Sep. 14 - first combat mission, a raid over Kahili
Sep. 15 - photo escort
Sep. 16 - escorted Dauntless dive bombers to Ballale, a small island west of Bougainville where the Japanese had a heavily fortified airstrip. In a big aerial battle, the Black Sheep claimed 11 confirmed (5 by Boyington) and 8 probables, but Bob Ewing was lost.
Sept. 17 - AM: escort photo reconnaisance over Choiseul; PM: search for Ewing. The Squadron moved up to the primitve facilities on Munda.
Sep. 18 - CAP over landings on Vila, 31 sorties, Case and Magee scored
Sept. 19 - AM: search for missing pilot, PM: escort strike on Vila
Sept. 20 - 1AM: Boyington tries to intercept 'Washing Machine Charlie'; AM: escort Adm. Halsey in PT boat; PM: escort SBD's and TBF's to Kolombangara
Sept. 21 - AM: barge-strafing, Magee threw grenade; PM: Kahili strafing
Sept. 23 - AM: escort 24 SBD's and TBF's to Jakohima, near Kahili; PM - missing pilot search
Sept. 26 - 3 divisions took part in large inter-service mission, flying cover for SBD's and TBF's over Kangu Hill near Kahili. Rinabarger's and Mullen's Corsairs badly shot up. Mullen got one kill.
Sept. 27 - AM: dawn patrol; PM: escort B-24's to Kahili, and missing pilot search; 4 claims; Case returned late to find his belongings already shared out.
Sept. 28 - routine patrols
Sept. 29 - PM: barge-busting off Choiseul
Sept. 30 - Lt. Bob Alexander killed in friendly-fire accident with PT-126 Bruce Gamble gives a well-written narrative of this tragedy in The Black Sheep. The squadron relocated back to the relative comforts of Banika in the Russells.
Oct. 2/3 - Missions scrubbed for bad weather.
Oct. 4 - escort SBD attack on Malabeta Hill near Kahili
Oct. 7 - staged through Munda to cover naval task forces
Oct. 10 - strike with B-24's over Kahili. Wildly inaccurate, most of the bombs dropped in the water, and thus (as Frank Walton noted in the official squadron War Diary) "killing many small fish." Ed Olander got his first victory.
Oct. 11 - 3 divisions covered bombers over Kahili. More bombs landed in the water, presumably killing more "small fish." Bill Case scored a lucky kill when test-firing his guns, bringing down a Zero at extreme range.
Oct. 13 - Lt. Virgil Ray, who had been traumatized in an earlier accident and therefore given light flying duties, was lost while flying a mail run.
Oct. 14 - Case led a division on shipping patrol, and scored another lucky credit.
In October VMF-214 moved up from their orginal base in the Russells to a more advanced location at Munda. From here they were closer to the next big objective -- the Jap bases on Bougainville. On another big day, Oct. 17, the squadron claimed 12 kills on a fighter sweep. Two days later they flew their last mission of the first tour, then went for R&R in Australia.
Black Sheep 2nd Tour
Since the Black Sheep had left, the Americans had captured a perimeter on the western side of Bougainville, at Empress Augusta Bay. They returned to Espiritu Santo in late November, where John Bolt conducted his ammo tests. By the 28th, VMF-214 had settled into their tents at Barakoma, on Vella Lavella; their base for the entire second tour.
On Nov. 28, three divisions flew a routine patrol over Bougainville, code-named 'Cherry Blossom'. These patrols, an hour's flight from their base, occupied much of their air activity for the next three weeks. They were largely uneventful, as the Japanese planes were nowhere to be found.
On Dec. 5, Boyington, Walton, Doc Reames, and others took a PT boat to Kolombangara, to search for Bob Alexander's remains. They found them, "the plane in a million pieces, and the boy, too, his bones huddled up in a pitifully small pile. We scooped out a shallow grave, laid his remains in there, painted his name on one blade of the propeller, and set it up as a headstone." as Frank Walton wrote to his wife.
Three days later, some Black Sheep touched down at a brand-new airstrip on Torokina Point, at Empress Augusta Bay, Bougainville, the aircraft to use it. While the Black Sheep remained based at Vella Lavella, they would use Torokina as a refueling and emergency strip. Later squadrons, notably the Navy's VF-17, the Jolly Rogers, would operate from Torokina.
After conferencing with ComAirSols, Gen. Ralph Mitchell, a large fighter sweep of eighty planes (from the Marine Corps, Navy, and RNZAF) was organized to go after Rabaul, the main Japanese base in that part of the Pacific. The idea was that they would have to come up and fight over Rabaul. They took off at 0515 on December 17. "Come up and fight." Boyington taunted over the radio. Edward Chikaki Honda, a Hawaii-raised Nisei who had ended up wearing a Japanese uniform, called back, "Come on down, sucker."