard right. Swat cut inside the turn. The Wildcat's stubby wings and low wing loading gave it one advantage over the Zero, tight radius turns at low altitude. The Val couldn't outmaneuver him. Two second burst at 200 yards. The Val's canopy exploded. The bomber went straight down. Seven kills, eight seconds left. Swat had just become an ace, five confirmed victories. The minimum standard set in World War I.
Achieving ace status normally took months of combat, sometimes years. Some pilots never made it. Swat had done it in less than 15 minutes on his first mission. But the ammunition counter showed near zero, and two Vals remained ahead, pulling away toward the northwest and safety. He selected the nearest target, close to 150 yards. The rear gunner opened fire. Swat saw the muzzle flashes, bright yellow strobes. He squeezed the trigger. His remaining ammunition, maybe 40 rounds total across six guns, lanced out in one final burst.
The gunner's position went silent.
Swett's tracers had killed him. The Val's engine began smoking. Not a kill, a probable. The bomber kept flying, limping northwest trailing white coolant vapor. His guns were empty. All six Brownings. Nothing left. The mechanical counters read zero across the board.
Then his windscreen exploded inward. The dead gunner's last rounds, fired 1 second before Swett killed him, hit the Wildcat's nose. Glass shards slashed Swett's face. Something warm ran down his cheek. Blood. His left eye blurred.
More glass embedded in his forehead. The engine temperature gauge spiked.
Redline. The oil cooler had taken hits.
Pressure dropping. Temperature climbing.
The right radial had maybe 2 minutes before it seized. Swett turned southeast toward Henderson Field. 28 miles away.
His engine was dying. His face was bleeding. His left wing had a hole from friendly fire. His windscreen was gone.
And he was flying alone over enemy controlled waters with no ammunition and no radio contact with anyone who could help him. 2 minutes of engine life to cover 28 miles meant the math didn't work. He'd in the ocean or crash into the jungle. Either way, the rookie who just become an ace in 15 minutes had about 120 seconds to figure out how to survive long enough to tell anyone what he'd done. The engine temperature gauge climbed past 260°.
Normal operating temperature for the right R-1830 radial was 230. At 280, the pistons would expand beyond tolerance.
The connecting rods would seize. The crankshaft would lock. The propeller would stop turning. And the Wildcat would become a 28-ft glider with the aerodynamics of a brick. Swett had 90 seconds, maybe less. Henderson Field lay 28 miles southeast. Airspeed 200 miles per hour with power. Without power, the Wildcat's glide ratio was roughly 8 to 1. From 8,000 ft, he could glide maybe 12 miles. The math was simple and final.
He'd come up 15 miles short. The ocean below stretched blue and empty. No rescue boats, no destroyers, no patrol craft. Japanese submarine I-17 had been spotted in these waters 3 days earlier.
American submarines operated here, too.
Neither side would surface to rescue an enemy pilot. But, Tulagi Harbor sat 10 miles ahead, American-controlled.
Shallow water, coral reefs, Coast Guard picket boats patrolling for downed air crew. If he could make it to Tulagi, his survival odds jumped from near zero to maybe 50/50. The engine temperature hit 270. White smoke began streaming from the cowling. Not coolant vapor anymore.
That was oil burning on hot metal. The seized engine was maybe 60 seconds away.
Swede nose down, trading altitude for distance. The Wildcat accelerated to 240 miles per hour. The damaged left wing vibrated. The hole from anti-aircraft fire had torn through the aileron control cables. Every turn to the left felt mushy. Every turn to the right felt normal. He'd have to ditch with a right hand turn. No choice. Tulagi came into view, the harbor mouth. The coral reefs marked by white breakers. American LSTs and destroyers at anchor. And beyond them, the flat, calm water inside the harbor, where a pilot could attempt a water landing without getting torn apart by 6-ft swells. The engine temperature gauge pegged at 285.
The needle couldn't go higher. The actual temperature was probably 300 degrees or more. Black smoke now mixed with white. The engine was cooking itself to death. 5,000 ft, 3 mi from the harbor entrance, the engine coughed, stuttered, coughed again. Sweat reached down and pushed the mixture control to full rich, trying to squeeze 30 more seconds of power. The engine caught, ran rough, kept turning. 2,000 ft, 1 mi out.
He could see the picket boats now, small craft with machine gun mounts, crews watching the sky for returning aircraft.
