Kenneth Taylor, a newly minted second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air Corps’ 47th Pursuit Squadron, received his first posting to Wheeler Army Airfield in Honolulu, Hawaii in April 1941. His commanding officer, General Gordon Austin, chose Taylor and another pilot, George Welch, as his flight commanders shortly after they arrived in Hawaii. Late that November, just a week before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the 47th Pursuit Squadron was moved temporarily to the auxiliary airstrip at Haleiwa Field, located some 11 miles from Wheeler, for gunnery practice.
December 6, 1941, was a Saturday. Taylor, a 21-year-old from Oklahoma, and the 23-year-old Welch, of Wilmington, Delaware, spent the evening at a dance held at the officers’ club at Wheeler Field. After the dance, the two pilots joined an all-night poker game. According to some accounts, the two pilots had finally gone to sleep, and were awoken only around 7:51 a.m., when Japanese fighter planes and dive bombers attacked Wheeler. Other sources record that the poker game was just wrapping up, and they were contemplating a morning swim.