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James P. Hagerstrom

James Philo Hagerstrom (January 14, 1921 – June 25, 1994) was a fighter ace of both the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) in World War II and the U.S. Air Force (USAF) in the Korean War. With a career total of 14.5 victories, he is one of seven American pilots to have achieved ace status in two different wars.

James P. Hagerstrom
Hagerstrom with an F-86 Sabre in Korea, c. 1952
Birth nameJames Philo Hagerstrom
Born(1921-01-14)January 14, 1921
Cedar Falls, Iowa, U.S.
DiedJune 25, 1994(1994-06-25) (aged 73)
Shreveport, Louisiana, U.S.
Buried
AllegianceUnited States
Service/branchUnited States Army Air Forces
United States Air Force
Years of service1941–1968
RankColonel
Service number0-727447[1]
Unit8th Fighter Squadron
334th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron
Commands held111th Fighter-Bomber Squadron
67th Fighter-Bomber Squadron
450th Fighter-Day Group
Battles/warsWorld War II

Korean War

Vietnam War
AwardsDistinguished Service Cross
Silver Star
Legion of Merit
Distinguished Flying Cross (6)
Spouse(s)Virginia Lee Jowell
Other workLawyer
Signature

Born in Cedar Falls, Iowa, Hagerstrom became eager to fly at a young age. He left college in 1941 to join the USAAF, and participated in the New Guinea campaign of the South West Pacific theater of World War II. There, he mainly escorted bombers, flying P-40 Warhawks with the 8th Fighter Squadron. He shot down six Japanese aircraft during the war, including four in one morning. After the war, he continued flying, joining the Texas Air National Guard and participating in several air races. By 1950 he was in command of the 111th Fighter-Bomber Squadron, which was deployed to Korea following the outbreak of the Korean War. He later transferred to the USAF and flew F-86 Sabre fighter jets with the 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing in "MiG Alley", the nickname given to the area around the northern border of North Korea with China. During his service in Korea, he was credited with shooting down 8.5 Chinese, Soviet, and North Korean MiG-15s (the half coming from a shared credit).

Hagerstrom returned to the U.S. in 1953 and remained in the Air Force, also earning degrees in economics and law. In 1965, he served in command roles during the Vietnam War while flying 30 combat missions. After retiring in 1968, he traveled around the Pacific Ocean in a homemade boat with his family, living on several islands before returning to the U.S. and settling in Mansfield, Louisiana. Hagerstrom died in nearby Shreveport of stomach cancer in 1994.

Early life and education

James Philo Hagerstrom was born on January 14, 1921, in Cedar Falls, Iowa.[2][3] He was the third son of Edward and Hazel Hagerstrom.[4] His father, the son of Swedish immigrants, worked as an electrician with the Iowa Public Service Company, and the family lived in Waterloo, Iowa.[5] James' interest in aviation began at a young age: when he was five, he had the opportunity to sit in the cockpit of a Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny" biplane at a family friend's farm. His fascination increased at thirteen when he took a short fifty-cent flight in a Ford Trimotor aircraft at an airshow.[2][5][6]

Hagerstrom attended Waterloo West High School, where he joined the wrestling team and earned a varsity letter.[2] He also built model airplanes as a hobby, and swam. After graduating in 1939, he began studying at the University of Iowa, where he joined the Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps. After a year he transferred to Iowa State Teachers College, where he helped start an aero club.[5] While in college, he began flight training, accumulating several dozen hours of flying experience.[2]

Military career

World War II

Training and mobilization

On December 6, 1941, the day before the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hagerstrom went to Iowa City and enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Forces (USAAF) Aviation Cadet program. He was sent to Fort Des Moines, and was inducted into the USAAF on January 15. He and other new inductees were then sent to Minter Field in Bakersfield, California, for paperwork and more physical examinations, and were sent north to Visalia for primary training on January 23.[2] The class (which wore coveralls and other civilian attire owing to a lack of military uniforms)[5] first trained in PT-22 Recruits. Hagerstrom's previous flying experience allowed him to undertake an accelerated program before moving back to Minter Field for basic flight training in BT-13 Valiants. His older brother Robert happened to be in basic flight training at the same time, and they were together for six weeks. After this phase, Hagerstrom and his classmates went to Luke Field near Phoenix, Arizona, where he underwent advanced flight training in the AT-6 Texan. On July 26, 1942, he graduated and was commissioned as a second lieutenant, receiving his wings from Brigadier General Ennis Whitehead.[2]

 
Hagerstrom flew the P-40 Warhawk in World War II.

Hagerstrom was posted to active duty with the 20th Pursuit Group and sent to Myrtle Beach Air Force Base in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and then to Pinellas Army Air Field, near St. Petersburg, Florida, flying the P-39 Airacobra and P-40 Warhawk. In late September he was assigned to the 8th Fighter Squadron (8th FS) of the 49th Fighter Group (49th FG) and sent to San Francisco, California. Hagerstrom was temporarily given the duty of quarters officer, and he arranged for the group of forty second lieutenants to stay at the Mark Hopkins Hotel. After processing at Fort Mason, they sailed on the Norwegian troopship M/V Torrens to Hawaii along with 1,500 other personnel, including the headquarters of the Fifth Air Force (5th AF). They stayed for a short time at Hickam Field, near Pearl Harbor, before leaving again, this time as part of a naval task force. Near the end of October, they broke off from the task force and sailed with a destroyer escort to Suva, Fiji, for an overnight stop before heading towards Australia. A corvette from the Royal Australian Navy took over the escort until it arrived in Townsville, Queensland. Initially there was no one to greet the Americans and nowhere to house the 5th AF commanders besides some barracks at RAAF Base Garbutt. Eventually Brigadier General Paul Wurtsmith of the 5th AF organized a refresher session for the new pilots, and they learned from experienced combat aviators at Charters Towers Airfield.[7]

New Guinea

Hagerstrom joined the rest of the 8th FS at Kila Airfield, near Port Moresby, Territory of Papua, to fight in the New Guinea campaign. He flew several missions out of Kila in the P-40, all without seeing combat. The 8th FS then relocated in early April 1943 to Dobodura Airfield, near Popondetta, to rejoin the rest of the 49th FG. Shortly after, Hagerstrom was promoted to first lieutenant. His first combat experience—and aerial victory—came on April 11, when he joined a fight over Oro Bay with several Japanese A6M Zeros. His first attempt at taking a shot at a Zero failed because his guns were switched off, but he later shot down a Zero that was trailing two P-38 Lightning fighters. He returned to base with little fuel to spare.[8]

I fired my first burst when his wings filled my sight. It hit him in the left engine, wing root and fuselage. The left engine exploded and the aircraft did a steep wing-over due to the sudden loss of power ... I rolled with the "Dinah", firing again at the left wing root and it caught fire. I rolled over and split-essed, only to find he had hit the water.

—Hagerstrom, describing a victory on October 5, 1943[9]

While at Dobodura, the 8th FS mainly escorted C-47 Skytrains airdropping supplies to ground troops below,[10] and Hagerstrom was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his work during this period.[1] At the end of August 1943,[11] the squadron was moved to Tsili Tsili Airfield in the Territory of New Guinea, hastily and covertly constructed in July on recently captured territory. Although it was not known whether the surrounding area was clear of Japanese forces, the airstrip was not attacked after two raids on August 15 and 16 that did little damage.[10][12] The 8th FS switched to escorting B-25 Mitchell and A-20 Havoc bombers but saw little action themselves. The pilots saw more combat when they began escorting the high-altitude B-17 Flying Fortress and B-24 Liberator bombers; the unit was often low on fuel and other supplies as a result of being at the end of a long supply chain.[10]

On October 5, Hagerstrom led one of two formations to intercept an approaching Ki-46 "Dinah" reconnaissance aircraft over Finschhafen. He chased the plane for twelve minutes, climbing at full throttle to 18,000 feet (5,500 m)[13] before getting within firing range. He was able to damage the Dinah's left engine, wing root, and fuselage. The engine exploded and sprayed what Hagerstrom guessed to be hydraulic fluid onto his plane, causing him eye irritation. He pursued the crippled aircraft until it hit the water.[9] After a malfunction with his navigational instruments, he had to find his way back to the airfield by following the Markham River. The plane was running low on fuel, night had fallen, and Tsili Tsili was in blackout due to another enemy reconnaissance plane in the area, so Hagerstrom had to estimate the airstrip's location but landed safely.[14] Later that month, heavy rainfall made the airstrip too muddy to allow the co-located P-38s to take off, and the 8th FS was relocated 50 miles (80 km) north to Gusap Airfield.[13] Soon after, Hagerstrom contracted malaria and was sent to Australia for three weeks to recover.[5][14]

On January 23, 1944, Hagerstrom was leading a flight of four aircraft assisting P-38 Lightnings to escort bombers near Wewak.[15][16] They encountered 10–15 enemy aircraft, and he and his wingman, John Bodak, dove on a group of Zeros that were pursuing four P-38s; Hagerstrom shot down one of the aircraft. He took a shot at another Zero but missed, and was in turn targeted by a Zero on his tail. Bodak destroyed this plane, and Hagerstrom shot down a Zero that was tailing his wingman. He got a third Zero and then went to the assistance of several P-38s who had started a Lufbery circle defensive maneuver. Hagerstrom fired a short burst at one of the pursuing Japanese planes, a Ki-61 "Hien". He followed the damaged aircraft and gave it another burst at short range, causing it to catch fire and crash. Hagerstrom and Bodak damaged several more Zeros before running out of ammunition. Hagerstrom returned home with four victories for a total of six, making him an ace.[17] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his "extraordinary heroism" during the engagement.[1] By this time in the war, much of the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service's small, elite pilot corps had been killed in battle, and the Japanese lacked the time and resources to properly train enough replacement airmen. By the end of 1943 most of the surviving Japanese pilots were poorly trained and equipped, while the U.S. had all along concentrated on training a large pool of pilots to an adequate standard.[18] In early February, Hagerstrom received orders to return home[19] from New Guinea, which he called a "terrible place" due to the poor conditions.[5] He had flown 170 combat missions comprising 350 hours[20] and destroyed six enemy aircraft.[15]