They'd spotted him. One boat turned toward his projected impact point. The engine seized. No warning, no gradual power loss, just instant silence. The propeller windmilled for 2 seconds and stopped. The sudden quiet was total.
Only the wind noise over the shattered windscreen and the damaged left wing.
1,000 ft, half a mile from calm water.
Sweat lowered the flaps manually. The hydraulic system was compromised, but the manual backup worked. Flaps down 30° airspeed dropped to 110 mph. 500 ft, he was going to make it. The harbor entrance passed below. Calm water ahead.
The picket boat moving into position.
Sweat lined up for a right-hand approach, kept the damaged left wing high, aimed for a spot 200 yd from the nearest reef. 200 ft, he reached down to tighten his shoulder harness. The buckle was already at maximum tension, or he thought it was. The webbing had stretched during the dive attacks and hard turns, but there was no time to check, no time to adjust. 100 ft, the water rushed up, glass smooth, deceptive. Water at 100 mph hit like concrete. 50 ft, Sweat pulled back on the stick, flared. The Wildcat's tail touched first. Perfect. Then the main gear area. The impact was harder than expected. The Wildcat bounced, rose 10 ft, fell again. The second impact drove Sweat forward. His loose shoulder straps let his body slide. His face hit the gun sight mount. The metal ring smashed his nose. Cartilage broke. Blood filled his mouth. The Wildcat's nose dug in. Water exploded over the shattered windscreen.
Green water, salt water, rushing into the cockpit. The aircraft pitched forward. The tail rose. The nose went down. And the Wildcat that had carried Swett through seven victories in 15 minutes was now dragging him 20 ft below the surface toward the bottom of Tulagi Harbor. With his parachute straps tangled in the seat frame and his broken nose filling with seawater and roughly 15 seconds of air left in his lungs before his first combat mission ended with his body trapped in the cockpit of a sunken fighter that nobody would find for 70 years. 20 ft down. Green water.
Pressure in his ears. Blood from his broken nose mixing with seawater. Swett pulled against his shoulder straps. They held. He pulled harder.
The buckle release was underwater, somewhere.
His left hand found it. Pressed. The straps released. But he didn't float up.
The parachute harness still connected.
The risers, thick nylon straps connecting the harness to the parachute canopy, had tangled in the seat frame during the impact. Swett twisted, pulled. The risers held tight. His chest harness quick release sat on his right side. He found it. Squeezed the metal release. Nothing. Jammed. Bent from the impact or corroded from salt spray or just bad luck. His lungs burned. Maybe 8 seconds of air remaining. The Wildcat was settling deeper. 25 ft. 30.
The water grew darker, colder.
Swett's training at Pensacola had included underwater escape drills.
Controlled pool environment. Instructors standing by. Practice fuselage that didn't have shattered glass and twisted metal, and a dead engine pressing everything down toward the bottom.
This wasn't training.
He reached for the survival knife strapped to his right calf. Marine Corps issue K-Bar, 7-in blade. He pulled it free, started sawing at the parachute risers. The nylon was tough, designed to hold a 200-lb man falling at terminal velocity.
The knife was sharp, but cutting through 2-in nylon webbing underwater with no air in your lungs took time. Sweat didn't have. 4 seconds. First riser parted. He was still held by three more.
He sawed faster. His vision tunneled.
The edges went gray. Second riser gave way. His body shifted, almost free. Two more cuts, 2 seconds. Third riser. His hand was cramping. The knife felt heavy.
Everything felt heavy. His body wanted to breathe, wanted to inhale. Didn't matter that inhaling meant drowning. The brain stem's automatic response to carbon dioxide build up didn't care about logic. 1 second. Fourth riser parted. Sweat kicked. His flight boots were heavy. His leather jacket was heavy. His survival vest was heavy, but he wasn't trapped anymore. He kicked again, rose. Too slow. He kicked harder.
The surface seemed impossibly far. His chest spasmed. The involuntary gasp reflex started. He clamped his jaw shut.
