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American Volunteer Group Flying Tiger Flight
Leader and Ace: living
A Marine pilot, who joined Claire Chenault’s Flying Tigers
in China, Ken Jernstedt became the American Volunteer Group’s
fifth-ranking ace, destroying more than 10 Japanese aircraft. Jernstedt
joined the
Marine Air Corps in 1939, receiving his Navy wings in 1940. He became
a Flight Leader for the legendary Flying Tigers after training in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. His “Hells Angels” squadron was
among the first in action after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
Before going into basic training he wanted to make sure he would
like flying, so he took his first flight from the old Swan Island
Airport in Portland, Oregon, in a small, two-seat airplane. Jernstedt
said, “From that point on I was hooked on flying!” After
World War II, he returned to Oregon making a home in Hood River
where he ran a successful bottling company and began a political
career that lasted 40 years. Beginning as a city councilman in 1951,
he became Hood River’s Mayor in 1959. Jernstedt moved to the
Oregon House of Representatives in 1966, and then served five terms
in the Oregon Senate. He returned to Hood River as Mayor in 1989
and retired from politics in 1991. Due to glaucoma, his vision eventually
deteriorated, and his guide dog, Driscoll, entered his life. Jernstedt
received the Distinguished Flying Cross in October 1996 and in June
of 2001 the Port of Hood River formally changed the name of the
Hood River Airport to Ken Jernstedt Airport in his honor.
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