Between wars

External image
  Hagerstrom in the cockpit of a P-38 Lightning plane at the 1949 National Air Races in Cleveland, Ohio

After a period of rest back home in Iowa, Hagerstrom went to Miami, Florida, to be reassigned. He requested a unit that flew jet aircraft, but jets had not reached widespread production, so he was instead made an instructor in the Army Air Forces School of Applied Tactics flying P-47 Thunderbolts at a base near Orlando.[19] There, he met Virginia Lee Jowell, a member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP),[21] and they were married on July 25, 1944. Shortly after, Virginia was transferred to Brownsville, Texas, to train in fighter aircraft, while he was assigned to Evansville, Indiana, to be a test pilot for the P-47s being produced at the Republic Aviation plant there. The couple were reunited when Virginia finished her training and moved to Evansville to serve as a ferry pilot for the P-47s, delivering them to coastal air bases to be shipped overseas. James was promoted to the rank of captain in January 1945, and he remained in Evansville until September 6 of that year, when he left the USAAF.[19]

Hagerstrom and his now-pregnant wife returned to Waterloo,[22] and he re-applied to Iowa State Teachers College to complete his studies, the president of the college personally re-enrolling him.[23] In October, the first of the Hagerstroms' eight children was born. Hagerstrom graduated in June 1946 with a bachelor's degree in economics[24] and subsequently went to Houston, Texas, to work in the municipal bonds business.[23] He grew bored of the bonds industry and wanted to keep flying,[6] so he joined the 111th Fighter-Bomber Squadron (111th FBS) of the Texas Air National Guard,[25] which he and his fellow pilots viewed as the "bottom of the heap".[26] He enjoyed his tenure with the P-51 Mustang–equipped squadron and was successful, becoming operations officer for the 111th FBS within six months. He flew the P-38 Lightning and P-51 (redesignated as F-51) in the National Air Races in September 1949;[24] he took sixth place in the Thompson Trophy race and won a $1,500 prize, flying his F-51 at an average speed of 372.7 miles per hour (599.8 km/h).[27]

Hagerstrom was promoted to major and appointed commander of the 111th FBS in June 1950.[24] In October, the 111th FBS was federalized and ordered into active duty to serve in the Korean War.[28] Hagerstrom's assignment was at the headquarters of the Tactical Air Command (TAC) at Langley Air Force Base, Virginia, where he persuaded the commander to allow him and some other officers to fly a combat tour in Korea. They were allowed to transfer from the Air National Guard into the active-duty Air Force. Hagerstrom was sent to Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, where he undertook gunnery training on the jet-powered F-80 Shooting Star and F-86 Sabre, taught by William T. Whisner Jr.[24] He became operations officer of the 4th Fighter-Interceptor Group.[29]

Korean War

Preparation and first two victories (1952)

 
North American F-86F-25-NH Sabre of 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing

Hagerstrom, keen for any edge that would give him the chance to be an ace in two wars, prepared extensively for flying in Korea. He studied gun sights[30] and intelligence reports on the MiG-15, and he made metric conversion tables to allow him to patrol altitudes where MiGs commonly flew.[28] He got a pair of moccasin boots lined with felt and a silk-lined flight suit for winter insulation,[31] and he obtained special half-mirrored sunglasses that allowed him to see twice as clearly as normal, at the risk of permanently ruining his eyes.[32] The Air Force issued its pilots a standard survival kit for their aircraft, to which he added 30 days' worth of food (including 10 pounds [4.5 kg] of rice), a camp stove, maps, a monocular, a radio, sulfa,[33] and a sleeping bag he had vacuum-packed into a tin can.[34] He also obtained a .22 Hornet rifle issued to Strategic Air Command, because he thought the standard .45 caliber pistol would be ineffective against patrols with rifles. If he had to bail out over enemy territory, he planned to fight off any patrols searching for him, and then hike 10 miles (16 km) a day toward the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea. According to Hagerstrom, this obsessive preparation helped him control his fear: "the difference between panic and fear is pretty tight, and you can spread that line a bit by having one last chance".[33]

 
Hagerstrom flew an F-86 Sabre nicknamed "MiG Poison" in the Korean War. The reproduction pictured here is on display at Kadena Air Base in Okinawa, Japan.

Upon arrival in Korea, Hagerstrom was assigned to the 334th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron of the Fifth Air Force's 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing (18th FBW).[35] At this time, the 4th and 51st Fighter-Interceptor Wings were the only units equipped with F-86 Sabres,[36] but Hagerstrom was able to convince his commander to let him and several other officers fly these aircraft, despite not being in the designated wings. Hagerstrom registered the 18th FBW's first victory of the war on November 21, 1952, about 100 miles (160 km) south of the Yalu River. The MiG pilot Hagerstrom was shooting at ejected just before his plane exploded.[35] Hagerstrom was separated from his wingman and no one witnessed the action, so Kimpo Air Base group commander Royal N. Baker refused to confirm it unless he had good film from his gun camera. This proved unnecessary when Baker confirmed the victory after spotting a piece of the exploded MiG embedded in Hagerstrom's F-86.[37] The engagement earned him a second Distinguished Flying Cross, this time with a "V" device, for "courage, tenacity, superior tactical skill and marksmanship".[1]

On December 24, Hagerstrom led a group of jets that attacked three MiGs in formation just south of the Yalu near the Sup'ung Dam. Twenty more MiGs arrived from Manchuria, and Hagerstrom managed to damage three enemy aircraft while being chased as far south as the Chongchon River.[38][39]

The next day, Hagerstrom was to have the day off for Christmas, but he still wanted more action: "I tried to get some of the men to trade with me—I'm not on the schedule today—but with weather like this, they know there are MiGs up there near the Yalu. No one was willing to trade his mission for my day off."[40] He was able to talk his superiors into giving him a mission, and he ended up getting the only confirmed "kill" of the day[40] when the MiG he was chasing spun out of control at an altitude of 50,000 feet (15,000 m), so high that Hagerstrom did not fire for fear of stalling. The pilot ejected, most likely dying of exposure to the −20 °F (−29 °C) temperatures.[28][35]

Ace status (1953)

In January 1953, Hagerstrom was transferred to Osan Air Base to help the rest of the pilots of the 18th FBW transition from F-51s to F-86s,[41] beginning on January 28. Despite cold weather and a limited number of instructor pilots,[36] the wing's 125 pilots[41] were trained in the F-86 in under a month. On February 3, Hagerstrom was named commander of the 67th Fighter-Bomber Squadron,[42] and on February 25 he was part of the 18th FBW's first patrol in Sabre jets.[36] He was chasing two MiGs when he noticed a third attacking another F-86; he engaged and shot it down flying very low over Mukden, China. Low on fuel, he had just enough to land and park the aircraft back at Osan,[35][43] and he later received the Distinguished Flying Cross for the third time.[1]

On March 13, Hagerstrom and his wingman Elmer N. Dunlap came across two MiGs, the first of which Hagerstrom, by his own account, "shot the daylights out of".[44] He fired at the second until he ran out of ammunition, and the remaining MiG was leaking fuel and its engine had stopped. Hagerstrom told Dunlap to "finish off" the crippled plane, and the MiG's pilot bailed over the enemy's Antung Airfield.[45] That mission gave Hagerstrom a total of 4.5 victories, just short of the five kills needed for ace status. Knowing that he was likely to be transferred out soon, he became even more determined to get another victory, giving a speech to his men on March 27:[46]

Gentlemen, I've been living on coffee. I haven't been sleeping. I've got to do this thing. I'm gonna do it, and if you don't want to go with me, that's fine, I'll understand. We are going to go up there and give it one good college try south of the Yalu, and if we don't scare anything up, I'm going after them today.

I thought, 'I wonder what he's going to tell those guys at the officers club tonight because he's going to be landing very close to his own air base.' Seeing a burning MiG crash on your own base can cause a hell of a morale problem.

