What the hell does this have to do with old trucks?

--- On Sat, 12/4/10, Rob J <jacobs...@gscwireless.net> wrote:


From: Rob J <jacobs...@gscwireless.net>
Subject: [old-chevy-truck] FW: Aircraft #13 on the Doolittle Raid
To: old-chevy-truck@yahoogroups.com
Date: Saturday, December 4, 2010, 9:11 PM


Rec'd from a correspondent in mail group of heroes.



Give a big Hoo-ah! to the US Navy and the Army Doolittle Crews for their
raid. What courage, what uncommon bravery. Yet note the author's  assertion:
They simply did their job. Each of them felt that they were in the company
of heroes, but not a hero themselves.



This is a great read.



It was a different time, though not necessarily a time of lesser danger than
now. We simply responded to an attack on America by declaring total war on
the perpetrators and their allies and pursued them until their capacity to
make war was totally destroyed. We were a bold and great people then. Today
about half the population acts like a pathetic bunch of PC-whimps!



Compare Pre-revolutionary France [of the late 18th Century]: Now our
Secretary of State acts like Talleyrand, our President acts like Louis XVI,
his Wife acts like Marie Antoinette, and the Congress acts like the useless
Estates General. The King dismissed Patriots like Lafayette who wanted to
create a free France, but the collectivists, revolutionaries, and anarchists
of the day had different ideas and brought mayhem and destruction. Ten years
later Napoleon ruled France as a total dictator and roamed Europe trampling
other nation states under foot almost at will. The aftermath of Napoleon's
defeat created a vacuum, fertile ground for Karl Marx [1818-83] and his
theories to take root. We have been fighting communism ever since. Read an
unbiased history to discover what happened to all these folks... it is worth
your time!



But I digress ....



Our pathetic, Left-dominated education system fails to tell the stories of
these old warriors ... or for that matter, old warriors from Korea, Viet
Nam, the Hot-Cold Wars of the 60s,70s & 80s, GWI and GWII, and Afghanistan.
Our children [some even well into their 50s] have absolutely no sense of the
sacrifices it takes to keep us free, and have only known the good life. Is
it any wonder that the country languishes in 10% unemployment, but won't
take those measures that will turn this country back into the engine of
freedom in the world.



Fewer than 1/3 [like "Steny Hoyer"] of our Congress Members have ever served
in the military. Very few of those who served are combat veterans. Men under
55 year of age were not subject to the draft. Fewer than 7%-10% of men
[depending on age group] under 55 are veterans. This is a pathetic statement
of willingness to support and defend the Constitution and our Republic. It
would seem that most talk about "giving back" to our Country did not apply
to military service. Compare this to the 70+% who served during the WWII,
Korea, and Vietnam era.



Draw your own conclusions about the future of America if the Progressives
finish their agenda of social engineering in the USA.



wrm



  _____  

Should be required reading for all Americans

Great first-hand account of an important event in WWII history.....

Aircraft #13 on the  Doolittle Raid 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

    
    

For you  historians,  this is an interesting account of  the Doolittle raid
on the mainland of Japan in early WW ll.  Enjoy!

This is a really excellent firsthand account by the pilot of  aircraft #13
on the Doolittle Raid off the Hornet in 1942. Take the time and enjoy a bit
of history.



  _____  

  _____  


My  name is  Edgar McElroy. My friends call me "Mac". I was  born and
raised in Ennis , Texas the youngest of  five children, son of Harry and
Jennie McElroy.  Folks say that I was the quiet one. We lived at    609
North Dallas Street and attended the  Presbyterian Church.   
My dad had  an auto  mechanic's shop downtown close to the  main fire
station. My family was  a hard working  bunch, and I was expected to work at
dad's  garage  after school and on Saturdays, so I grew  up in an
atmosphere of  machinery, oil and  grease. Occasionally I would hear a lone
plane   fly over, and would run out in the street and  strain my eyes
against the sun to watch it.  Someday, that would be me up there!   