Then his head broke the surface. Air. He sucked in a breath, choked. Blood and seawater in his throat. He coughed, breathed again. His May West, the inflatable life preserver worn by every naval aviator, had auto inflated when he hit the water. It kept his head up, barely. His face was a mess. Blood still flowing from his broken nose. Cuts from glass shards across his forehead and cheeks. His left eye swelling shut. But he was alive. The Coast Guard picket boat reached him 90 seconds later. Two sailors pulled him aboard, laid him on the deck. One sailor, a hospital corpsman, checked his wounds. The nose was obviously broken. The glass cuts were superficial, no major arterial bleeding. The corpsman gave him a morphine injection, then somebody handed him a flask, Scotch whiskey. Sweat took a drink. Bad idea. The morphine and alcohol hit his empty stomach simultaneously. Everything went sideways. He spent the next six days in the Naval Hospital at Guadalcanal recovering from his broken nose, his glass cuts, and the worst hangover of his life. Meanwhile, his seven victory claims were being investigated. Marine Corps intelligence officers were skeptical. Seven kills in one mission by a pilot on his first combat flight seemed impossible. Sounded like rookie exaggeration. Maybe he'd gotten confused in the heat of battle. Maybe he'd counted the same Val twice. Maybe friendly aircraft had shared kills he was claiming solo. The intelligence officer assigned to verify the claims interviewed witnesses. The destroyer crews in Tulagi Harbor had watched the entire fight. They'd seen Sweat's Wildcat make repeated attacks. They'd counted bombers falling. Their estimates matched Sweat's claims. Seven Vals destroyed, one probable damaged. The anti-aircraft gunners confirmed they'd hit a Wildcat during the fight, left wing. They thought they'd killed the pilot. Instead, he'd kept fighting and splashed four more bombers with a damaged aircraft. Japanese records captured later confirmed the losses.
Carrier air groups from Zuikaku, Hiyo, and Junyo had sent 67 Vals against Guadalcanal. 21 failed to return. Sweat had personally accounted for 1/3 of Japan's losses that day. Admiral Marc Mitscher, Commander Air Solomon Islands, read the intelligence report. Then he did something remarkable. He nominated a first mission pilot for the Medal of Honor, not the Distinguished Flying Cross, not the Navy Cross, the highest decoration America could award. The paperwork went through channels. The witnesses were re-interviewed. The gun camera footage from other aircraft was reviewed. Every detail checked and rechecked. And 6 months later, on October 10th, 1943, Major General Ralph Mitchell presented First Lieutenant James Swett with the Medal of Honor on Espiritu Santo. But that was October. This was April. And Swett had just spent 6 days in a hospital bed wondering if his war was over before it really began. The doctors cleared him for flight duty on April 14th. He walked back to VMF-221 squadron area expecting to find his bunk and his flight gear exactly where he'd left them a week earlier. Instead, he found orders transferring him to a new aircraft type that would either make him the most effective fighter pilot in the Pacific or kill him in a flat spin before he learned how to land it. The Chance Vought F4U Corsair had a reputation.
Navy pilots called it the Ensign Eliminator. Marine pilots called it the Bent Wing Bastard. Test pilots at Patuxent River called it a widowmaker.
All three names referred to the same problem. The Corsair killed inexperienced pilots faster than the Japanese did. The aircraft was beautiful and deadly in equal measure. Its inverted gull wing, bent downward at the root, then swept upward, gave it an unmistakable profile. The 18-ft Hamilton standard propeller required the bent wing design to maintain ground clearance. The 2,000-horsepower Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp engine gave it a top speed of 417 mph, 50 mph faster than the Wildcat, nearly 100 mph faster than the Zero. But speed came with costs. The Corsair's long nose blocked forward visibility during takeoff and landing. Pilots couldn't see the runway until the tail came up.
Carrier landings were worse. The left wing stalled before the right wing at low speeds, creating an uncommanded roll toward the deck. The landing gear oleo struts bounced on hard touchdowns, causing the aircraft to porpoise down the deck. And the engine torque during go-arounds could flip the aircraft inverted if the pilot didn't immediately apply full right rudder. Between December 1942 and April 1943, the Corsair killed more American pilots in training accidents than it killed Japanese pilots in combat. Swett started his Corsair checkout on April 20th. His instructor was a Marine captain who'd survived three Corsair carrier landing accidents and had the reconstructed collarbone to prove it. The captain's advice was simple, "Respect the aircraft or it will kill you." Swett's first takeoff attempt nearly ended in a crash.
