Warren Frank COWAN

COWAN, Warren Frank

Service Number: 407614
Enlisted: 7 December 1940, Adelaide, SA
Last Rank: Pilot Officer
Last Unit: No. 32 Squadron (RAAF)
Born: Angaston, South Australia, 12 May 1911
Home Town: Angaston, Barossa, South Australia
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Wool Classer
Died: Flying Battle, Buna, New Guinea, 22 July 1942, aged 31 years
Cemetery: Port Moresby (Bomana) War Cemetery, Papua New Guinea
Port Moresby (Bomana) War Cemetery, Bomana, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
Memorials: Adelaide WW2 Wall of Remembrance, Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Bowhill War Memorial
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World War 2 Service

7 Dec 1940: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Aircraftman, 407614, Aircrew Training Units, Adelaide, SA
7 Dec 1940: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Pilot Officer, 407614
8 Dec 1940: Involvement Royal Australian Air Force, Aircraftman, 407614, Aircrew Training Units, Empire Air Training Scheme
22 Jul 1942: Involvement Royal Australian Air Force, Pilot Officer, 407614, No. 32 Squadron (RAAF), Air War SW Pacific 1941-45

Honouring the father she never knew

Elizabeth Buchanan was not yet born when her pilot father, Warren Cowan, was killed in a fight with the Japanese over Buna in Northern in 1942.
At an emotional 2018 Anzac Day visit to the grave of the father she never met at the Bomana War Cemetery, in Port Moresby, with her husband, Chris Buchanan.
“I wasn’t even born. I was only in my mum’s tummy at that time,” she said.
Buchanan said she grew up without a father and only heard stories about him from family members.
“I only heard his stories from people who had known him,” she said.
Warren Frank Cowan was an Australian bomber pilot.
Her wife Betty was expecting their second child (Elizabeth).
They already had 15-month-old son named Blair.
When he failed to return from his mission of July 22, 1942, he was written off as a statistic.
No one knew what had happened to him.
The Australians never knew the magnitude of his final combat back then, but one enemy pilot did.
At the 2018 dawn service at Bomana, outside Port Moresby, a special tribute was also paid to Cowan, whose feat that day won the respect of one of the Japanese pilots who attacked him.
Cowan, then 31, from Angaston, South Australia, was killed in action along with his crew.
They were navigator Pilot Officer David Taylor, 33, from Hobart,
Tasmania, and gunners sergeants Russell Polack, 24, of Summer Hill, New South Wales, and Laurie Sheard, 20, of Nuriootpa, South Australia.
They were the crew of a Lockheed Hudson on a solo armed reconnaissance mission.
What distinguished this action from many like it in the early stages of Australia’s war in the south-west Pacific, is the accurate account of what happened which came from the other side.
In 1997, 55 years after the incident, one of the Japanese pilots, Saburo Sakai, involved in the destruction of the aircraft, lobbied the Australian government to present Cowan with a posthumous award for his actions that day.
Chris Buchanan, husband of Elizabeth, said Sakai also wrote to Cowan’s widow and she found it very hard to open his letter.
Sakai also wrote to the Australian Minister for Veterans Affairs, Danna Vale, requesting that Cowan’s bravery be recognised.
The wreck of the Hudson and the remains of the crew were discovered in 1943 by a United States Army Air Forces search team.
The Hudson wreck was near the village of Popoga.
Australians recovered the remains of the crew in early 1945, which were subsequently interred in the Lae War Cemetery. They are now in the Port Moresby Bomana War Cemetery. By MALUM NALU

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Biography contributed by Steve Larkins

Pilot Officer Warren Cowan, 31 years old from Angaston SA, was killed in action on 22 July 1942, along with his crew;

It is believed that Warren Cowan and his crew were originally interred at Lae War Cemetery. Their remains were repatriated there by USAF investigators who had recovered remains from a US C-47 transport, when they were told by villagers of another wreck in the area. It was later identified as Cowan's Hudson, and the remains of the crew were duly recovered.

Navigator, Pilot Officer David Taylor (/explore/people/649251), 33, from Hobart Tasmania and

gunners Sergeant Russell Polack (/explore/people/643628), 24 of Summer Hill NSW, and

Sergeant Lauri Sheard (/explore/people/515235), 20, of Nuriootpa, SA.  

They were the crew of a Lockheed Hudson Mk IIIA, tail number A16-201 on a solo armed reconnaissance mission. They died in a forlorn and lonely air combat against six Mitsubishi Zeros over New Guinea's northern beaches near Buna, the site of Japanese amphibious landings that were a prelude to the Kokoda campaign. What distinguishes this action from many like it in the early stages of Australia's war in the SW Pacific, is that an accurate account of what happened came from the other side.

