[EDIT: Graham Cutting posted on the WIX Facebook thread that “Navy pilots weren't allocated a particular aeroplane so the pictures of Jimmy thatch & Butch O' Hare flying their F4Fs with their kill markings is just for the press.” Thus, for all I know, Butch O’Hare did pilot Wildcat White F-5 on occasion, though it has been written that he scored all of his kills in White F-15.]
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++It has already been posted elsewhere that Butch O’Hare’s Wildcat on Feb 20, 1942 was White F-15 – not the White F-5 seen underwater. Also, we know that O’Hare was credited with five kills in a day (Feb 20, 1942), and the underwater wreck only shows four kill flags. The underwater wreck clearly is not O’Hare’s aircraft from Feb 20.
On the WIX Facebook site I offered another perspective – a cockpit-area comparison between the LIFE magazine photo of Butch O’Hare posing in the the Wildcat bearing five kill flags versus the Wildcat filmed underwater.
I'm too lazy/challenged to figure out how to post a photo here, so if someone else cares to copy it from the WIX Facebook page and add it to this forum, go right ahead. Seeing that comparison image is needed to make sense of some of the following. You will find it, after some digging, here:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/wixhq/? ... CpYR98VVEsOn the wartime photo of O’Hare’s Wildcat, the diagonal line coincident with an edge of the top-hinged access panel forward of the pilot passes through the top Japanese kill flag. Likewise, a similar diagonal line coincident with the corresponding edge of the access panel on the underwater wreck also passes through the top painted flag.
Now, count the flags down from that top flag in both images. There are only four in the underwater wreck (stated already). Again, O’Hare’s Wildcat clearly shows five. There is no room for a fifth flag to have been painted above the top flag on the underwater wreck.
Furthermore, look at the position of VF-3's Felix the Cat insignia in each image. In the underwater image, the bottom of the circle is almost tangent with that same diagonal access panel edge. In the wartime O’Hare photo there is a clear gap between the diagonal edge and the bottom of the circle.
Different aircraft.
Mark Allen M has offered this:
“VF-3 was on board the Lex for Coral Sea, and Felix was their squadron emblem, seen clearly on the forward fuselage. The number [on the underwater wreck] appears to be F-5, meaning this plane would have been flown by Ensign Dale W. Peterson during that fateful period.”
His source is “The First Team” by Lundstrom, pg 107.
Jack Cook, on the Facebook thread, also ID’d Dale Peterson and quoted from Peterson's Navy Cross citation. Peterson was reassigned to VF-2 and was shot down and killed on May 8. According to TBDude, above, the location was hundreds of miles from where the Lexington went down. Peterson was only credited with 1.5 kills.
I can’t see a stenciled name under the cockpit, similar in position to the name on O’Hare’s Wildcat.
My guess is that Peterson was just one of the pilots who scored kills in White F-5.