American Air Power in View

Curtiss P-40 Warhawk 42-104590 “Lulu Belle” White 44. Curtiss P-40 Warhawk "Lulu Belle" was a P-40N operated in India against the Japanese and flown by 2nd Lt. Philip Adair of the 10th Air Force, 80th Fighter Group. The reason for the choice of this motif comes from the 89th Fighter Squadron in which Lt. Adair flew; they knew that the Japanese were incredibly superstitious about images of death and so they painted skulls, which varied from aircraft to aircraft, on the cowlings to scare the enemy pilots.

80th Fighter Group

Constituted as 80th Pursuit Group (Interceptor) on 13 Jan 1942. Activated on Feb 1942. Re-designated 80th Fighter Group in May 1942. Used P-47's to train for combat and to serve as part of the defense force for the northeastern US. Sailed for India, via Brazil, Cape of Good Hope, and Ceylon, in May 1943. Assigned to Tenth AF. Began operations in Sep 1943 with P-38 and P-40 aircraft; later used P-47's. Supported Allied ground forces during the battle for northern Burma and the push southward to Rangoon, bombing and strafing troop concentrations, supply dumps, lines of communication, artillery positions, and other objectives. Defended the Indian terminus of the Hump route by striking Japanese airfields and by patrolling Allied airfields to safeguard them from attack. Received a DUC for intercepting a formation of enemy planes and preventing its attack on a large oil refinery in Assam, India, on 27 Mar 1944. Returned to the US in Oct 1945. Inactivated on 3 Nov 1945.
 

Squadrons

88th: 1942-1945

89th: 1942-1945

90th: 1942-1945

459th: 1943-1944

Stations

Selfridge Field, Mich, 9 Feb 1942

Farmingdale, NY, 5 Jul 1942

Mitchel Field, NY, 9 Mar-30 Apr 1943

Karachi, India, 28 Jun 1943

Nagaghuli, India, Oct 1943

Tingkawk Sakan, Burma, 29 Aug 1944

Myitkyina, Burma, 20 Jan 1945

Dudhkundi, India, 24 Maya Oct 1945

Camp Kilmer, NJ, 1-3 Nov 1945

 Commanders

Unkn, Feb-May 1942

Col John C Crosthwaite, c. 20 May 1942

Maj Albert L Evans Jr, 1 Jul 1942

Col Ivan W McElroy, 14 Jul 1943

Col Albert L Evans Jr, 13 Apr 1944

Col Sydney D Grubbs Jr, 1 Feb 1945

Col Hiette S Williams Jr, c. 29 Apr 1945-unkn

Victories

88th Fighter Squadron: 8 victories

89th Fighter Squadron: 23 victories

90th Fighter Squadron: 12 victories

459th Fighter Squadron: 66.5 victories 

Curtiss P-40F Warhawk fighters are being hoisted onto the USS Chenango at Pier 7, NOB Norfolk, Virginia, October 15, 1942.

A Curtiss P-40F Warhawk (41-14305) fighter is being hoisted onto the USS Chenango at Pier 7, NOB Norfolk, Virginia, October 15, 1942.

The top two U.S. aces of World War II. Maj Richard Bong and Maj Thomas McGuire. McGuire was killed in combat on January 7, 1945 and Bong died in the crash of a P-80 jet he was test flying on August 6, 1945.

Curtiss P-36 Hawks.

Curtiss P-36A Hawk US Army Air Corps.

Curtiss P-36C Hawk, US Army Air Corps. Photographed at the National Air Races, Cleveland, Ohio, USA, September 1, 1939. These P-36Cs belonged to the 27th Pursuit Squadron of the 1st Pursuit Group, 2nd Wing, General Headquarters Air Force based at Selfridge Field, Michigan, USA. The leading aircraft is s/n 38-85 with the number 69 on the tail (the 6 is hardly visible). The aircraft were on display at the National Air Races to show not only the US Army's preparedness, but also the various camouflage schemes tested at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, USA, during the Carolina War Games of 1939. Twelve P-36C's were painted in this unusual camouflage, in the picture accompanied by six "normal" painted aircraft. The schemes were of three classes: Class I: One to three dark colors on top (ground camouflage) with white or gray underneath (sky camouflage). Class II: The ground camouflage on top with the outline broken up by sand or white. No camouflage underneath. Class III: Confusion scheme, non-concealment with the same camouflage colors being used on top and underneath. Within each Class there were several variations on patterns and colors. The colors used were water based temporary camouflage paint, as follows: Dark Blue, Dark Green, Dark Olive, Neutral Gray, Sand (believed to have been an orange shade of sand), Sea Green, and White.

