NAME William Cleveland Hayter |
NICKNAME — |
SERVICE NUMBER O-7537 |
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UNIT VMSB-131 Pilot |
HOME OF RECORD 2914 East 6th Street, Long Beach, CA |
NEXT OF KIN Parents, Cleveland & Nellie Hayter |
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DATE OF BIRTH February 21, 1919 in Conway, TX |
ENTERED SERVICE September 18, 1941 (commission) |
DATE OF LOSS April 8, 1943 |
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REGION Solomon Islands |
CAMPAIGN / AREA Russell Island Group |
CASUALTY TYPE Missing In Action Declared Dead April 9, 1945 |
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CIRCUMSTANCES OF LOSS Captain William C. Hayter was a Marine pilot assigned to VMSB-131, a torpedo bomber squadron operating out of Henderson Field, Guadalcanal. On 8 April 1943, Captain Hayter led six of the squadron’s planes in a strike against Kahili, Bougainville. The Avengers ran into a fierce storm and never reached the target. Only one bomber returned to Guadalcanal – the rest, including Captain Hayter’s TBF-1 47545, disappeared. Rescue operations located three survivors stranded in the Russell Islands. William Hayter was not among them; he was declared dead as of 9 April 1945. |
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INDIVIDUAL DECORATIONS Distinguished Flying Cross, Purple Heart |
LAST KNOWN RANK Captain posthumous Major |
STATUS OF REMAINS Not recovered. |
MEMORIALS Archer City Cemetery, Archer County, TX Manila American Cemetery |
Biography:
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April 8 1943
Six planes take off at 0200 along with other TBFs from Navy squadrons to bomb Kahili Airfield. The weather report received was not too good and the Black Cats on the weather hops reported very bad flying conditions. Someone slipped up as the flight was ordered out anyhow. Capt. Richey became separated from the other five planes in the flight and returned hours after experiencing considerable difficulty in locating the field. Our other five planes did not return and were listed as missing. Out of the eighteen Navy plans participating in this attack, four were unable to take off, seven became lost and returned early, while five reached the target, dropping on what they thought to be the field, and two did not return. VMSB-131 has been hard hit and we were a dejected lot when there were no reports whatsoever of our pilots and gunners. Searches were immediately started with our TBFs and the other outfits cooperated also giving good coverage of the entire area. All searches were negative.– excerpt from the war diary of VMSB-131, April 1943.
Articles & Records:
Wow. He was my great uncle. There’s more information here than I’ve ever seen anywhere else. Thank you.