Lt. Gen. William Pitts, war hero
Lt. Gen. William Pitts, war hero | Inland News | PE.com | Southern California News | News for Inland Southern California
OBITUARY: He was born at March Air Force Base and later commanded the 15th Air Force from there. He was 89.
10:00 PM PST on Wednesday, December 31, 2008
By DAVID OLSON
The Press-Enterprise
Lt. Gen. William Pitts, a World War II hero who was born at March Air Force Base and later commanded the 15th Air Force from the base, died Tuesday at his Riverside home.
Lt. Gen. Pitts was 89. He died from cancer and complications from a broken pelvis suffered in a September fall, said his daughter, Dale Cowgill.
"If there is one word to sum him up, it was that he was a patriot," said Paul Gill, a former wing commander at March and close friend of Lt. Gen. Pitts. "He loved his country and put that love into action."
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Longtime friend Rep. Ken Calvert, R-Corona, said Lt. Gen. Pitts was an institution in the Inland area.
"People trusted him and a lot of people looked up to him, as I did," Calvert said. "He was a great man and a great friend, and he did great service to our country."
Lt. Gen. Pitts had deep family roots in both the military and the Riverside area.
Lt. Gen. Pitts' father was a career military officer, and Lt. Gen. Pitts was born at March Field Hospital on Thanksgiving Day 1919, a year after the March base opened. The Pittses lived on Larchwood Street in Riverside until they became the first family to live in newly built base housing.
In a 2005 oral history recorded at March, Lt. Gen. Pitts recalled how he delivered newspapers and sold magazines on the base as a kid. When he was 10, he took his first airplane ride. When the plane landed, he vowed to become an Air Force pilot.
Lt. Gen. Pitts graduated from West Point in 1943. He flew 25 World War II missions against Japan in a B-29 Superfortress.
In his last mission in the bomber, then-Capt. Pitts was shot down off the Japanese coast. He parachuted seconds before the plane exploded and was rescued by a submarine.
In the decades that followed, Lt. Gen. Pitts rose up the ranks and earned three stars. He served a tour of duty as a NATO commander in Turkey, four tours at the Pentagon, and stints as a diplomat in Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, England and Taiwan.
In 1972, he returned to his birthplace as commander of the 15th Air Force.
"For him to come back as March Air Force commander was the ultimate thrill," Gill said. "It was home like no place was home."
After retirement in 1975, Lt. Gen. Pitts and his wife, Doris, moved to Washington, D.C. In the early 1990s, they bought a home in Riverside, where he lived until his death.
Lt. Gen. Pitts continued his close relationship with March during retirement, helping to keep the base open. It was closed as an Air Force base in 1993 and is now an air reserve base. A stone post honors Lt. Gen. Pitts at March's parade grounds.
In 2000, Lt. Gen. Pitts hammered a pair of his copper wings on the Famous Fliers Wall of the Mission Inn in Riverside, joining famous aviators such as Amelia Earhart, Chuck Yeager and Charles Lindbergh.
While raising money as a board member of the March Field Air Museum, Lt. Gen. Pitts met donor Dick Alden, former CEO of Bloomington-based Empire Oil Co.
The two became friends and golfed regularly at Riverside's Victoria Club.
"I was a lowly enlisted man, but he always said to me, 'You're a 5-star corporal,' " Alden, an Air Force veteran, recalled.
"We've got colonels at the Victoria Club who swagger around and are rather obnoxious," Alden, 77, said. "But he was never one to be boastful. He was a grand old man."
Cowgill, 62, said her father never looked down on people. He empathized with and cared about those he led, she said.
"He loved people and loved the men he worked with," Cowgill said. "He would never have asked people to do something he wouldn't do himself. He never had to earn respect. It was something given freely. He just had that magnetism."
Although Lt. Gen. Pitts was well-loved, he was stern when he needed to be, both to his three daughters and to his men, Cowgill said.
"He believed in discipline, but discipline with a great deal of love," Cowgill said.
Lt. Gen. Pitts celebrated his 60th anniversary with Doris on Dec. 22. Theirs was a love that never waned, Cowgill said.
"My mother was the great love of his life," she said. "They were together for 60 years and in love. That's how he died: holding my mother's hand."
Lt. Gen. Pitts is survived by wife, Doris; daughters Cowgill, of Oak Park; Alisha Pitts, of Encino, and Linda Terrie, of the Sacramento area; sister Nanetta Atkinson, of Oklahoma City; and four grandchildren.
There will be no services, Cowgill said. The family is planning a memorial service at West Point, she said.