I really like  cars,  and I was always busy on some project, and  it wasn't
long before I  decided to build  my  very own Model-T out of spare parts. I
got an engine from over here, a frame from over  there, and  wheels from
someplace else, using  only the good parts from old cars  that were
otherwise shot. It wasn't very pretty, but it  was all  mine. I enjoyed
driving on the dirt  roads around town and the feeling  of freedom and
speed. That car of mine could really go fast, 40   miles per hour!

In high school I   played football and tennis, and was good enough  at
football to  receive an athletic scholarship  from Trinity University in
Waxahachie.  I have to  admit that sometimes I daydreamed in class, and
often  times I thought about flying my very own  airplane and being up there
in the clouds. That  is when I even decided to take a correspondence
course in aircraft engines. 
Whenever I got  the  chance, I would take my girl on a date up to  Love
Field in Dallas . We  would watch the  airplanes and listen to those mighty
piston   engines roar. I just loved it and if she didn't,  well that was
just too bad.  

After my  schooling, I  operated a filling station with my  brother, then
drove a bus, and  later had a job  as a machinist in Longview , but I never
lost my   love of airplanes and my dream of flying. With  what was going on
in Europe and in Asia , I  figured that our country would be drawn into  war
someday, so I decided to join the Army Air Corps  in November  of 1940. This
way I could finally  follow my  dream.

I reported for   primary training in California . The training  was rigorous
and  frustrating at times. We  trained at airfields all over California . It
was tough going, and many of the guys washed  out. When I finally  saw that
I was going to make  it, I wrote to my girl back in Longview ,   Texas  .
Her name is Agnes Gill. I asked her to come  out to   California for my
graduation. and oh  yeah, also to marry me.   

I graduated on  July  11, 1941. I was now a real,  honest-to-goodness Army
Air Corps pilot.  Two  days later, I married "Aggie" in Reno , Nevada .  We
were  starting a new life together and were  very happy. I received my
orders  to report to   Pendleton , Oregon and join the 17th Bomb Group.
Neither of us had traveled much before, and the  drive north  through the
Cascade Range of the   Sierra Nevada 's was interesting and  beautiful.  

It was an exciting   time for us. My unit was the first to receive  the new
B-25  medium bomber. When I saw it for  the first time I was in awe. It
looked so huge.  It was so sleek and powerful. The guys started   calling it
the "rocket plane", and I could  hardly wait to get my  hands on it. I told
Aggie  that it was really something! Reminded me of  a  big old scorpion,
just ready to sting!   Man, I could  barely  wait!

We were  transferred  to another airfield in Washington   State , where we
spent a lot a time  flying  practice missions and attacking imaginary
targets. Then,  there were other assignments in   Mississippi and Georgia ,
for more  maneuvers and  more practice. 
We were on our way back to    California on December 7th when we got word of
a  Japanese attack  on Pearl Harbor . We listened  with mixed emotions to
the announcements  on the  radio, and the next day to the declaration of
war. What  the President said, it just rang over  and over in my head,
".With  confidence in our  armed forces, with the un-bounding determination
of our people, we will gain the inevitable  triumph. So help us  God." By
gosh, I felt as  though he was talking straight to me! I  didn't  know what
would happen to us, but we all knew  that we  would be going somewhere now.


The first weeks of   the war, we were back in Oregon flying patrols  at sea
looking  for possible Japanese submarines.  We had to be up at 0330 hours to
warm up the  engines of our planes. There was 18 inches of  snow  on the
ground, and it  was so cold  that our engine oil congealed  overnight. We
placed big tarps over the engines that reached   down to the ground. Inside
this tent we used  plumbers blow  torches to thaw out the engines. I
figured that my dad would be proud  of me, if he  could see me inside this
tent with all this   machinery, oil and grease.  After about an  hour of
this,  the engines were warm enough to  start. 