Curtiss P-36C Hawk, US Army Air Corps. Photographed at the National Air Races, Cleveland, Ohio, September 1, 1939. The aircraft in the center of the photo is s/n 38-85 with the number 69 on the tail.

Boeing Y1P-26 Peashooter (XP-936).

Boeing P-26A Peashooter.

Boeing P-26A (33-125), 94th Pursuit Squadron, Oakland, California, May 1936. Pilot Lt. John S. Chennault.

Boeing P-26A US Army Air Corps.

Boeing XP-936 (32-412) US Army Air Corps.

Boeing P-26 (32-414) US Army Air Corps. Photographed at Barksdale Field, Shreveport, Louisiana, January 23, 1934.

Boeing P-26C US Army Air Corps.

Boeing P-26B US Army Air Corps, Seattle, Washington, 1933.

Three of the Boeing F4B-3 aircraft that the US Marine Corps used in 1933. These craft are shown in flight on 30 October 1933.

Boeing F4B-3 (A-8892 c/n 1596) US Navy. The F4B-3 was the USN production equivalent of the P-12E with the semi-monocoque metal fuselage, and 21 were ordered on April 23, 1931, together with 92 F4B-4s, the latter differing only in having enlarged vertical tail surfaces, and life raft stowage in an enlarged streamlined headrest on the last 45 examples. Both were designated Model 235 by their manufacturer.

Boeing F4B-4 US Navy.

Boeing F4B-2 (A-8635 c/n 1414), Fighting Squadron Six, US Navy.

Boeing P-12E (32-56), AC Reserve, Oakland Airport, 1939, when the Army Air Corps had half of Hangar One.

Ridgefield PG-2, serial number 42-77062, a powered glider. The idea was to use the glider normally and after landing attach the engines and fly it home.

Crashed Republic P-43A fighter. This particular aircraft is serial 40-2921, pictured in November 1941. It was part of the USAAC's 55th Pursuit Group, originally activated at Hamilton Field, Novato, California. This photograph is taken at Portland Army Air Base, OR, which also hosted the 55th. The P-43s of the 55th Pursuit Group primarily conducted training operations until August 1943 when the group was moved to England for operations over Western Europe.

Seversky 1XP (r/n R 18Y) after crash landing at Floyd Bennett Field, New York, September 1, 1937. At the right, men have extinguished the resulting fire.

North American O-47A, 37-299.

North American O-47A, 37-330, Griffith Park California National Guard Base.

Curtiss YO-40 Raven prototype recon aircraft. The YO-40 was the main prototype of the O-40 Raven recon aircraft. It was developed starting in 1931 and the prototype first flew in February of 1932. The aircraft was powered by a 653 hp Wright R-1820E Cyclone radial engine. The aircraft was subsequently ordered into production in 1932/33.

Curtiss O-40B Raven observation aircraft.

Douglas O-38B, assigned to the Maryland National Guard's 104th Observation Squadron, parked on the flight line on 9 May 1934. The Maryland National Guard was equipped with O-38Bs from February 1932 to March 1937.

Douglas O-38E.

Douglas O-38E (33-4), California National Guard, Alameda, 1939.

Douglas O-38B.

Douglas O-38E.

Northrop N-9M.

View of Nagasaki showing the destruction wrought by the atomic bomb dropped on 9 August 1945.

De Havilland Mosquitos, USAAF.

Allied XLRA-1 amphibious glider.

Allied LRA-1 (BuNo 11648) on its beaching gear.

Allied LRA-1 (BuNo 11648) glider on its beaching gear.

Allied LRA-1 (BuNo 11648) on its beaching gear.

