[Thomas L. Hayes, Jr. oral history interview (Part 2 of 2)]


AFAA interview with Thomas L. Hayes Jr, Tape 2 of 2
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[Thomas L. Hayes, Jr. oral history interview (Part 2 of 2)]
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Title

[Thomas L. Hayes, Jr. oral history interview (Part 2 of 2)]

Description

In this two-part oral history, fighter ace Thomas L. Hayes, Jr. is interviewed about his military service with the United States Army Air Forces during World War II. In part two, he continues to describe the bomber escort mission to Berlin, Germany on March 6, 1944. He also touches briefly on his postwar career with the United States Air Force.

The interview is conducted via telephone by historian Eric M. Hammel. Note that the audio may be difficult to hear in some spots due to a buzzing noise caused by the phone recording.

Date

1992-02-19

Coverage

Extent

1 sound cassette (36 min., 47 sec.) : analog ; 4 x 2.5 in

Language

Rights

Bibliographic Citation

The American Fighter Aces Association Oral Interviews/The Museum of Flight

Identifier

2002-02-13_AV_098_01
2002-02-13_AV_098_01_transcription

Interviewee

Interviewer

Biographical Text

Thomas L. Hayes, Jr. was born on March 13, 1917 in Portland, Oregon. He joined the United States Army Air Corps in 1940 and graduated from flight training the following year. Initially assigned to the 35th Pursuit Group, Hayes served in Australia, Java, and New Guinea until October 1942, when he returned to the United States to help train new pilots. In 1943, he joined the 357th Fighter Group as commander of the 364th Fighter Squadron, based in England. He was later promoted to deputy group commander and joined the group headquarters staff. Remaining in the military after the air, Hayes’s postwar assignments include commanding the 65th and 86th Air Divisions and serving at the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) headquarters. He retired as a brigadier general in 1970 and passed away in 2008.

Note

This recording is presented in its original, unedited form. Please note that some interviews in this collection may contain adult language, racial slurs, and/or graphic descriptions of wartime violence.