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Recovery1
01-03-03, 08:39 PM
Joe Foss, 87, Flying Ace Who Led Football League, Is Dead
By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, NY Times


Joe Foss, a Medal of Honor winner as a Marine fighter pilot in World War II who was a two-term governor of South Dakota, commissioner of the upstart American Football League and head of the National Rifle Association, died yesterday at a hospital in Arizona. Mr. Foss, who lived in Scottsdale, was 87.

A cigar-chomping curly haired six-foot captain who looked like his friend John Wayne, Mr. Foss inspired the nation as a wartime ace.

Flying a Wildcat that was slower than the vaunted Japanese Zeros, he shot down 26 fighters and bombers in the battle for Guadalcanal from October 1942 to January 1943. With his 26th "kill," he became the first American pilot of World War II to equal Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker's record in World War I.

Captain Foss was brought home in the spring of 1943 to receive the Medal of Honor from President Franklin D. Roosevelt and to go on a national tour to sell war bonds, spur military recruiting and inspire workers in war plants. Thrilling an America still reeling from Pearl Harbor, Captain Foss was pictured in his dress uniform on the cover of Life on June 7, 1943, described as "America's No. 1 Ace."

Joseph Jacob Foss was born on April 17, 1915, on a farm near Sioux Falls, S.D. When he was 12, he visited a tiny airport near his home to see Charles A. Lindbergh, who was taking his Spirit of St. Louis on a national tour after flying to Paris. The boy envisioned soaring through the skies himself one day.

Four years later, he went up in a plane for the first time, a $1.50 sightseeing ride in a Ford Tri-Motor. After watching a Marine aerial team perform acrobatics in open-cockpit biplanes, he was convinced that the aviator's life was for him.

But a month before Joe's 18th birthday, his father was electrocuted by a downed power line in a lightning storm. The teenager had to help his mother and his brother, Cliff, work the farm while the dust storms of the Depression piled sand knee high. Working at odd jobs, he managed to afford occasional flying lessons and, at 25, graduated from the University of South Dakota with a bachelor's in business administration.

Seeing a chance to fly at government expense, he joined the Marines and won his wings in March 1941, nine months before the United States entered the war. On Oct. 9, 1942, he landed his Wildcat on Guadalcanal at the southern end of the Solomons, the setting for the first American land offensive in the Pacific.

The First Marine Division had gone ashore on Aug. 7, 1942, to seize a partly completed airstrip that was later renamed Henderson Field. In October, the marines were hanging on to the strip in the face of fierce Japanese efforts to retake the island and use it as a staging point to attack Australia, 1,600 miles to the south.

Flying out of Henderson Field over the next three months, Captain Foss and his fliers, a band known as Joe's Flying Circus for its acrobatic maneuvers, played a major role in defending Guadalcanal.

Early in November, while Captain Foss was strafing Japanese ships 150 miles north of Guadalcanal, machine-gun fire from a Japanese plane pierced his engine and shattered his canopy, narrowly missing the aviator's head. When the engine quit, Captain Foss ditched the plane in the ocean. It quickly sank. He freed himself and struggled in his life jacket for five hours in a rainstorm while sharks circled him. Finally, members of a Catholic mission from the island of Malaita, who were paddling by in canoes, rescued him.

On Jan. 15, 1943, Captain Foss downed his 26th plane. Ten days later, he was credited with a feat that may have saved Henderson Field.

A large force of Japanese bombers and fighters approached Guadalcanal, hoping to obliterate the airstrip. Captain Foss and his 11 pilots went up to engage them. He quickly realized that the enemy fighters were seeking to lure them into a confrontation while the bombers slipped through. Instead of battling the fighters, the Americans maneuvered nearby without attacking. Soon, the Japanese began to run out of fuel. Fearing that Captain Foss's group was a decoy for other Americans hidden in the clouds, the Japanese returned to their bases on Bougainville and Munda, leaving Henderson Field untouched. It never again came under a sustained attack.

In April 1943, stricken with malaria, Captain Foss went home. At a White House ceremony, President Roosevelt gave him the Medal of Honor, citing "outstanding heroism and courage" on his many missions to defend Guadalcanal. He also received the Silver Star, Bronze Star and a Purple Heart.

After the war, he rejected several offers from big business. "I didn't want to be a dancing bear," Time quoted him as saying in 1955.

He returned to Sioux Falls, where he and a friend ran the Joe Foss Flying Service, building it into a venture with 35 airplanes. He also organized the South Dakota Air National Guard and commanded a squadron.

When the Korean War broke out, the Marines recalled him, and he was a colonel who directed training.

He was elected to the South Dakota Legislature as a Republican in 1948. Six years later, at 39, he was elected the youngest governor in the history of the state. After serving two two-year terms, he ran for Congress against George McGovern, the future Democratic presidential nominee, who was seeking a second term in the House of Representatives. Mr. McGovern, also a highly decorated pilot in the war, defeated him.

In November 1959, the club owners forming the American Football League selected Mr. Foss as commissioner, hoping that his contacts in Washington could help them in an anticipated struggle with the long-established National Football League. Even though his football experience had been limited to benchwarming as a guard for the University of South Dakota, he accepted.

Under Mr. Foss, the A.F.L., out of necessity, divided broadcast revenues evenly among the teams. One move he made for the league was signing a five-year $10.6 million television contract with ABC in 1960 that included his pioneering idea.

As commissioner, Mr. Foss indulged his lifelong passion for hunting and fishing as host of "The American Sportsman" on ABC. He was criticized by some A.F.L. club owners who said he spent too much time filming his outdoors shows and flying as a brigadier general in the Air National Guard.

