Pearl Harbor Heroes: George Welsh and Ken Taylor


Lieutenants Kenneth Marlar Taylor and George Schwartz Welch, Air Corps, United States Army. Taylor and Welch took two Curtiss-Wright P-40B Warhawk fighters from a remote airfield at Haleiwa, on the northwestern side of the island of Oahu, and against overwhelming odds, each shot down four enemy airplanes: Welch shot down three Aichi D3A Type 99 “Val” dive bombers and one Mitsubishi A6M2 Type 0 (“Zero”) fighter. Taylor also shot down four Japanese airplanes.


At exactly 7:55 on a beautiful Sunday morning the United States was suddenly plunged into the greatest conflict in the history of the world. We were not only unprepared for war, but our armed forces in. the Pacific were caught completely by surprise.

That same Sunday morning two young Army Air Corps lieutenants were just leaving an all-night party at Wheeler Field, Hawaii. They were George Welsh and Ken Taylor of the 15th Pursuit Group. As they stood outside an army barracks watching the tropical dawn grow brighter, neither had any idea of the momentous event which was about to change their lives. It was 7 December 1941. Welsh was saying that instead of going to sleep, he wanted to drive back to their own base at nearby Haleiwa Field for a nice Sunday morning swim.

At that moment, just ten miles south of Lieutenants Welsh and Taylor, carrier-based dive bombers, torpedo planes and fighters of the Imperial Japanese Navy were beginning their carefully planned sneak attack on the great American naval base at Pearl Harbor, as well as its surrounding airfields. Most of our powerful Pacific Fleet was in training, and there were ninety-six United States warships anchored in and about this Pacific stronghold. War had been expected by our military leaders, but the general opinion was that the Japanese would open hostilities against the Dutch or British possessions in Asia thousands of miles farther west.

As Welsh and Taylor walked to their car to head back to their own base, they saw sixty-two new Curtiss P-40 “Tomahawks” parked wing tip to wing tip so they could be guarded “against sabotage.”

Suddenly the Japanese swooped down on Wheeler Field, which was a center for fighter operations in Hawaii. Dive bombers seemed to appear out of nowhere. Violent explosions upended the parked planes, and buildings began to burn.

Welsh ran for a telephone and called Haleiwa as bullets sprayed around him.

“Get two P-40s ready!” he yelled. “It’s not a gag—the Japs are here.”

The drive up to Haleiwa was a wild one. Japanese Zeros strafed Welsh and Taylor three times. When the two fliers careened onto their field nine minutes later, their fighter planes were already armed and the propellers were turning over. Without waiting for orders they took off.

As they climbed for altitude they ran into twelve Japanese Val dive bombers over the Marine air base at Ewa. Welsh and Taylor began their attack immediately. on their first pass, machine guns blazing, each shot down a bomber. As Taylor zoomed up and over in his Tomahawk he saw an enemy bomber heading out to sea. He gave his P-40 full throttle and roared after it. Again his aim was good and the Val broke up before his eyes. In the meantime Welsh’s plane had been hit and he dived into a protective cloud bank. The damage didn’t seem too serious so he flew out again—only to find himself on the tail of another Val. With only one gun now working he nevertheless managed to send the bomber flaming into the sea.

Both pilots now vectored toward burning Wheeler Field for more ammunition and gas. Unfortunately the extra cartridge belts for the P-40s were in a hangar which was on fire. Two mechanics ran bravely into the dangerous inferno and returned with the ammunition.

The Japanese were just beginning a second strafing of the field as Welsh and Taylor hauled their P-40s into the air again. They headed directly into the enemy planes, all guns firing. This time Ken Taylor was hit in the arm, and then a Val closed in behind him. Welsh kicked his rudder and the Tomahawk whipped around and blasted the Val, though his own plane had been hit once more. Taylor had to land, but George Welsh shot down still another bomber near Ewa before he returned.

Perhaps twenty American fighter planes managed to get into the air that morning—including five obsolete Republic P-35s. Most of them were shot down, but their bravery and initiative accounted for six victories in the one-sided aerial battle.

The United States possessed no airplane which could outfight the Japanese Zero on its own terms. The Zero was faster—except in a dive. It could out-turn the American fighter planes and it could out climb them. It was the most important weapon Japan had until the Kamikaze planes were introduced near the end of the war.

