John F. Bolt
John F. Bolt | |
---|---|
Bolt in the cockpit of his F-86 Sabre in July of 1953. | |
Nickname |
"Jack" "Blot"[1] "Duke of Mukden"[2] |
Born |
19 May 1921 Laurens, South Carolina |
Died |
8 September 2004 (aged 84) Tampa Bay, Florida |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Marine Corps |
Years of service | 1941–1962 |
Rank | Lieutenant colonel |
Service number | O-13522[3] |
Unit |
VMF-214 VMF-211 VMF-471 VMF-215 VMF-224 39th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron |
Commands held | VMA-214 |
Battles/wars |
World War II Marshall Islands campaign New Guinea campaign Korean War MiG Alley |
Awards |
Navy Cross Distinguished Flying Cross (3) |
Other work | Lawyer |
John Franklin Bolt (19 May 1921 – 8 September 2004) was a United States Marine Corps aviator and a decorated flying ace who served during World War II and the Korean War. He remains the only US Marine to achieve ace status in two wars and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel during his military career. He was also the only Marine jet fighter ace.
Born to a poor family in Laurens, South Carolina, Bolt was a self-described "workaholic" and was involved in numerous groups and social activities throughout his life. After dropping out of the University of Florida for financial reasons in 1941, he joined the Marine Corps at the height of World War II. Sent to the Pacific Theater of Operations, he flew an F4U Corsair during the campaigns in the Marshall Islands and New Guinea, claiming six victories against Japanese A6M Zeroes.
Bolt continued his service through the Korean War, entering combat through an exchange program with the United States Air Force (USAF) in late 1952. Over a period of several weeks in mid-1953, he led flights of F-86 Sabres into combat with MiG-15s of the Chinese Air Force, scoring six victories during fights along the northern border of North Korea, commonly known as "MiG Alley," giving him a total of 12 victories over his career.
Bolt stayed in the Marine Corps until 1962, serving as an analyst and instructor in his later career, before retiring and earning a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Florida. He subsequently settled down in Florida and began a private real estate law practice; he continued to be active in law until 1991. He died from leukemia in 2004.
Biography
Early years
John Bolt was born on 19 May 1921 in Laurens, South Carolina, to Thomas Crews Bolt and Brucie Bolt (née Bagwell). John had a younger brother, Bruce. In 1924 the family moved to Sanford, Florida. In his youth, John Bolt gained the nickname "Jack" from his friends and family.[4] His family was poor and he was for the most part responsible for providing his own clothes and social expenses from the time he was ten years old.[5] He worked several part-time jobs, at one point working 30 to 40 hours a week at a local creamery in addition to attending school. He also enrolled in the Boy Scouts, eventually attaining the rank of Star Scout.[4]
In June 1939 Bolt began attending Seminole High School. Described as modest and hardworking by his high school classmates,[4] he was elected class president in his final two years in school.[4]
Bolt attended the University of Florida, majoring in accounting and meeting most of the costs himself using money that he had saved while working through high school. He joined Phi Eta Sigma, an honor society and professional fraternity, and Alpha Tau Omega, a social fraternity. In 1941, his brother Bruce also enrolled at Florida, straining the family's expenses; John dropped out after his second year so that his brother could complete his degree.[4] Bolt enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve in April 1941 to train as a pilot, but deferred his training when the Marine Corps offered him the chance to finish college and attend law school, paying him US$500 a year to do so.[6]
World War II
Bolt left for basic training in June 1941. Though he intended to join the US Marine Corps, he signed up for the US Navy Flight Training Program, which would allow him to fly for the Marines. On completion of his basic training in November 1941, he was selected as a pilot, and moved to Atlanta Naval Air Station in Georgia in February 1942. He was placed on active duty just before the attack on Pearl Harbor and the United States' entry into World War II.[7] Completing his initial pilot training and transferring to Jacksonville Naval Air Station for the next phase, he started flight training in the AT-6 Texan. He also qualified to fly in the N3N Canary trainer aircraft. His final phase of flight lessons occurred in Opa Locka Naval Air Station in Miami, Florida, where he flew the Grumman F3F, a biplane which was the Navy's most advanced trainer at the time. Bolt completed this training on July 18, 1942, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the US Marine Corps, receiving his aviator wings that day as well.[4]
Around this time, Bolt began dating Dorothy E. Wiggins, whom he knew from Sanford. The two would marry after two years of dating,[4] and they would eventually have two children together, Robert and Barbara.[8]
