| Lieutenant
Commander John J. Magda, Jr.
United States Navy, Deceased
Killed in action, Korea, March 8, 1951
John
Joseph Magda, Jr. was born in Camp Taylor, Kentucky, on July
23, 1918. He was captain of the football team at Okalona High
School and was a football and baseball star at Western Kentucky
State Teachers’ College from which he graduated in 1940.
Both of his parents came to this country in 1904 from Hungary.
After
graduating from Western, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, September
26,
1940 and was appointed an aviation cadet in January, 1941. He
completed flight training at the Naval Air Station, Pensacola,
Florida and was commissioned Ensign June 21, 1941.
In August,
1941, he was assigned to Fighter Squadron Eight, based on the
famed aircraft carrier the USS Hornet. In June, 1942, during the
famous Battle of Midway, his plane ran out of fuel after attacking
three Japanese aircraft carriers
and had to be ditched in the Pacific Ocean. He and another flyer
spent five days in a rubber life raft before being rescued.
In March,
1943, he was assigned to the carrier USS Saratoga in the Pacific
and while serving there was awarded
the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal and two Gold Stars
in lieu of the Second and Third Air Medals, for heroism and extraordinary
achievement as Pilot and Leader of a Fighter Plane Division. He
was an Ace at age 23, credited with shooting down five Japanese
aircraft and destroying at least seven on the ground.
Magda returned
to the United States in 1944 and was promoted to Lieutenant Commander
on October 3, 1945. In March, 1948, he served as a member of the
first jet squadron to operate on board an aircraft carrier (the
USS Boxer).
In September,
1949, he was assigned to fly with the “Blue Angels”,
the navy’s flight exhibition team and he became their Commander
in January, 1950.
With
the outbreak of the Korean War, Magda and his Blue Angel teammates
were assigned to the USS Princeton, where he commanded VF-191,
a jet fighter squadron operating in the Korean area.
On March 9,
1951, Lieutenant Commander Magda, as strike leader, was pressing
home a rocket and strafing attack against enemy North Korean and
Chinese Communist installations at Tanchon,
Korea when his jet was hit and burst into flames. He headed his
plane toward the sea where it crashed, costing him his life. He
was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for extraordinary heroism.
He was survived by his wife and two children – He was 33.
His military
awards include the Navy Cross; Distinguished Flying Cross; the
Air Medal with two Gold Stars; the Purple Heart; the American
Defense Service Medal; the American Campaign Medal; the Asiatic-Pacific
Campaign Medal;
the World War II Victory Medal; the National Defense Service Medal;
the Korean Service Medal; and the United Nations Service Medal.
On
November 3rd LCDR Johnny Magda was inducted into the Aviation
Hall of Fame in Lexington, Kentucky. BA coordinator for the event
was Dan Cherry USAF (Ret) and former flight leader of the Thunderbirds.
At the induction ceremony, it was announced that Aviation Heritage
Park had just obtained the rights to a F9F Panther which will
be displayed alongside the Phantom. The plane was located and
made available through the efforts of Bob Rasmussen. It will be
painted in the Blue Angel scheme of the time with Boss Magda's
name on it. Dan also presented Dale Magda, son of Johnny Magda,
with an oil painting of Magda's Panther. The painting will be
displayed in a Johnny Magda exhibit at Western Kentucky University.
Read
Marni Magda's (daughter of Johnny Magda) speech here.
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