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Joseph Jacob "Joe" Foss (April 17, 1915–January 1, 2003) was the leading fighter ace of the United States Marine Corps during World War II, a 1943 recipient of the Medal of Honor, a General in the Air National Guard, the 20th Governor of South Dakota, and the first commissioner of the American Football League.
[edit] Early yearsBorn on a farm near Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Foss grew up in a farmhouse without electricity. When he was 12, he visited a local airfield in Renner to see Charles Lindbergh on tour with his aircraft, the Spirit of St. Louis. Four years later, he and his father paid $1.50 apiece to take their first aircraft ride. In 1933, upon the death of his father, young Foss took over the running of the family farm, but the crops and stock were destroyed by dust storms over the next two years. He worked at a service station to pay for books and college tuition, and flight lessons. While at the University of South Dakota, he joined the Sigma chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. [1] By 1940, armed with a pilot certificate and a degree in Business Administration, he enlisted in the Marine Reserves to join the Naval Aviation Cadet program in order to become a Naval Aviator. [edit] Military career[edit] World War II flying aceAfter being designated a Naval Aviator and commissioned as a second lieutenant, Foss served as an instructor at Pensacola, Florida and later attended the Navy School of Photography, at which time he was assigned to Marine Photographic Squadron 1 (VMO-1) which was stationed at Naval Air Station North Island in San Diego, California. Eager for combat, he qualified in Grumman F4F Wildcats while still assigned to VMO-1 and was eventually transferred to Marine Fighting Squadron 115 VMF-115 as the executive officer. In October 1942, VMF-115 was deployed to the South Pacific and became part of the Cactus Air Force in the Battle of Guadalcanal with Foss serving as the executive officer. On combat missions, he led a flight of eight Wildcats that became known as Foss's Flying Circus. He shot down a Japanese Zero in his first combat on October 13, but his own plane was hit and, with a dead engine and three more Zeros on his tail, he landed at full speed, no flaps and minimal control on the American runway at Guadalcanal, barely missing a grove of palm trees. [2] By the time Foss left Guadalcanal in January 1943, his Flying Circus had shot down 72 Japanese aircraft, including 26 credited to him. As America's "ace of aces", he received the Medal of Honor during a White House ceremony in 1943, and appeared on the cover of Life magazine. Even though all of Foss' 26 victories were gained as a Marine Corps aviator, the service continues to recognize Gregory Boyington as its leading ace. This is due to Boyington's wartime claims of 6 victories scored while serving with the American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers) prior to rejoining the Marine Corps, though the documented records prove otherwise (AVG records only show 2). (See Dr. Frank Olynyk, Stars and Bars: A Tribute to the American Fighter Ace, 1995). Currently, the Marines [3] credit Boyington with 28 victories: six with the AVG in China and 22 with the Marine Corps, the last two being unwitnessed. Boyington's total score recognized by the American Fighter Aces Association is 24: 2 with the AVG and 22 claimed with the Marine Corps. Boyington thus ranks behind Foss (26) and Robert M. Hanson (25). Foss returned to the Pacific in command of VMF-115 during 1944 but contracted malaria and was medically returned to the U.S. A postwar attempt to film a story of Foss's life, starring John Wayne, fell through when Foss refused to allow the producers to add a fictitious love story. [edit] Medal of Honor citationThe President of the United States takes pleasure in presenting the CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR to CAPTAIN JOSEPH J. FOSS for service as set forth in the following CITATION:
[edit] Air National GuardAfter the war, Foss capitalized on his name recognition by opening a charter flying service and flight instruction school. He later became a car salesman. He also helped organize the South Dakota Air National Guard, commanded the Guard's 175th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron as a lieutenant colonel, and eventually reached the rank of Brigadier General. During the Korean War, Foss, then a colonel, was called to active duty with the United States Air Force and served as a Director of Operations and Training for the Central Air Defense Command. [edit] Decorations
[edit] Political career
Foss served two elected terms in the South Dakota legislature and, beginning in 1955, as his state's Republican governor. During his tenure as governor, he accompanied Tom Brokaw, then a high school student and Governor of South Dakota Boys State, to New York City for a joint appearance on a television game show. Later, Brokaw would feature Foss prominently in his book about World War II veterans, The Greatest Generation. In 1958, Foss unsuccessfully sought a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, having been defeated by the Democrat George Stanley McGovern in a year particularly discouraging to Republicans nationwide. [edit] Later careerAfter his 1958 election loss, Foss became commissioner of the new American Football League in 1959. He oversaw the emergence of the league as the genesis of modern professional football, then stepped aside as commissioner in 1966, two months before the NFL agreed to merge with the AFL. Foss' many charities included the Easter Seals campaign, Campus Crusade for Christ, and an Arizona program for disadvantaged youths. Foss hosted ABC television's The American Sportsman from 1964 to 1967. He was succeeded in that position by Grits Gresham, an outdoors journalist from Natchitoches, Louisiana. Foss then hosted a syndicated program, The Outsdoorsman: Joe Foss from 1967 to 1974. He also served as President of the National Rifle Association from 1988 to 1990, and appeared on the cover of Time Magazine wearing a Stetson hat and holding a revolver. In 2000, Foss served as a consultant on the popular computer game 'Combat Flight Simulator 2' by Microsoft.[1] On January 11, 2002, Foss, then in his mid-80s, gained renewed fame when he was stopped at the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport because he was carrying his Medal of Honor (which has pointed edges), along with a clearly marked dummy-bullet keychain and a small knife (with MOH insignia) on his way to giving a speech to a class at the United States Military Academy at West Point.[2] The subsequent delay and lack of recognition of the award, together with his age, were used as an example of an alleged widespread abuse of passengers by airport security personnel pre TSA. The story later attained urban-legend status before it was held as true by snopes.com, a popular "last word" on such claims.[3] Foss coauthored or was the subject of three books including the wartime Joe Foss: Flying Marine (with Walter Simmons); Top Guns (with Matthew Brennan); and A Proud American by his wife, Donna Wild Foss. Foss also provided the foreword to Above and Beyond: the Aviation Medals of Honor by Barrett Tillman. Joe Foss died on New Year's Day 2003 following a severe stroke three months previously.[4] Foss was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Section 7A, Lot 162 on January 21, 2003.[5] His name and patriotic activities are perpetuated in the Foss Institute in Scottsdale, Arizona. He was also a member of the South Dakota Sigma Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity. [edit] See also
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Categories: 1915 births | 2003 deaths | Deaths from stroke | American aviators | American World War II flying aces | Burials at Arlington National Cemetery | Governors of South Dakota | Marine Corps Medal of Honor recipients | United States naval aviators | United States Air Force generals | Norwegian Americans | United States Marine Corps officers | Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United States) | People from Sioux Falls, South Dakota | American Football League contributors | South Dakota Republicans | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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