—Hagerstrom after shooting down an enemy plane over its own base[47]

That day, Hagerstrom snuck up behind six MiGs, fired on one, and by "sheer ass luck ... knocked his wing tip off".[48] He kept up the chase, shooting short bursts, until the pilot, Chinese ace Wang Hai,[49] ejected above his own base.[47] On the way home, Hagerstrom destroyed another MiG, bringing the total to 6.5. He became the war's 28th ace and the first and only from the 18th FBW.[45] After the engagement, he was awarded the Silver Star for "his outstanding ability and gallantry in the face of enemy opposition".[1]

Hagerstrom scored another victory on April 13, when he fired a long burst at a single MiG flying at 49,000 feet (15,000 m). The plane burst into flames and went down near the Chongchon River. In early May, he learned that he was to return to the U.S.[50] On his last day in Korea, May 16, he was waiting for a Military Air Transport Service plane to become available for his flight out to Tachikawa Airfield in Japan[51] when he got a call from a friend who said he needed four planes in the air.[50] He said, "I got tired of the inaction, so I posted the name 'Sam Kratz' on the flight board and went out as a regular combat officer and not as a squadron commander as on other missions."[52] Hagerstrom took off, still wearing his blue dress uniform instead of a flight suit, and the flight soon came across the formation of 24 MiGs. He pretended to have communication difficulties to prevent the mission from being recalled because they were heavily outnumbered. When the MiGs turned and headed toward the safety of Chinese airspace, Hagerstrom attacked one of the planes and followed it into a dive, firing short bursts. After his target crashed, he pulled out and the flight and headed back to base, reporting the large number of MiGs. During the debriefing, his commanding officer interrupted and assured Hagerstrom that he would be on the next C-54 Skymaster flight out, before he could take another risky flight.[50] He was awarded his eleventh Air Medal in the form of a second silver oak leaf cluster for courage during the flight.[1] The mission gave him 8.5 victories for the war[53] in 101 missions.[54]

Attitude toward combat

Like many other aces, Hagerstrom had an aggressive attitude toward his missions. In his book Officers in Flight Suits, historian John Darrell Sherwood calls this a "flight suit attitude", which he defines as "a sense of self-confidence and pride that verged on arrogance" where "status was based upon flying ability, not degrees, rank, or 'officer' skills".[55] He believes this is why Hagerstrom frequently butted heads with military bureaucrats and never became a general himself.[6] Determined to be at full mental capacity during missions, he never drank, unlike most other pilots, some of whom flew while hungover or left Korea as alcoholics.[56] He was critical of pilots who wanted to just complete their requisite 100 missions and avoid conflict and danger; he was twice abandoned by his wingman during a fight.[57] Hagerstrom enjoyed the adrenaline rush of combat[58] and would put himself at more risk in an effort to shoot down more planes. He would fly into Chinese airspace despite it being forbidden by United Nations Command, and on one mission he buzzed Antung Airfield by flying near the speed of sound at an altitude of 15 feet (4.6 m) in an attempt to draw the MiGs into the air because U.S. pilots were not allowed to attack planes on the ground in China.[59]

The F-86 bases were near Seoul, South Korea, which was 200 miles (320 km) from where they would patrol in MiG Alley. Getting there used so much fuel that they were supposed to spend only twenty minutes flying around the Yalu in search of MiGs, but Hagerstrom did his own calculations and determined he could make it back to base with 600 pounds (270 kg) of fuel—half of the recommended minimum. He had to set an alarm to remind himself when to head back, but he often went beyond that, once running out of gas just after landing.[60] Unlike all the other American aces, who were in fighter-interceptor units, Hagerstrom was in a fighter-bomber squadron but found aerial combat by dropping his bombs as quickly as possible and flying to where he was likely to encounter MiGs.[61]

Regarding shooting down planes, Hagerstrom focused on the machine rather than the human in the aircraft, saying "I never shot directly at the pilot, nor did I shoot anyone dangling from a parachute." He had a similar response whenever a fellow American or allied pilot was killed: he thought about the technical aspects of the death and how it could be prevented in the future, rather than grieving the loss of a friend.[62] During World War II, he said, "There is no emotion like is shown in the movies. They just say, 'Tough luck.'"[20]

After Korea

Hagerstrom remained in the USAF after he returned to the U.S. After a reunion with his family, he was assigned to the Operations Section of the Ninth Air Force at Pope Air Force Base in Fayetteville, North Carolina. He flew an F-86 in the September 1953 Bendix Trophy air race, which went from California to Ohio, finishing thirty seconds behind the winner. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in June 1954.[63] He became a TAC officer at Foster Air Force Base in Victoria, Texas, and commanded the 450th Fighter-Day Squadron of the 322d Fighter-Day Group.[64] During his tenure at Foster, he was named inspector general and base commander, and in May 1955, he was given command of the 450th Fighter-Day Group, which flew the F-100 Super Sabre.[65][66]

In 1956, Hagerstrom was transferred to the headquarters of the Far East Air Forces (FEAF) in Japan as chief of the fighter branch.[53] During that tour of duty, he went to Taiwan to teach members of the Republic of China Air Force about combat against MiGs.[67] He briefly returned to Texas as an advisor for the Air National Guard and in April 1957 was honored with the dedication of a new hangar at Ellington Field in Houston in his name.[68][69] He then was sent to Hawaii to join the staff of the FEAF—which had been renamed the Pacific Air Forces (PACAF)—at its new headquarters at Hickam Air Force Base. He was promoted to colonel in March 1959,[65] and earned a master's degree in economics from Jackson College.[21] His job with the PACAF was to assess the air forces of the U.S. and their allies; after evaluating the new AIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missile, he advocated for retaining guns on fighter jets instead of replacing them with missiles on some aircraft, an opinion at odds with military leadership.[70]

In 1960, he left Hawaii for a position with the Office of Inspector General at Norton Air Force Base in San Bernardino, California. While at Norton, he studied at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles three nights a week before attending the Industrial College of the Armed Forces (ICAF), which required him to relocate to Washington, D.C. Once settled, he also enrolled at Georgetown Law. He graduated from the ICAF in June 1964,[71] having written a thesis on the role of air power in a limited war.[72] The next day, he received his Bachelor of Laws degree from Georgetown.[21][73] His next assignment was as vice wing commander of the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing, flying F-4 Phantom IIs at George Air Force Base in Victorville, California.[74]

Vietnam War

 
The Air America headquarters at Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base in Thailand, taken in the 1960s

Throughout 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson led a major escalation of American involvement in the Vietnam War.[75] In May of that year,[76] Hagerstrom was posted to Saigon, South Vietnam, to serve with the Seventh Air Force. There, he flew 30 combat missions[73] while serving as director of the combat operations control center at Tan Son Nhut Air Base. He soon came into conflict with General William Westmoreland over the Air Force's role in the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. Hagerstrom proposed that air assets be used against strategic targets in North Vietnam, while Westmoreland insisted that they be used solely in-country to support Army ground operations. After Hagerstrom argued against the decision not to bomb Hanoi in 1965, Westmoreland asked the Air Force to remove Hagerstrom from Vietnam.[6][74][77] Hagerstrom was awarded the Legion of Merit for his service in Vietnam, and the citation mentions his "significant contributions to the combat effectiveness of the tactical air forces".[1]

In early 1966, the Air Force reassigned Hagerstrom to Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. In four days he set up a combat operations control center to conduct air interdiction operations against the North Vietnamese Army on the Ho Chi Minh trail.[74] On March 3, Royal Lao Air Force commander Thao Ma requested help from the USAF in defending the town of Attopeu, Laos. The Royal Lao Armed Forces were suffering low morale and faced pressure from Viet Cong (VC) fighters, who had taken two nearby towns.[78] Hagerstrom assisted in planning the use of an AC-47 Spooky gunship equipped with a night vision Starlight Scope (which had previously been typically used by ground forces) to attack VC positions around the town. The airstrike on the VC took place on the night of March 4 and was successful despite several malfunctions, and the aircraft was not hit by enemy fire.[79] Hagerstrom said he conservatively estimated that 200 VC were killed in the attack, using this to argue that air attacks cause fewer friendly casualties than a war of attrition strategy with ground forces.[80]

Hagerstrom also tried to obtain the release of James Robinson Risner, a prisoner of war who had also been an ace in Korea. Hagerstrom enlisted the help of CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite and lawyer James B. Donovan (who had negotiated the release of Francis Gary Powers after the 1960 U-2 incident) to start a fundraiser for Risner's bail, but the U.S. State Department stepped in and halted the effort.[81] Hagerstrom was sent back to Norton later in 1966,[73] frustrated by the political and military bureaucracy he had clashed with over his career. "I got disgusted with the whole thing and resigned," he said. "Vietnam was wrong, we shouldn't have been there".[81]

Retirement

 
Hagerstrom's gravestone at Arlington National Cemetery

Back at Norton, Hagerstrom sat and passed the California Bar Examination and retired from the Air Force in January 1968. He lectured at the University of Southern California and worked for a law firm in Los Angeles.[82] Later that year, along with Virginia and their eight children, he began living on a boat, sailing along the Pacific coast of Mexico. In mid-1969, they stopped at San Diego and Hagerstrom began practicing law there. They did not settle; he and his wife began building their own boat in 1971. Four years later, they had completed the 30-short-ton (27 t), 57-foot (17 m) sailboat and set sail on March 19, 1976. They returned to the Mexican coast before heading to Hawaii. They continued on to the Marshall Islands and Caroline Islands (then part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands),[73] and Guam.[83] In many of their stops, Hagerstrom practiced law (becoming district attorney for the island of Kosrae), and Virginia taught.[73][83]

The family eventually returned to the U.S. in 1979[73] and settled on a farm in Mansfield, Louisiana.[83] Hagerstrom maintained his love of flying, and in 1992 planned to buy an ultralight aircraft.[6] He died of stomach cancer on June 25, 1994,[83] in nearby Shreveport.[84] Hagerstrom was survived by his wife and six of his children;[85] on July 26 he was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery.[83]

Aerial victory credits

Hagerstrom was credited with 14.5 victories—6 in World War II and 8.5 in the Korean War—as well as one probably destroyed and five damaged.[86] He is one of seven American pilots to achieve ace status in two wars; all flew piston-engined planes in World War II and jet fighters in Korea. The others are George Andrew Davis Jr., Gabby Gabreski, Vermont Garrison, Harrison Thyng, and Whisner, all Air Force pilots, and John F. Bolt of the U.S. Marine Corps.[87]

Date # Type Location Aircraft flown Unit
April 11, 1943 1 A6M Zero Oro Bay, New Guinea P-40 Warhawk 8 FS
October 5, 1943 1 Ki-46 Finschhafen, New Guinea P-40 Warhawk 8 FS
January 23, 1944 3 A6M Zero Wewak, New Guinea P-40 Warhawk 8 FS
January 23, 1944 1 Ki-61 Hien Wewak, New Guinea P-40 Warhawk 8 FS
November 21, 1952 1 MiG-15 Near Yalu River, China/North Korea F-86 Sabre 334 FIS
December 25, 1952 1 MiG-15 Sinsi-dong, North Korea F-86 Sabre 335 FIS
February 25, 1953 1 MiG-15 Mukden, China F-86 Sabre 67 FBS
March 13, 1953 1.5 MiG-15 Antung, North Korea F-86 Sabre 67 FBS
March 27, 1953 2 MiG-15 Near Yalu River, China/North Korea F-86 Sabre 67 FBS
April 13, 1953 1 MiG-15 Taegwan-dong, North Korea F-86 Sabre 67 FBS
May 16, 1953 1 MiG-15 Uiju, North Korea F-86 Sabre 67 FBS
Sources: [88][89]