The torque pulled him left. He overcorrected. The Corsair swerved right. He corrected again. The aircraft finally climbed away after using 3/4 of Henderson Field's runway. His first landing attempt was worse. He came in too fast, bounced, applied power to go around. The left wing dropped. He caught it with opposite aileron, barely. The Corsair touched down hard enough to blow both main tires. By May 1st, Swett had logged 40 hours in the Corsair.
He'd mastered the takeoff, mostly mastered the landing, definitely mastered the high-speed combat maneuvering that made the Corsair worth its dangerous handling characteristics.
VMF-221 moved to a new airfield in the Russell Islands, closer to Japanese-held territory, shorter flight times to combat zones, better early warning from coastwatcher stations. The squadron transitioned completely to Corsairs. The Wildcats went to replacement squadrons.
Swett flew his first Corsair combat mission on June 30th, 1943.
The target was Rendova Island. American troops were conducting an amphibious landing. Japanese bombers from Rabaul were coming down the slot to stop them.
24 Mitsubishi G4M Betty medium bombers escorted by 35 zeros. VMF-221 intercepted at 15,000 ft. Swett spotted two Bettys flying line abreast. He dove.
The Corsair accelerated past 400 mph.
His six 50-caliber guns, same armament as the Wildcat but with more ammunition per gun, opened fire at 600 yd. The first Betty's right engine exploded. The bomber rolled inverted and went down.
Second Betty tried to evade, too slow.
The Betty's cruise speed was 230 mph.
Swett was doing 390. He closed to 400 yd, fired. The Betty's tail section separated. The bomber spun into the sea off Rendova. A zero bounced his wingman.
Swett reversed hard. The Corsair's superior speed let him catch the zero.
Shared kill with his wingman. The zero went down trailing fire. Three victories, no damage. The Corsair had just proven its worth. 11 days later, July 11th, Swett added two more Bettys near New Georgia Island. Then he spotted his wingman under attack by a zero.
Swett rolled inverted, dove, shot the zero off his wingman's tail. Fourth kill of the mission. But he'd forgotten the most important rule of fighter combat, check 6:00 always. A second zero, one Swett never saw, put 20-mm cannon rounds into his Corsair's engine. Oil pressure dropped to zero. Coolant temperature spiked. The engine seized at 8,000 ft over water. Swett had survived his first shoot-down by ditching in friendly harbor waters with rescue boat standing by. This time, he was 15 mi from land, open ocean, no rescue boats visible, shark-infested waters, and a Corsair that was about to become a very expensive anchor. He had maybe 60 seconds to make the same decision twice.
Ditch the aircraft and hope somebody saw him go down, or try to stretch the glide toward land and probably die in the jungle. The math said ditch. His gut said land. And the Zero pilot who just shot him down was circling above, probably radioing Sweatt's position to Japanese patrol boats. 60 seconds, same decision, different ocean, worse odds.
Sweatt aimed for a narrow beach on New Georgia's western shore, 7 miles away.
The Corsair was gliding at a 10 to 1 ratio. From 8,000 ft he could theoretically reach 12 miles, but the bullet-damaged Corsair wasn't performing at book numbers. The bent wing had taken hits. Drag was higher than normal, and every second of gliding time brought him closer to Japanese-controlled jungle. He passed 6,000 ft, 5 miles from the beach.
Still possible. He adjusted his glide path, checked his Mae West inflation, tightened his harness properly this time. His broken nose from the first ditching had healed crooked. He wasn't eager to break it again. 4,000 ft, 3 miles out. The math was getting tight.
The beach looked impossibly small, a thin strip of white sand between jungle and water. If he overshot, he'd crash into the trees. If he came up short, he'd ditch in the surf zone, where the Corsair would flip and trap him underwater again. 2,000 ft, 1 mile. He wasn't going to make it. The beach was too far. The glide ratio was too poor.
Sweatt accepted it. He turned parallel to the shore, aimed for calm water between the surf line and the reef. At least he could see what he was hitting this time. 1,000 ft. He lowered the flaps manually. The hydraulics were dead. The manual system worked. Flaps down. Airspeed dropped to 120 mph. The Corsair wanted to stall. He pushed the nose down slightly, kept flying speed.