Allied Aviation XLRA-1 transport flying boat glider prototype.

Marine Corps LNS-1 gliders for student pilots at Page Field, Parris Island, South Carolina. May 1942.

A U.S. Marine Corps NAF N3N-3 “Yellow Peril” towing three LNS-1 gliders at Parris Island, South Carolina. May 1942.

Marine Corps student glider pilots preparing for a training flight in their Schweizer LNS-1. Parris Island, South Carolina, May 1941.

Pratt-Read LNE-1 glider. The Navy ordered 100 gliders with the designation LNE. The PR-G1 was a monoplane glider and had a fabric-covered steel tube fuselage and wooden wings and tail. The Pratt-Read TG-32 was a 1940s American military training glider, designed and built by the Gould Aeronautical Division of the piano manufacturer Pratt, Read & Company of Deep River, Connecticut, for the United States Navy. The Pratt-Read glider was a monoplane glider having a fabric-covered steel tube fuselage and wooden wings and tail. The unique "polywog (tadpole)" shape was the suggestion of aerodynamicist Charles Townsend Ludington, former owner of the Ludington Line.

Pratt-Read LNE-1 (31558). When the decision was made not to use gliders in the Pacific campaign, 73 of the Navy aircraft were transferred to the United States Army Air Forces in exchange for two Pratt-Read manufactured CG-4A Army gliders which the Navy had been experimenting with. The LNE-1 gliders were then given the AAF designation of TG-32. The Air Force did not use the gliders and they were stored until the end of the war and were sold on the civilian market.

Sergeant McConachie of the 94th Bomb Group with his L-5 Sentinel (42-99306).

Stinson L-5B Sentinel (44-16902) at East Wretham, home of the 359th Fighter Group.

Stinson L-5 Sentinel (42-98998), 7th Photographic Reconnaissance Group, Mount Farm.

Aeronca O-58B Grasshopper US Army Air Forces.

Aeronca O-58 Grasshopper US Army Air Corps.

Aeronca L-3 Grasshopper.

Aeronca L-3 Grasshopper.

Grumman J4F Widgeon, U.S. Coast Guard.

Grumman J4F-2 Widgeon being crated for shipment circa 1944.

Grumman J4F-2 Widgeon being crated for shipment circa 1944.

Grumman J4F-2 Widgeon being crated for shipment circa 1944.

Airspeed Horsa gliders.

Airspeed Horsa glider.

Airspeed Horsa glider.

C-47s towing Airspeed Horsa gliders as they fly over the Normandy beaches.

Airspeed Horsa glider after landing during training as C-47 tow planes fly overhead.

Hughes H-4 Hercules (NX37602), Long Beach Harbor, California, 2 November 1947. The Spruce Goose taxiing in Long Beach Harbor. The giant flying boat famously made only one short flight.

Great Lakes BG-1 (9807), VB-4, Bombing Squadron Four, visiting Oakland, 1938.

Beech GB-2 Traveler BuNo 01626.

Beech GB-2 Traveler, NAS Pensacola, Warrington, Florida, ca. 1942-45.

Beech GB-2 of the National Naval Aviation Museum, Pensacola, Florida, which arrived in 1984, and is painted in the markings of an aircraft assigned to Naval Air Station (NAS) Pensacola, Florida.

A Goodyear dirigible of the M Class, which had a helium capacity of 725,000 cubic feet.

Berliner-Joyce OJ-2 BuNo 9852.

Berliner-Joyce XOJ-3 BuNo 9196 Anacostia.

Berliner-Joyce XOJ-3.

AT-12 Guardsman twin-seat trainer. The AT-12 was derived from the twin-seat Seversky 2PA. All AT-12s were originally 2PAs that didn't get exported abroad—the leftovers. These remaining aircraft, of which there were 50, were handed over to the U.S. Army Air Corps (late-1930s). The AT-12s were rearmed with a combination of .30 cal and .50 cal machine guns.

September 12, 1944: Japanese-occupied harbor of Cebu is under attack by U.S. Navy carrier-based fighter planes, at Cebu island, Philippines.