Awards and decorations

Hagerstrom received numerous awards and decorations for his services:[90]

 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
     

Distinguished Service Cross citation

 

First Lieutenant (Air Corps) James P. Hagerstrom (ASN: 0-727447), United States Army Air Forces, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy while serving as Pilot of a P-40 Fighter Airplane in the 8th Fighter Squadron, 49th Fighter Group, Fifth Air Force, in aerial combat against enemy forces near Boram, New Guinea, on 23 January 1944. First Lieutenant Hagerstrom, leading a flight of four fighters on a bomber escort mission, encountered ten to fifteen enemy aircraft and promptly led in the attack. He shot down one enemy airplane, and then attacked two others, scoring damaging hits. Pulling up, he quickly shot down another enemy fighter. Two of the enemy then attacked from a climbing head-on position, and he scored damaging hits on both. Making a close pass at another enemy fighter, he caused it to burst into flames. At this point, he observed four enemy airplanes making a concentrated attack upon two of our fighters. Without hesitation he entered the fight, and succeeded in shooting down one enemy airplane and breaking the enemy formation. By his daring skill and aggressive effort in this fierce encounter, First Lieutenant Hagerstrom destroyed four enemy aircraft, damaged others, and saved the lives of two pilots while our bombers successfully completed their mission.[1]

See also

Citations

Notes

  1. ^ In 2000 this award was made retroactive to all U.S. military personnel who served in the Korean War.[91]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hall of Valor.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 69.
  3. ^ Social Security Death Index.
  4. ^ 1940 United States Census.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Sherwood 1996, p. 34.
  6. ^ a b c d e Ballard 1995, p. A4.
  7. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 69–70.
  8. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 70–71.
  9. ^ a b Hess 2004, p. 66.
  10. ^ a b c Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 71.
  11. ^ Griset 2017, p. 3.
  12. ^ Craven & Cate 1983, pp. 176–177.
  13. ^ a b Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 71–72.
  14. ^ a b Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 72.
  15. ^ a b Sherwood 2000, p. 1.
  16. ^ Hammel 2010, p. 290.
  17. ^ Hess 2004, pp. 88–89.
  18. ^ Peattie 2001, pp. 191–192.
  19. ^ a b c Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 73.
  20. ^ a b Veach 1944.
  21. ^ a b c Edgerton 1966.
  22. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 73–74.
  23. ^ a b Sherwood 1996, pp. 34–35.
  24. ^ a b c d Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 74.
  25. ^ 171st Air Refueling Wing 2016.
  26. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 35.
  27. ^ Cleveland Plain Dealer 1949.
  28. ^ a b c Sherwood 2000, p. 2.
  29. ^ Werrell 2005, pp. 183–184.
  30. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 70.
  31. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 81.
  32. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 84.
  33. ^ a b Sherwood 1996, pp. 81–82.
  34. ^ Ballard 1995, p. A1.
  35. ^ a b c d Werrell 2005, p. 184.
  36. ^ a b c Catchpole 2000, p. 248.
  37. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 88.
  38. ^ The New York Times 1952.
  39. ^ The Oregonian 1952.
  40. ^ a b Spokane Daily Chronicle 1952.
  41. ^ a b Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 75.
  42. ^ Dollman 2018.
  43. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 75–76.
  44. ^ Brownwood Bulletin 1953.
  45. ^ a b Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 76.
  46. ^ Sherwood 1996, pp. 89–90.
  47. ^ a b Sherwood 2000, pp. 3–4.
  48. ^ Sherwood 2000, p. 3.
  49. ^ Zhang 2002, p. 192.
  50. ^ a b c Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 77.
  51. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 90.
  52. ^ The Dallas Morning News 1953.
  53. ^ a b Sherwood 2000, p. 4.
  54. ^ The San Bernardino County Sun 1966.
  55. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 6.
  56. ^ Sherwood 1996, pp. 126, 165.
  57. ^ Sherwood 1996, pp. 87–88.
  58. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 91.
  59. ^ Sherwood 1996, pp. 88–89.
  60. ^ Sherwood 1996, p. 83.
  61. ^ Hankins 2020.
  62. ^ Sherwood 1996, pp. 90–91.
  63. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 77–78.
  64. ^ The Victoria Advocate 1954.
  65. ^ a b Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 78.
  66. ^ Maurer 1983, p. 325.
  67. ^ a b Sherwood 1996, p. 160.
  68. ^ Densford 1973, p. 170.
  69. ^ Kelly 1977.
  70. ^ Sherwood 1996, pp. 160–161.
  71. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 78–79.
  72. ^ Feit 1965, p. 1.
  73. ^ a b c d e f Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 79.
  74. ^ a b c Sherwood 1996, p. 161.
  75. ^ Hall 2018, p. 12.
  76. ^ Feit 1965, p. 3.
  77. ^ Sherwood 2000, pp. 4–5.
  78. ^ Porter 1966, p. 1.
  79. ^ Porter 1966, pp. 3–9.
  80. ^ Porter 1966, p. 13.
  81. ^ a b Sherwood 1996, pp. 161–162.
  82. ^ The San Bernardino County Sun 1968.
  83. ^ a b c d e f Inouye 1994.
  84. ^ McCrery 1994.
  85. ^ The Washington Post 1994.
  86. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 81.
  87. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, pp. 4–5.
  88. ^ Newton & Senning 1978, p. 79.
  89. ^ Maurer 1963, p. 16.
  90. ^ Oliver & Lorenz 1999, p. 80.
  91. ^ Naval History & Heritage Command.

Sources

Books

  • Catchpole, Brian (2000). The Korean War, 1950–53. New York: Carroll & Graff. ISBN 978-0-7867-0780-5.
  • Craven, Wesley Frank; Cate, James Lea, eds. (1983). The Pacific: Guadalcanal to Saipan, August 1942 to July 1944. The Army Air Forces in World War II. Vol. 4. Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-03-X.
  • Densford, James T., ed. (1973). From Jennies to Jets: The Story of the 111th Squadron. Dallas: Taylor Publishing. OCLC 10559205.
  • Hall, Mitchell (2018). The Vietnam War. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-68600-7.
  • Hammel, Eric M. (2010). Air War Pacific: Chronology. Pacifica, California: Pacifica Military History. ISBN 978-1-890988-10-4.
  • Hess, William N. (2004). 49th Fighter Group: Aces of the Pacific. Oxford, England: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-47280-249-1.
  • Maurer, Maurer, ed. (June 1963). USAF Historical Study No. 81: USAF Credits for the Destruction of Enemy Aircraft, Korean War (PDF). Montgomery, Alabama: USAF Historical Division. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
  • Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1983). Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-91279-902-5. Retrieved January 10, 2017.
  • Newton, Wesley P. Jr.; Senning, Calvin F.; et al. (1978). USAF Historical Study No. 85: USAF Credits for the Destruction of Enemy Aircraft, World War II (PDF). Montgomery, Alabama: USAF Historical Division. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
  • Oliver, William E.; Lorenz, Dwight L. (1999). The Inner Seven: The History of Seven Unique American Combat "Aces" of World War II and Korea. Pacudah, Kentucky: Turner Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-56311-504-2.
  • Peattie, Mark (2001). Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909–1941. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-61251-436-9.
  • Porter, Melvin F. (1966). The Defense of Attopeu. Honolulu, Hawaii: Pacific Air Forces Tactical Evaluation Center. doi:10.21236/ada586293.
  • Sherwood, John Darrell (1996). Officers in Flight Suits: The Story of American Air Force Fighter Pilots in the Korean War. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-8038-1. JSTOR j.ctt9qg3ps.
  • Werrell, Kenneth P. (2005). "James Hagerstrom: F-86 Ace Not with the 4th or 51st". Sabres over MiG Alley: The F-86 and the Battle for Air Superiority in Korea. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. pp. 183–185. ISBN 978-1-61251-344-7.
  • Zhang, Xiaoming (2002). Red Wings Over the Yalu: China, the Soviet Union, and the Air War in Korea. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 1-58544-201-1.

