
Artist R.G. Smith’s depiction of SBD Dauntless dive-bombers attacking the Japanese aircraft carriers Akagi, Kaga, and Soryu during the Battle of Midway.
Whether they strapped into cockpits of airplanes on the sandy shores of Midway Atoll or on the wooden planks of carrier decks, a select group of young men faced a daunting prospect in early June 1942. Bearing down on them was a mighty Japanese Fleet, some of the ships of which had last ventured this far east in the Pacific Ocean the previous December en route to launch air attacks against Pearl Harbor. This time, owing to code breaking by Naval Intelligence, U.S. Pacific Fleet commander Admiral Chester W. Nimitz knew details of the enemy’s plans. Yet, as it always does in war, success or failure hinged on those closest to the action, which in a carrier battle included naval aviators who winged their way towards the enemy.
The National Naval Aviation Museum holds a collection of archival records in its collection consisting of the flight training records of individual aviators. They provide a unique glimpse into the months in which young men first learned to fly, taking the first steps towards active service in the fleet. Using these records, and other sources in the historical collection, we present the faces of Midway.
A page from the aviation training records of Aviation Cadet Langdon Fieberling features the names of some prominent instructors, including future Chief of Naval Operations David L. McDonald and Charles Crommelin, one of five brothers who graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and served in the Navy, three of them as naval aviators. Charles flew F6F Hellcats in the Pacific Theater, a crash landing he made on board the carrier Yorktown (CV 10) featured in the wartime film The Fighting Lady. Receiving the Navy Cross for leading strikes against Tokyo in February 1945, he was killed in action near Okinawa the following month. Though not listed on this sheet, another instructor was Lance E. Massey, who like Fieberling, was killed in action at the Battle of Midway while commanding Torpedo Squadron (VT) 3.