Air strikes in the Visayas, 12 September 1944.  SB2C bombers from task force 38 fly past Cebu, after attacking installations and shipping there, 12 September 1944. US National Archives 80-G-247516.

Air strikes in the Visayas, 12 September 1944. Planes from task force 38 aircraft raiding Japanese shipping off Cebu, Cebu, 12 September 1944. US National Archives 80-G-247511.

Air strikes in the Visayas, 12 September 1944. Planes from task force 38 strike installations and shipping at Cebu City, Cebu, 12 September 1944. US National Archives 80-G-247510.

Douglas Dolphin. The Douglas Dolphin is an American amphibious flying boat. While only 58 were built, they served a wide variety of roles including private air yacht, airliner, military transport, and search and rescue. The U.S. Army Air Corps ordered several under the designations C-21, C-26, and C-29.

James Doolittle and fellow Raiders at a reunion in Miami Beach, Florida, United States, 19 April 1947.

General James Dootlittle.

Gen. James Harold “Jimmy” Doolittle, USAAF.

Grumman F3F (1-MF-2) of Marine Fighting 1, prewar.

Aviation Cadet Thanas inspects a Grumman F3F engine. Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, 1942.

Grumman F3F, early war camouflage and markings.

Grumman F3F-3, Anacostia.

Grumman F3F-3, Anacostia.

Grumman XF3F-1, Anacostia.

Grumman F3F-1 (BuNo 0264).

Grumman F3F-2 (BuNo 1018).

Grumman F4F-4 Wildcats from Fighting Squadron 71 (VF-71) and Royal Air Force Supermarine Spitfire Mk.Vc of No. 603 Squadron RAF on the deck of the aircraft carrier Wasp (CV-7) on 19 April 1942. Having landed her torpedo planes and dive bombers at Hatson in Orkney, Wasp had loaded 47 Spitfires of No. 603 Squadron at Glasgow on 13 April, then departed on the 14th for "Operation Calendar". Wasp and her consorts passed through the Straits of Gibraltar under cover of the pre-dawn darkness on 19 April. At 0400 on 20 April, Wasp spotted 11 Wildcats on her deck and launched them to form a combat air patrol. Meanwhile, the Spitfires were warming up their engines and later launched for Malta. When the launch was complete, Wasp retired toward Gibraltar.

Grumman F4F-3S Wildcatfish. The Wildcatfish was inspired by the Japanese success in adding floats to their A6M2 Zero fighter, and was intended to fill the same requirement – to provide fighter protection to islands in the Pacific where airfields were not available.

Two large aluminum floats were designed for the Wildcat by the EDO Aircraft Corporation of Long Island, NY. The aircraft was not amphibious, wheeled beaching gear was attached to the floats in order to bring the aircraft ashore. F4F-3 Bureau Number 4038 was converted for the trails.  Note that the propeller tips are painted in the pre-war three-color warning stripes. The wing guns appear to have been removed, but the bomb racks are in place.

Two small auxiliary rudders were attached to the horizontal tailplanes to provide additional yaw control, which was required by the large surface area of the floats.  The standard wheel well openings were skinned over.

The configuration was first flown on 28 February 1943 at Norfolk. Only a single aircraft was converted.

Testing revealed the aircraft was unstable in yaw, so additional tail surface area was added under the fuselage. The Japanese A6M2-N “Rufe” floatplane also had a similar modification.

The floats reduced the top speed and maneuverability of the Wildcatfish, which was a major liability as the Japanese Zero was already faster and more agile than a standard Wildcat. The U.S. Navy’s Seabee Construction Battalions had also proven themselves remarkably efficient at constructing airfields.  The modification was not put into production, and the Wildcatfish slipped into obscurity.

