Sidelines column: Wartime memories of Lt. Bill Dickey
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Don Cantrell
During the recent salute to many Harbor High World War II heroes in
the military service, this corner - and with regrets - failed to mention
one of the classy Navy pilots named Lt. Bill Dickey.
Dickey, who grew up in Balboa, was an outstanding varsity baseball
player for three years under two coaches, the late Ralph Reed and the
late Dick Spaulding, who also coached the 1938-39 football teams.
Dickey earned numerous honors as a fighter pilot, but the two most
noteworthy awards featured the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air
Medal. He was decorated with both medals in San Diego.
The military report said, “The Distinguished Flying Cross was won for
aiding in repelling an attack by an overwhelming surface force of
Japanese battleships, cruisers and destroyers, which attempted to destroy
his lightly protected carrier division in the decisive sea-air Battle of
Leyte Gulf (Philippines).”
The report added, “He won the Air Medal for intercepting a large
formation of enemy bombing planes striking at the invasion ships of Layte
Gulf. During the attack, he destroyed part of the enemy air force and
helped to turn back the raiders before they could reach their objective.”
Lt. Dickey also participated in the major campaigns at Saipan and
Tinian in the South Pacific.
Dickey, a graduate of Santa Ana Junior College, matched up with his
teammate, Sparks McClellan, a ’39 Tar gridder, by flying a Navy Hellcat.
McClellan also earned numerous honors during WWII.
Dickey’s younger brother, Don, a regular on the ’48 varsity basketball
team under Reed, also drew recognition from the Navy years later, when he
sustained a serious eye injury performing his task for the Navy Seals.
After serving numerous years for a major airline, Bill Dickey retired
and moved to Dana Point.
He and another Harbor High grad, Glenn O. Thompson, who, in time,
became a rear admiral in the Coast Guard, once returned to the Harbor
area before the war ended to deliver modest talks on their roles in the
South Pacific before local community leaders.
Thompson was the star quarterback on the ’37 Harbor High football
team, directed by Reed.
Dickey got his start in the Navy by signing up for duty at Los
Alamitos. He then shifted to Pensacola, Fla. to learn how to fly and was
then directed to the South Pacific for action.
One sterling event that came about with Don Dickey’s ’48 class was
seeing the varsity baseball team win the championship. What makes it
bigger today in the history books is the fact that no other Harbor High
outfit ever won a baseball title in all the other years.
The key to the title came with the arrival of a fabulous left-handed
pitcher named Frank Hamilton from Portland, Ore. He was 6-foot-4 and
hurled the ball at wild speeds for a prepster. In fact, he was offered a
$50,000 contract from the New York Yankees at the end of the season. But
he let it pass in favor of college.
Newport had a big boost for Hamilton when he came to Harbor and that
was an ace catcher named Bill Weatherwax, who later advanced to a club
with the St. Louis Cardinals.
Weatherwax played five years for an Idaho club, then returned to the
Harbor area where he worked for the Costa Mesa Fire Department, then the
Costa Mesa Police Department. He still lives in Costa Mesa.
The major event for some to celebrate this month is the 59th wedding
anniversary for Coach and Mrs. Al Irwin. They were married back before
WWII limited their activities.
Irwin served as a swimming instructor for the Navy at the Great Lakes
Training Center before taking an assignment to become a flight deck
officer in the South Pacific.
After four years of football at Harbor High, Irwin went on to play
another four years at the College of the Pacific under famed Coach Amos
Alonzo Stagg.
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