Albert William Tweedy, Jr.
Second Lieutenant Albert W. Tweedy, Jr. was a Marine Corps pilot who flew with VMSB-241.
He was shot down and reported missing in the battle of Midway on 4 June 1942.
Branch
Marine Corps Reserve
Service Number O-7145
Current Status
Remains not recovered.
Pursuit Category
Based on circumstances of loss, this individual is considered permanently non-recoverable.
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
March 22, 1920
at Yonkers, NY
Parents
Albert William Tweedy, Sr.
Rosalie Minturn (Mayer) Tweedy
Education
Thayer Academy (1938)
Williams College (ex-1942)
Occupation & Employer
College student
Service Life
Entered Service
June 12, 1940 (enlisted)
October 14, 1941 (officer)
Home Of Record
768 Main Street
Hingham, MA
Next Of Kin
Father, Mr. Albert Tweedy Sr.
Military Specialty
Pilot
Assistant Flight Officer
Primary Unit
VMSB-241
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
Second Lieutenant Albert Tweedy was a Marine pilot with VMSB-241, a scout-bomber squadron based at Midway Island in 1942. He was part of the Fourth Section, First Division, led by Major Lofton R. Henderson, and usually flew with Sergeant Elza L. Raymond as his radioman and gunner.
At 0610 hours on 4 June 1942, VMSB-241 took off from Midway and rendezvoused at “Point Affirm” – a safe distance from the airfield, out of the way of an incoming Japanese strike force. A radio message sent them on course to attack an enemy carrier; a two-hour flight brought them within sight of the IJN HiryÅ«. The carrier sent up a wall of flak, and her fighters quickly climbed to engage the unescorted American bombers.
Major Henderson, who had been flying out of formation to keep an eye on his newer pilots, pulled back into the lead position, which placed him on Lieutenant Tweedy’s wing. The squadron CO was an immediate target for the swarming “Zeroes” and soon went down in flames. According to the authors of A Glorious Page In Our History, Tweedy “maintained his position on Henderson’s wing until the end, and Zeroes shot him down, too.”
Tweedy’s Dauntless (SBD-2 #2103) failed to return from the HiryÅ« strike; he and Sergeant Raymond were officially declared dead on 5 June 1943.
Burial Information or Disposition
Shot down at sea; remains not recovered.
Memorials
Honolulu Memorial, Tablets Of The Missing
High Street Cemetery, Hingham, Massachusetts
Lieutenant Tweedy was the namesake of the John C. Butler-class destroyer escort USS Tweedy (DE-532).
Next Of Kin Address
Address of father, Mr. Albert Tweedy Sr.
Location Of Loss
Tweedy was shot down at an unspecified point after departing from Midway.