 

Royal Air Force Operations Over Albania and Greece 1940-1941 in View

Aircrew of No. 211 Squadron RAF being debriefed by a Greek Army liaison officer at Paramythia, Greece, following a sortie over Albania. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1036)

Two Bristol Blenheim Mark Is of 'A' Flight No. 30 Squadron RAF, taking off from Eleusis, Greece, for a bombing raid over Italian-occupied Albania. Both aircraft are carrying external bomb loads in the Light Series Carriers fitted under the fuselage. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1101)

An aircrew officer of No. 30 Squadron RAF checks the bomb load on a Light Series Carrier fitted underneath a Bristol Blenheim Mark I at Eleusis, Greece, before taking off on a sortie over Albania. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1095)

Ground crew run an engine test on Bristol Blenheim Mark I 'VA-O', of No. 84 Squadron RAF at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)336)

Squadron Leader Marmaduke Thomas St John "Pat" Pattle, Officer Commanding No. 33 Squadron RAF, and the Squadron Adjutant, Flight Lieutenant George Rumsey, standing by a Hawker Hurricane at Larissa, Thessaly, Greece. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1260)

Bristol Blenheim Mark I, L1434, of No. 211 Squadron RAF, undergoing an engine service at Paramythia, Greece. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1038)

Officers of No. 211 Squadron RAF enjoy a meal in their open-air Officers' Mess at Paramythia. Seated at top right is the Squadron's Commanding Officer, Squadron Leader J R "The Bishop" Gordon-Finlayson. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1024)

Two American Army officer observers talk to two Canadian members of 211 Squadron RAF at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)422)

Pilots of No. 33 Squadron RAF, at Larissa, Greece, with Hawker Hurricane Mark I, V7419, in background. They are (left to right); Pilot Officer P R W Wickham, Flying Officers D T Moir, and V C "Woody" Woodward, Flight Lieutenant J M "Pop" Littler, Flying Officers E H "Dixie" Dean, F Holman (k.i.a. 20 April 41), and E F "Timber" Woods (k.i.a. 17 June 1941), Pilot Officer C A C Chetham (k.i.a. 15 April 1941), Flight Lieutenant A M Young, Squadron Leader M St.J "Pat" Pattle (Squadron Commanding Officer, k.i.a. 20 April 1941), Flying Officer H J Starrett (died of burns 22 1941); Flight Lieutenant G Rumsey (Squadron Adjutant), Pilot Officers A R Butcher (p.o.w. 22 May 1941), W Winsland, and R Dunscombe (p.o.w. 22 May 1941). (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1246)

The funeral cortege of Sergeant John Merifield passing down a street in Athens to the English Church, where he was interred. Merifield, an air gunner serving with No. 30 Squadron RAF, was the first RAF casualty of the campaign in Greece. He was killed during the RAF's first offensive action on 6 November 1940, when Bristol Blenheims of the Squadron were attacked by Italian fighters while bombing Valona airfield in Albania. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)292)

Pilots of No. 80 Squadron RAF relax in front of Hawker Hurricane Mark I, V7599 'YK-Q', at Eleusis, Greece: (left to right); Sergeant C E Casbolt, Flying Officer H D Flower, Pilot Officer J Still, Pilot Officer P T Dowding, Sergeant E W F Hewett and Warrant Officer S A Richens. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1088)

Pilots of No. 33 Squadron RAF, at Larissa, Greece, with Hawker Hurricane Mark I, V7419, in background. Standing (left to right); Pilot Officers W Winsland, R Dunscombe (p.o.w 22 May 41), C A C Chetham (k.i.a. 15 April 41), and P R W Wickham, Flying Officers D T Moir and H J Starrett (died of burns 22 April 41): sitting (left to right); Flying Officer E J "Timber" Woods (k.i.a. 17 June 41), Flying Officer F Holman (k.i.a. 20 May 41), Flight Lieutenant A M Young, Flying Officer V C "Woody" Woodward, Squadron Leader M St J "Pat" Pattle (Squadron Commanding Officer, k.i.a. 20 Apr 41), Flying Officer E H "Dixie" Dean, Flight Lieutenants J M "Pop" Littler and G Rumsey (Squadron Adjutant), Pilot Officer A R Butcher (p.o.w. 22 May 41). (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1200)

Aircrew of 'A' Flight, No. 30 Squadron RAF, collect their equipment and board Bristol Blenheim Mark I, K7095 'VT-G', at Eleusis, Greece, for a raid on Italian targets in Albania. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)1100)

Bristol Blenheim Mark I 'UQ-D' of No. 211 Squadron RAF, on the ground at Paramythia, Greece. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)2598)