At first our pilots did not know the weaknesses of the Zero—that it had no armor, that it had no self-sealing gasoline tanks, and that its explosive 20-mm cannons did not have the range or accuracy of the smaller but powerful .50-caliber machine guns mounted in our newest fighters. Also our pilots had not yet perfected the principle of the wingman, who was trained to stick close to his leader during combat and protect him from any attack from the rear.

Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, who was in charge of all Japanese naval operations, had planned the Pearl Harbor strike brilliantly. In a few hours all of the Navy and Marine aircraft at Ewa air base were destroyed on the ground. Two-thirds of the Pacific Fleet was either sunk or seriously crippled. Luckily our two aircraft carriers in the South Pacific, the Lexington and the Enterprise, were away from Pearl Harbor during the attack.

The Japanese particularly wanted to catch our carriers in the harbor. Admiral Yamamoto knew the value of the carrier better than most naval commanders. As early as 1915 he had stated that: “The most important ship of the future will be a ship to carry airplanes.” (After the war we learned that most of the messages sent from Pearl Harbor by a Japanese spy had to do with the whereabouts of our carriers.)

The Enterprise didn’t escape entirely, however. She was on her way back to Pearl Harbor after delivering Major Paul Putnam’s squadron of Marine Grumman F4F “Wildcats” to Wake Island. Heavy seas had kept the “Big E” from arriving on time—which would have meant her destruction. But many of her scouts and bombers which flew in ahead of the ship were caught in the initial Japanese attack, and five were lost.

Even more tragic was the fate suffered by Navy Lieutenant Fritz Hebel. He was leading his Wildcat fighters from the Enterprise toward Ford Island in Pearl Harbor later that day after completing a search mission. It was 7:30 and getting dark. The men on the ground were still jittery from the morning attacks. As Hebel’s fighters came in for a landing the whole sky suddenly filled with tracer bullets. Practically every ship in the harbor thought the Wildcats were Japanese planes returning for another raid. Lieutenant Hebel and three other Navy pilots were killed by our own guns.

 

A flight of six Curtiss-Wright P-40B Warhawks of the 44th Pursuit Squadron, 18th Pursuit Group, over the island of Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, 9:00 a.m., 1 August 1941.


Maj. George S. Welch poses with his P-40 aircraft while assigned to the 45th Air Base Group in Hawaii.


The Curtiss P-36A Hawk in the World War II Gallery at the National Museum of the United States Air Force features a mannequin of a pajama-clad 2nd Lt. Philip M. Rasmussen.


The few who got up: (L-R) Pearl Harbor fighter pilots 2nd Lt. Harry Brown, 2nd Lt. Philip M. Rasmussen, 2nd Lt. Kenneth M. Taylor, 2nd Lt. George S. Welch, and 1st Lt. Lewis M. Sanders.


(L-R) Pearl Harbor fighter pilots 1st Lt. Lewis M. Sanders, 2nd Lt. Philip M. Rasmussen, 2nd Lt. Kenneth M. Taylor, 2nd Lt. George S. Welch, and 2nd Lt. Harry Brown.


Welch and Taylor during the awards ceremony for their Distinguished Service Cross medals. Welch was nominated for the Medal of Honor but was rejected because he acted without orders to take off'.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Another view of the awards ceremony.


Lieutenant George S. Welch, of Wilmington, Delaware, gets a hearty handshake from President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House in Washington, May 25, 1942 and his congratulations for shooting down four Japanese planes during the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7. From left to right are Sen. James H. Hughes (D-Del.), Mrs. Hughes, Mrs. George Schwartz, Welch's mother; George Schwartz, his stepfather, and Lieutenant Welch.


George Welch. He would end World War II with 16 total confirmed enemy airplanes shot down. A test pilot post-war, he died of injuries from a plane crash sustained during a test flight of the F-100.


Burial, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia. Plot: Section 6, Grave 8578-D.



The St. Louis at Pearl Harbor

by Al Seton

Published November 1979

I happened to have been in Pearl Harbor, 7 December 1941. Aboard the light cruiser U.S.S. St. Louis (CL-49). Through the years, I never paid much attention to what people were saying about that Day of Infamy until quite recently when I became spokesman for our ship’s association, trying to save her from a scrap heap in Brazil today.

