Eagle Biography
William S. Harrell
As squadron commander, Bill Harrell flew on the first long-range, over-water flight in a
single-engine jet aircraft, the Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star. Harrell,
the son of a country doctor, was born during October 1920 in Pleasant Hill, Alabama. In
1938, after graduation from high school, he enrolled in the University of Alabama to
become a doctor. He also joined the Reserve Officer Training Corps and participated in
the Civilian Pilot Training Program.
He made his first flight in a Piper Cub.
As World War II escalated, Harrell joined the Army Air Corps in 1941 and began primary
flying school. He soloed in the Boeing PT-17 Kaydet, and then advanced to the
Vultee BT-13 "Vibrator." He earned his wings at Craig Field, Alabama, in the
North American T-6 Texan, and pinned on gold lieutenant bars. Shipped to India,
he was soon flying combat over Burma in the Curtis P-40 Warhawk as a member of
the 89th Fighter Squadron (FS). During 158 combat missions, protecting transports flying
the perilous "hump" from India to China, Harrell shot down two Japanese
aircraft. He also earned command of the squadron, and met his future wife, Marion
Johnson, a flight nurse also stationed in the theater.
In 1945, he returned to the
States and after graduation from Command and General Staff School in 1946, was sent to
the Pacific Air Command. From March 1946 to February 1948, Harrell commanded the 413th
FS, then the 67th FS, and finally the 16th FS. Next, while assigned as Chief, Flight
Test Unit, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, he attended Air Command and Staff College and
later enrolled in Ohio State University. From 1950 to 1953 at HQ USAF, he worked on the
acquisition of the McDonnell F-101 Voodoo; the first supersonic air defense
interceptor designed to carry an air-to-air nuclear rocket. In 1954, he went to England
to command the 406th Fighter Interceptor Group, U.S. Air Forces in Europe (USAFE).
Flying the North American F-86 Sabre, he twice led the USAFE "Rocket Team
" during the annual USAF fighter interceptor competition in Arizona.
After
graduating from Air War College in 1958, he served at HQ Western Air Defense Force,
Hamilton AFB, California, and in the early 1960s directed operations at the Beale AFB,
California, SAGE (Semi-Automatic Ground Environment) facility. Returning to Hamilton AFB
in 1962, he commanded the 78th Fighter Wing and flew the F-101. As a new brigadier
general, Harrell became Vice Commander, Tenth Air Force, in July 1966 and three years
later received his second star while serving as Deputy Chief of Staff, Materiel, HQ
Aerospace Defense Command. In 1973, Major General Harrell retired after commanding 24th
Air Division and returned home to Alabama with his wife, Marion.
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1999
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