Jack Eugene Spaulding 1925-200
Jack Eugene Spaulding was born Decemberr 8, 1925 at Fort Smith, Sebastian Co., Ar.
to John Edgar & Ludie Clarenda Fry Spaulding. August 30, 1947 he
married Ora Lee Ray at Fort Smith, Arkansas, both being residents there. June 11,
1962 they divorced at Crawford Co., Arkansas. She is listed on his Find A Grave
site as spouse.
No draft card or enlistment record has been found for Jack but many Navy muster rolls
have as well as his headstone in the National Cemetery at Fort Smith.
The musters are at the bottom of this page. It appears he served on the USS Makin
Island hia full enlistment time in the Navy. A photo and history of activity
during Jack's time there is below.
Jack Eugene Spaulding passed away January 4, 2008 at Fort Smith, Sebastian Co.,
Ar. His burial was in the Natonal Cemetery there.
Following commissioning, USS Marcus Island underwent outfitting at Astoria, Oregon. On 31 May, she left, bound for Puget Sound, where munitions
were loaded, and tests were conducted. On 8 June, she departed, traveling down to Naval Base San Diego, stopping at Naval Air Station Alameda
to load more munitions and to refuel. Upon arriving in San Diego, she underwent a brief shakedown cruise, engaging in exercises off of Baja
California. On 19 June, she set off on a transport mission, ferrying 78 aircraft and 236 men to Hawaii. After unloading her cargo in Pearl
Harbor, she took on 70 aircraft, along with a marine squadron (VMO-155). She then proceeded onwards to Majuro Atoll, where she unloaded her
planes. After leaving, she made stops at Kwajalein Atoll and Roi-Namur, where she took on wounded from the ongoing Battle of Saipan. She then
returned to Pearl Harbor, where she loaded onboard Air Group 16, which had been recently detached from Lexington. After returning her aircraft
cargo to San Diego, she sailed to Long Beach Naval Shipyard, where she underwent overhaul.
After finishing overhaul, she took on her aircraft contingent (VC-84), and on 16 August, she began exercises along the California coast. Exercises
concluded on 5 September, with minor repairs being conducted until 11 September, when she sortied again for more exercises. She was assigned as
part of Carrier Division 29, along with Lunga Point, Bismarck Sea, and Salamaua. The task group engaged in simulated amphibious landings on San
Clemente Island. On 10 October, Rear Admiral Calvin T. Durgin took control over the escort carrier group, making Makin Island as his flagship.
On 16 October, her task group finished exercises, and traveled to the Ulithi Atoll, making stops at Pearl Harbor and Enewetak Atoll.
On 10 November, the ship got underway for Leyte, stopping at Kossol Roads. There, she protected convoys in transit to supply the ongoing\
Battle of Leyte. Notably, on 21 November, she opened fire on three Nakajima J1N "Irving" twin-engined bombers who flew near the carrier, albeit the
aircraft did not engage, and escaped. On 23 November, she was relieved by Carrier Division 27, and the task group sailed to Manus for the
forthcoming invasion of Luzon. On 27 November, she arrived at Seeadler Harbor, Manus Island, where supplies were loaded and preparations were
made. Between 16 December and 20 December, she left port to engage in exercises with Huon Gulf.
She left Manus island on 27 December, and she rendezvoused with the invasion force in Surigao Strait, Leyte on 3 January 1945. The fleet assembled
for the invasion of Luzon was immense, consisting of 18 escort carriers, 6 battleships, 4 heavy cruisers, and a multitude of destroyers and
destroyer escorts. Almost immediately, the massive fleet was continuously harassed by Japanese kamikaze attacks. On the night of 3 January, a
Mitsubishi A6M Zero "Zeke" dove on the escort carriers, plunging into the ocean approximately 500 yd (460 m) from the starboard of Makin Island.
On the afternoon of 4 January, the task force once again came under kamikaze attacks, which sunk Ommaney Bay. On the early morning of 5 January,
a Japanese plane flew a scant 300 ft (91 m) over the carrier. Later that day, her aircraft supplemented a strike force which sunk Momi and
heavily
damaged Hinoki. That same day, in the evening, kamikazes damaged Louisville, Arunta, and Manila Bay. Makin Island arrived unscathed near
Luzon on
6 January. For the next 11 days, she remained off of Luzon flying air support for the amphibious operation. Notably, Salamaua was heavily damaged
by a kamikaze on 13 January. On 17 January, the escort carriers withdrew, heading back to Ulithi. During the three-week operation, the only fatality
onboard Makin Island was a sailor on the flight deck, who died when a 3.5-inch rocket on an Avenger accidentally discharged, launching him off
the carrier. A resulting search proved unsuccessful. This was despite the fact 16 of her own aircraft were destroyed through anti-aircraft
fire and accidents. Her air group destroyed 10 Japanese aircraft, and her anti-aircraft guns claimed a kamikaze heading towards the task force.
After the Battle of Luzon, the aircraft carriers only had 18 days to prepare for the Invasion of Iwo Jima. On 10 February, she departed Ulithi
for Iwo Jima, where she arrived on 16 February 1945. Her escort carrier task group conducted 3,000 sorties over the Iwo Islands until 8 March,
conducting aerial reconnaissance, providing close air support, creating a fighter cover, and patrolling against submarines. On 28 February, her
fighters were even used to spray down the island with DDT to control a boom in the population of flies on the island. Notably, her fighters
intercepted two Japanese troop transports carrying reinforcements to Iwo Jima, which were promptly strafed and sunk. The carrier group yet again
came under heavy Japanese kamikaze attacks, but Makin Island was once again unscathed, although Bismarck Sea was sunk, and Saratoga heavily damaged.
Despite the intense air support, the only casualty onboard Makin Island was a wounded airman. After replenishing at Ulithi, she sailed for Okinawa,
again as flagship. On 8 March, she retired to Ulithi in preparations for the Battle of Okinawa.
Arriving at Ulithi on 11 March, the ship was quickly readied, and launched for Okinawa on 21 March. Arriving on 25 March, Makin Island remained on
station for 77 days (69 days directly off the coast of Okinawa), flying constant fire support, supply, and reconnaissance missions for the ground
forces. The ship's aircraft, from Composite Squadrons 84 and 91 (VC-84 and -91), flew 2,347 combat sorties, recording almost 8,000 hours of flying
time. Relieved 1 June, the carrier sailed for Guam, arriving on 5 June. Whilst in availability on Guam, Vice Admiral Ira Earl Hobbs relieved now
Rear Admiral Whaley from command. In addition, her aircraft contingent was rotated, with VC-41 being transferred onto the ship.
She sailed again 11 July, with Task Group 32.1, into the East China Sea. The task group's goal was to provide air cover for minesweepers operating
in the area, to blockade Japanese troops within China from mainland Japan, to provide air cover for a fast cruiser group which was raiding the
Chinese coast, and to attack shipping around Shanghai. Upon a sweep of the Chinese coast, in which the task group encountered minimal resistance,
and after a brief bombing of Shanghai harbor, she anchored in Buckner Bay, Okinawa, on 13 August. There, she received news of the Japanese
surrender, and on 9 September proceeded to Wakanoura Wan, in southern Honshū, for occupation duty. Among her missions was providing air cover
for the evacuation of Allied prisoners of war. She sailed for San Francisco on 18 October, arriving on 5 November, then voyaged to Shanghai to
return troops (including the famous Flying Tigers) to the United States at Seattle on 30 December.
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