HomeVisitor StoriesKoga’s Zero – by Jim Rearden

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Koga’s Zero – by Jim Rearden — 10 Comments

  1. I am trying to contact Jim Reardon. My Grand father, Capt. Claude Brown, transported Koga’s zero on the ship SS. Pennsylvanis from Seattle to San Pedro.

    I Have spoken to Mr. Reardon years ago but have lost contact information.

    Blessings,
    Claudia Aposhian, Simi Valley, CA.

    • Claudia:

      It’s always a surprise when someone finds my blog, especially with something so fascinating as your father’s connection to such an historic event of WWII.

      I’ve been unable to find any contact information for Mr. Rearden. A Google search (which you may have already done) uncovered multiple links and a nice article in the local newspaper in Homer Alaska where was living in April of 2010. He was in his mid-80’s at that time. It may be that he keeps personal contact information private. I don’t have any of his books, so I don’t know if any of the recent ones would include links to a website, if he has one, and my guess is that he doesn’t. You might try Epicenter Press, box 82368, Kenmore WA, 98028, 800-950-6663, epicenterpress.com. They might be willing to pass on your contact info to him. I’m sorry that I can’t be of more assistance.

      If you are able to contact him and would be willing to share, I’d love to hear about it.

      Tosh

      • Thank you Tosh.

        I actually did find my old contact number after I posted my request. All is well.
        Blessings to you and your efforts to share the history of America and aviation

        Claudia Aposhian

  2. My grandfather was on location too. I remember years ago I sat and listened to his recount of the story. So refreshing to find the story and find the same little details that I remember listening to many years ago. Now I am just looking for photos to maybe find my grandfather. Nothing confirmed yet, however there is one that has some promise.

    • Clayton:

      Thanks for visiting the site and taking the time to comment. Even though the power of the Internet to connect people is an accepted part of modern life, it still never ceases to amaze me.

      I became aware of Mr. Rearden’s article about a wartime incident I’d never heard of and re-published it on the site primarily out of historical interest in WWII aviation. I have no family connection to individuals directly involved so many years ago, but the underlying significance of capturing an enemy aircraft and using it to develop tactics for defeating it in combat strikes very close to my personal experience. We used captured Migs to explore the strengths and weaknesses of our adversaries during the Vietnam War and developed the concept of “aggressor” squadrons to train American fighter pilots.

      I never anticipated that someone with family ties to participants in the recovery of Koga’s Zero would end up on the site to comment. You might be interested to know that this is one of the most popular posts I’ve ever published. It continues to attract a steady stream of visitors, as well it should. Mr Rearden is considered to be an Alaskan “treasure,” and I am honored to pay tribute to him here.

  3. I really enjoyed this article and being originally from Alaska I shared it with my long-time friends. They were troubled that prior to Koga’s crash, his flight had reportedly strafed survivors of a PBY they had shot down. Is there any way that I can corroborate the attack on the PBY? I kind of saw Koga as a young victim of war. Of course thinking of him strafing people in a raft changes my perhaps naive first impression.

    Thanks for posting this article. I have a couple of personal brushes with it. My mother worked with Jim Reardon at Alaska Magazine and he was always very nice to me and seemed like a true, hard-boiled journalist. I know my mother thought a great deal of him. Also, my father flew P-40s in China with the 14th Air Force.

    • Eric:

      Thank you so much for visiting the site. You have commented on what might be one of my all-time favorite posts.

      As an ex-fighter pilot with two combat tours in Vietnam and understanding from personal experience how difficult it is to train adequately to engage an enemy fighter, the fact that this airplane revealed to US pilots the key limitation of the Zero and thereby saved many lives makes it all that much more fascinating.

      You are the second visitor with direct connections to Mr. Rearden or the Zero. The first person contacted me about an error she had found in the original accounts, stating that her grandfather had been the commander of the Naval vessel that transported the crated Zero for part of the journey from the Aleutians to California.

      I’ve not read anything about the attack on the PBY. It wouldn’t surprise me in the least based on historical accounts of the War in the Pacific, however. (Added: Since posting this reply, I have refreshed my memory of Rearden’s account and other historical evidence indicating that the details of what happened on June 3 and 4, 1942 will forever remain clouded in mystery. Selective memory and the fog of war have created conflicting reports. My conclusion is that whether or not strafing survivors in the water occurred in this instance, such acts were common enough to be indicative of the Japanese military’s pervasive attitude toward any defeated enemy combatant.)

      Here’s a comment from another visitor regarding my as yet uncompleted series on beautiful aviation art: “My watchcap is off to these gallant airmen and their crews, however, once again the crews of the lowly PBY Black Cats are left out of the story. Those men flew into the teeth of the Japanese war machine with a lumbering flying boat painted black as their main defense. They sunk millions of tons of war provisions during the night, then spent the day rescuing downed aviators. They were crucial in early warning at Midway, and other battles. I doubt if the men whose lives were saved by ‘Dumbo’ and the Marines who fought starved-out Japanese soldiers would consider the PBY incidental to the war effort. Let’s give these men and crews their due. J.L. Reeves, proud son of Lt. Cdr. Columbus DeMerville Reeves II, VPB-33” This from jim_reeves@yahoo.com. I don’t know if that’s still a valid email address, but you might consider touching base with him about the PBY strafing. My guess is that he’s pretty knowledgeable about the PBY story of WWII.

  4. My father Harold L. Loth Sr. was a Marine stationed in Dutch Harbor during the raid. He told me about the event many years ago when I was a child (I am 53 now). He was part of the patrol that went out to find and recover the Zero, I believe he was a Sargent at the time. The thing I remember most was that the plane was found upside down with the Pilot still strapped in the Cockpit. I never really thought of the story much until I saw a brief TV show about the incedent a few years ago. Thank you for the information, I wish my Father was still alive to contribute more details of the event.

    • Harold, thank you for visiting my site and leaving your comment about a personal connection to this story. As one of the “greatest generation,” your father deserves the lasting gratitude and respect of freedom-loving peoples everywhere.

      History is replete with small examples of luck, circumstance, and coincidence with far-reaching consequences. If a lucky round from ground fire had not damaged the Zero’s oil line; if Ensign Koga had not tried to land on the island but ditched the airplane at sea; if Koga had been able to tell that he wasn’t making an emergency landing in a grassy field but in water and not flipped upside down; if his wingmen had not failed to follow standard procedure to strafe the Zero to destroy it because they thought Koga might still be alive in the cockpit, if the PBY co-pilot had not caught a glimpse through the undercast of what he thought was the wing of an airplane with the Japanese “meatball” on it; if US forces hadn’t followed up on the report to confirm that there indeed was a Japanese warplane on the island; and if your father and that patrol had not gone out there to begin the process of retrieving it, many more American airmen would have died in aerial combat with the Zero.

      Of such things as this, history is made and becomes part of the legacy of bravery and sacrifice of so many at a time when the world faced the abominable scourge of the Axis powers.

      Thanks again,

      Tosh

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