After commissioning, Bolt was assigned as a cadet training instructor, training aviation cadets at Naval Air Station Jacksonville in Green Cove, Florida, until December 1942, when the unit was deactivated. Until May 1943 he was trained on the F4F Wildcat, a carrier-based aircraft, in preparation for movement to a front-line combat unit.[9] Over the next few months, Bolt was stationed in Glencoe, Illinois, where he trained for 60 hours aboard the paddlewheel aircraft carrier USS Wolverine. After qualifying to operate carrier-based aircraft, he was assigned to Miramar Naval Air Station in San Diego, California, until June 1943, when he and his class departed for the Pacific Theater aboard the USS Rochambeau (AP-63).[4]
Formation of VMF-214
On his way to the front lines, Bolt traveled to a number of islands as the Rochambeau stopped at New Caledonia and New Hebrides to avoid Japanese submarines. Upon arrival at Espiritu Santo, Bolt was placed in a pool of new officers who were intended to replace casualties in several squadrons. But casualties at this time proved to be less than expected, so the replacement pool was used to form a new squadron. The new unit was designated VMF-214, and became known as the "Black Sheep" because its pilots had originally not been assigned to a squadron. Under the command of Major Pappy Boyington, the unit was equipped with F4U Corsairs. Moved after several months to the Russell Islands, they were ready for combat by 13 September.[10] Bolt flew the aircraft every chance he got, and although new to the war in the Pacific, Bolt had over 700 hours flying in the F4U Corsair by September, more than many combat pilots accrued in two combat tours.[11]
On 14 September the squadron began flying missions to escort B-24 Liberator bombers. The Japanese had 200 aircraft at Kahili Airfield and Balalae Island, opposed by only 50 aircraft from the US squadrons in the area. The first couple of missions that the squadron undertook were relatively quiet, but on 16 September, VMF-214 was attacked by a group of 35 Japanese A6M Zeroes. The squadron repelled the strike, destroying 11 Japanese aircraft for the loss of only one of their own. Several costly engagements with the strong Japanese forces in the area followed. Bolt did not score any victories during this time, but was promoted to first lieutenant that month.[12]
Marshall Islands
Bolt got his first victories of the deployment on 23 September when he was with a flight of 15 VMF-214 aircraft escorting B-24 Liberators back from a raid on Kahili. The bombers had been followed by 20 to 30 Zeroes, and a dogfight quickly ensued.[13] During the course of the engagement over Bougainville, Bolt scored two victories.[14] His wingman Ed Harper also claimed a victory. For the next several weeks, the squadron operated out of Munda in the Solomon Islands.[12]
A self-described "workaholic"[15] Bolt was considered by the other pilots to be the most energetic member of the squadron. He took to collecting and sending home keepsakes from daily life on the front lines; he and two other pilots were known as the "Quartermaster Kids" because they collected so many souvenirs and shipped them home. He could often be found in the harbor near their airstrip dynamiting fish and was known to organize many of the squadron's pig roasts and beer parties.[1] Bolt also took it upon himself to test out many different ammunition configurations for the .50 caliber guns on the F4U during his free time. His research was conducted by firing rounds into 50-gallon drums partially filled with gasoline and at abandoned aircraft in the Espiritu Santo boneyard. He found that incendiary rounds were more effective, and convinced his squadron, and eventually most of the aircraft squadrons in the Pacific Theater, to begin firing six incendiary rounds for every one armor-piercing or tracer round, rather than firing one for one.[16][17]
Bolt became well known, but also drew the ire of his squadron's commanding officer, during what began as an escort mission for B-24 Liberators.[18] The bombers were lost in the clouds and the flight ran into poor weather, forcing them to turn back. During the flight home, the US pilots noticed much Japanese surface traffic but did not engage because of the weather. On their way back to Munda one of the aircraft had maintenance issues, and a group including Bolt had to land at Barakoma Airfield on Vella Lavella. He tried to convince others to go with him to attack the ships they had seen, but they refused.[19] He refueled and took off, against Boyington's orders, and destroyed four enemy barges and strafed several ground concentrations in the vicinity of Tonolei Harbor before returning to Munda. Disobeying a direct order drew Boyington's wrath[20] until the next day, when a telegram was received from Admiral William "Bull" Halsey: "That one man war ... conducted by Lieut Bolt against Jap stuff in Tonolei, warm heart (stop) Halsey."[18][21]
On 17 October, during a mission over Kahili Airfield, Bolt's squadron was ambushed by Japanese fighters. Bolt downed one of the Japanese aircraft in his last mission before a scheduled rest and recuperation (R&R) in Sydney, Australia.[18]
Vela Lavella
"During the last war, the Corsairs would have to make running passes at the Japanese Zeroes, being careful never to really tangle with them because the Zeroes could turn on a dime. In Korea, the MiGs made the passes and we made the turns, especially at higher altitudes."
