Eagle Biography
Scott McCuskey
US Navy Captain Scott McCuskey is a World War II ace credited with 13 1/2 aerial
victories during combat in the Battles of the Coral Sea, Midway, and the Philippine Sea.
Born in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1915, he attended the Universities of Alabama and
Arkansas before entering Naval Flight School at Pensacola, Florida, in 1938. He earned
his wings and commission as an ensign in the Navy in October 1939. McCuskey's first
operational assignment was Scouting Squadron VS-41. The unit transitioned to the F4F-3
Wildcat and became VF-42.
His first sea duty was aboard the carrier USS
Yorktown on convoy escort and neutrality patrol duties. The routine quickly changed
after 7 December 1941. The Yorktown was reassigned to the Pacific and the men of VF-42
readied themselves and their aircraft for the action to come. McCuskey first tasted
combat on 1 February 1942 when he and his wingman, Johnny Adams, downed a Kawanishi Type
97 Flying Boat off the Marshall islands--it was the first aerial victory for both
Fighting 42 and the Yorktown. In May 1942, during the Battle of the Coral Sea, and in
June 1942, during the Battle of Midway, McCuskey added six more victories and three
probables to his record before returning stateside.
Until mid-1943, he instructed and
extensively studied aerial combat tactics with the Advanced Carrier Training Group at
Norfolk, Virginia, and the Army Air Force. He helped develop aerial team tactics to
counter the Japanese Zero and also tested the "G" suit and other
anti-blackout equipment. Volunteering for combat again, he joined VF-8 in June 1943 and
took with him a vast store of knowledge, which he passed on as the squadron's tactical
officer. VF-8 was the first Navy unit to use the "G" suit in combat. VF-8,
flying F6F Hellcats from the attack carrier USS Bunker Hill, achieved much
success during the island-hopping campaign across the central Pacific in 1944.
Following
the war, McCuskey served as a strategic and aviation planner in Washington, D.C., and,
during 1949-50, was personal aide to the Vice Chief of Naval Operations. Later he
commanded an anti-submarine squadron and served as Operations Officer aboard the attack
carrier USS Hornet. Captain McCuskey is a graduate of the Air War College and
the Industrial College of the Armed Forces (ICAF), having served on the staff of Air
University and the faculty of ICAF. Retired from the Navy in 1965, he earned his Ed.D.
and served as Professor of Economics at St Petersburg Junior College until 1980.
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1987
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At 0915 on 8 May 1942, Scott McCuskey launched from the Yorktown in
an F4F-3 Wildcat with "Fighting 42" to escort the Douglas
TBD Devastators of Torpedo Squadron VT-5. The targets were the
Japanese carriers, Shokaku and Zuikaku, the backbone of a striking force
charged with destroying Allied forces on New Guinea. Four enemy fighters
attacked McCuskey. During the fray, he scored one victory and diverted the
enemy fighters from attacks on the TBDs. Earlier, during a raid on Tulagi in
the Solomon Islands, McCuskey had successfully attacked a destroyer. These
actions earned McCuskey the Navy Cross and helped to turn the tide toward
Allied victory in the Pacific.
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