Mike wrote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...012602148.html
Walter E. Scholz Navy Pilot
Walter E. Scholz, a retired Navy pilot who was voted "least likely to
succeed" by his senior officers during flight training, but managed to
earn a Silver Star, Legion of Merit, two Distinguished Flying Crosses
and nine Air Medals, died of septic shock and pneumonia Dec. 27 at
Inova Fairfax Hospital. Capt. Scholz, operating off the USS Enterprise
during World War II, shot down four Japanese planes. He earned one of
his Silver Stars for his part in the second Battle of the Philippine
Sea, when he and 23 other pilots crippled a fleet of three dozen
Japanese warships, enabling American gunboats and destroyers to move in
and sink the fleet.
I'm fairly familiar with WW II...the "Second Battle of the
Philippine Sea" is more commonly called the "Battle for Leyte Gulf."
But I'm not aware of any action where pilots (24 or any other
number) crippled a fleet of Japanese ships that gunboats and
destroyers cleaned up. In fact I'm not aware of gunboats
participating at all. Could this be:
- The Battle off Cape Engano, where carrier planes attacked the
Japanese decoy carriers before Halsey had to turn and run back
towards San Bernardino Strait, and cruisers and destroyers carried
out surface attacks on the decoy fleet?
- The Battle of Surigao Strait? No aircraft participated, but
destroyers adn PT boats participated along with larger surface gun
ships.