When the squadron returned from its R&R, Bolt had been promoted to Captain and the squadron had been relocated to Vella Lavella. The new base was within 150 miles (240 km) of Rabaul, which was the center of Japanese activity on New Britain, and was the squadron's next primary target. Defended by 98,000 Japanese troops, the island was of great strategic importance as it had a harbor and several airfields and was within striking distance of the Marshall Islands, defended by 400 Japanese aircraft.[18]
On 23 December, 16 Corsairs from VMF-214 formed part of a force of 120 US fighters and bombers that undertook a mission over Rabaul. The strike against the city and harbor areas was countered by a large force of Japanese aircraft. While defending the bombers, Bolt shot down two more Japanese aircraft, making him the squadron's sixth flying ace. Two days later, he took part in another mission during which his squadron mates claimed four victories, bringing VMF-214's tally of confirmed aerial victories to 76.[18]
On 3 January 1944, VMF-214 was among 75 US aircraft raiding near Rabaul when they were surprised by 300 Japanese aircraft. Boyington was shot down and parachuted into the St. George's Channel. The next day, Bolt led a flight of four Corsairs from VMF-214 in search of Boyington. Despite hazy weather and the need to take an indirect route to avoid Japanese radar, Bolt managed to lead the flight to the area where the battle had taken place the day before. Although they did not spot Boyington, they discovered and engaged a flotilla of Japanese barges, destroying six of them. Bolt also claimed his sixth victory against a Japanese aircraft attempting to defend the barges.[22]
Bolt's tour, along with the rest of VMF-214, came to an end on 8 January 1944, five days after Boyington was shot down and captured by the Japanese. VMF-214 was disbanded and its pilots assigned to other units.[22] In his time with VMF-214, Bolt developed a reputation among his peers as a leader and an accomplished pilot. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross twice, and scored a total of six confirmed victories and one probable victory and two aircraft damaged in his 92 missions with the squadron.[23]
Subsequent assignments
Bolt was reassigned to VMF-211, at an airfield on Nissan Island in the Green Islands, 75 miles (121 km) north of Bougainville and 100 miles (160 km) west of Rabaul. The aircraft there were primarily concerned with the destruction of convoys and ships. The missions, nicknamed "Truck Busters", were very successful, but at the cost of damaged aircraft and wounded crewmen, including Bolt's wingman. This tour lasted until May 1944 when Bolt returned to Marine Corps Air Station Santa Barbara with his squadron.[23]
Reassigned, Bolt flew to Hawaii, then to Long Beach, California. He reunited with Dorothy Wiggins in San Francisco, and the two married on 23 May 1944 in Oakland, before going on a one-month honeymoon. His next assignment was with the newly formed VMF-471 at Marine Corps Air Station El Toro. While posted to VMF-471, he attended the Aviation Ground Officer's School at Marine Corps Air Station Quantico, Virginia, from November 1944 through February 1945. He saw no combat for the rest of the war, but did manage to break the Corsair endurance record by keeping an aircraft aloft for 14 hours and 9 seconds. After briefly returning to VMF-471, Bolt was reassigned to VMF-215 in March 1945, tasked with training pilots for new carrier-based aircraft. He remained in this role until V-J Day, the end of hostilities.[23]
Following the war, Bolt served in various units around El Toro. He was at various times assigned to MASG-46, VMF-512, VMF-323, VMF-312, VMF-452, and Marine Aircraft Group 12 (MAG-12), before transferring to Quantico again in November 1949 to attend the Aircraft Maintenance Course.[24] Diving in Florida's Tampa Bay on leave, Bolt (then a captain) set a world spearfishing record when he caught an Atlantic goliath grouper weighing hundreds of pounds.[25]
Korean War
