User:Buckboard/Draft of Thomas W. Steed
Thomas Webster Steed was a professional U.S. military officer in the United States Army Air Corps and United States Air Force. During World War II he commanded the 456th Bomb Group (Heavy) throughout its combat service, one of only three bomb group commanders to train a group, command it overseas, and return it to the United States.
Steed was born October 18, 1904, at Mineral Bluff, Fannin County, Georgia. His family later moved the to nearby Etowah, Tennessee. Steed was educated in the public schools, and attended both Tennessee Military Academy and the University of Tennessee before entering the United States Military Academy in 1923 on a senatorial appointment. His initial efforts were unsuccessful and he was dropped from the Academy for academic deficiencies, particularly in required English, during the second half of his plebe year. Steed moved to New York City and worked as a digger in the building of the 14th Street Tunnel under the East River. Steed was reinstated in the autumn of 1924 as a plebe and successfully completed the four-year course as a member of the Class of 1928. Nicknamed "Sadie" and "Red", he was a popular cadet though older than most of his peers.
2nd Lt. Steed underwent flight training at the primary school, Brooks Field, and advanced flying school, Kelly Field, Texas, receiving his wings in March, 1930. His first unit assignment was with the 99th Observation Squadron at Mitchel Field, New York, from April, 1930 to December, 1932. In addition to the limited flying, he performed collateral duties as mess officer, armament officer, and squadron adjutant, and attended Cooks and Bakers Training School at Fort Slocum, New York.
From January 1933 to April, 1936, Lt. Steed was based at Clark Field, Philippine Islands, with the 3rd Pursuit Squadron. In 1934 he flew escort for the first non-stop flight from Tokyo to Manila. Steed was promoted to first lieutenant in October, 1934.
In May, 1936, Steed transferred to the 32nd Bombardment Squadron, 19th Bombardment Group, March Field, California. He remained with the group to August, 1942, also serving in the 93rd Bombardment and 38th Reconnaissance Squadrons. He also had temporary duty as a student at the Air Corps Tactical School, Maxwell Field, Alabama, in 1939.
While assigned to the 19th Bomb Group he received promotions to captain (June 1938), major (February 1941), lieutenant colonel (January 1942), and to colonel (March 1942). Major Steed received the Distinguished Flying Cross in May, 1941, as a member of the first flight of B-17s from Hamilton Field, California, to Hickam Field, Hawaii.
From August 1942 to July 1943 Colonel Steed was assigned as Chief of Staff 4th Bomber Command, Headquarters Fourth Air Force, San Francisco, receiving the Legion of Merit. From this assignment he was selected to command the 456th Bomb Group.
Colonel Steed took command of the 456th at Gowen Field, Idaho on July 14, 1943. In five months of training he supervised the development of the group from a small cadre of transferred personnel without equipment to a unit of 2,300 officers and men and 61 B-24 Liberator bombers. Included in the training period were four changes of station that forced a reduction of phase three training, normally three months in length, to a month at Muroc AAF, California.
At Muroc the 456th had only half the number of aircraft it required for training and was unable to secure equipment for high altitude bombing and gunnery practice which were necessary to prepare the crews for combat. When the Preparation for Overseas Movement inspectors asked Colonel Steed to certify his group as ready for combat, Colonel Steed replied that, as a professional airman, he could not comply. According to the group history of the 456th, Steed added that he knew the group would be sent anyway, that its members wanted to get into combat, and that the 456th would "fight one hell of a war." Despite efforts to have him change his position, the 456th was sent overseas without POM certification.
The 456th, based at Stornara, Italy, was assigned to the 304th Bomb Wing, headquartered at Cerignola, as part of the Fifteenth Air Force. There it flew 249 combat missions from February 10, 1944 to April 25, 1945, with Steed as its only commander. The 456th achieved the only 100% bombing accuracy on a mission (and only the second in Europe) by the Fifteenth Air Force on its final mission. The group earned two Distinguished Unit Citations and seven campaign streamers. Its members were awarded one Distinguished Service Cross, 19 Silver Stars, 215 Distinguished Flying Crosses, over 2,000 Air Medals. Colonel Steed was personally awarded the Silver Star, two Distinguished Flying Crosses, seven Air Medals, and three Commendation Medals.
While at Stornara, Colonel Steed met and married his wife, Julia, a captain and army nurse with the 34th Field Hospital, Cerignola. Colonel Steed returned to the United States in May, 1945.
His post-war assignments for the USAAF and after September 18, 1947 the USAF were:
- Base commander, Marianna Air Force Base, Florida, July 1945--April 1946
- Senior instructor, Massachusetts Air National Guard, April 1946 to August 1948 *Student, Air War College, Maxwell AFB, Alabama, August 1948-July 49
- Commander, 91St Strategic Reconnaissance Wing
- Commander, 4th Air Division, Strategic Air Command, Barksdale AFB, Louisiana.
- Base Commander, Larson Air Force Base, Washington
- Commander, 62nd Troop Carrier Wing (Medium), Larson AFB
- Base Commander, Hamilton Air Force Base, California
Colonel Steed medically retired from the Air Force on October 31, 1952. In 1950 Colonel Steed had been severely injured during a training flight in England when a crewman went berserk on the flight deck of Steed's aircraft. During an attempt to subdue the airman Colonel Steed was struck on the head with the wrench, causing a bone splinter that forced his early retirement.
Following his retirement, Colonel Steed resided in Pelham, New Hampshire, and became a contract realtor and an appraiser for the Veterans' Administration. Colonel Steed died October 21, 1973 at the Veterans Hospital in Manchester, New Hampshire, from meningioma.
References
[edit]- Capps, Robert S., Flying Colt: Liberator Pilot in Italy, Manor House (1997). ISBN 0-9640665-1-3
- 456th Bomb Group Association, 456th Bomb Group History: Steed's Flying Colts 1943-1945, Turner Publishing Company (1994). ISBN 1-56311-141-1