Newspapers and magazines

Online sources and records

james, hagerstrom, james, philo, hagerstrom, january, 1921, june, 1994, fighter, both, united, states, army, forces, usaaf, world, force, usaf, korean, with, career, total, victories, seven, american, pilots, have, achieved, status, different, wars, hagerstrom. James Philo Hagerstrom January 14 1921 June 25 1994 was a fighter ace of both the United States Army Air Forces USAAF in World War II and the U S Air Force USAF in the Korean War With a career total of 14 5 victories he is one of seven American pilots to have achieved ace status in two different wars James P HagerstromHagerstrom with an F 86 Sabre in Korea c 1952Birth nameJames Philo HagerstromBorn 1921 01 14 January 14 1921Cedar Falls Iowa U S DiedJune 25 1994 1994 06 25 aged 73 Shreveport Louisiana U S BuriedArlington National CemeteryAllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branchUnited States Army Air ForcesUnited States Air ForceYears of service1941 1968RankColonelService number0 727447 1 Unit8th Fighter Squadron334th Fighter Interceptor SquadronCommands held111th Fighter Bomber Squadron67th Fighter Bomber Squadron450th Fighter Day GroupBattles warsWorld War II New Guinea campaignKorean War MiG AlleyVietnam WarAwardsDistinguished Service CrossSilver StarLegion of MeritDistinguished Flying Cross 6 Spouse s Virginia Lee JowellOther workLawyerSignatureBorn in Cedar Falls Iowa Hagerstrom became eager to fly at a young age He left college in 1941 to join the USAAF and participated in the New Guinea campaign of the South West Pacific theater of World War II There he mainly escorted bombers flying P 40 Warhawks with the 8th Fighter Squadron He shot down six Japanese aircraft during the war including four in one morning After the war he continued flying joining the Texas Air National Guard and participating in several air races By 1950 he was in command of the 111th Fighter Bomber Squadron which was deployed to Korea following the outbreak of the Korean War He later transferred to the USAF and flew F 86 Sabre fighter jets with the 18th Fighter Bomber Wing in MiG Alley the nickname given to the area around the northern border of North Korea with China During his service in Korea he was credited with shooting down 8 5 Chinese Soviet and North Korean MiG 15s the half coming from a shared credit Hagerstrom returned to the U S in 1953 and remained in the Air Force also earning degrees in economics and law In 1965 he served in command roles during the Vietnam War while flying 30 combat missions After retiring in 1968 he traveled around the Pacific Ocean in a homemade boat with his family living on several islands before returning to the U S and settling in Mansfield Louisiana Hagerstrom died in nearby Shreveport of stomach cancer in 1994 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Military career 2 1 World War II 2 1 1 Training and mobilization 2 1 2 New Guinea 2 2 Between wars 2 3 Korean War 2 3 1 Preparation and first two victories 1952 2 3 2 Ace status 1953 2 3 3 Attitude toward combat 2 4 After Korea 2 5 Vietnam War 3 Retirement 4 Aerial victory credits 5 Awards and decorations 5 1 Distinguished Service Cross citation 6 See also 7 Citations 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 8 Sources 8 1 Books 8 2 Newspapers and magazines 8 3 Online sources and recordsEarly life and education EditJames Philo Hagerstrom was born on January 14 1921 in Cedar Falls Iowa 2 3 He was the third son of Edward and Hazel Hagerstrom 4 His father the son of Swedish immigrants worked as an electrician with the Iowa Public Service Company and the family lived in Waterloo Iowa 5 James interest in aviation began at a young age when he was five he had the opportunity to sit in the cockpit of a Curtiss JN 4 Jenny biplane at a family friend s farm His fascination increased at thirteen when he took a short fifty cent flight in a Ford Trimotor aircraft at an airshow 2 5 6 Hagerstrom attended Waterloo West High School where he joined the wrestling team and earned a varsity letter 2 He also built model airplanes as a hobby and swam After graduating in 1939 he began studying at the University of Iowa where he joined the Army Reserve Officers Training Corps After a year he transferred to Iowa State Teachers College where he helped start an aero club 5 While in college he began flight training accumulating several dozen hours of flying experience 2 Military career EditWorld War II Edit Training and mobilization Edit On December 6 1941 the day before the attack on Pearl Harbor Hagerstrom went to Iowa City and enlisted in the U S Army Air Forces USAAF Aviation Cadet program He was sent to Fort Des Moines and was inducted into the USAAF on January 15 He and other new inductees were then sent to Minter Field in Bakersfield California for paperwork and more physical examinations and were sent north to Visalia for primary training on January 23 2 The class which wore coveralls and other civilian attire owing to a lack of military uniforms 5 first trained in PT 22 Recruits Hagerstrom s previous flying experience allowed him to undertake an accelerated program before moving back to Minter Field for basic flight training in BT 13 Valiants His older brother Robert happened to be in basic flight training at the same time and they were together for six weeks After this phase Hagerstrom and his classmates went to Luke Field near Phoenix Arizona where he underwent advanced flight training in the AT 6 Texan On July 26 1942 he graduated and was commissioned as a second lieutenant receiving his wings from Brigadier General Ennis Whitehead 2 Hagerstrom flew the P 40 Warhawk in World War II Hagerstrom was posted to active duty with the 20th Pursuit Group and sent to Myrtle Beach Air Force Base in Myrtle Beach South Carolina and then to Pinellas Army Air Field near St Petersburg Florida flying the P 39 Airacobra and P 40 Warhawk In late September he was assigned to the 8th Fighter Squadron 8th FS of the 49th Fighter Group 49th FG and sent to San Francisco California Hagerstrom was temporarily given the duty of quarters officer and he arranged for the group of forty second lieutenants to stay at the Mark Hopkins Hotel After processing at Fort Mason they sailed on the Norwegian troopship M V Torrens to Hawaii along with 1 500 other personnel including the headquarters of the Fifth Air Force 5th AF They stayed for a short time at Hickam Field near Pearl Harbor before leaving again this time as part of a naval task force Near the end of October they broke off from the task force and sailed with a destroyer escort to Suva Fiji for an overnight stop before heading towards Australia A corvette from the Royal Australian Navy took over the escort until it arrived in Townsville Queensland Initially there was no one to greet the Americans and nowhere to house the 5th AF commanders besides some barracks at RAAF Base Garbutt Eventually Brigadier General Paul Wurtsmith of the 5th AF organized a refresher session for the new pilots and they learned from experienced combat aviators at Charters Towers Airfield 7 New Guinea Edit Hagerstrom joined the rest of the 8th FS at Kila Airfield near Port Moresby Territory of Papua to fight in the New Guinea campaign He flew several missions out of Kila in the P 40 all without seeing combat The 8th FS then relocated in early April 1943 to Dobodura Airfield near Popondetta to rejoin the rest of the 49th FG Shortly after Hagerstrom was promoted to first lieutenant His first combat experience and aerial victory came on April 11 when he joined a fight over Oro Bay with several Japanese A6M Zeros His first attempt at taking a shot at a Zero failed because his guns were switched off but he later shot down a Zero that was trailing two P 38 Lightning fighters He returned to base with little fuel to spare 8 I fired my first burst when his wings filled my sight It hit him in the left engine wing root and fuselage The left engine exploded and the aircraft did a steep wing over due to the sudden loss of power I rolled with the Dinah firing again at the left wing root and it caught fire I rolled over and split essed only to find he had hit the water Hagerstrom describing a victory on October 5 1943 9 While at Dobodura the 8th FS mainly escorted C 47 Skytrains airdropping supplies to ground troops below 10 and Hagerstrom was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his work during this period 1 At the end of August 1943 11 the squadron was moved to Tsili Tsili Airfield in the Territory of New Guinea hastily and covertly constructed in July on recently captured territory Although it was not known whether the surrounding area was clear of Japanese forces the airstrip was not attacked after two raids on August 15 and 16 that did little damage 10 12 The 8th FS switched to escorting B 25 Mitchell and A 20 Havoc bombers but saw little action themselves The pilots saw more combat when they began escorting the high altitude B 17 Flying Fortress and B 24 Liberator bombers the unit was often low on fuel and other supplies as a result of being at the end of a long supply chain 10 On October 5 Hagerstrom led one of two formations to intercept an approaching Ki 46 Dinah reconnaissance aircraft over Finschhafen He chased the plane for twelve minutes climbing at full throttle to 18 000 feet 5 500 m 13 before getting within firing range He was able to damage the Dinah s left engine wing root and fuselage The engine exploded and sprayed what Hagerstrom guessed to be hydraulic fluid onto his plane causing him eye irritation He pursued the crippled aircraft until it hit the water 9 After a malfunction with his navigational instruments he had to find his way back to the airfield by following the Markham River The plane was running low on fuel night had fallen and Tsili Tsili was in blackout due to another enemy reconnaissance plane in the area so Hagerstrom had to estimate the airstrip s location but landed safely 14 Later that month heavy rainfall made the airstrip too muddy to allow the co located P 38s to take off and the 8th FS was relocated 50 miles 80 km north to Gusap Airfield 13 Soon after Hagerstrom contracted malaria and was sent to Australia for three weeks to recover 5 14 On January 23 1944 Hagerstrom was leading a flight of four aircraft assisting P 38 Lightnings to escort bombers near Wewak 15 16 They encountered 10 15 enemy aircraft and he and his wingman John Bodak dove on a group of Zeros that were pursuing four P 38s Hagerstrom shot down one of the aircraft He took a shot at another Zero but missed and was in turn targeted by a Zero on his tail Bodak destroyed this plane and Hagerstrom shot down a Zero that was tailing his wingman He got a third Zero and then went to the assistance of several P 38s who had started a Lufbery circle defensive maneuver Hagerstrom fired a short burst at one of the pursuing Japanese planes a Ki 61 Hien He followed the damaged aircraft and gave it another burst at short range causing it to catch fire and crash Hagerstrom and Bodak damaged several more Zeros before running out of ammunition Hagerstrom returned home with four victories for a total of six making him an ace 17 