In May 1950, Bolt was reassigned to VMF-224 at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina, and he remained there until May 1951. The squadron flew the F2H Banshee and within three months of joining the unit he had flown more hours on the aircraft than any other pilot in the squadron. This was followed by a quick four-month tour on the staff at the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing. During this time, the US Air Force was operating its first squadron of F-86 Sabre aircraft. The Sabres were the only US aircraft which performed well against the MiG-15s operated by China and North Korea in the Korean War. Bolt used his connections to enter an exchange program with the USAF in September 1951, becoming an exchange officer with the 318th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron at McChord Air Force Base in Washington flying the F-94 Starfire. Soon after, he began piloting the F-86F Sabre which had been transferred to the squadron. He continued training with the squadron and was promoted to major in December 1951.[24]
Fighter-bomber missions
In November 1952, Bolt transferred to squadron VMF-115, an element of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing flying F9F Panther fighter-bomber aircraft in South Korea. He flew 94 combat missions with the squadron, all of them in bombing runs and close air support and air strike missions against ground targets. He did not enjoy this duty, preferring instead to fly the Sabre in air-to-air combat. As his squadron headed to Japan for R&R, he traveled to Seoul to visit the 4th Fighter-Interceptor Wing at Kimpo Airfield.[24]
At the 4th Wing, Bolt met with its commander, Colonel Royal N. Baker, who refused his request to fly in combat units. He then went to the 51st Fighter-Interceptor Wing at Suwon Air Base to observe its operations, where he met with George I. Ruddell, an acquaintance from El Toro, who was commanding the 39th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron. Ruddell agreed to let Bolt join his unit as part of another officer exchange. This apparently angered some of his commanders in VMF-115, and Bolt only completed a requisite six weeks of duty with the wing prior to its next R&R.[24]
Exchange and combat
"It was about one Saturday evening when I added those last two. We hadn't seen anything of the MiGs in over 10 days — when all of a sudden I spotted four of them taking off from an air base on the other side of the Yalu. I nosed over and hit them just as they began to gain altitude. I fired four bursts and a MiG began to smoke. It rolled over and slipped into the ground. I made the second kill when this other dude drifted my way. Pulling nose-up, I closed to within 500 feet (150 m) and started firing up his tailpipe. I saw the pilot eject himself and the action was over. It took about 5 minutes for the whole show.
Six weeks later, Bolt again turned down his R&R and joined the 39th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, flying the F-86 Sabre.[27] Ruddell assigned him to First Lieutenant Joseph C. McConnell, who would be the top ace in the war. Bolt and McConnell quickly established a close friendship in spite of Bolt's superior rank, and he attributed his success in Korea to McConnell's guidance. Ruddell sent a request to Lieutenant General Glenn O. Barcus, commander of the Fifth United States Air Force, that Bolt's tour with the squadron be extended. The request was granted, and McConnell and Bolt began going on combat missions together as wingmen in MiG Alley, the area in northwestern Korea where air-to-air combat was most frequent.[28] Bolt's Sabre, tail number 52-2582, was named Darling Dottie.[29]
By May, McConnell was rotated back to the United States and Bolt was given charge of the flight; in 16 combat missions and 27 combat hours, his flight had never engaged any MiG fighters. This changed on 16 May, when the flight was attacked by a group of MiG fighters at 45,000 feet (14,000 m). He was quickly tailed by one of the aircraft, but managed to avoid its fire and tail another MiG himself. With several well placed shots, Bolt forced its pilot to bail out. Six days later on 22 May, MiG aircraft attacked again, and he managed to outmaneuver a fighter which had been attacking his wingman and shoot it down at 7,000 feet (2,100 m).[30] On 24 June, he flew his 31st combat mission, during which he engaged a single MiG and shot it down after a quick battle in the vicinity of the Yalu River.[30] A week later on 30 June, he was flying another mission in the same area when he spotted and quickly shot down another MiG. By the end of the month, he had credit for four victories and two aircraft "damaged".[26]
