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-   -   2024 Bio of USMC Fighter Pilot Maj. Henry Elrod - MoH Wake Island (http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/showthread.php?t=66874)

Edward 12th December 2025 00:09

2024 Bio of USMC Fighter Pilot Maj. Henry Elrod - MoH Wake Island
 
Wake Island Wildcat: A Marine Fighter Pilot's Epic Battle at the Beginning of World War II [Major Henry T. Elrod]
(Stackpole Books – August 20, 2024)
by William L. Ramsey
232 pages - hardcover
$29.95 US

"When the Japanese attacked Wake Island in December 1941—the same day as the attack on Pearl Harbor—Marine pilot Henry T. 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. Captain Elrod, who had attended Yale and spent his freshman year playing football at the University of Georgia, had arrived mere days before as part of a fighter squadron of twelve pilots. On December 10 and 11, Elrod had two of the most remarkable days of the war for any pilot in any theater: 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 with small caliber bombs delivered by a fighter plane in World War II. Then, once American aircraft were too 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.

Though unsuccessful, the against-the-odds battle for Wake Island buoyed American morale during a dark period of World War II. Elrod, who became known as “Hammerin’ Hank,” was a key figure in the defense. For his gallantry, he was posthumously promoted to major and awarded the Medal of Honor. A US 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 and Space Museum. Drawing on research in military archives and materials from Elrod’s family, William L. Ramsey tells Hammerin’ Hank’s full story—which is not only the history of the battle for Wake Island but also the experiences that led him to become a Marine fighter pilot—with drama and verve."

The author
"William L. Ramsey is historian, poet, and a professor of history at Lander University in South Carolina. He received his PhD from Tulane University in 1998 and has taught at Tulane, SUNY Oswego, the University of Idaho, and Lander University. In 2005, he received the Martin Luther King, Jr. Distinguished Service Award 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 of Idaho. 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. Award for best book of South Carolina history, sponsored by the South Carolina Historical Society. He lives in Greenwood, South Carolina."

https://www.simonandschuster.com/boo.../9780811776677

2025 book review by Sean Kentch, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas (Military Review)
"Although not apparent from its title, Wake Island Wildcat . . . isn't a book about the defense of Wake Island. While the author, William L. Ramsey, devotes seventy pages to the events on Wake Island, the bulk of the book is about Elrod, who was known to friends and family by his middle name, Talmage. As we learn at the beginning, Ramsey's interest in Elrod began early in life while listening to stories from his grandmother, Farrar Elrod Ramsey—Talmage's sister. The author shares a memory from his teenage years, when Farrar asked what he wanted to be. When he answered "writer," she told him to write about Talmage. Deep into his career as a professor of history, Ramsey has done just that. Ramsey's portrait of Elrod is as intimate as it is detailed, drawing on both a deep supply of secondary documents and the memories of Elrod's relatives as primary sources. The author deftly moves between the two, taking us on a journey from Elrod's childhood to his death that leaves the reader with a sense of the person Henry Talmage Elrod . . . "

https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Jour...sland-Wildcat/

Related
Wake Island Pilot: A World War II Memoir
(Brassey's Inc 1995)
by John F. Kinney with James M. McCaffrey
200 pages - hardcover


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