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Rear
Admiral Edward Cobb Outlaw
- born 29 Sept 1914 Greenville, NC
Edward Outlaw graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy at
Annapolis, Class of 1935
Lieutenant Commander Edward C. Outlaw, Commander Fighting Squadron 32 and Air Group 32, with other VF-32 pilots in flight quarters after a sweep over Truk, 29 April 1944. Note steward serving drinks, status boards on the bulkhead and ventilator on the overhead. - USS Langley, CVL-27
Carriers in combat the air war at sea - Vietnam
U.S. Navy Fighter Squadrons in World War II (9780933424746) Barrett Tillman Books
Squadron # "Nickname" |
Start | End | A/C | Carrier/Base | Top Ace (kills w/ sqn) | CO (kills w/ sqn) | Kills | # Aces |
---|
VF-32 "Outlaw's Bandits" |
Mar-44 |
Oct-44 |
F6F |
Langley CVL-27 |
Lt. Cdr. Eddie Outlaw (6) |
44 |
2 |
Intrepid The Epic Story of America's Most Legendary Warship
USS Langley, CVL-27
- VF-32 -Outlaw's Bandits (Est 1 Jun 1943, Dis 13 Nov 1945)
(F6F-3/5)
LANGLEY FIGHTER
ACES, APRIL 29, 1944 - The photo caption reads, "Pilots of F6F's who shot
down 21 Japanese planes in less than 15 minutes over Truk Atoll aboard the Langley."
- photo
courtesy and copyright of The USS Langley CVL-27 Association
Hellcat Aces of World War 2 - Barrett Tillman
Grumman F6F-3 Hellcat on the flight deck of USS Yorktown (CV-10) prior to take off, having its wings extended
Grumman F6F Hellcat was a carrier-based fighter aircraft developed to replace the earlier F4F Wildcat in United States Navy (USN) service. Although the F6F resembled the Wildcat, it was a completely new design powered by a 2,000 hp Pratt & Whitney R-2800. Some tagged it as the "Wildcat's big brother".
WWII Ace
- Navy Cross -
Rear Admiral Edward
Cobb Outlaw - tells the truth about Vietnam:
Carriers
in combat the air war at sea - Vietnam - Rolling Thunder - Cambodian supply depots off limits - SOVIET
SA-2 SAM sites shot down 115 American planes . "We were restrained to carrying out a campaign which seemed designed NOT
to win" because RUSSIAN technicians might be killed. McNamara did not allow pilots to attack any installation where MIG's were
based.
Rear
Admiral Edward Cobb Outlaw - born 29 Sept 1914 Greenville, NC
Edward Outlaw graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Class
of 1935
Aces WWII -
Edward C Outlaw, LtCdr USN
USN
Ships--USS Langley (CVL-27)
USS Langley, an 11,000-ton Independence class small aircraft carrier built at Camden, New Jersey, was originally ordered as the light cruiser Fargo (CL-85). By the time her keel was laid in April 1942, she had been redesigned as an aircraft carrier, using the original cruiser hull and machinery. Commissioned in August 1943, Langley went to the Pacific late in the year and entered combat during the Marshalls operation in January-February 1944. During the next four months, her planes attacked Japanese positions in the central Pacific and western New Guinea. In June 1944, she took part in the assault on the Marianas and in the Battle of the Philippine Sea.
Langley continued her war role through the rest of 1944, participating in the Palaus Operation, raids on the Philippines, Formosa and the Ryukyus, and the Battle of Leyte Gulf. In January-February 1945, she was part of the Third Fleet's foray into the South China Sea, the first massed carrier attacks on the Japanese Home Islands and the invasion of Iwo Jima. More combat activity followed in March-May, as Langley's planes again hit targets in Japan and supported the Okinawa operation. Overhauled in the U.S. in June and July, she was en route back to the Pacific war zone when the conflict ended in August.
Following service transporting Pacific veterans home, Langley went to the Atlantic, where she carried out similar missions in November 1945 - January 1946. Inactive at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, during the remainder of 1946, the carrier decommissioned there in February 1947. Langley was taken out of "mothballs" early in 1951, refurbished and transferred to France under the Mutual Defense Assistance Program. After more than a decade of French Navy service, under the name La Fayette, she was returned to the United States in March 1963 and sold for scrapping a year later.