On 11 July Bolt led another flight of four fighters in a reconnaissance mission above Sinuiju, his 37th combat mission of the deployment.[26] Two of the aircraft departed after their fuel tanks were depleted, leaving him with one wingman to continue the patrol.[31] Soon after, the two pilots spotted a formation of four MiGs taking off from Antung airfield on the Chinese side of the Yalu River, despite being low on fuel, Bolt ordered an attack. He made a head-on dive toward the formation, which was attempting to gain altitude, and downed the leading airplane with four machine gun bursts.[32] He then banked his aircraft and aimed for the second aircraft in the formation, continuing the attack and scoring hits on its fuselage. The pilot bailed out, and the remaining two MiGs fled.[33] Within five minutes of the engagement, Bolt had shot down two of the MiGs after firing only 1,200 rounds of ammunition, an exceptional feat. This brought his tally of confirmed victories during the war to six.[26] For these actions he became the final Marine aviator to be awarded the Navy Cross during the war.[31] Bolt is the only non-USAF pilot to become an ace in the F-86 and the only naval aviator to become an ace in two wars.[29] Shortly after this final mission, his tour of duty ended and he was rotated back to the United States for an extended rest and vacation, which he spent with his family.[26]
Later Marine Corps career
Following his return from Korea, Bolt was assigned to the US Navy Bureau of Aeronautics in Washington, D.C. as an aircraft design engineer. In this duty, he was detailed to The Pentagon and a board which reported on aircraft performance and tactics. A press conference was held in September 1953 to welcome him to the position, and during this he recounted stories from his service in Korea for the first time to local newspapers. Bolt's experiences in World War II and the Korean War were used to help shape air combat doctrine.[26] He worked in this assignment for around a year, until 1954 when he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and moved to the Naval Pilot Test Center at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, in St. Mary's County, Maryland. During this time, he took evening classes at the University of Maryland, eventually earning a Bachelor of Science in Military History.[8]
In 1957, Bolt was ordered to Marine Corps Base Quantico to attend a one-year course at the Senior School of Amphibious Warfare as part of a program which would later be incorporated into the accredited curriculum of the Marine Corps University. On 5 November, after this one-year stint, he was assigned to command VMF-214, his World War II squadron, at Marine Corps Air Station Kaneohe Bay on the Hawaiian Islands. The squadron, which was part of Marine Aircraft Group 13, flew the FJ-4 Fury; Bolt remained in command of it until 14 August 1959. His final assignment as an instructor was at the Senior School of Amphibious Warfare at Quantico. He taught at this school for the final three years of his career, before retiring from the Marine Corps on 31 March 1962.[8]
Later life
"To our fallen companions whose bones rest on the bottom of the sea in the Solomon Islands, cut down in the bloom of youth, denied the pleasures of life, which by chance, the rest of us have enjoyed. To Gregory Boyington, the courageous, charismatic leader of our days of glory. To Frank Walton, who from our early days has not only been our Boswell, our biographer, in creating the Black Sheep legend, but by his own life has been friend, inspiration and role model to all. To Jim Reames our compassionate squadron doctor, whose medical treatment, Lejon brandy and cheerful good humor helped each of us to bear the stress of combat when death was a frequent visitor to our squadron. To our wives and ladies without whom life would have been a fruitless, cheerless existence without meaning. To each of us, once a proud, brave brotherhood in arms, today we are bound by our own actions in the Black Sheep legend as friends forever. Last to our beloved Marine Corps. We all knew when we put on the forest green uniform that it would ask us to put our lives at risk, which it did, and it would give us only pride and self respect, which it has."
