Wake Island Wildcat tells the story of “Hammerin’ Hank,” Henry Elrod, the fighter pilot who was the linchpin of the defense of Wake Island, attacked by the Japanese on the same day as Pearl Harbor. This is not only the story of the battle for Wake Island, but also the story of a Marine fighter pilot at war, told with drama and verve.
Wake Island Wildcat tells the story of “Hammerin’ Hank,” Henry Elrod, the fighter pilot who was the linchpin of the defense of Wake Island, attacked by the Japanese on the same day as Pearl Harbor. This is not only the story of the battle for Wake Island, but also the story of a Marine fighter pilot at war, told with drama and verve.
When the Japanese attacked Wake Island in December 1941—the same day as Pearl Harbor—Marine pilot Henry Elrod took to the skies in his F4F Wildcat fighter to defend the American military base on the tiny Pacific atoll, battling swarms of enemy planes and ships with rare courage and skill for the next two weeks. A graduate of Yale who had spent his freshman year playing football at the University of Georgia, Captain Elrod had arrived mere days before to join a fighter squadron of twelve pilots. On December 12, Elrod had one of the most remarkable days of the war for any pilot in any theater, when he took on a group of twenty-two Japanese planes—shooting down two—and then bombed and strafed the destroyer Kisaragi, sinking the vessel with all hands and becoming the first American pilot to sink a warship in World War II. Then, once American aircraft were too badly damaged to fly, the pilots joined the ground defense against Japanese invasion forces. Elrod assumed command of one sector of the beach and led the repulse of repeated enemy assaults until he was killed on the last day of the battle, just before the American surrender.
Even though unsuccessful, the against-the-odds battle for Wake buoyed American morale during a dark period of World War II. Elrod, who became known as “Hammerin’ Hank,” was the linchpin of the defense. For his gallantry, he was posthumously promoted to major and awarded the Medal of Honor; a U.S. Navy frigate and a street at Marine Base Quantico were named for him; and a piece of his plane is on display at the National Air & Space Museum. Drawing on research in military archives and on materials from Elrod’s family, William Ramsey tells this story—which is not only the story of the battle for Wake Island, but also the story of a Marine fighter pilot at war—with drama and verve.
"In the 1980's the US Navy would name one of its new frigates, USS Elrod, in his honour. This ship would go on to serve all around the world, for the next thirty years. It is a fitting tribute to a brave man, much like this most excellent book."
-- "History Book Chat"Captain Henry T. Elrod burst from the gloom that engulfed the United States in December 1941 to claim a place among his country's heroes. In the sky and on the ground at Wake Island, Elrod's fierce combat skills and irrepressible spirit made him a living legend who his outnumbered fellow Marines called "Hammering Hank." While Elrod's wartime exploits have been chronicled in many publications, Wake Island Wildcat takes the full measure of the man from his troubled boyhood to his abbreviated career as a Marine pilot. William L. Ramsey has succeeded in producing a well-researched and judicious biography that reconstructs one man's life without missing the big picture.
--Gregory J. W. Urwin, professor of history at Temple University, and author of Facing Fearful Odds: The Siege of Wake IslandRamsey offers an insightful and engaging portrait of a complicated and sometimes troubled man who unflinchingly faced impossible odds in the heroic but ultimately doomed defense of Wake Island in the opening days of World War II. A welcome bonus is the book's illuminating depiction of Marine Corps aviation in the years leading up to the debacle at Pearl Harbor.
--James H. Hallas, author of several books about World War II, including Fly Boy Heroes, Uncommon Valor on Iwo Jima, and SaipanHistorian and poet William L. Ramsey is a Professor of History at Lander University in Greenwood, South Carolina. He received his Ph.D. from Tulane University in 1998 and has taught at Tulane, SUNY-Oswego, the University of Idaho, and Lander University. While in Idaho, he received the Martin Luther King, Jr. Distinguished Service Award in 2005 from the University of Idaho and Washington State University, acting jointly, for public activism in defense of civil rights and racial tolerance, and he was awarded the Outstanding Faculty Award in 2007 by the Student Association of the University.
His historical articles have appeared in The Journal of American History, Georgia Historical Quarterly, and The South Carolina Historical Magazine. His first book, The Yamasee War: A Study of Culture, Economy, and Conflict in the Colonial South, received the 2008 George C. Rogers, Jr., book award for best book of South Carolina History, sponsored by the South Carolina Historical Society. He lives in Greenwood, South Carolina.
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