They gave a distinguished account of themselves, so much so that 55 years after the incident, one of the Japanese pilots, none other than top Japanese 'Ace' of the war, Saburo Sakai, who was one of the pilots involved in the destruction of this aircraft, lobbied the Australian Government to present Cowan with a posthumous award for his actions that day.

Warren Cowan and his crew were on an armed reconnaissance mission launched from Port Moresby's Seven Mile Drome at 1130hrs, in response to the Japanese landings in the Buna Gona area. The aircraft they were flying had been assembled in Australia just three months before and delivered to No. 32 Squadron on 25 April 1942. They were looking for the destroyer escorts and the departing convoy heading back to Rabaul. Two hours after leaving Port Moresby, they reported they were 20 miles out to sea having flown over the north coast near Gona. Unreported by them but recorded by Japanese records it is fair to assume they did not locate the convoy and dropped their bomb load on Japanese positions at Buna on the return journey.

Unfortunately they flew into the Japanese air defence net cast over the landing area. A total of 18 Mitsubishi A6M2 Zeros belonging to a detachment of the Tainan Naval Air Group were rostered in three 'Chutai' (squadrons) of six aircraft, organised in two flights of three aircraft each, to patrol the landing area from their base at Lae further up the coast. The pilots were all combat experienced and had most recently been engaged in raids on Port Moresby. Saburo Sakai was the flight leader of the second flight, of the third Chutai, each aircraft marked with blue stripes around the rear fuselage. The other Chutai were marked yellow and red respectively. Sasai Jun'ichi was No 1 Flight Commander, Ota Toshio and Endo Masuaki were his wingmen. Flying with Sakai were Yonekawa Masayoshi and Mogi Yoshio.

Like Cowan, the Zeros failed to locate the convoy, but they did spot Cowan's Hudson, and his crew spotted them as was evident from his actions, which was basically to undertake a smooth descent to build up as much speed as it could towards Milne Bay.

The Zeros jettisoned their drop tanks and gave chase, sacrificing the increased range afforded by the lost fuel in exchange for speed to catch their quarry. Now it was just a matter of time, if Cowan adhered to the expected tactic of throttles to the firewall and attempting to gain maximum speed - which would not be enough to outpace the Zeros.

He didn't. In a move that startled his pursuers, perhaps realising that his expected course of action was forlorn, Cowan stood the Hudson on its wingtip in a very steep turn presumably assisted by the application of 'asymmetric power', and turned to face his attackers as perhaps his only remotely viable option.  He fired his nose guns as he sped through the Japanese formation which broke up as he did so. The Japanese pilots were not carrying radios due to technical difficulties with their sets and the Zero airframe and engine. They were however, disciplined and experienced pilots and they regained their formation and tried to position themselves to attack despite defensive fire from the Hudson's dorsal turret. According to Sakai, it was ten minutes or so, an age in aerial dogfighting, before the Zeros could land hits on the Hudson thanks to Cowan's desperate maneuvering to evade them. Eventually the Zeros successively took out the Hudson's dorsal turret then set fire to the port engine, moments before it rolled into the jungle below and exploded, near the village of Popogo.

Cowan's actions impressed the Japanese pilots, but most ultimately became casualties themselves. Sasai Jun'ichi, the No 1 Flight Commander was lost just a month later in air combat with US Wildcat fighters over Guadalcanal. Sakai lost the sight in one eye but returned to flying late in the war as Japan's circumstances became dire.

In 1997, 55 years after the event, the only surviving participant in this action, Saburo Sakai, wrote to the Australian Minister for Veterans Affairs, Hon Danna Vale, requesting that Cowan's bravery be recognised. The Minister thanked him for his submission but advised that, regrettably, the request could not be legally honoured becasue the 'End of War' list had closed in 1945 thus closing off the avenue for a posthumous award.

This set of circumstances however makes for a unique anecdote in the history of the struggle in which Australia found itself in those dark days of 1942.

As a footnote, the wreck of the Hudson and the remains of the  crew were discovered in 1943 by a USAAF search team who had been told of the wreck by villagers while they were recovering the remains of the crew of a C-47 Dakota crew that had crashed near Popondetta.  The Hudson wreck was near the village of Popoga.  It was realised it was not American and a later team including Australians recovered the remains of the crew in early 1945, which were subsequently interred in the Lae War cemetery although they are now in the Port Moresby Bomana War Cemetery (CWGC records).

 


Compiled by Steve Larkins Dec 2016 from the source cited below:

 

Source:

'Outgunned and Outclassed' an article by Michael John Claringbold as published in 'Flightpath ' magazine Vol 28 No.2 Nov 2016-Jan 2017 Yaffa Media Pty Ltd Sydney

 

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