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#1
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From: Cub Driver lo
ed flying to Australia in one of them. I can look this up in Bloody Shambles if you like. I just bought this two-volume set (and damned pricey at 29.95 pounds per volume) with high hopes. Haven't begun on it yet, but noting your comment above I turned to the description of the MacArthur evacuation and noted, alas, errors of no small moment. The authors state that of the 4 B-17s originally sent for MacA., two turned back with engine trouble, true enough, but then say that a third crashed off the Australian coast. Very wrong. This was Capt. Godwin's B-17, which he put down into the sea short of the runway at Del Monte Field, close enough that the crew could wade ashore and Godwin could receive some choice words from them complimenting him on his flying skill. It was also at Del Monte where Godwin met MacArthur and charmed him into making him his personal pilot for the flight down and then put him on his staff. This is all pretty well known stuff and for the "Bloody Shambles" trio of author's to not know this, especially considering how it affected future air operations, is distressing. Further on the authors' state that 3 "new" B-17s were sent to fetch McA. At first reading I took this literally and snorted, as there were no "new" B-17s in the theater at the time, and with the lack of spare parts--or even any facilities where engine changes could be performed--any "new" B-17s sent to Australia very quickly would have been well used. But on reflection it could be interpreted that the authors by writing "new" meant to say "additional" or "other," so I'll let that go. But having spotted this blunder among others on first cracking open the cover, I wonder what other gross errors litter the text. And this is supposed to be one of the better researched books on WW2 aviation. Crap. Chris Mark |
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Where I mention Godwin I meant Godman. And re those three "new" B-17s sent,
one of these aborted within minutes of leaving Batchelor Field and never left Australia, let alone made it to Del Monte Field, so only two got in. Bloody Shambles says this plane developed engine trouble at Del Monte field. If so, it never would have left it. Because there was not way to repair it and no way a B-17 could get out of that field on three engines. Apparently the authors of BS (good acronym for this book) believe fixing a B-17 engine is a trivial matter, easily accomplished without tools or spare parts, or those totally unnecessary drones, airplane mechanics. Chris Mark |
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#4
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![]() when 3 B-17s and 10 B-25s flew up from Australia As a footnote, two pilots of these 13 aircraft were awarded the medal of honor in subsequent actions, both for raids to Rabaul, both posthumously One was Capt. Pease. The other was Maj. Ray Wilkins. Chris Mark |
#5
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Apparently the description in Bloody Shambles of MacArthur's extraction from
Del Monte, as well as the description of the B-17/B-25 episode is lifted from John Toland's But Not in Shame. I've been told that the BS author's real interest was BCE stuff and they didn't really give much attention to the US side. At least they're not as bad as Costello (The Pacific War) in which he mentions MacA's B-17 flight from Mindanao to Darwin took five hours, and that at Darwin MacA boarded a train for the remainder of his journey. Are there no reliable books covering this part of the war? Chris Mark |
#6
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![]() Chris, these stories are enough to make a man cry. If you got this information out of a book, please post the title. On the other hand, if you didn't, then please write the book and post the title! -- G Hassenpflug * IJN & JMSDF equipment/history fan |
#7
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![]() Well, there is a book about the prisoners of Rabaul, by Henry Sakaida. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...f=nosim/annals On Mon, 28 Jul 2003 10:32:19 +0900, Gernot Hassenpflug wrote: Chris, these stories are enough to make a man cry. If you got this information out of a book, please post the title. On the other hand, if you didn't, then please write the book and post the title! all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at http://www.danford.net/index.htm Vietnam | Flying Tigers | Pacific War | Brewster Buffalo | Piper Cub |
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#10
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On 28 Jul 2003 15:28:21 GMT, ost (Chris Mark) wrote:
Surely the war must be a big subject to the Japanese, but what can be found in English from a japanese point of view is very limited. Much of what there is appears to be related to fighter planes and pilots. curiously enough, the best stuff available on this line has been available for more than half a century, and that's the "Japanese Monograph" series published by the U.S. Army of Occupation in Japan in the late 1940s, early 1950s. They vary hugely in quality, but they were written by demobbed Japanese officers (perhaps enlisted as well) using what resource material was available, plus their personal memories. Some of them have been republished www.danford.net/historic.htm and the Library of Congress has a complete set on microfilm. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at http://www.danford.net/index.htm Vietnam | Flying Tigers | Pacific War | Brewster Buffalo | Piper Cub |
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