He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his extraordinary heroism during the engagement 1 By this time in the war much of the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service s small elite pilot corps had been killed in battle and the Japanese lacked the time and resources to properly train enough replacement airmen By the end of 1943 most of the surviving Japanese pilots were poorly trained and equipped while the U S had all along concentrated on training a large pool of pilots to an adequate standard 18 In early February Hagerstrom received orders to return home 19 from New Guinea which he called a terrible place due to the poor conditions 5 He had flown 170 combat missions comprising 350 hours 20 and destroyed six enemy aircraft 15 Between wars Edit External image Hagerstrom in the cockpit of a P 38 Lightning plane at the 1949 National Air Races in Cleveland OhioAfter a period of rest back home in Iowa Hagerstrom went to Miami Florida to be reassigned He requested a unit that flew jet aircraft but jets had not reached widespread production so he was instead made an instructor in the Army Air Forces School of Applied Tactics flying P 47 Thunderbolts at a base near Orlando 19 There he met Virginia Lee Jowell a member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots WASP 21 and they were married on July 25 1944 Shortly after Virginia was transferred to Brownsville Texas to train in fighter aircraft while he was assigned to Evansville Indiana to be a test pilot for the P 47s being produced at the Republic Aviation plant there The couple were reunited when Virginia finished her training and moved to Evansville to serve as a ferry pilot for the P 47s delivering them to coastal air bases to be shipped overseas James was promoted to the rank of captain in January 1945 and he remained in Evansville until September 6 of that year when he left the USAAF 19 Hagerstrom and his now pregnant wife returned to Waterloo 22 and he re applied to Iowa State Teachers College to complete his studies the president of the college personally re enrolling him 23 In October the first of the Hagerstroms eight children was born Hagerstrom graduated in June 1946 with a bachelor s degree in economics 24 and subsequently went to Houston Texas to work in the municipal bonds business 23 He grew bored of the bonds industry and wanted to keep flying 6 so he joined the 111th Fighter Bomber Squadron 111th FBS of the Texas Air National Guard 25 which he and his fellow pilots viewed as the bottom of the heap 26 He enjoyed his tenure with the P 51 Mustang equipped squadron and was successful becoming operations officer for the 111th FBS within six months He flew the P 38 Lightning and P 51 redesignated as F 51 in the National Air Races in September 1949 24 he took sixth place in the Thompson Trophy race and won a 1 500 prize flying his F 51 at an average speed of 372 7 miles per hour 599 8 km h 27 Hagerstrom was promoted to major and appointed commander of the 111th FBS in June 1950 24 In October the 111th FBS was federalized and ordered into active duty to serve in the Korean War 28 Hagerstrom s assignment was at the headquarters of the Tactical Air Command TAC at Langley Air Force Base Virginia where he persuaded the commander to allow him and some other officers to fly a combat tour in Korea They were allowed to transfer from the Air National Guard into the active duty Air Force Hagerstrom was sent to Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada where he undertook gunnery training on the jet powered F 80 Shooting Star and F 86 Sabre taught by William T Whisner Jr 24 He became operations officer of the 4th Fighter Interceptor Group 29 Korean War Edit Preparation and first two victories 1952 Edit North American F 86F 25 NH Sabre of 18th Fighter Bomber Wing Hagerstrom keen for any edge that would give him the chance to be an ace in two wars prepared extensively for flying in Korea He studied gun sights 30 and intelligence reports on the MiG 15 and he made metric conversion tables to allow him to patrol altitudes where MiGs commonly flew 28 He got a pair of moccasin boots lined with felt and a silk lined flight suit for winter insulation 31 and he obtained special half mirrored sunglasses that allowed him to see twice as clearly as normal at the risk of permanently ruining his eyes 32 The Air Force issued its pilots a standard survival kit for their aircraft to which he added 30 days worth of food including 10 pounds 4 5 kg of rice a camp stove maps a monocular a radio sulfa 33 and a sleeping bag he had vacuum packed into a tin can 34 He also obtained a 22 Hornet rifle issued to Strategic Air Command because he thought the standard 45 caliber pistol would be ineffective against patrols with rifles If he had to bail out over enemy territory he planned to fight off any patrols searching for him and then hike 10 miles 16 km a day toward the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea According to Hagerstrom this obsessive preparation helped him control his fear the difference between panic and fear is pretty tight and you can spread that line a bit by having one last chance 33 Hagerstrom flew an F 86 Sabre nicknamed MiG Poison in the Korean War The reproduction pictured here is on display at Kadena Air Base in Okinawa Japan Upon arrival in Korea Hagerstrom was assigned to the 334th Fighter Interceptor Squadron of the Fifth Air Force s 18th Fighter Bomber Wing 18th FBW 35 At this time the 4th and 51st Fighter Interceptor Wings were the only units equipped with F 86 Sabres 36 but Hagerstrom was able to convince his commander to let him and several other officers fly these aircraft despite not being in the designated wings Hagerstrom registered the 18th FBW s first victory of the war on November 21 1952 about 100 miles 160 km south of the Yalu River The MiG pilot Hagerstrom was shooting at ejected just before his plane exploded 35 Hagerstrom was separated from his wingman and no one witnessed the action so Kimpo Air Base group commander Royal N Baker refused to confirm it unless he had good film from his gun camera This proved unnecessary when Baker confirmed the victory after spotting a piece of the exploded MiG embedded in Hagerstrom s F 86 37 The engagement earned him a second Distinguished Flying Cross this time with a V device for courage tenacity superior tactical skill and marksmanship 1 On December 24 Hagerstrom led a group of jets that attacked three MiGs in formation just south of the Yalu near the Sup ung Dam Twenty more MiGs arrived from Manchuria and Hagerstrom managed to damage three enemy aircraft while being chased as far south as the Chongchon River 38 39 The next day Hagerstrom was to have the day off for Christmas but he still wanted more action I tried to get some of the men to trade with me I m not on the schedule today but with weather like this they know there are MiGs up there near the Yalu No one was willing to trade his mission for my day off 40 He was able to talk his superiors into giving him a mission and he ended up getting the only confirmed kill of the day 40 when the MiG he was chasing spun out of control at an altitude of 50 000 feet 15 000 m so high that Hagerstrom did not fire for fear of stalling The pilot ejected most likely dying of exposure to the 20 F 29 C temperatures 28 35 Ace status 1953 Edit In January 1953 Hagerstrom was transferred to Osan Air Base to help the rest of the pilots of the 18th FBW transition from F 51s to F 86s 41 beginning on January 28 Despite cold weather and a limited number of instructor pilots 36 the wing s 125 pilots 41 were trained in the F 86 in under a month On February 3 Hagerstrom was named commander of the 67th Fighter Bomber Squadron 42 and on February 25 he was part of the 18th FBW s first patrol in Sabre jets 36 He was chasing two MiGs when he noticed a third attacking another F 86 he engaged and shot it down flying very low over Mukden China Low on fuel he had just enough to land and park the aircraft back at Osan 35 43 and he later received the Distinguished Flying Cross for the third time 1 On March 13 Hagerstrom and his wingman Elmer N Dunlap came across two MiGs the first of which Hagerstrom by his own account shot the daylights out of 44 He fired at the second until he ran out of ammunition and the remaining MiG was leaking fuel and its engine had stopped Hagerstrom told Dunlap to finish off the crippled plane and the MiG s pilot bailed over the enemy s Antung Airfield 45 That mission gave Hagerstrom a total of 4 5 victories just short of the five kills needed for ace status Knowing that he was likely to be transferred out soon he became even more determined to get another victory giving a speech to his men on March 27 46 Gentlemen I ve been living on coffee I haven t been sleeping I ve got to do this thing I m gonna do it and if you don t want to go with me that s fine I ll understand We are going to go up there and give it one good college try south of the Yalu and if we don t scare anything up I m going after them today I thought I wonder what he s going to tell those guys at the officers club tonight because he s going to be landing very close to his own air base Seeing a burning MiG crash on your own base can cause a hell of a morale problem Hagerstrom after shooting down an enemy plane over its own base 47 That day Hagerstrom snuck up behind six MiGs fired on one and by sheer ass luck knocked his wing tip off 48 He kept up the chase shooting short bursts until the pilot Chinese ace Wang Hai 49 ejected above his own base 47 On the way home Hagerstrom destroyed another MiG bringing the total to 6 5 He became the war s 28th ace and the first and only from the 18th FBW 45 After the engagement he was awarded the Silver Star for his outstanding ability and gallantry in the face of enemy opposition 1 Hagerstrom scored another victory on April 13 when he fired a long burst at a single MiG flying at 49 000 feet 15 000 m The plane burst into flames and went down near the Chongchon River In early May he learned that he was to return to the U S 50 On his last day in Korea May 16 he was waiting for a Military Air Transport Service plane to become available for his flight out to Tachikawa Airfield in Japan 51 when he got a call from a friend who said he needed four planes in the air 50 He said I got tired of the inaction so I posted the name Sam Kratz on the flight board and went out as a regular combat officer and not as a squadron commander as on other missions 52 Hagerstrom took off still wearing his blue dress uniform instead of a flight suit and the flight soon came across the formation of 24 MiGs He pretended to have communication difficulties to prevent the mission from being recalled because they were heavily outnumbered When the MiGs turned and headed toward the safety of Chinese airspace Hagerstrom attacked one of the planes and followed it into a dive firing short bursts After his target crashed he pulled out and the flight and headed back to base reporting the large number of MiGs During the debriefing his commanding officer interrupted and assured Hagerstrom that he would be on the next C 54 Skymaster flight out before he could take another