LT. GEORGE WELCH'S "WHITE 160" P-40B TOMAHAWK - PEARL HARBOR
ULTIMATE SOLDIER 1:18 SCALE AIRCRAFT
Special Edition P-40 revealed!
1st Century Toys, Inc. announces the Special Edition Release of the 1:18 Scale P-40B Tomahawks of 2nd Lieutenants George Welch and Ken Taylor of the 47th Fighter Squadron. Stationed at the Haleiwa Airfield near Pearl Harbor – Hawaii, Welch and Taylor were two of the few pilots that got their aircraft airborne and engaged the Japanese during the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor on the morning of December 7th 1941. This model is loaded with the fantastic details you have come to expect from 21st Century Toys including authentic paint schemes and detailed cockpits and comes in their own Special Edition box.
INFO: MOLDED
PLASTIC, 2nd Lt. George
Welch - 47th Fighter Squadron “White 160
SCALE: 1:18
WING SPAN: 0.0 INCHES
Item Number: CEN_10163S4A Price: $54.95
December
7, 1941....By Roy Sutherland
At exactly 7:55 in the morning of Sunday December 7, 1941, the US Naval Base at
Pearl Harbor was attacked without warning by aircraft of the Japanese Navy,
dragging the United States (who had remained uncommitted up to this point) into
World War II.
At that moment, two young Army Air Corps 2nd Lieutenants, George
Welch and Ken Taylor of the 47th Fighter Squadron, were leaving an
all-night party at Wheeler Field, the center for fighter operations in Hawaii.
Just ten miles to the south, the Imperial Japanese Navy had launched a
meticulously planned attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor.
As the two pilots walked past a field of newly delivered P-40B Tomahawks (which
were parked wingtip to wingtip to deter sabotage attempts), unfamiliar airplanes
suddenly filled the skies. Japanese D3A Vals and A6M2 Zeros strafed and bombed
the parked aircraft and buildings, leaving flaming wreckage in their path.
Driving their car to Haleiwa Air Field at speeds approaching 100 mph, Welch and
Taylor survived 3 separate strafing attacks. Without any clearance or knowledge
of the enemy situation, they took off with only their .30-caliber guns loaded,
and attacked a formation of Val dive-bombers. Welch shot down an enemy aircraft,
and Taylor also claimed one. With Welch's P-40 already struck by enemy fire,
both pilots turned toward Pearl Harbor. Welch, who’s
Tomahawk was now down to one working gun, overtook another Val and sent it down
in flames.
Low on ammunition and fuel, the two landed at Wheeler Field to rearm. As they
prepared to take off a second time, a wave of Vals escorted by Zeros swept
toward them. Launching directly into the enemy formation, Welch quickly shot
down two more aircraft. Taylor wound up with a Zero on his tail. Welch chased it
off, but not before Taylor was hit in the arm by an enemy bullet. Both returned
safely to base.
By the time the Japanese aircraft departed for their carriers, the Pacific Fleet
was in ruins. Most of the US military aircraft at Wheeler Field had been
destroyed. Luckily, the three American Pacific Fleet Carriers were not in port
at the time of the attack.
These two courageous young airmen will be remembered as the first US Army Air
Corps pilots to shoot down enemy planes in the Pacific War, and as two of the
great heroes of Pearl Harbor. The next four years would be marked by the same
courage, skill, and determination displayed by so many untested American pilots
during our country's first hours in World War II.