Mr. Foss, who advocated an association with the N.F.L. under a single commissioner while hoping to keep the leagues' identities separate, resigned as A.F.L. commissioner on April 17, 1966. Less than two months later, the league announced plans to merge with the N.F.L. in 1970.

Mr. Foss turned to television again, appearing on his syndicated series "The Outdoorsman: Joe Foss" from 1966 to 1974. The programs drew barbs from environmentalists and advocates of animal rights.

Much more controversy arrived when Mr. Foss was president of the National Rifle Association from 1988 to 1990.

On Jan. 29, 1990, he appeared once more on the cover of a national magazine, Time, which showed him with a pistol in his hand.

"I say all guns are good guns," he told Time for its article on gun control. "There are no bad guns. I say the whole nation should be an armed nation. Period."

Mr. Foss is survived by his second wife, Didi; a son, Frank, of Mankato, Minn.; a daughter, Mary Joe Finke of Billings, Mont.; a stepson, H. Dean Hall, and a stepdaughter, Coni Foss, both of Scottsdale; a sister, Flora Kanan of California, and six grandchildren. His marriage to his first wife, June, ended in divorce.

In the late 1990's, Mr. Foss was honored far from the spotlight when he appeared at a tribute to American heroes at a school near his home in Arizona.

"Well, I got there and I was the only living hero," Mr. Foss told Tom Brokaw in "The Greatest Generation" (Random House, 1998). "All the rest were George Washington and those guys. But at least the school was studying history and thinking about heroes."

__________________

thedrifter
01-12-03, 07:42 AM
http://www.arizonarepublic.com/news/gifs/breaking/covfoss.jpg

2,000 bid farewell

The Arizona Republic

Gen. William L. Nyland, the Assistant Commandant of the Marines consoles Dede Foss, widow of Joe Foss.

By Kristina Davis
The Arizona Republic
Jan. 10, 2003


Joe Foss wasn't just a member of the "greatest generation," he was one of its greatest heroes.



In a generation that prided itself on achievement, he achieved more than most.


Nearly 2,000 people came together Thursday at Scottsdale Bible Church for a farewell befitting a flying ace who dedicated his life to public service, his church and family.


Actor Charlton Heston, another member of Foss' generation, which is fading from the stage, gave a brief but powerful tribute to his friend despite limitations caused by symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.


Foss was also a mentor to NBC news anchorman Tom Brokaw, who said in videotaped remarks that Foss had the "aura of a hero but the openness of the guy next door."


Former first lady Barbara Bush sent her family's regards in a letter saying, "The whole Bush family thought the world of you."


The memorial service was full of military pomp and circumstance, including a flyover by F-16s in a missing-man formation.




Related link
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http://www.legacy.com/azcentral/LegacySubPage2.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonId=698863

But Foss wasn't just an ace pilot. He was also a former governor of South Dakota, first commissioner of the American Football League and a past president of the National Rifle Association, which Heston leads.


Cars with American flag decals and bumper stickers including "I'm the NRA and I vote" and "Proud to be an American" filled the parking lot.


Foss died Jan. 1 at 87 in Scottsdale after suffering an aneurysm in October.


Brokaw, a native of South Dakota, and Foss became friends in 1957 when Brokaw was 17. Foss, then governor of South Dakota, invited Brokaw, governor of Boy's State, to be his partner on a national quiz show, where they won $612 each.



Foss was a key inspiration behind Brokaw's 1998 book The Greatest Generation, about Americans who came of age during the Depression and World War II and helped shape the country.


When Heston walked to the podium, he got a standing ovation. It was a poignant moment and a show of respect for the actor and his struggle with early signs of Alzheimer's.


He bowed to the audience, then spoke briefly about his friend who had served two terms as NRA president.


"I've known no man of more honor than Joe Foss. I'll miss his smile, his passion and his friendship," he said, reading from text.


Bill Bright of Orlando, founder of Campus Crusade for Christ International, also videotaped his remarks.


"Joe Foss was the original John Wayne. John Wayne was an actor, but Joe is real," he said.


Mourners were told that Foss turned down a Hollywood offer to have Wayne play him in a movie because there was a love interest in the script.


Gen. William Nyland, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, bade a tearful goodbye to a man he had heard about for decades from when he was in officer's training in the Marines.


"I would later learn that there wasn't an aircraft in the world that could account for all the victories of Joe's life," he said of the 26 flags posted on Foss' fighter plane that symbolized the 26 planes he shot down in World War II.


"We will miss you. Your Corps will miss you," Nyland said, his voice cracking.


After a bagpipe bellowed a mournful Amazing Grace, a 21-gun salute exploded into the sky and F-16s thundered overhead.


Thursday was also officially declared Joe Foss Day, and state flags flew at half-staff.


In the end, Foss got the last word when he spoke to the mourners in an old videotape about his Christian faith.


"Each one of us is one breath away from leaving this great world of ours, and it's better to know where you're going," he said. "God bless you all and have another great day."


Sempers,

Roger

Gunny1957
06-06-11, 03:47 PM
albeit from the daughter of an old timer's daughter, my dad loved Foss' demeanor and was a tanker/refueler for Foss' plane at Guadalcanal.

Rooger
06-06-11, 04:33 PM
R.I.P. Joe, R.I.P. Patrol the sky's of heaven, and we'll guard the streets. :) I realize this post is VERY old but i just noticed it.

FistFu68
06-06-11, 05:49 PM
:beer: Heres Too You It will Be a Grand Reunion Someday S/F :thumbup: :iwo: