Major Charles Carpenter made headlines during the
Second World War when he affixed six bazookas to his tiny Piper L-4 observation
plane and began attacking German tanks. “Bazooka Charlie” and his plane “Rosie
the Rocketer” were profiled in a variety of military and civilian publications,
including the iconic Stars & Stripes. The major was a high school educator
in the civilian world, teaching history and coaching football. Carpenter was
talented, highly intelligent, and athletically gifted, but the war truly tested
him. In 1945, the dashing pilot was forced out of the cockpit and into a
hospital bed by Hodgkin’s lymphoma, which was discovered in his neck. In
addition to the enemy and terminal cancer, Carpenter also battled cynicism and
guilt, particularly in regard to the state of his marriage, which was on the
brink of failure by the time he returned home from Europe. Charles Carpenter
died in 1966, having resumed his career, salvaged his marriage, and long
outlived the timeline afforded him by his doctors in the initial prognosis. This
revealing biography of the famous pilot was made possible through the
collaboration of noted aviation author and magazine editor Jim Busha, and
Carpenter’s daughter, Carol Apacki. Along with memories of her father in his
postwar years, Carol provided a treasure trove of wartime correspondence between
Charles and his wife, Elda Carpenter.