[James E. Swett oral history interview (Part 2 of 2)]


AFAA interview with James E. Swett, Tape 2 of 2
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[James E. Swett oral history interview (Part 2 of 2)]
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Title

[James E. Swett oral history interview (Part 2 of 2)]

Description

In this two-part oral history, fighter ace James E. Swett discusses his military service with the United States Marine Corps during World War II. In part two, he continues to describe his wartime experiences and provides clarifying details about a combat mission discussed in the previous interview. Topics discussed include his training history, his aerial victories on April 7, 1943, and his subsequent shoot-down.

The interview is conducted via telephone by historian Eric M. Hammel.

Date

1980s-1990s circa

Coverage

Extent

1 sound cassette (41 min., 15 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_172_01
2002-02-13_AV_172_01_transcription

Interviewee

Interviewer

Biographical Text

James E. Swett was born on June 15, 1920 in Seattle, Washington and grew up in California. He entered Navy flight training in 1941 and received his commission with the U.S. Marine Corps the following year. A member of Marine Fighting Squadron 221 (VMF-221), Swett served two combat tours in the Pacific Theater: one in the Solomon Islands and one stationed aboard the USS Bunker Hill (CV-17). On April 7, 1943, he scored seven aerial victories against a flight of Japanese dive bombers before being shot down himself. For his actions, he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Swett left active duty after the end of World War II but remained in the Marine Corps Reserve, retiring as a colonel in 1970. As a civilian, he worked in the family business as a manufacturer representative. Swett passed away in 2009.

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.