- John C. Waldron
Infobox Military Person
name=John Charles Waldron
born= birth date|1900|8|24
died= death date and age|1942|6|4|1900|8|24
placeofbirth=Fort Pierre, South Dakota
placeofdeath=nearMidway Atoll
placeofburial=
caption=
nickname=
allegiance= United States of America
branch=United States Navy
serviceyears=1924-1942
rank=Lieutenant Commander
commands=Torpedo Squadron 8
unit=
battles=World War II
*Battle of Midway
awards=Navy Cross Presidential Unit Citation (US) Purple Heart
laterwork=John Charles Waldron (
24 August 1900 –4 June 1942 ) was aUnited States Navy aviator who led asquadron oftorpedo bomber s inWorld War II . He and most of his squadron perished in theBattle of Midway .Naval aviation training and shore duty
Waldron was born on
24 August 1900 atFort Pierre, South Dakota . He received an appointment asmidshipman from his home state on16 June 1920 and graduated with theUnited States Naval Academy Class of 1924. Following his initial sea duty in "Seattle" (CA-11), Waldron went toNaval Air Station Pensacola , Fla., where he received his wings in the summer of 1927. Over the ensuing months, Waldron flew with torpedo squadrons (VT-1S and VT-9S and received his commission as a Lieutenant (jg.) on16 February 1928 . He served at the Naval Academy from24 May to13 September 1929 , where he instructed midshipmen in the field of aviation. Then, after duty as an instructor at the NAS Pensacola, between October of 1929 and June of 1931, Waldron went to sea again, this time withScouting Squadron 3B (VS-3B), based on board "Lexington" (CV-2), reporting for duty on1 July 1931 .Waldron flew observation aircraft off "Colorado" (BB-45), before he joined
Patrol Squadron 1B (VP-1B), Battle Force, for a brief period in late 1936. Subsequently flying from "Saratoga" (CV-3) withFighter Squadron 3 (VF-3) until the early summer of 1939, he reported back to NAS, Pensacola, for further instructor's duty on27 June 1939. Waldron then served three successive tours of shore duty, all involving flying, at theNaval Proving Ground , Dahlgren, Va.; theBureau of Ordnance ,Washington, D.C. ; and finally in the3rd Naval District , where he was appointed naval inspector of ordnance at the plant ofCarl L. Norden, Inc. , inNew York —makers of the famedNorden bombsight . Detached from that duty in the summer of 1941, Lt. Comdr. Waldron took command of the newly-formedTorpedo Squadron 8 (VT-8), part of the embryonic air group being assembled for the new fleet carrier "Hornet" (CV-8) atNewport News, Virginia . The Pearl Harbor attack, though, meant that his training of his men had to be intensive.At Midway
"Torpedo 8" did not get a chance to practice its trade, however, until nearly 10 months after it had been commissioned at Norfolk. Too late to take part in the
Battle of the Coral Sea , VT-8 would receive its brutal baptism of fire at the turning point of thePacific War —theBattle of Midway . In the days preceding that battle, VT-8 led a relaxed existence on board the carrier as she steamed toward "Point Luck " fromPearl Harbor in the first few days of June 1942. Finally, on the eve of battle, Commander Waldron called his men together and distributed a mimeographed plan of attack. He concluded by saying that if worst came to worst, he wanted each man to do his utmost to destroy the enemy. "If there is only one plane left to make a final run-in," he told his men, "I want that man to go in and get a hit. May God be with us all. Good luck, happy landings, and give 'em hell."The next day,
4 June , the 15 Douglas TBD-1 Devastators of VT-8 launched from "Hornet"'s flight deck in search of the enemy. While the dive-bomber and fighter units from that carrier made a wrong turn and thus missed the Japanese fleet, Waldron found it and, grimly aware of the lack of fighter protection, decided to lead Torpedo 8 into the attack—unprotected. All of the planes fell to the enemy'scombat air patrol ofMitsubishi "Zero" fighters. Of the 30 men who set out that morning, only one—Ens. George H. Gay, Jr., USNR—survived. Their sacrifice, however, had not been in vain. The TBDs had drawn off the fighter cover over the Japanese carriers and forced the ships to maneuver radically. With no fighters overhead and launching operations temporarily disrupted, the enemy lay open to the DouglasSBD Dauntless es from "Yorktown" (CV-5) and "Enterprise" (CV-6) that sank three carriers, and changed the course of the battle.Torpedo 8 earned the
Presidential Unit Citation (US) ; Lt. Comdr. Waldron received theNavy Cross posthumously, as well as a share of the unit citation.Namesake
The USS "Waldron" (DD-699), an "Allen M. Sumner"-class
destroyer , was named in his honor.Waldron Field, an outlying training landing strip, at
Corpus Christi NAS , was named in his honor.External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w2/waldron.htm history.navy.mil: DANFS biography of John Waldron]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.