Background
Baggett was born in Graham, Texas in 1920.
Baggett was born in Graham, Texas in 1920.
He graduated from Hardin–Simmons University in 1941, where he was the band"s drum major. Baggett enlisted in the Army Air Corps (which was subsumed by the Army Air Forces in February 1942) and graduated from pilot training on July 26, 1942, at the New Columbus Army Flying School.
He initially went to work on Wall Street after graduation. On March 31, 1943, while stationed in British India, Baggett"s squadron was ordered to destroy a bridge at Pyinmana, Burma. Before reaching their target, the B-24 bombers were intercepted by Japanese fighter planes.
Baggett"s plane was badly hit, and the crew were ordered to bail out.
The Japanese pilots then attacked United States. airmen as they parachuted to earth. Two of Baggett"s crew members were killed.
Baggett, though wounded, played dead, hoping the Japanese would ignore him. One Zero approached within several feet of Baggett.
The pilot then nosed up, almost stalling, and opened his canopy.
Baggett shot at the pilot with his.45 caliber pistol. The plane stalled and plunged to the earth, and Baggett became legendary as the only person to down a Japanese airplane with an M1911 pistol. He survived and was captured by the Japanese.
This account is not consistent with Japanese records - discussed in the book "B-24 Liberators vs Ki-43 Oscars" by Edward M Young on page 57.
This dogfight was between 13 Ki-43s of the JAAF 64th Sentai and around 12 B-24s of the 7th Black Gold. There were no Japanese pilot loses. Regarding his pistol, his obituary states he shot down the Zero with a revolver.
The statement that his pilot, Lloyd K. Jensen was "summarily executed" which appears in some articles regarding this event is untrue. Lloyd Jensen survived as evidenced by Baggett"s own statements in the book "Guests of the Emperor" at page 187 and National Archives and Records Administration: "World World War II Prisoners of War Data File, 12/7/1941 - 11/19/1946".
He remained a prisoner for the rest of the war.
Baggett and 37 other POWs were liberated at the war"s end by eight Office of Strategic Services agents who parachuted into Singapore. While he was assigned to Mitchel Air Force Base, Baggett was noted for his assignment working with children, including sponsoring a boy and a girl to be commander for a day. Baggett retired from the Air Force as a colonel and later worked as a defense contractor manager for Litton.