U.S. Navy Fighter Squadrons in World War II (9780933424746) Barrett Tillman Books
Squadron # Nickname" | Start | End | A/C | Carrier/Base | Top Ace (kills w/ sqn) | CO (kills w/ sqn) | Kills | # Aces |
---|
VF-32 "Outlaw's Bandits" |
Mar-44 |
Oct-44 |
F6F |
Langley CVL-27 |
Lt. Cdr. Eddie Outlaw (6) |
44 |
2 |
Intrepid The Epic Story of America's Most Legendary Warship
Aircraft Carrier Photo Index
USS LANGLEY (CVL-27)
Photo #: 80-G-233487 USS Langley (CVL-27)
Lieutenant Commander Edward C. Outlaw, Commander Fighting Squadron 32 and Air
Group 32, with other VF-32 pilots in flight quarters after a sweep over Truk, 29
April 1944.
If they had their way, He would not even have been a pilot in WWII:
http://www.newtotalitarians.com/PretendersFailureOfAdmiralship.html
- New Totalitarians
More recently, ADM Edward C. 'Eddie' Outlaw, who was a ne'rdowell at the
Academy, became an outstanding fighter pilot during WWII.
In fact, that war molded Outlaw into the leader he became. Those under his
command as C.O. of the Intrepid during the late 1950s revered 'Eddie' Outlaw for
his 'atta boys' for difficult tasks well done.
Midshipman Outlaw graduated 436th out of 442 in his 1935 Naval Academy class
-- 6th from the bottom.
His is another shining example that neither class standing, nor the Naval
Academy for that matter, make that much of a difference in whether one becomes a
'warrior' and a leader in wartime or not -- it is the real world
caldron of combat experience that defines and molds the leader -- the kind the
Navy needs now more than ever in the age of Political Correctness.
Intrepid Fighter Aces
Outlaw, Edward C., Cdr., VF-32, USS Langley (CVL-27), CO USS Intrepid (CVA-11) -
6
Born 1914 in Greenville, NC; Public Schools, Goldboro, NC.; USNA
'35, Retired, Durham, NC '69.
Flight Training, Pensacola '37-'38. USS Enterprise, Scouting
Squadron 6. '42 deployed to Pacific as XO (VC-11) flying F4F (Wildcats).
Led flight of 54 from Fiji to Guadalcanal to re-enforce Marine Corps.
He served there as leader of the Navy Fighter Group. 1943 formed
VF-32 as CO. Deployed on USS Langley .
April 29, '44, he led a flight of 8 Hellcats on a pre-dawn fighter sweep over
Truk atoll; at dawn sighted a flight of about 36 Japanese Zeroes flying at
10,000 ft in column of V's; first pass his flight flamed 8; then, exercising
perfect discipline "Holly" Hills (4 kills) led his division to
"high cover" where they accounted for seven of the enemy. Cdr.
Outlaw shot down 5 and 1 probable, fellow Ace, Dick May got 3 and Outlaw's
wingman 4. Total for this brief action was 22 victories and 6 probables.
The action took place in less than ten minutes and was declared by
COMNAVAIRPAC to be "a perfect example of air combat and air
discipline."
Subsequently, he served three times in Pentagon; as CO of USS
Duxbury Bay and USS Intrepid; as CO Air Group Six (Coral Sea); CO Heavy Attack
Squadron five (NucWpns).
Selected to rank of Rear Admiral and served as Commander Naval
Aviation Safety Center;
Commander Carrier Division One and Task Force 77 of
Vietnam '64-'65 where he directed first sustained attacks;
Commander CARDIVS 16
and 20 and Commander Hunter-Killer Force, Atlantic Fleet.
His last assignment was as Commander Fleet Aircraft
Mediterranean/CTF-67/ and Maritime Air Mediterranean (a NATO organization of
which he was the first commander). Decorations: Navy Cross, Legion of
Merit (3), DFC (3)
COMMANDER CARRIER DIVISION ONE
Rear Admiral Edward C. Outlaw
born 29 Sept 1914 Greenville, NC.
Married Mary Ellen Yeargin of Pensacola, FL
Son: Edward C. Jr who is married to Pamela Thiesen of Wilmington, DE.
THE LANGLEY IN THE MIDST OF THE GREAT TYPHOON OF DECEMBER, 1944.
National Naval Aviation Foundation - Charter In Memorium - Service Member
In
Memory of
Rear Admiral Edward Cobb Outlaw, USN (Ret.)
Born Sept. 29, 1914
Died Mar. 5, 1996