Bk Dick Cole's War - WB
- In stock
With
the 100th anniversary of his birth on September 7, 2015 Dick Cole has long stood
in the powerful spotlight of fame that has followed him since his B-25 was
launched from a Navy carrier and flown toward Japan just four months after the
attack on Pearl Harbor. In recognition the tremendous boost Doolittle’s Raid
gave American morale, members of The Tokyo Doolittle Raiders were awarded the
Congressional Gold Medal in May 2014.
Doolittle’s
Raid was only the opening act of Cole’s flying career during the war. When that
mission was complete and all of the 16 aircraft had crash-landed in China, many
of the survivors were assigned to combat units in Europe. Cole remained in India
after their rescue and was assigned to Ferrying Command, flying the Hump of the
Himalayas for a year in the world’s worst weather, with inadequate aircraft, few
aids to navigation, and inaccurate maps. More than 600 aircraft with their crews
were lost during this monumental effort to keep China in the war, but Cole
survived and rotated home in 1943. He was home just a few months when he was
recruited for the First Air Commandos and he returned to India to participate in
Project 9, the aerial invasion of Burma.