500 ft. The water rushed up. He pulled back, flared. The Corsair's tail touched, then the fuselage. The impact was hard, but controlled. The aircraft skipped once, twice, settled. Water flooded the cockpit, but Sweat was ready this time. Harness released, parachute disconnected, canopy already open. He climbed out as the Corsair's nose dipped forward. The aircraft sank in 30 seconds. Sweat inflated his life raft, a small yellow circle of rubberized canvas. Room for one pilot and maybe his survival gear if he didn't move much. He climbed in, took stock. No visible rescue aircraft, no patrol boats. The shoreline was maybe 2 mi away, Japanese territory. Swimming that distance in a Mae West and flight gear would take hours. He'd be exhausted, vulnerable, easy target. He decided to wait, drift, hope somebody had seen him go down, hope that somebody was friendly. 4 hours later, two Solomon Islanders paddled up in a dugout canoe. They'd watched the fight from the beach, watched Sweat ditch, paddled out to investigate. They pulled him aboard, gave him water, started paddling north along the coast.
The journey took 6 hours. 10-man war canoe. Sweat sat in the middle. His rescuers paddled steadily. Nobody spoke.
Hand signals only. Japanese patrols operated in these waters. Sound carried at night. One shout could bring a patrol boat. They reached the Australian coastwatcher station after sunset. The coastwatcher, a former plantation manager named Jack Keenan, had been radioing Allied ship movements and Japanese aircraft sightings from hidden camps in the jungle since 1942. He fed Sweat, gave him dry clothes, radioed for extraction. A PBY Catalina flying boat arrived the next morning. Sweat flew back to the Russell Islands. His squadron mates had already written him off as killed in action. His bunk had been reassigned. His personal effects had been packed for shipment home. Swett unpacked them himself. He returned to combat operations on October 1st. The squadron was covering Marine landings at Bougainville, major Japanese airbase at Kahili. Heavy zero presence. Swett's division engaged a formation of 12 zeros over Empress Augusta Bay on October 18th. He shot down one zero confirmed, damaged another, probably destroyed. His wingman went down in the same fight.
Swett watched him crash into the jungle.
No parachute, no survival radio beacon, no rescue, just another empty bunk that night. November brought more action.
American forces were pushing north through the Solomons. Every island came with air battles. Every air battle came with losses. Swett added two more Ichi vows to his score on November 2nd. Shot down a possible Kawasaki Ki-61 Tony, a new Japanese fighter with inline engine, on November 7th. The Tony claim remained unconfirmed. Japanese records were incomplete. By December 1st, Swett's combat record showed 83 missions, 15 confirmed victories, four probables, two shoot-downs, one broken nose, one Purple Heart, one Medal of Honor, and orders transferring him back to the United States for what the Marine Corps called a well-deserved rest. Swett knew what that meant. War bond tours, public appearances, recruitment speeches, telling the story of his first combat mission over and over to civilians who'd never seen combat and never would. While his squadron mates kept fighting and dying without him. He reported to Marine Corps Air Station Santa Barbara on December 20th. Found a new VMF-221 squadron being formed. All new pilots, all new aircraft, all training for an operation that nobody was talking about, but everybody knew was coming. the invasion of Japan. And Swett had roughly 6 months to turn a squadron of rookies into combat-ready fighter pilots before they sailed west to finish what started at Pearl Harbor 3 years earlier. Except the war wouldn't wait 6 months, and Swett's next combat deployment would put him on the deck of an aircraft carrier that was about to become the most damaged American warship to survive World War II. Marine Corps Air Station Santa Barbara sat on a bluff overlooking the Pacific.
Wind came off the ocean, constant and cold. The runway pointed east-west.
Crosswinds made every landing an exercise in correcting for drift.
Perfect training environment for carrier operations, where wind over deck never matched wind direction, and every approach required constant stick and rudder inputs. Swett's new VMF-221 squadron had 36 pilots. Average age, 21.
Average combat experience, zero. Most had logged less than 300 hours total flight time. None had made a carrier landing. None had seen a Zero except in recognition training films. They were good kids, enthusiastic, confident, exactly like Swett had been 14 months earlier before his first combat mission taught him the difference between training and combat. He trained them hard. Formation flying, gunnery runs against towed sleeves, simulated carrier approaches to a painted deck on the runway, navigation over open water, emergency procedures, and the constant repetition of basic fighter tactics.
