VICTOR M. GADROW, LTJG, USN

From USNA Virtual Memorial Hall
Victor Gadrow '35

Date of birth: May 16, 1913

Date of death: December 22, 1941

Age: 28

Lucky Bag

From the 1935 Lucky Bag:

1935 Gadrow LB.jpg

VICTOR MARVIN GADROW

Peacedale, Rhode Island

"Vic" "Adolph" "Viva"

VIC found Peacedale too peaceful for an adventurous spirit, and turned to the ever-appealing Navy. He seems satisfied, and quite desirous of applying his knowledge where he gained it. As classmates remember Vic, he is the shining light holding down the "hot corner" over on Lawerence Field. A home-run hero Plebe Year and an N-star Youngster Year were only starts to Viva. Back in the days of the WFBR Breakfast Club, Vic used to star with that watch and chain of his. These are known facts, but how many know that his greatest weakness is the name Mary? He also prefers having his back scratched to studying Dago, and he likes old German waltzes.

Baseball 4, 3, 2, 1, N*. Class Football 4, 3. 1 Stripe.

1935 Gadrow LB.jpg

VICTOR MARVIN GADROW

Peacedale, Rhode Island

"Vic" "Adolph" "Viva"

VIC found Peacedale too peaceful for an adventurous spirit, and turned to the ever-appealing Navy. He seems satisfied, and quite desirous of applying his knowledge where he gained it. As classmates remember Vic, he is the shining light holding down the "hot corner" over on Lawerence Field. A home-run hero Plebe Year and an N-star Youngster Year were only starts to Viva. Back in the days of the WFBR Breakfast Club, Vic used to star with that watch and chain of his. These are known facts, but how many know that his greatest weakness is the name Mary? He also prefers having his back scratched to studying Dago, and he likes old German waltzes.

Baseball 4, 3, 2, 1, N*. Class Football 4, 3. 1 Stripe.

Loss

From Aviation Safety Network:

At 1200 hrs on 16 December 1941 TF 14 left Pearl Harbor to assist Wake Island, two thousand miles to the west. The formation consisted of the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga, with 81 aircraft aboard (the 13 F4F Wildcats, 43 SBD-3 and 11 TBD-1 of the carrier Air Group, plus the 13 F2A-3 Buffaloes of VMF-221), three heavy cruisers, nine destroyers, a seaplane tender crammed with Marines and the fleet oiler Neches, one of the oldest and slowest in the fleet, only able to do 12 knots. On 21 December 1941 Wake Island was attacked by Japanese carrier aircraft and TF 14’s commander, Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher, was warned that he might possibly have to fight a major battle just to get to Wake.

On the morning of 22 December, the ships had closed to about 520 miles northeast of Wake. Rough seas washed over the Saratoga’s plunging bow and greatly hindered the oiler’s efforts to refuel the destroyers. 6 F4Fs of VF-3 flew the early-morning combat air patrol (CAP). At 1021 hrs six other F4Fs took off to relieve them. Taking off into a stiff wind, the division climbed toward patrol altitude, but suddenly Lt.(jg) Victor M Gadrow, the skipper’s wingman, experienced engine trouble. The division leader, Lt Cdr John Thach, turned the lead over to another pilot and, to maintain radio silence, raced back to the Saratoga to give the emergency deferred forced landing signal (wheels up, tail hook down) to warm her that one of his planes needed to land back on board immediately. Gadrow followed in his failing Wildcat but barely got within a mile of the carrier before he stalled and went down. His F4F-3 Buno 3985 sank immediately in the turbulent seas. Racing to the scene, the destroyer Selfridge, acting as plane guard, found nothing.

Gadrow was VF-3’s first wartime loss. Although he graduated from Annapolis in 1935, he was a latecomer to aviation, having earned his wings in the spring of 1941. He had married only a few months before the war broke out.

Other Information

From researcher Kathy Franz:

Victor had just been advanced to engineering officer of VF-3 when he was killed. His brother Robert (‘37) was executive officer of the destroyer O’Brien when she was torpedoed (without personnel casualty) in September 1942. In 1918 in WWI, an older brother Alfred died in a flu epidemic while serving with the Navy at Newport.

Victor married Mary McMullen on August 28, 1941, in Seattle. They lived in Pasadena when he was called back to his ship two weeks later.

He was survived by his mother Hulda. His father was Levi Gadrow, a woolen weaver. They had at least eight children.

His wife was listed as next of kin.

Victor has a memory marker in Rhode Island, and he is also listed at the Courts of the Missing in Hawaii.

Memorial Hall Error?

Victor is not listed on the killed in action panel in the front of Memorial Hall. While not an obvious error, inclusion on the panel for crashes like this (incidental to combat flights) has been inconsistent across WWII, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War.

Navy Directories & Officer Registers

The "Register of Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps" was published annually from 1815 through at least the 1970s; it provided rank, command or station, and occasionally billet until the beginning of World War II when command/station was no longer included. Scanned copies were reviewed and data entered from the mid-1840s through 1922, when more-frequent Navy Directories were available.

The Navy Directory was a publication that provided information on the command, billet, and rank of every active and retired naval officer. Single editions have been found online from January 1915 and March 1918, and then from three to six editions per year from 1923 through 1940; the final edition is from April 1941.

The entries in both series of documents are sometimes cryptic and confusing. They are often inconsistent, even within an edition, with the name of commands; this is especially true for aviation squadrons in the 1920s and early 1930s.

Alumni listed at the same command may or may not have had significant interactions; they could have shared a stateroom or workspace, stood many hours of watch together… or, especially at the larger commands, they might not have known each other at all. The information provides the opportunity to draw connections that are otherwise invisible, though, and gives a fuller view of the professional experiences of these alumni in Memorial Hall.

October 1935
Ensign, USS Colorado


Others at or embarked at this command:
LTjg John Riggs, Jr. '28 (Observation Plane Squadron (VO) 4B)
January 1936
Ensign, USS Colorado


Others at or embarked at this command:
LTjg John Riggs, Jr. '28 (Observation Plane Squadron (VO) 4B)
April 1936
Ensign, USS Colorado


Others at or embarked at this command:
LTjg John Riggs, Jr. '28 (Observation Plane Squadron (VO) 4B)
January 1937
Ensign, USS Colorado


Others at or embarked at this command:
ENS Ned Wentz '33 (Observation Plane Squadron (VO) 4B)
April 1937
Ensign, USS Colorado


Others at or embarked at this command:
ENS Ned Wentz '33 (Observation Plane Squadron (VO) 4B)
November 1940
Lieutenant (j.g.), under instruction, Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida

April 1941
Lieutenant (j.g.), Fighting Squadron (VF) 3, USS Saratoga


Others at or embarked at USS Saratoga:
LCDR William Hank '25 (USS Saratoga)
LTjg Jack Ferguson '35 (Bombing Squadron (VB) 3)
LTjg Francis Maher, Jr. '35 (Bombing Squadron (VB) 3)
LTjg Harold Shrider '37 (Scouting Squadron (VS) 3)
LTjg Patrick Hart '37 (Torpedo Squadron (VT) 3)
LTjg Macdonald Thompson '37 (Torpedo Squadron (VT) 3)
LTjg Howard Nester, Jr. '37 (Bombing Squadron (VB) 3)
ENS Osborne Wiseman '38 (Bombing Squadron (VB) 3)
ENS Curtis Howard '38 (Torpedo Squadron (VT) 3)
ENS William Brady '38 (Scouting Squadron (VS) 3)
ENS Norman White '39 (USS Saratoga)


Class of 1935

Victor is one of 57 members of the Class of 1935 on Virtual Memorial Hall.

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