When the 353 Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor without warning that Sunday morning, few of some one hundred ships in the harbor were less prepared to fire effectively than the U.S.S. St. Louis, the only ship in the Pacific Fleet with the coveted gunnery “E” on every one of her five turrets and four gun mounts.

Berthed in the Navy Yard for “limited availability” near Battleship Row, primary target for the attack, the St. Louis was in no condition to fight back or get underway. Two of her eight boilers were dismantled for cleaning; five others were cold. All of her 5-inch anti-aircraft guns were inoperative with their circuit breakers ashore in the repair shop. Most of her sound-powered battle telephones were deep in the ship’s IC repair shop for routine maintenance. All of her antennae were down. Scaffolding littered her masts and superstructure. Some of her key personnel were ashore on weekend liberty. But ammunition had not yet been off-loaded.

“Within two minutes by the clock,” the ship was shooting and all guns going were in local control within extremely limited firing bearings and making all preparations for getting underway, without any orders passed to do so, her captain, George A. Rood, recalled later.

Before the attack was over the St. Louis was the only major warship to get underway and reach the open sea. In doing so, she became a primary target for attack as she raced down the channel and headed for the open sea to seek out the attacking Japanese fleet, sinking a Japanese submarine in her dash. Of the twenty-nine Japanese planes that failed to return to their carriers that day, the St. Louis claimed six, but was officially credited with three.

The “Fighting St. Louis,” strafed, near missed by bombs and target of a torpedo attack, suffered inconsequential damage. Sailors on the other ships said the “Fighting Lou” was “just lucky” and, loyal to their own ships, dubbed her “The Lucky Lou.”

Upon escaping Pearl Harbor, the St. Louis received a report that an enemy carrier was operating to the south and she immediately headed south, ordering all ships in the vicinity to join to form an attack group to engage the carrier. Complying “promptly and efficiently” were the U.S.S. Montgomery, U.S.S. Phelps and U.S.S. Blue, all of whom had successfully escaped the attack in Pearl Harbor. Thus was formed the first U.S. Navy attack force of World War II to “seek out and destroy the enemy.”

Earlier this year, the U.S.S. St. Louis (CL-49) Association asked one of the ship’s former gunnery officers who was planning a vacation trip to Hawaii to visit Pearl Harbor as a tourist and see what the million and a half visitors annually are being told and shown about this “Day of Infamy.”

Admiral R. H. Lambert, USN (Ret.), looked and listened, high and low, for any mention of St. Louis during the officially guided tour. Not one word was said about her but eventually he came upon a list of ships present in Pearl Harbor on 7 December. Yep, the St. Louis is there. But only that she had been present.

All of the official emphasis is on the battleships and vessels sunk and damaged. And next month, as the nation’s media gives its annual coverage to the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, you can make your own evaluation on who’s minding the store when it comes to our nation’s heritage.

Look and listen for the ships named St. Louis, Montgomery, Phelps and Blue.

The Author

Al Seton, a retired commander, was the youngest man commissioned from the ranks during World War II.

Postscript

The effort to save the U.S.S. St. Louis failed. Although the ship was sold as scrap, she sank en route—and once again escaped an ignominious fate.

 

St. Louis driving to sea, 0910 AM. California sinking and burning off starboard quarter.

 
This message denotes the first US ship, USS St. Louis (CL49) to clear Pearl Harbor. (National Archives and Records Administration) [Note that this is in answer to question "Is channel clear?" and faint writing at bottom concerning the answer being held until St. Louis had successfully cleared.]

 
USS St Louis (CL-49) off the Mare Island Navy Yard, California, on 4 June 1941. She is wearing Measure 5 (false bow wave) camouflage.

 
A framed flag sits on display inside the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio, December 7, 2016. The flag was flown on the USS St. Louis at Pearl Harbor the day of the attacks nearly 77 years ago. It was later flown on the USS Iowa at the time of the Japanese surrender in 1945.

 
Captain George A. Rood, ship's captain on December 7, 1941.

 

Ships Present at Pearl Harbor

0800, 7 December 1941

The U.S. Navy ships in the list below are sorted by type and hull number, for example New Orleans (CA-32) is found in hull number order under heavy cruisers. For the purposes of this list, yard craft assigned to the Fourteenth Naval District and other small non-commissioned craft are not included. In addition, Pearl Harbor is defined as the area inside the nets guarding the harbor entrance.