After retiring from the Marine Corps, Bolt, then 40 years old, began a new career in agriculture. He and his wife moved back to Sanford, Florida, where he worked for Chase & Co. He remained in that position for five years, until 1967.[8] That year, he decided to follow his original career aspirations to be a lawyer. He enrolled in the Fredric G. Levin College of Law at the University of Florida, where his son Robert was also in attendance.[35] The two formed an American handball team during their spare time, and won several tournaments.[25] Bolt's program had a three-year curriculum, but he completed the degree in 27 months, graduating with a Juris Doctor degree in December 1969. For two years after graduation, he stayed with the university to teach, and from 1969 to 1971 he was a law professor as well as the president of the Board of Trustees of Alpha Tau Omega, the fraternity he had joined while an undergraduate at the university.[8]
After this stint as an instructor, Bolt and his wife moved to New Smyrna Beach, a place both of them had enjoyed in their childhoods. He began a private law practice and became a local property owner. During this time he was described as a "softspoken, kind, gentle person who would go out of his way to help a friend or a stranger."[8] He specialized in real estate law and was the attorney for the city's utilities commission for 13 years. He retired from law in 1991.[35]
Bolt subsequently lived a quiet life and kept frequent contact with his children. Robert became a lawyer in Tampa, Florida, and Barbara wrote for Reader's Digest.[8] In May 1993, Bolt attended the 50th reunion of the original "Black Sheep" squadron in New Orleans, Louisiana, and gave the toast at the beginning of the festivities.[34] In 2003, he was inducted into the American Combat Airman Hall of Fame at the American Airpower Heritage Museum in Midland, Texas.[25]
Bolt died of acute leukemia in Tampa on 8 September 2004 after fleeing the approaching Hurricane Frances. At the time of his death, he was the last surviving of the seven Americans to become aces in both World War II and Korea. He was survived by his wife and children, as well as two grandchildren.[25]
Aerial victory credits
Bolt scored a total of 12 confirmed aerial victories during his career, with an additional "probable" victory and two aircraft damaged.[36] He was the only US Marine Corps pilot to become an ace in the Korean War,[37] and remains the only US Marine Corps pilot to be an ace in two wars.[36] Bolt was one of 1,297 World War II aces from the United States with six confirmed victories during that war. He later became one of 40 Korean War aces from the United States with six more confirmed victories during that war.[38]
Bolt is one of seven US pilots who achieved ace status as both a piston-engined pilot in World War II and as a jet pilot in Korea. The others are all USAF pilots: Francis S. Gabreski, James P. Hagerstrom, William T. Whisner, Vermont Garrison and Harrison Thyng, as well as George A. Davis, Jr.[39]
Date | # | Type | Location | Aircraft flown | Unit |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
23 September 1943 | 2 | A6M Zero | Bougainville | F4U Corsair | VMF-214 |
17 October 1943 | 1 | A6M Zero | Bougainville | F4U Corsair | VMF-214 |
23 December 1943 | 2 | A6M Zero | New Ireland | F4U Corsair | VMF-214 |
4 January 1944 | 1 | A6M Zero | Rabaul | F4U Corsair | VMF-214 |
16 May 1953 | 1 | MiG 15 | North Korea | F-86E Sabre | 39th FIS, 51st FIW |
22 June 1953 | 1 | MiG 15 | North Korea | F-86E Sabre | 39th FIS, 51st FIW |
24 June 1953 | 1 | MiG 15 | North Korea | F-86E Sabre | 39th FIS, 51st FIW |
30 June 1953 | 1 | MiG 15 | North Korea | F-86E Sabre | 39th FIS, 51st FIW |
11 July 1953 | 2 | MiG 15 | North Korea | F-86E Sabre | 39th FIS, 51st FIW |
Source:[36] |
Awards and decorations
Bolt was decorated several times during World War II and the Korean War. His decorations included the following medals:[3]Naval Aviator Badge | |||||||||||||||
Navy Cross | Distinguished Flying Cross with 2 gold stars |
Air Medal with 1 gold star |
Combat Action Ribbon with 1 gold star | ||||||||||||
Navy Presidential Unit Citation with 1 bronze service star |
Navy Unit Commendation | China Service Medal with 2 bronze campaign stars |
American Campaign Medal | ||||||||||||
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with 2 bronze campaign stars |
World War II Victory Medal | Navy Occupation Service Medal | National Defense Service Medal with 1 bronze service star | ||||||||||||
Korean Service Medal with 3 bronze campaign stars |
Korean Presidential Unit Citation | United Nations Korea Medal | Korean War Service Medal[n 1] |
Navy Cross citation
The Navy Cross is presented to John F. Bolt.(0-13522) Lt Colonel, U.S. Marine Corps for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy of the united Nations while attached to the First Marine Aircraft Wing and serving as a pilot of a plane in the THIRTY NINTH Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, Fifth Air Force, in action against enemy aggressor forces in the Republic of Korea on 11 July 1953. Sighting four hostile jet interceptors immediately after the second section of his four-plane flight was forced to retire from the area because of a low fuel supply during a reconnaissance mission deep in enemy territory. Major Bolt quickly maneuvered his aircraft and that of his wingman into attack position and deliberately engaged the numerically superior enemy in a head-on firing run, destroying one of the hostile planes with his initial burst of fire. Although his fuel supply was dangerously low, he initiated repeated attacks on the remaining enemy aircraft and severely damaging the engine section of the lead interceptor, routinely pressed his attack against the crippled plane until the enemy pilot was forced to bail out. By his exceptional courage and superb airmanship in destroying the two aircraft, Major Bolt raised his total of enemy jet planes destroyed during the Korean War to six, thereby becoming the first jet ace in Marine Corps aviation. His inspiring leadership and great personal valor reflect the highest credit upon himself and was in keeping with the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.
