Willis Lee: Difference between revisions
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'''Willis Augustus "Ching" Lee''' (1888-1945) was a [[United States Navy]] admiral who specialized in gunnery, and commanded the Battle Force of the Pacific Fleet during [[World War Two in the Pacific]], TF 34 when under the [[United States Third Fleet]] and [[William Halsey]], and TF 54 when under [[United States Fifth Fleet]] and [[Raymond Spruance]]. | '''Willis Augustus "Ching" Lee''' (1888-1945) was a [[United States Navy]] admiral who specialized in gunnery, and commanded the Battle Force of the Pacific Fleet during [[World War Two in the Pacific]], TF 34 when under the [[United States Third Fleet]] and [[William Halsey]], and TF 54 when under [[United States Fifth Fleet]] and [[Raymond Spruance]]. |
Revision as of 14:41, 8 April 2024
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Willis Augustus "Ching" Lee (1888-1945) was a United States Navy admiral who specialized in gunnery, and commanded the Battle Force of the Pacific Fleet during World War Two in the Pacific, TF 34 when under the United States Third Fleet and William Halsey, and TF 54 when under United States Fifth Fleet and Raymond Spruance. He served as Assistant Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet to February 1942. He was appointed Commander, Task Force, Southwest Pacific, in February 1942. [1] GuadalcanalHis most distinguished action was in the Second Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, commanding a battleship division with supporting ships. His flagship, USS Washington (BB-56), did the major damage after USS South Dakota was put out of action. When American PT boats moved to attack the unidentified battleships, he radioed, ""This is Ching Chong China Lee! Chinese, catchee? Refer your boss about Ching Lee. Call off your boys!" [2] Rather than use secure communications, he identified himself by his Naval Academy nickname, a complex story involving confusion at a Chinese laundry. RaidsOn the Spring of 1944 he and Admiral Marc A. Mitscher directed attacks on Truk Islands and the Japanese strongholds in the Carolines, then, in the fall, at Formosa and the Ryukyus. Leyte GulfDuring the Battle of Leyte Gulf, he was to have commanded Task Force 34 of heavy ships, should that have been formed as a unit. Admiral Halsey had only established contingency plans for doing so, but Admirals Chester W. Nimitz and Thomas Kinkaid believed it was in being. Halsey had issued a battle plan, which he did not consider an order, saying that a surface gunfire force "will be formed as TF 34 under VADM Lee, Commander Battle Line. TF 34 will engage decisively at long ranges." It was his intention to have this treated as a warning order for the action if a surface engagement offered. As confirmation, he pointed out his subsequent radio message, "If the enemy sorties [through San Bernadino], TF 34 will be formed when directed by me."[3] During the Action off Samar, Halsey received a series of messages from Kinkaid, apparently starting at 0900, read At 0922, Halsey said he received what he believed to be Sprague's sixth message was actually his third, sent at 0725 but received by Halsey himself at 0922. It read Halsey then received two near-simultaneous messages at 1000, one from Kinkaid, significantly sent unencrypted, the mark of extreme urgency. It read DeathIn May 1945, he was sent to the Atlantic to command a special unit researching defenses against the Kamikaze threat. While serving in that position on 25 August 1945, he died suddenly after suffering a heart attack. References
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