Ships marked with an asterisk (*) were within twelve miles of the island of Oahu but were not actually within Pearl Harbor as defined above. Locations of these ships are indicated. Ships marked with a † symbol were sunk or destroyed during the Pearl Harbor attack. All of these were later raised and rebuilt except for Arizona, Oklahoma, and Utah. Oklahoma was raised but not rebuilt.

Battleships (BB)

Pennsylvania (BB-38) (in drydock)

Arizona (BB-39) †

Nevada (BB-36)

Oklahoma (BB-37) †

Tennessee (BB-43)

California (BB-44) †

Maryland (BB-46)

West Virginia (BB-48) †

Heavy Cruisers (CA)

New Orleans (CA-32)

San Francisco (CA-38)

Light Cruisers (CL)

Raleigh (CL-7)

Detroit (CL-7)

Phoenix (CL-46)

Honolulu (CL-48)

St. Louis (CL-49)

Helena (CL-50

Destroyers (DD)

Allen (DD-66)

Schley (DD-103)

Chew (DD-106)

Ward (DD-139) * (patrolling Channel entrance to Pearl Harbor)

Dewey (DD-349)

Farragut (DD-348)

Hull (DD-350)

MacDonough (DD-351)

Worden (DD-352)

Dale (DD-353)

Monaghan (DD-354)

Aylwin (DD-355)

Selfridge (DD-357)

Phelps (DD-360)

Cummings (DD-365)

Reid (DD-369)

Case (DD-370)

Conyngham (DD-371)

Cassin (DD-372) (in drydock)

Shaw (DD-373) (in floating drydock)

Tucker (DD-374)

Downes (DD-375) (in drydock)

Bagley (DD-386)

Blue (DD-387)

Helm (DD-388)

Mugford (DD-389)

Ralph Talbot (DD-390)

Henley (DD-391)

Patterson (DD-392)

Jarvis (DD-393)

Submarines (SS)

Narwhal (SS-167)

Dolphin (SS-169)

Cachalot (SS-170)

Tautog (SS-199)

Minelayer (CM)

Oglala (CM-4) †

Minesweeper (AM)

Turkey (AM-13)

Bobolink (AM-20)

Rail (AM-26)

Tern (AM-31)

Grebe (AM-43)

Vireo (AM-52)

Coastal Minesweeper (AMC)

Cockatoo (Amc-8)

Crossbill (Amc-9)

Condor (Amc-14)

Reedbird (Amc-30)

Destroyer Minelayer (DM)

Gamble (DM-15)

Ramsay (DM-16)

Montgomery (DM-17)

Breese (DM-18)

Tracy (DM-19)

Preble (DM-20)

Sicard (DM-21)

Pruitt (DM-22)

Destroyer Minesweeper (DMS)

Zane (DMS-14)

Wasmuth (DMS-15)

Trever (DMS-16)

Perry (DMS-17)

Patrol Gunboat (PG)

Sacramento (PG-19)

Repair Ship (AR)

Medusa (AR-1)

Vestal (AR-4)

Rigel (AR-11)

Destroyer Tender (AD)

Dobbin (AD-3)

Whitney (AD-4)

Seaplane Tender (AV)

Curtiss (AV-4)

Tangier (AV-8)

Small Seaplane Tender (AVP)

Avocet (AVP-4)

Swan (AVP-7) (on marine railway dock)

Seaplane Tender, Destroyer (AVD)

Hulbert (AVD-6)

Thornton (AVD-11)

Ammunition Ship (AE)

Pyro (AE-1)

Oiler (AO)

Ramapo (AO-12)

Neosho (AO-23)

Submarine Tender (AS)

Pelias (AS-14)

Submarine Rescue Ship (ASR)

Widgeon (ASR-1)

Hospital Ship (AH)

Solace (AH-5)

Cargo Ship (AK)

Vega (AK-17) * (at Honolulu)

Stores Issue Ship (AKS)

Castor (AKS-1)

Antares (AKS-3) * (at Pearl Harbor entrance)

Ocean Tug (AT)

Ontario (AT-13)

Sunnadin (AT-28)

Keosanqua (AT-38) * (at Pearl Harbor entrance)

Navajo (AT-64) * (12 miles outside Pearl Harbor entrance)

Miscellaneous Auxiliary (AG)

Utah (AG-16) †

Argonne (AG-31)

Sumner (AG-32)

 

Map showing the disposition of the fleet at Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941.