For the President, /S/ Robert Bernard Anderson, Secretary of the Navy.[31]
See also
- List of historically notable United States Marines
- List of Korean War flying aces
- List of World War II aces from the United States
- United States Marine Corps Aviation
Citations
Notes
- ↑ In 2000 this award was made retroactive to all US military personnel who served in the Korean War.()
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Walton 1986, p. 16
- ↑ Dorr 2005, p. 161
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 22
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 11
- ↑ Dorr 2005, pp. 164–165
- ↑ Baron & Wise 2007, pp. 119–120
- ↑ Astor 2005, p. 227
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 21
- ↑ Gamble 1998, p. 214
- ↑ Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 12
- ↑ Astor 2005, p. 228
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 13
- ↑ Gamble 1998, p. 249
- ↑ Gamble 1998, p. 253
- ↑ Walton 1986, p. 110
- ↑ Walton 1986, p. 128
- ↑ Gamble 1998, pp. 332–333
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 14
- ↑ Gamble 1998, pp. 290–291
- ↑ Astor 2005, pp. 233–234
- ↑ Gamble 1998, p. 292
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 15
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 16
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 17
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 25.2 25.3 Schudel, Matt (12 September 2004). "Lt. Col. John F. Bolt Dies; Flying Ace in 2 Wars". The Washington Post. p. C10. Retrieved 20 March 2009.
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 26.4 26.5 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 20
- ↑ Dorr 2005, p. 156
- ↑ Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 18
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 Werrell 2005, p. 191
- ↑ 30.0 30.1 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 19
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 31.2 Baron & Wise 2007, p. 117
- ↑ Mersky 1983, p. 183
- ↑ Mersky 1983, p. 185
- ↑ 34.0 34.1 Reed 2001, p. 197
- ↑ 35.0 35.1 Dorr 2005, p. 166
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 36.2 Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 23
- ↑ Mersky 1983, p. 150
- ↑ Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 32
- ↑ Lorenz & Oliver 1999, p. 1
Sources
Wikimedia Commons has media related to John F. Bolt. |
- This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps.
- Astor, Gerald (2005), Semper Fi in the Sky – The Marine Air Battles of World War II, New York City: Random House, ISBN 0-89141-877-6
- Baron, Scott; Wise, James E. (2007), The Navy Cross: Extraordinary Heroism in Iraq, Afghanistan and Other Conflicts, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, ISBN 1-59114-945-2
- Dorr, Robert F. (2005), Marine Air – The History of the Flying Leathernecks in Words and Photos, London, United Kingdom: Penguin, ISBN 0-425-20725-0
- Gamble, Bruce (1998), The Black Sheep: The Definitive Account of Marine Fighting Squadron 214 in World War II, Novato, California: Presidio Press, ISBN 0-89141-825-3
- Lorenz, William E.; Oliver, Dwight L. (1999), The Inner Seven: The History of Seven Unique American Combat 'Aces' of World War II and Korea, Nashville, Tennessee: Turner Publishing Company, ISBN 978-1-56311-504-2
- Mersky, Peter B. (1983), U.S. Marine Corps Aviation – 1912 to the Present, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina: Nautical and Aviation Publishing Company of America, ISBN 0-933852-39-8
- Reed, Robert T. (2001), Lost Black Sheep: The Search for WWII Ace Chris Magee, Central Point, Oregon: Hellgate Press, ISBN 1-55571-549-4
- Walton, Frank (1986), Once They Were Eagles: The Men of the Black Sheep Squadron, Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky, ISBN 0-8131-0875-6
- Werrell, Kenneth P. (2005), Sabres Over MiG Alley: The F-86 and the Battle for Air Superiority in Korea, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, ISBN 1-59114-933-9