We flew patrols  over  the coasts of Oregon and Washington from  dawn until
dusk. Once I  thought I spotted a sub,  and started my bomb run, even had my
bomb  doors  open, but I pulled out of it when I realized  that it was  just
a big whale.  

Lucky for me, I  would  have never heard the end of that!  
Actually it was lucky for us  that the  Japanese didn't attack the west
coast, because  we just  didn't have a strong enough force to  beat them
off. Our country was in  a real fix  now,  and overall things looked pretty
bleak to  most folks. In early February, we were  ordered to report to
Columbus ,   South Carolina .  Man, this Air Corps sure moves a fellow
around a   lot! Little did I know what was coming   next!

After we got  settled  in Columbus , my squadron commander  called us all
together. He told us  that an  awfully hazardous mission was being planned,
and  then he  asked for volunteers. There were some of  the guys that did
not step  forward, but I was  one of the ones that did. My co-pilot was
shocked. He said "You can't volunteer, Mac!  You're married, and  you and
Aggie are expecting  a baby soon. Don't do it!" I told him that  "I  got
into the Air Force to do what I can, and  Aggie  understands how I feel. The
war won't be  easy for any of us."   

We that  volunteered  were transferred to Eglin Field near   Valparaiso ,
Florida in late  February. When we  all got together, there were about 140
of us   volunteers, and we were told that we were now  part of the  "Special
B-25 Project."  

We set about our   training, but none of us knew what it was all  about. We
were  ordered not to talk about it, not  even to our wives. 
In early March, we were   all called in for a briefing, and gathered
together in a big  building there on the base.  Somebody said that the
fellow who head of  this  thing is coming to talk to us, and in walks
Lieutenant  Colonel Jimmy Doolittle. He was  already an aviation legend, and
there  he stood  right in front of us. I was truly amazed just to  meet
him. 
Colonel  Doolittle  explained that this mission would be  extremely
dangerous, and that  only volunteers  could take part. He said that he could
not tell   us where we were going, but he could say that  some of us would
not be coming  back.

There was a silent   pause; you could have heard a pin drop. Then  Doolittle
said that  anyone of us could withdraw  now, and that no one would criticize
us  for this  decision. No one backed out! From the outset,  all  volunteers
worked from the early morning  hours until well after  sunset. All excess
weight  was stripped from the planes and extra gas  tanks  were added. The
lower gun turret was removed,  the heavy  liaison radio was removed, and
then  the tail guns were taken out and  more gas tanks  were put aboard. We
extended the range of that   plane from 1000 miles out to 2500 miles.   

Then I was  assigned  my crew. There was Richard Knobloch the  co-pilot,
Clayton Campbell the  navigator, Robert  Bourgeous the bombardier, Adam
Williams the   flight engineer and gunner, and me, Mac McElroy  the pilot.
Over  the coming days, I came to  respect them a lot. They were a swell
bunch  of  guys, just regular All-American   boys.

We got a few ideas   from the training as to what type of mission  that we
had signed  on for. A Navy pilot had  joined our group to coach us at short
takeoffs  and also in shipboard etiquette.  We began our  short takeoff
practice. Taking off  with first a light load, then a  normal load, and
finally overloaded up to 31,000 lbs. The   shortest possible take-off was
obtained with  flaps full down,  stabilizer set three-fourths,  tail heavy,
full power against the  brakes  and  releasing the brakes simultaneously as
the  engine revved up to max power. We pulled  back gradually on the stick
and the airplane  left the ground with the tail skid about one   foot from
the runway. It was a very unnatural  and scary way to  get airborne! I could
hardly  believe it myself, the first time as I  took off  with a full gas
load and dummy bombs within just  700  feet of runway in a near stall
condition. We  were, for all practical  purposes, a slow flying  gasoline
bomb! 

