Edwards AFB News

Legacy aviator Col. Clarence W. Lewis Jr. visits 412th Test Wing

  • Published
  • By Danny Bazzell

Retired USAF pilot Col. Clarence W. Lewis Jr., the first William Tell award recipient, toured the Center of the Aerospace Testing Universe here at Edwards AFB, May 23. Lewis, who recently turned 94, won the coveted “William Tell” award for aerial gunnery skills in 1954.

 The William Tell Meet, a biennial aerial gunnery competition, pits USAF fighter crews against each other in a series of aerial gunnery engagements using live ordnance against towed aerial targets.  In that first event, then Captain Lewis and his radar systems operator, Lt. James R. Boone took home the “Top Gun” trophy; the pair flew a F94-C Interceptor for the 3550th Flying Training Wing (Interceptor) from Moody AFB, Ga.

He began his Air Force career in 1943 and was assigned to the Pacific Theater during WWII flying the P61 “Black Widow.” As a squadron commander, he flew combat missions in Vietnam from 1964 to 1966.  Lewis retired in 1977 after 34 years of service to the US Air Force and has flown a multitude of aircraft including the P51, P61, B17, B25, B26, F86, F89 and all of the F100 series aircraft.