risky flight 50 He was awarded his eleventh Air Medal in the form of a second silver oak leaf cluster for courage during the flight 1 The mission gave him 8 5 victories for the war 53 in 101 missions 54 Attitude toward combat Edit Like many other aces Hagerstrom had an aggressive attitude toward his missions In his book Officers in Flight Suits historian John Darrell Sherwood calls this a flight suit attitude which he defines as a sense of self confidence and pride that verged on arrogance where status was based upon flying ability not degrees rank or officer skills 55 He believes this is why Hagerstrom frequently butted heads with military bureaucrats and never became a general himself 6 Determined to be at full mental capacity during missions he never drank unlike most other pilots some of whom flew while hungover or left Korea as alcoholics 56 He was critical of pilots who wanted to just complete their requisite 100 missions and avoid conflict and danger he was twice abandoned by his wingman during a fight 57 Hagerstrom enjoyed the adrenaline rush of combat 58 and would put himself at more risk in an effort to shoot down more planes He would fly into Chinese airspace despite it being forbidden by United Nations Command and on one mission he buzzed Antung Airfield by flying near the speed of sound at an altitude of 15 feet 4 6 m in an attempt to draw the MiGs into the air because U S pilots were not allowed to attack planes on the ground in China 59 The F 86 bases were near Seoul South Korea which was 200 miles 320 km from where they would patrol in MiG Alley Getting there used so much fuel that they were supposed to spend only twenty minutes flying around the Yalu in search of MiGs but Hagerstrom did his own calculations and determined he could make it back to base with 600 pounds 270 kg of fuel half of the recommended minimum He had to set an alarm to remind himself when to head back but he often went beyond that once running out of gas just after landing 60 Unlike all the other American aces who were in fighter interceptor units Hagerstrom was in a fighter bomber squadron but found aerial combat by dropping his bombs as quickly as possible and flying to where he was likely to encounter MiGs 61 Regarding shooting down planes Hagerstrom focused on the machine rather than the human in the aircraft saying I never shot directly at the pilot nor did I shoot anyone dangling from a parachute He had a similar response whenever a fellow American or allied pilot was killed he thought about the technical aspects of the death and how it could be prevented in the future rather than grieving the loss of a friend 62 During World War II he said There is no emotion like is shown in the movies They just say Tough luck 20 After Korea Edit Hagerstrom remained in the USAF after he returned to the U S After a reunion with his family he was assigned to the Operations Section of the Ninth Air Force at Pope Air Force Base in Fayetteville North Carolina He flew an F 86 in the September 1953 Bendix Trophy air race which went from California to Ohio finishing thirty seconds behind the winner He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in June 1954 63 He became a TAC officer at Foster Air Force Base in Victoria Texas and commanded the 450th Fighter Day Squadron of the 322d Fighter Day Group 64 During his tenure at Foster he was named inspector general and base commander and in May 1955 he was given command of the 450th Fighter Day Group which flew the F 100 Super Sabre 65 66 In 1956 Hagerstrom was transferred to the headquarters of the Far East Air Forces FEAF in Japan as chief of the fighter branch 53 During that tour of duty he went to Taiwan to teach members of the Republic of China Air Force about combat against MiGs 67 He briefly returned to Texas as an advisor for the Air National Guard and in April 1957 was honored with the dedication of a new hangar at Ellington Field in Houston in his name 68 69 He then was sent to Hawaii to join the staff of the FEAF which had been renamed the Pacific Air Forces PACAF at its new headquarters at Hickam Air Force Base He was promoted to colonel in March 1959 65 and earned a master s degree in economics from Jackson College 21 His job with the PACAF was to assess the air forces of the U S and their allies after evaluating the new AIM 9 Sidewinder air to air missile he advocated for retaining guns on fighter jets instead of replacing them with missiles on some aircraft an opinion at odds with military leadership 70 In 1960 he left Hawaii for a position with the Office of Inspector General at Norton Air Force Base in San Bernardino California While at Norton he studied at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles three nights a week before attending the Industrial College of the Armed Forces ICAF which required him to relocate to Washington D C Once settled he also enrolled at Georgetown Law He graduated from the ICAF in June 1964 71 having written a thesis on the role of air power in a limited war 72 The next day he received his Bachelor of Laws degree from Georgetown 21 73 His next assignment was as vice wing commander of the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing flying F 4 Phantom IIs at George Air Force Base in Victorville California 74 Vietnam War Edit The Air America headquarters at Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base in Thailand taken in the 1960s Throughout 1965 President Lyndon B Johnson led a major escalation of American involvement in the Vietnam War 75 In May of that year 76 Hagerstrom was posted to Saigon South Vietnam to serve with the Seventh Air Force There he flew 30 combat missions 73 while serving as director of the combat operations control center at Tan Son Nhut Air Base He soon came into conflict with General William Westmoreland over the Air Force s role in the Military Assistance Command Vietnam Hagerstrom proposed that air assets be used against strategic targets in North Vietnam while Westmoreland insisted that they be used solely in country to support Army ground operations After Hagerstrom argued against the decision not to bomb Hanoi in 1965 Westmoreland asked the Air Force to remove Hagerstrom from Vietnam 6 74 77 Hagerstrom was awarded the Legion of Merit for his service in Vietnam and the citation mentions his significant contributions to the combat effectiveness of the tactical air forces 1 In early 1966 the Air Force reassigned Hagerstrom to Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base Thailand In four days he set up a combat operations control center to conduct air interdiction operations against the North Vietnamese Army on the Ho Chi Minh trail 74 On March 3 Royal Lao Air Force commander Thao Ma requested help from the USAF in defending the town of Attopeu Laos The Royal Lao Armed Forces were suffering low morale and faced pressure from Viet Cong VC fighters who had taken two nearby towns 78 Hagerstrom assisted in planning the use of an AC 47 Spooky gunship equipped with a night vision Starlight Scope which had previously been typically used by ground forces to attack VC positions around the town The airstrike on the VC took place on the night of March 4 and was successful despite several malfunctions and the aircraft was not hit by enemy fire 79 Hagerstrom said he conservatively estimated that 200 VC were killed in the attack using this to argue that air attacks cause fewer friendly casualties than a war of attrition strategy with ground forces 80 Hagerstrom also tried to obtain the release of James Robinson Risner a prisoner of war who had also been an ace in Korea Hagerstrom enlisted the help of CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite and lawyer James B Donovan who had negotiated the release of Francis Gary Powers after the 1960 U 2 incident to start a fundraiser for Risner s bail but the U S State Department stepped in and halted the effort 81 Hagerstrom was sent back to Norton later in 1966 73 frustrated by the political and military bureaucracy he had clashed with over his career I got disgusted with the whole thing and resigned he said Vietnam was wrong we shouldn t have been there 81 Retirement Edit Hagerstrom s gravestone at Arlington National Cemetery Back at Norton Hagerstrom sat and passed the California Bar Examination and retired from the Air Force in January 1968 He lectured at the University of Southern California and worked for a law firm in Los Angeles 82 Later that year along with Virginia and their eight children he began living on a boat sailing along the Pacific coast of Mexico In mid 1969 they stopped at San Diego and Hagerstrom began practicing law there They did not settle he and his wife began building their own boat in 1971 Four years later they had completed the 30 short ton 27 t 57 foot 17 m sailboat and set sail on March 19 1976 They returned to the Mexican coast before heading to Hawaii They continued on to the Marshall Islands and Caroline Islands then part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands 73 and Guam 83 In many of their stops Hagerstrom practiced law becoming district attorney for the island of Kosrae and Virginia taught 73 83 The family eventually returned to the U S in 1979 73 and settled on a farm in Mansfield Louisiana 83 Hagerstrom maintained his love of flying and in 1992 planned to buy an ultralight aircraft 6 He died of stomach cancer on June 25 1994 83 in nearby Shreveport 84 Hagerstrom was survived by his wife and six of his children 85 on July 26 he was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery 83 Aerial victory credits EditHagerstrom was credited with 14 5 victories 6 in World War II and 8 5 in the Korean War as well as one probably destroyed and five damaged 86 He is one of seven American pilots to achieve ace status in two wars all flew piston engined planes in World War II and jet fighters in Korea The others are George Andrew Davis Jr Gabby Gabreski Vermont Garrison Harrison Thyng and Whisner all Air Force pilots and John F Bolt of the U S Marine Corps 87 Date Type Location Aircraft flown UnitApril 11 1943 1 A6M Zero Oro Bay New Guinea P 40 Warhawk 8 FSOctober 5 1943 1 Ki 46 Finschhafen New Guinea P 40 Warhawk 8 FSJanuary 23 1944 3 A6M Zero Wewak New Guinea P 40 Warhawk 8 FSJanuary 23 1944 1 Ki 61 Hien Wewak New Guinea P 40 Warhawk 8 FSNovember 21 1952 1 MiG 15 Near Yalu River China North Korea F 86 Sabre 334 FISDecember 25 1952 1 MiG 15 Sinsi dong North Korea F 86 Sabre 335 FISFebruary 25 1953 1 MiG 15 Mukden China F 86 Sabre 67 FBSMarch 13 1953 1 5 MiG 15 Antung North Korea F 86 Sabre 67 FBSMarch 27 1953 2 MiG 15 Near Yalu River China North Korea F 86 Sabre 67 FBSApril 13 1953 1 MiG 15 Taegwan dong North Korea F 86 Sabre 67 FBSMay 16 1953 1 MiG 15 Uiju North Korea F 86 Sabre 67 FBSSources 88 89 Awards and decorations EditHagerstrom received numerous awards and decorations for his services 90 Command PilotDistinguished Service Cross Silver StarLegion of Merit Distinguished Flying Crosswith V device and four bronze oak leaf clusters 67 83 Air Medalwith two silver oak leaf clustersAir Force Commendation Medal Air Force Presidential Unit Citationwith bronze oak leaf cluster American Defense Service