Altitude is life. Speed is life. Check 6:00. Never fight alone. Never assume the enemy is defeated until you see him hit the water. By June 1945, the squadron was carrier qualified. They'd made arrested landings on USS Wolverine on Lake Michigan. They'd practiced deck operations. They'd learned to live in the tight confines of an aircraft carrier, where a fighter squadron shared space with dive bombers, torpedo bombers, and a ship's company of 3,000 sailors. The VMF-221 deployed aboard USS Bunker Hill in February 1945.
The Bunker Hill was an Essex-class carrier. Displacement, 27,000 tons.
Flight deck, 862 ft. Air group, 90 aircraft. The ship had been in combat since May 1943.
Task Force 58, fast carrier operations.
The Bunker Hill had participated in strikes against Rabaul, Tarawa, the Philippines, Formosa, and the Japanese home islands. Swett flew his first carrier combat mission on February 16th.
Target, Tokyo. The VMF-221's Corsairs provided fighter cover for dive bombers hitting aircraft factories near the capital. Light opposition, no losses, standard mission. The squadron supported Marine landings at Iwo Jima in March, flew daily patrols, shot down scattered Japanese aircraft attempting to reinforce the island. Swett added no victories. His job was protecting the bombers. He did his job. April brought the Okinawa campaign, the largest amphibious invasion of the Pacific War.
1,300 American ships offshore, 1,800 Japanese kamikaze aircraft waiting at airfields throughout Kyushu. The kamikazes came in waves, suicide attacks. Young Japanese pilots with barely enough training to take off and find the fleet. They didn't need to land, just hit a ship and die. The kamikazes were changing the math of naval warfare. A single kamikaze carried more explosive power than a bomb. The pilot's body weight, plus a full fuel load, plus the aircraft structure, hitting at 300 mph could penetrate a carrier's armored deck. Traditional air defense assumed pilots wanted to survive. The kamikazes assumed pilots wanted to die for the emperor. Swett flew four missions per day during Okinawa, combat air patrol, standing barriers patrols 50 miles from the fleet, watching for Kamikazes, shooting them down before they reach the carriers. It was target practice with stakes measured in thousands of American lives. May 11th started like every other day, pre-dawn launch, climb to patrol altitude, wait, watch. The radar picket ships called warnings, multiple bogies inbound, bearing 340, distance 40 miles, closing fast. Swett's division intercepted at 12,000 ft. He identified the lead aircraft immediately, Yokosuka D4Y Judy, single-engine dive bomber, often used for Kamikaze attacks. This one was flying straight and level, no evasive maneuvers, no defensive fire. The pilot was either inexperienced or already committed to dying. Swett closed to 400 yd, fired. The Judy's engine exploded.
The aircraft nosed down burning. Swett's 15th confirmed victory, his last victory. The war ended 3 months later, but for Swett, the war effectively ended 90 seconds after he shot down that Judy, because while he was chasing one Kamikaze, two more got through. The first Kamikaze hit Bunker Hill's flight deck at 30° angle, penetrated three decks, exploded in the hangar bay, ignited fueled aircraft, ignited bombs, ignited torpedoes. The hangar bay became an inferno, 800° jet fuel burning, ordnance cooking off, sailors trapped below decks. The second Kamikaze hit 30 seconds later, crashed into the base of the island superstructure, destroyed the flag bridge, killed 13 staff officers.
Admiral Mitscher, the same admiral who'd nominated Swett for the Medal of Honor 2 years earlier, had to transfer his flag to Enterprise. Swett watched from above, watched the black smoke pour from his carrier, watched sailors jump overboard, watched rescue ships move in. His fuel gauge showed 20 minutes remaining, not enough to reach another carrier and land. He radioed Enterprise, requested emergency landing clearance.
Enterprise's deck was packed with aircraft from Bunker Hill. The air boss was screaming at pilots to push planes overboard to make room. Swett landed, rolled to a stop. A deck crewman frantically waved him out of the cockpit, then pushed his brand new F4U-1C, the cannon-armed Corsair variant, over the side into the Pacific to make room for the next emergency landing. Bunker Hill burned for hours. The fires killed 396 men, wounded 264.
The carrier survived, limped to Pearl Harbor, spent the rest of the war under repair. And Swett's combat career ended the same way it began, with him in the water watching his aircraft sink while wondering if today was the day his luck finally ran out. The war ended on August 15th, 1945.
