Last WWII ace, 103, dead August 14

McPherson in an F-6 Hellcat 27 September 2024KARE-11
Our last WWII ace pilot has left us.
Donald McPherson served as a Navy fighter pilot aboard the aircraft carrier USS Essex in the Pacific theater, where he engaged Japanese forces during the final years of the war. He earned the Congressional Gold Medal and three Distinguished Flying Crosses for his service.
McPherson was listed as the conflict’s last living U.S. ace by both the American Fighter Aces Association and the Fagen Fighters WWII Museum. He was honored at the museum’s Victory at Sea event last weekend in Minnesota. To be considered an ace, a pilot has to shoot down five or more enemy planes.
McPherson enlisted in the Navy in 1942 when he was 18. Trainees weren’t allowed to marry, so he and his wife Thelma tied the knot right after he completed the 18-month flight program in 1944. He flew F6F Hellcat fighters against the Japanese as part of fighter squadron VF–83.
Wasn’t all peaches and cream.
He recounted one mission where he shot down two Japanese planes after he noticed them low near the water on a converging course. In a video the Fagen museum played in his honor, McPherson described how he shoved his plane’s nose down and fired on the first aircraft, sending that pilot into the ocean.
“But then I did a wingover to see what happened to the second one. By using full throttle, my Hellcat responded well, and I squeezed the trigger and it exploded,” McPherson said. “Then I turned and did a lot of violent maneuvering to try to get out of there without getting shot down.”
When he returned to the aircraft carrier, another sailor pointed out a bullet hole in the plane about a foot behind where he was sitting. His daughter, Donna Mulder, said her father told her that experiences like that during the war gave him the sense that “Maybe God is not done with me.”
Looks like He wanted him around another 80 years.
So after he returned home to the family farm in Adams, Nebraska, he dedicated himself to giving back by helping start baseball and softball leagues for the kids in town and serving as a Scoutmaster and in leadership roles in the Adams United Methodist Church, American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars.
The community later named the ballfield McPherson Field in honor of Donald and his wife, Thelma, who often kept score and ran the concession stand during games. AP
Won’t see that any more – the ball field get named after the biggest financial endowers now. But, another reason – there are few living aces of any stripe.
Most of the older aces flew solo (rather than with a back-seater – sorry, Ed, didn’t mean to get your Goose with that) none are exactly young considering the Vietnam War ended air operations over 50 years ago.
Category: Navy, We Remember, WWII





“Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth……..
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God”
Fly high, pilot, and Rest In Peace.
(slow salute)
Three years at war and 100 years living his best life till the end, serving others and farming. We should all be so blessed. May the gates of heaven open wide for him.
Dude was like…thankfully i was swerving!
“When he returned to the aircraft carrier, another sailor pointed out a bullet hole in the plane about a foot behind where he was sitting.”
Death came to take him at 104, because any earlier and the ace would’ve shot him down easily. Fly High Donald, you soar with Angels 6 now.
Hardcore.
Rest well, Mr. McPherson.
Gonna take 12 pallbearers to carry Mr. McPherson for obvious reasons. Godspeed, Sir!
Either
A. Because of his gigantic brass ones
B. He’s twice the man than most of us could ever hope to be
C. All the Above
Fair skies and tailwinds forever Sir. Thank you for our freedom.
It is so saddening to know that one by one we are losing the stories of these men and women who served in ways is younguns’ can’t even imagine. The lives they’ve lived, wow. It is good to know that men such as these lived.
Rest well.
Rest In Peace, Sir
KARE-11 is our local “News” station that actually does good stories like this one.
That was a nice tribute to an old warrior.
May he have clear skies and smooth flying forever more.
*Slow Salute*
Rest In Peace Sir, you’ve earned your place in History and Valhalla.