|
*GENERAL VERNON E.
MEGEE, USMC
General Vernon E. Megee,
aviator and combat veteran of World War II and Korea, who was a pioneer in the
development of close air support for ground combat operations, died 14 January
1992 in Albuquerque, New Mexico at the age of 91.
During the Korean Conflict,
the general commanded the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing from January to December
1953, receiving the Air Force Distinguished Service Medal in that capacity.
As a colonel during World
War II, General Megee saw action in the Iwo Jima, Okinawa and Western Carolines
operations. He earned the Legion of Merit with Combat "V" as commander
of Landing Force Air Support Control Unit One at Iwo Jima, and the Bronze Star
Medal with Combat "V" as commander of all the Marine landing force
air support control units at Okinawa.
On 19 June 1930, the
general, then a first lieutenant, earned the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for
commendatory achievement while flying as an observer and machine gunner in an
attack on a large force of rebel bandits in Nicaragua.
General Megee was born 5
January 1900, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and is a graduate of Oklahoma A&M
College. He enlisted in the Marine Corps 8 March 1919, and was commissioned a
second lieutenant 4 May 1922. After completing the Officers Basic Course, he
served first tour of expeditionary duty with the 1st Marine Brigade in Haiti,
from October 1923 to November 1925. He was then stationed with the 10th Marines
at Quantico, Virginia. He was promoted to first lieutenant in March 1926.
In April of the following
year, Lieutenant Megee was ordered to China for his second tour of
expeditionary duty. Returning from China in March 1928, he was assigned to
preliminary aviation training at the Naval Air Station, San Diego, California,
until January 1929. He then began another tour of expeditionary service as
Squadrons Quartermaster, Aircraft Squadrons, 2d Marine Brigade, in Nicaragua.
After earning the Navy and Marine Corps Medal there, he returned to the United
States to enter flight training at Pensacola, Florida, in January 1931.
Awarded his wings in
February 1932, Lieutenant Megee was next assigned to Aircraft Squadrons, West
Coast Expeditionary Forces at San Diego, where he remained until May 1933. The
following month he began a three-year tour of duty at Quantico as a student and
instructor in the Marine Corps Schools, then as Executive Officer of Marine Fighter
Squadron 9. He was promoted to captain in November 1934.
Captain Megee entered the
Air Corps Tactical School at Maxwell Field, Alabama, in August 1936. After
graduating in June 1937, he returned to Quantico for another two years as an
instructor in aviation tactics. He was promoted to major in August 1938. In
July 1939, the major took command of Marine Fighter Squadron 2, 2d Marine
Aircraft Group, with which he participated in fleet exercises the following
year.
In October 1940, Major
Megee was assigned to the U.S. Naval Aviation Mission to Peru as special
advisor to that government's Minister of Aviation. For his service in that
capacity during the next three years, he was awarded the Peruvian Aviation
Cross, First Class. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in January 1942, and
to colonel in December 1942. He returned to the United States in October 1943.
The following month Colonel
Megee reported to Cherry Point, North Carolina, as Chief of Staff of the 3d
Marine Aircraft Wing. He went overseas with that unit in May 1944. Assigned to
Aircraft, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, in October 1944, he was named commander
of the Provisional Air Support Command. After leading Control Unit One at Iwo
Jima, he became Chief of Staff, Air Support Control Units, Pacific Fleet, with
additional duty as Commander, Marine Air Support Control Units. He served in
that capacity until he returned to the United States in September 1945.
Reporting to Marine Corps
Headquarters that October, Colonel Megee was a member of the Joint Amphibious
Operations and Doctrines Committee until August 1946. He then served briefly as
an instructor at the National War College, Washington, D.C. He was promoted to
brigadier general in December 1946. Ordered to Norfolk, Virginia, the general
became Chief of Staff, Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic, the following month.
General Megee returned to
Washington in August 1949 to serve as Assistant Director of Marine Corps
Aviation until January 1950. That month he joined the Joint Staff, Department
of Defense. In August 1951, he was promoted to major general and named
commander of the Marine Corps Air Station and Marine Corps Air Bases, Cherry
Point, North Carolina.
The general remained there
until February 1952, then served for almost a year as Commanding General,
Aircraft, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, at El Toro, California. He took command
of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing in Korea in January 1953. The following
January, he reported to Pearl Harbor, where he served as Deputy Commander,
Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, until June 1955. A month later he was appointed
Commanding General, Aircraft, Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic, serving in that
capacity at Norfolk, until December 1955.
General Megee was promoted
to lieutenant general 1 January 1956. On the same date, he was appointed
Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps and Chief of Staff, Headquarters
Marine Corps. He was the first Marine aviator to serve in that capacity.
Following two years in this assignment, he moved to Honolulu, where he served
as Commanding General, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, from December 1957 until
his retirement 1 November 1959. He was advanced to the rank of general upon
retirement by reason of having been specially commended in combat.
A complete list of the
general's medals and decorations includes: the Distinguished Service Medal, the
Legion of Merit with Combat "V", the Navy and Marine Corps Medal, the
Bronze Star Medal with Combat "V", the Navy Unit Commendation with
one bronze star in lieu of a second award, the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal,
the Expeditionary Medal with one bronze star, the Second Nicaraguan Campaign
Medal, the Yangtze Service Medal, the American Defense Service Medal with Base
clasp, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with
three bronze stars, the World War II Victory Medal, the National Defense
Service Medal, the Korean Service Medal with two bronze stars, the United
Nations Service Medal, the Peruvian Aviation Cross, First Class, the Korean
Order of Military Merit Taiguk with Silver Star, the Korean Presidential Unit
Citation, and the Philippine Liberation Ribbon.
Back |