Eagle Biography
David Lee "Tex" Hill
Colonel David Lee "Tex" Hill was born on 13 July 1915 in Kwangju, Korea, the
son of American missionaries. He grew up in Texas, but returned to the Far East years
later as one of the first pilots in General Claire Chennault's American Volunteer Group
(AVG)--the original "Flying Tigers." He entered the Navy as an
aviation cadet in 1938 and earned his wings and commission upon graduation from Pensacola
NAS in 1939. He was assigned to Torpedo Squadron 3, flying the TBD Devastator
from the USS Saratoga, and then to Bombing Squadron 4, flying the SB2U
Vindicator from the USS Ranger. In 1941, he was recruited to serve in China
with the "Flying Tigers."
After a 6-week boat trip via Australia, the
Philippines, and Dutch East Indies, he arrived in Burma in the fall of 1941. Serving
first as a flight leader and then commander of the AVG's 2d Squadron, Hill flew a total
of 250 combat hours in the P-40B Tomahawk over Burma, China, and Thailand and was
credited with 12 1/4 Japanese aircraft destroyed. The AVG was disbanded in July 1942 and
Hill accepted a battlefield commission to major in the Army Air Force. He remained in
China until late 1942 as the first commander of the newly formed 75th Fighter Squadron.
After a short tour at Eglin Field, Florida, Chennault personally recalled him to China to
take command of the 23d Fighter Group.
He returned to the States in November 1944,
credited with 18 1/4 aerial victories and more than 20 probable victories. Hill spent the
rest of the war as commander of the 412th Fighter Group, operationally testing the first
American-built jets, the Bell YP-59 and the Lockheed P-80. He left the Army Air Force in
1945 and joined the Texas Air National Guard to command the newly formed 58th Fighter
Wing--becoming the youngest brigadier general ever to serve in the Guard. He later
resigned his commission and went to central Africa to trap gorillas for the movie "
Mighty Joe Young." Returning to the States, he joined the Air Force Reserve's 433d
Tactical Airlift Wing at Kelly AFB, Texas.
He retired in 1968 as a colonel after serving
his country in the Navy, American Volunteer Group, Army Air Force, Air Force, Air
National Guard, and Air Force Reserves. In addition to the Silver Star, three
Distinguished Flying Crosses, and two Air Medals earned in the Army Air Force, he earned
a British Distinguished Flying Cross and numerous awards and decorations from the Chinese
government. Hill is an active member of the Flying Tigers Association and the
American Fighter Aces Association. He lives with his wife, Mazie, in San Antonio, Texas.
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In 1941, before the United States entered World War II, a unique group of
American pilots, eager for combat, joined Claire Chennault's American
Volunteer Group. Flying obsolete P-40B Tomahawks for the Chinese
government, they repeatedly rose to meet superior Japanese armadas despite
acute shortages of fuel, spare parts, and ammunition. The "Flying
Tigers" never had more than 70 trained pilots or 49 aircraft in
commission at any one time, but they valiantly defended China from December
1941 until disbanded in July 1942. These outstanding airmen faced an enemy
that outnumbered them 10 to 1, but they compiled an incredible record of 299
enemy planes destroyed and another 153 probably destroyed--only 4 "
Flying Tigers" and 12 P-40s were lost in aerial combat!
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