MedalAmerican Campaign Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medalwith three bronze campaign stars World War II Victory MedalNational Defense Service Medalwith bronze service star Korean Service Medalwith two bronze campaign stars Vietnam Service MedalAir Force Longevity Service Awardwith silver oak leaf cluster Armed Forces Reserve Medal Republic of Korea Presidential Unit CitationUnited Nations Korea Medal Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal Korean War Service Medal a Distinguished Service Cross citation Edit First Lieutenant Air Corps James P Hagerstrom ASN 0 727447 United States Army Air Forces for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy while serving as Pilot of a P 40 Fighter Airplane in the 8th Fighter Squadron 49th Fighter Group Fifth Air Force in aerial combat against enemy forces near Boram New Guinea on 23 January 1944 First Lieutenant Hagerstrom leading a flight of four fighters on a bomber escort mission encountered ten to fifteen enemy aircraft and promptly led in the attack He shot down one enemy airplane and then attacked two others scoring damaging hits Pulling up he quickly shot down another enemy fighter Two of the enemy then attacked from a climbing head on position and he scored damaging hits on both Making a close pass at another enemy fighter he caused it to burst into flames At this point he observed four enemy airplanes making a concentrated attack upon two of our fighters Without hesitation he entered the fight and succeeded in shooting down one enemy airplane and breaking the enemy formation By his daring skill and aggressive effort in this fierce encounter First Lieutenant Hagerstrom destroyed four enemy aircraft damaged others and saved the lives of two pilots while our bombers successfully completed their mission 1 See also Edit Aviation portal World War II portalList of Korean War flying aces List of World War II flying acesCitations EditNotes Edit In 2000 this award was made retroactive to all U S military personnel who served in the Korean War 91 References Edit a b c d e f g h i Hall of Valor a b c d e f Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 69 Social Security Death Index 1940 United States Census a b c d e f Sherwood 1996 p 34 a b c d e Ballard 1995 p A4 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 69 70 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 70 71 a b Hess 2004 p 66 a b c Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 71 Griset 2017 p 3 Craven amp Cate 1983 pp 176 177 a b Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 71 72 a b Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 72 a b Sherwood 2000 p 1 Hammel 2010 p 290 Hess 2004 pp 88 89 Peattie 2001 pp 191 192 a b c Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 73 a b Veach 1944 a b c Edgerton 1966 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 73 74 a b Sherwood 1996 pp 34 35 a b c d Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 74 171st Air Refueling Wing 2016 Sherwood 1996 p 35 Cleveland Plain Dealer 1949 a b c Sherwood 2000 p 2 Werrell 2005 pp 183 184 Sherwood 1996 p 70 Sherwood 1996 p 81 Sherwood 1996 p 84 a b Sherwood 1996 pp 81 82 Ballard 1995 p A1 a b c d Werrell 2005 p 184 a b c Catchpole 2000 p 248 Sherwood 1996 p 88 The New York Times 1952 The Oregonian 1952 a b Spokane Daily Chronicle 1952 a b Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 75 Dollman 2018 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 75 76 Brownwood Bulletin 1953 a b Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 76 Sherwood 1996 pp 89 90 a b Sherwood 2000 pp 3 4 Sherwood 2000 p 3 Zhang 2002 p 192 a b c Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 77 Sherwood 1996 p 90 The Dallas Morning News 1953 a b Sherwood 2000 p 4 The San Bernardino County Sun 1966 Sherwood 1996 p 6 Sherwood 1996 pp 126 165 Sherwood 1996 pp 87 88 Sherwood 1996 p 91 Sherwood 1996 pp 88 89 Sherwood 1996 p 83 Hankins 2020 Sherwood 1996 pp 90 91 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 77 78 The Victoria Advocate 1954 a b Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 78 Maurer 1983 p 325 a b Sherwood 1996 p 160 Densford 1973 p 170 Kelly 1977 Sherwood 1996 pp 160 161 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 78 79 Feit 1965 p 1 a b c d e f Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 79 a b c Sherwood 1996 p 161 Hall 2018 p 12 Feit 1965 p 3 Sherwood 2000 pp 4 5 Porter 1966 p 1 Porter 1966 pp 3 9 Porter 1966 p 13 a b Sherwood 1996 pp 161 162 The San Bernardino County Sun 1968 a b c d e f Inouye 1994 McCrery 1994 The Washington Post 1994 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 81 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 pp 4 5 Newton amp Senning 1978 p 79 Maurer 1963 p 16 Oliver amp Lorenz 1999 p 80 Naval History amp Heritage Command Sources EditBooks Edit Catchpole Brian 2000 The Korean War 1950 53 New York Carroll amp Graff ISBN 978 0 7867 0780 5 Craven Wesley Frank Cate James Lea eds 1983 The Pacific Guadalcanal to Saipan August 1942 to July 1944 The Army Air Forces in World War II Vol 4 Washington D C Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 03 X Densford James T ed 1973 From Jennies to Jets The Story of the 111th Squadron Dallas Taylor Publishing OCLC 10559205 Hall Mitchell 2018 The Vietnam War New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 68600 7 Hammel Eric M 2010 Air War Pacific Chronology Pacifica California Pacifica Military History ISBN 978 1 890988 10 4 Hess William N 2004 49th Fighter Group Aces of the Pacific Oxford England Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 47280 249 1 Maurer Maurer ed June 1963 USAF Historical Study No 81 USAF Credits for the Destruction of Enemy Aircraft Korean War PDF Montgomery Alabama USAF Historical Division Retrieved December 21 2017 Maurer Maurer ed 1983 Air Force Combat Units of World War II Washington D C U S Government Printing Office ISBN 978 0 91279 902 5 Retrieved January 10 2017 Newton Wesley P Jr Senning Calvin F et al 1978 USAF Historical Study No 85 USAF Credits for the Destruction of Enemy Aircraft World War II PDF Montgomery Alabama USAF Historical Division Retrieved December 21 2017 Oliver William E Lorenz Dwight L 1999 The Inner Seven The History of Seven Unique American Combat Aces of World War II and Korea Pacudah Kentucky Turner Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 56311 504 2 Peattie Mark 2001 Sunburst The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power 1909 1941 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 61251 436 9 Porter Melvin F 1966 The Defense of Attopeu Honolulu Hawaii Pacific Air Forces Tactical Evaluation Center doi 10 21236 ada586293 Sherwood John Darrell 1996 Officers in Flight Suits The Story of American Air Force Fighter Pilots in the Korean War New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 8038 1 JSTOR j ctt9qg3ps Werrell Kenneth P 2005 James Hagerstrom F 86 Ace Not with the 4th or 51st Sabres over MiG Alley The F 86 and the Battle for Air Superiority in Korea Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press pp 183 185 ISBN 978 1 61251 344 7 Zhang Xiaoming 2002 Red Wings Over the Yalu China the Soviet Union and the Air War in Korea College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 1 58544 201 1 Newspapers and magazines Edit Air Race Results on Last Day Cleveland Plain Dealer September 6 1949 p 6 Retrieved December 19 2017 via NewsBank Ballard Larry July 16 1995 Waterloo ace remembered in book Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier pp A1 A4 Retrieved June 13 2018 via NewspaperArchive com Christmas Day Can t Stop Top Notch Sabre Fighters Spokane Daily Chronicle December 25 1952 p 6 Retrieved December 20 2017 via Google News Archive Edgerton Karl R July 12 1966 Ace of Two Wars Says Pressure Cancels Cong Monsoon Drive The San Bernardino County Sun p 2 Retrieved August 5 2014 via Newspapers com Feit Harvey September 12 1965 S B Man Plans Viet Air Strikes The San Bernardino County Sun pp 1 3 Retrieved June 11 2018 via California Digital Newspaper Collection Foe Uses 60 MiG s in Korea Sorties The New York Times December 25 1952 p 2 ProQuest 112391165 Hagerstrom Col James P USAF Ret The Washington Post July 20 1994 p D4 ProQuest 750973631 Highly Honored Pilot Retires From Service The San Bernardino County Sun February 12 1968 Retrieved August 6 2014 via Newspapers com Kelly Vicki July 18 1977 From Jennys to Jets A History Of Our Hometown Guard The News Friendswood Texas p 4 via NewspaperArchive com New Air Officers at Foster Have Record of Combat and Service The Victoria Advocate August 12 1954 p 8 Retrieved December 23 2017 via Google News Archive Red Thrusts Repulsed Supply Depots Pounded The Oregonian December 25 1952 p 4 Retrieved December 20 2017 via NewsBank Sherwood John Darrell September 2000 On Guard over MiG Alley The James P Hagerstrom Story PDF The on Guard Vol XXVIV no 10 Arlington Virginia National Guard Bureau Archived from the original PDF on December 27 2016 Retrieved January 1 2014 Thirty Fighter Pilots to Form Panel For Discussion of Viet Nam Air War The San Bernardino County Sun November 25 1966 Retrieved July 3 2015 via Newspapers com Tyler Jet Ace Comes Home To See Family The Dallas Morning News May 30 1953 p 13 Retrieved December 19 2017 via NewsBank U S Pilots Tell How They Teamed Up To Shoot Down MIGs Brownwood Bulletin March 13 1953 p 1 Retrieved August 5 2014 via Newspapers com Veach Francis C March 26 1944 Air Heroes Hagerstrom and Ludtke Enjoy Visit at Home Waterloo Sunday Courier p 19 Retrieved June 14 2018 Online sources and records Edit 1940 United States Census United States census 1940 Waterloo Iowa roll T627 1139 page 61A line 27 enumeration district 7 26 Dollman Daniel September 5 2018 67 Fighter Squadron PACAF Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved March 11 2019 Forging the Air National Guard 171st Air Refueling Wing Air National Guard December 22 2016 Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved June 12 2017 Griset Rick August 28 2017 8th Fighter Squadron PDF Luke Air Force Base Retrieved March 12 2019 Hankins Michael August 13 2020 Building the U S Air Force The Legacy of World War II Aces National Air and Space Museum Retrieved September 5 2021 Inouye Daniel July 20 1994 In honor of Col James P Hagerstrom USAF ret THOMAS Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 16 2016 Retrieved January 1 2014 James P Hagerstrom Social Security Death Index Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 8 2015 via FamilySearch Korean Service Medal Naval History amp Heritage Command Archived from the original on February 3 2015 Retrieved February 16 2014 McCrery Jim July 26 1994 In tribute to Col James Hagerstrom THOMAS Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved January 1 2014 Valor awards for James P Hagerstrom Hall of Valor Sightline Media Group Archived from the original on November 11 2017 Retrieved January 1 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James P Hagerstrom amp oldid 1114260390, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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