1st Lt. W.G. Ebersole
462nd Fighter Squadron, 506th Fighter Group
Ebersole began his piloting career in the Army Air Force at Maxwell Field, Alabama and continued at Arcadia, Florida which is where he was born and raised. This gave him a huge advantage as he knew the area and could never have gotten lost during flights. He continued on and eventually ending up at Bartow Army Air Base in Florida, where he gained about 270 hours flying a P-51, due to pilots at the time not being needed anywhere specifically, so he got extra time at the base to train. Finally, he was selected and moved to the 506th Fighter Group based at Lakeland, Florida. They left the U.S. in mid February on their way to an unknown destination, which would eventually be Iwo Jima. Flying P-51’s for the 462nd Fighter Squadron, he was assigned to aircraft #619, along with 1st Lt. J.R. Bercaw. It was during one of the first missions to Japan that Bercaw’s gun camera footage showed him strafing an outhouse on an airfield, and thus, the name and nose art was applied to their P-51, as a good laugh. Ebersole went on to fly 12 VLR missions, but only received credit for 10 as 2 were weather aborts. He earned a Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medal with three oak leaf clusters, and was credited with one probable destroyed aircraft on the ground.
Included here are original photos that Ebersole took on Iwo, as well as some documents including his hand written mission list and citations for awards.