The sun rises over the airfield at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece, as groundcrew remove the covers from Bristol Blenheim Mark I, L8374 'X', of No. 84 Squadron RAF, for a morning raid over Albania. L8374 was one of two Blenheims shot down when nine aircraft of the Squadron bombed the Kucera oil fields on 22 December 1940. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)306)

RAF officers haul their luggage from a Bristol Bombay of No. 216 Squadron RAF after landing at Maleme, Crete, while en route for the Greek mainland during the initial stages of the RAF deployment. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)172)

Blenheim Mark IF, L6670 ‘UQ-R’, of No. 211 Squadron RAF, landing at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece, after a raid on Italian positions in Albania. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)290)

Short Sunderland Mark I, T9048 'DQ-N', of No. 228 Squadron RAF, being boarded by RAF personnel in a rowing boat off Kalamata, during the evacuation from Greece. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)753)

The Commanding Officer of No. 211 Squadron RAF, Squadron Leader J R Gordon-Finlayson, and his wireless operator/air gunner, Pilot Officer A C Geary, photographed in a Bristol Blenheim Mark I at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece, after returning from Corfu. On 24 November 1941, Gordon-Finlayson's aircraft was hit by anti-aircraft fire during a bombing raid on Valona, Albania. Unable to reach Menidi, he force-landed on a beach at Corfu, where he and his crew were toasted and feted before returning to the mainland by fishing boat and rejoining their unit. Gordon-Finalyson is carrying bottles of wine and other gifts given to them by their Greek hosts. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)292)

A wireless operator/air gunner mans his Vickers K gun in the turret of an RAF Bristol Blenheim Mk I at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece, November 1940. (Imperial War Museum ME(RAF)285)

The first contingent of RAF reinforcements for Greece disembarks from a British cruiser and assembles on the quay at Piraeus. (Imperial War Museum CM187)

Bristol Blenheim Mark I, L6670 ‘UQ-R’, of No. 211 Squadron RAF preparing to taxi at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece (Imperial War Museum CM288)

Groundcrew of a Bristol Blenheim squadron at Menid/Tatoi, Greece, await the return of their aircraft from an operation over Albania. (Imperial War Museum CM287)

The crew of Bristol Blenheim Mark I, L1381 'VA-G', of No. 84 Squadron RAF, prepare to board their aircraft at Menidi/Tatoi, Greece, for a raid on an Italian port in Albania. L1381 was one of four Blenheims lost during a raid on Valona on 7 December 1941, when it crash-landed near Sarande after being damaged by an Italian fighter. (Imperial War Museum CM264)

A Messerschmitt Bf 109E of III/JG 77 which crash-landed on the airfield at Larrissa, Greece, possibly one of two claimed shot down by Squadron Leader "Pat" Pattle, the Officer Commanding No. 33 Squadron RAF on 20 April 1941. (Imperial War Museum CM873)

Vertical aerial photograph taken during an afternoon bombing attack on Italian shipping and installations at Valona, Albania, by eight Bristol Blenheim Mark Is of No. 211 Squadron RAF, flying from Menidi (Tatoi) near Athens in north-western Greece. Direct hits can be seen exploding on the jetty and on motor vessels alongside. (Imperial War Museum HU93072)

RAF ground crews assemble in lorries outside Athens, before traveling to a port in southern Greece for evacuation. (Imperial War Museum CM749)

Short Sunderland Mark Is of No 228 Squadron RAF (T9048 'DQ-N' in foreground), and No 230 Squadron, RAF (L2160 'NM-X' center), moored in Messinia Bay off Kalamata while evacuating RAF personnel from Greece. (Imperial War Museum CM759)

Air Commodore J H D'Albiac, Air Officer Commanding British Forces in Greece, sitting at his desk in his Headquarters at the Grande Bretagne Hotel, Athens. He was promoted acting Air Vice-Marshal on 15 November. (Imperial War Museum CM175)

The crew of a Bristol Blenheim Mark I study their maps before taking off on a raid to an Italian port in Albania. (Imperial War Museum CM280)