Background
Tyler was born on April 13, 1913, in Oelwein, Iowa.
Tyler was born on April 13, 1913, in Oelwein, Iowa.
Tyler was assigned as a pilot in the 78th Pursuit Squadron at on December 7, 1941, the day Japan attacked He moved with his family to Long Beach, California, and joined the Civilian Conservation Corps for two years before becoming an Army Air Corps flying cadet in 1936. On December 7, 1941, Tyler was a first lieutenant in the Army Air Corps serving as the Executive Officer of the 78th Pursuit Squadron, based at That morning he was assigned duty as the Officer In Charge of the partly activated Intercept Center. His duties were to assist the controller in ordering planes to intercept foreign planes, after the planes got in the air.
New and untrained at the time, when warned of the approach of a large aircraft flight from the north, Tyler presumed it to be the scheduled arrival of six B-17 bombers from the mainland.
The radar operators were tracking Japanese planes coming to attack the base. Radar operators, operating in training mode, failed to make clear the size of the formation even though it was larger than anything they"d ever seen, and he did not pass on an alarm of "attack imminent".
Following an investigation by a Naval Board of Inquiry in August 1942, it was determined that Tyler had been assigned to the Information Center with little or no training, no supervision, and no staff with which to work. Tyler was subsequently cleared on any wrongdoing by the Board and no disciplinary actions were taken against him.
Tyler retired as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Air Force in 1961.
After leaving military service, he obtained a business degree and worked as real estate broker. He died in San Diego, California of pneumonia on January 23, 2010, at the age of 96.