Japan surrendered. The kamikazes stopped coming. The carriers sailed home. And James Swett, 25 years old, Medal of Honor recipient, 15 and a half confirmed victories, found himself assigned to Marine Corps Air Station El Toro in California, preparing for an invasion that would never happen. His final combat statistics told the story. 103 combat missions, 83 in the Solomons, 20 in the Philippines and Okinawa campaigns, 15.5 confirmed victories, four probable, two aircraft shot out from under him, two water landings, one broken nose, two Purple Hearts, two Distinguished Flying Crosses, five Air Medals, and the Medal of Honor for a 15-minute fight on his first combat mission that set the standard every other mission would be measured against.
VMF-221, the Fighting Falcons, finished the war second among all Marine Corps squadrons in total aerial victories, 185 enemy aircraft destroyed. The squadron had arrived at Guadalcanal in February 1943 with no combat experience. By August 1945, they'd fought through the Solomons, the Philippines, and the final assaults on Japan itself. Swett stayed in the Marine Corps. He commanded VMF-141 at Naval Air Station Alameda, flying Corsairs in the post-war drawdown. When the Korean War started in June 1950, his squadron deployed. Swett didn't. The Navy decided that sending a Medal of Honor recipient into combat was too risky. If he died, the propaganda value to the enemy would be enormous. If he was captured, worse. Swett understood the logic, disagreed with it, but orders were orders. He watched his squadron sail west without him. He transferred to the Marine Corps Reserve, left active duty, started working in his father's company in San Francisco, manufacturing marine pumps and turbines. He married Lois Anderson, the woman who'd waited through four years of war, two shoot-downs, and countless nights wondering if the next telegram would be the one saying he wasn't coming home.
They raised a family, built a life.
Swett ran the company after his father died in 1960, passed it to his son 23 years later. He retired from the Marine Corps Reserve in 1970 at the rank of colonel. By then, the F4F Wildcat was a museum piece. The F4U Corsair was obsolete. The young pilots flying F4 Phantoms in Vietnam had never heard of Operation I-Go or the Battle of Guadalcanal or the day a rookie Marine shot down seven bombers in 15 minutes.
But Swett remembered. He spoke at schools, veteran events, aviation museums. He answered questions from kids who couldn't imagine a war where pilots flew without radar or missiles or ejection seats, where navigation meant dead reckoning with a compass and a watch, where survival meant flying a bullet-damaged aircraft back to base on one engine and prayers. In 2006, the History Channel recreated Swett's April 7th mission for their series Dogfights using computer graphics and combat footage. Swett provided commentary, watched his younger self, or rather a computer-generated version of his younger self, dive on those Val bombers over Tulagi Harbor. The animation was impressive, accurate enough, but it couldn't capture the fear, the adrenaline, the moment his guns went silent and he realized he was still alive. James Elms Swett died on January 18th, 2009 in Redding, California, heart failure after a lengthy illness. He was 88 years old. He was buried with full military honors at Northern California Veterans Cemetery in Igo. The airport in Trinity Center, California was named in his honor. His F4F Wildcat, the one he ditched in Tulagi Harbor on April 7th, 1943, remained on the bottom for 74 years.
Divers found the wreck in 2017.
The aircraft was remarkably intact.
Bullet holes in the left wing from friendly fire, shattered windshield, the gun sight mount that broke Swett's nose, still there, still waiting. A time capsule from the day a rookie proved that combat experience meant nothing compared to skill, courage, and 20 seconds of ammunition used exactly right. Swett never asked for recognition. He flew, he fought, he survived, and then he spent 60 years making sure the men who didn't survive were never forgotten. Now, it's our turn. If you think this story deserves to be seen, hit that like button. One click. That's all it takes for YouTube to push this to someone who's never heard of James Swett. Subscribe and turn on notifications.
We dig through declassified records and dusty archives to find stories exactly like this one. A 22-year-old rookie who became an ace before lunch. You won't find that in a textbook. Tell us in the comments where you're watching from.
United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Germany, Japan. We've heard from all of you. This community crosses every border and every former battle line. If someone in your family flew in the war, tell us about them. If someone in your family served in any war, tell us about them. Every comment keeps these stories visible. Every comment keeps these men alive in the only way that still matters. Thank you for being here.
Swett's Wildcat sat on the bottom of Tulagi Harbor for 74 years before anyone found it. His story almost sat there, too. You just made sure it didn't.
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