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Edward O'Hare
Lt. Cmdr. Edward "Butch" O'Hare
(March 13, 1914 - November 27, 1943) was a United States Navy pilot who on
February 20, 1942 became America's first World War II flying
ace. The O'Hare International Airport in
Chicago, Illinois, and USS O'Hare were named in his honor.
Early life
Edward "Butch" O'Hare was born in St.
Louis, Missouri. He had two sisters, Patricia and Marilyn. When
their parents divorced in 1927, O'Hare and his sisters moved to
Chicago with their father, Edward J. O'Hare. The elder O'Hare was
a lawyer who worked on many ventures with organized crime figure
Al Capone after moving to Chicago, and was one of Capone's lawyers.
Butch O'Hare graduated from the Western Military
Academy (WMA) in 1932, and the following year went on to the United States Naval Academy at
Annapolis, Maryland. He graduated from
Annapolis in 1937, following
which he received choice duty on the battleship USS New Mexico (BB-40). After
serving two years on the ship, in 1939 he started flight training at
NAS Pensacola in Florida. When he finished his naval
aviation training, he was assigned to VF-3, USS Saratoga's fighter
squadron.
During Capone's tax evasion trial in 1931 and 1932, O'Hare's
father provided incriminating evidence which helped finally put
Capone away. There is speculation that this was done to
ensure that Butch got into Annapolis, or to set a good
example. Whatever the motivation, the elder O'Hare was shot down in
his car in 1939, a week before Capone was released from
Alcatraz.
Butch O'Hare was married in 1941, and shortly thereafter called
to duty, the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
World War II service
O'Hare's most famous flight occurred on February 20,
1942. He was on board the aircraft
carrier Lexington, which had been
assigned the dangerous task of penetrating enemy-held waters north
of New Ireland.
While still 400 miles from the harbour at Rabaul, Lexington was discovered by a
Japanese flying boat and a group of Japanese torpedo planes
attacked the task force. As section leader and pilot of
VF-3, O'Hare single-handedly shot down 5 or 6 planes and
helped to save the ship. For this act he was promoted to Lieutenant
Commander and awarded the Medal of Honor, the highest decoration of his
country.
O'Hare was also awarded the Navy Cross, the Distinguished Flying Cross,
and Gold Star in
lieu of a second Distinguished Flying Cross in subsequent air
actions.
O'Hare died in an air crash on November 27,
1943 at Tarawa during the first carrier-based night fighter operations by the U.S.
Navy. The circumstances of his death are unclear, the assumptions
being that his plane may have been hit by Japanese bombers, or gone
down in friendly fire by the planes in his own formation.
Biography
Fateful Rendezvous: The Life of Butch O'Hare by Steve Ewing,
John B. Lundstrom, 1997, ISBN 1557502471
External Links
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Used under the GNU FDL, with material from the
Wikipedia article Edward O'Hare.
Site copyright ©2005. (4/23/05)
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