In addition to   take-off practice, we refined our skills in day  and night
navigation, gunnery, bombing, and low  level flying. We made cross  country
flights at  tree-top level, night flights and navigational   flights over
the Gulf of Mexico without the use  of a radio.  After we started that
short-field  takeoff routine, we had some pretty  fancy  competition between
the crews. I think that one  crew got  it down to about 300 feet on a hot
day.  We were told that only the  best crews would  actually go on the
mission, and the rest would   be held in reserve. One crew did stall on
takeoff, slipped back  to the ground, busting up  their landing gear. They
were eliminated  from  the mission. Doolittle emphasized again and  again
the  extreme danger of this operation, and  made it clear that anyone of us
who so desired  could drop out with no questions asked. No one   did. 
On one of  our cross  country flights, we landed at  Barksdale Field in
Shreveport , and I  was able  to catch a bus over to Longview to see Aggie.
We  had a  few hours together, and then we had to say  our goodbyes. I told
her I  hoped to be back in  time for the baby's birth, but I couldn't tell
her where I was going.  As I walked away, I  turned and  walked backwards
for a ways, taking  one last look at my beautiful  pregnant Aggie.  

Within a few days  of  returning to our base in Florida we were  abruptly
told to pack our  things. After just  three weeks of practice, we were on
our  way.   This was it. It was time to go. It  was the middle of March
1942,  and I was 30 years  old. Our orders were to fly to McClelland Air
Base in Sacramento , California on our own, at  the lowest  possible level.
So here we went on  our way west, scraping the tree  tops at 160  miles per
hour, and skimming along just 50 feet   above plowed fields. We crossed
North Texas and  then the  panhandle, scaring the dickens out of  livestock,
buzzing farm houses  and a many a barn  along the way. Over the Rocky
Mountains and   across the Mojave Desert dodging thunderstorms,  we enjoyed
the  flight immensely and although  tempted, I didn't do too much dare-devil
stuff.  We didn't know it at the time, but it was good  practice  for what
lay ahead of us. It proved to  be our last fling. Once we  arrived in
Sacramento  , the mechanics went over our plane with a   fine-toothed  comb.
Of the twenty-two  planes that made it,  only those whose pilots  reported
no mechanical problems were allowed  to  go on. The others were shunted
aside.   

After having our   plane serviced, we flew on to Alameda Naval Air  Station
in   Oakland . As I came in for final  approach, we saw it! I excitedly
called the rest  of the crew to take a look. There below us was a   huge
aircraft carrier. It was the USS Hornet,  and it looked so  gigantic! Man, I
had never even  seen a carrier until this moment.  There were  already two
B-25s parked on the flight deck. Now  we  knew! My heart was racing, and I
thought  about how puny my plane would  look on board this  mighty ship. As
soon as we landed and taxied off   the runway, a jeep pulled in front of me
with a  big "Follow Me"  sign on the back. We followed it  straight up to
the wharf, alongside  the towering  Hornet. All five of us were looking up
and just  in  awe, scarcely believing the size of this  thing. As we left
the plane,  there was already a  Navy work crew swarming around attaching
cables   to the lifting rings on top of the wings and the  fuselage. As we
walked towards our quarters, I  looked back and saw them lifting my  plane
up  into the air and swing it over the ship's deck.  It  looked so small and
lonely.  
Later that  afternoon,  all crews met with Colonel Doolittle  and he gave
last minute  assignments. He told me  to go to the Presidio and pick up two
hundred   extra "C" rations. I saluted, turned, and left,  not having any
idea where the Presidio was, and  not exactly sure what a "C" ration  was. I
commandeered a Navy staff car and told the  driver to take  me to the
Presidio, and he did.  On the way over, I realized that I had  no  written
signed orders and that this might get a  little  sticky. So in I walked into
the Army  supply depot and made my request,  trying to look  poised and
confident. The supply officer asked   "What is your authorization for this
request,  sir?" I told him  that I could not give him one.  "And what is the
destination?" he  asked. I  answered, "The aircraft carrier, Hornet, docked
at   Alameda ." He said, "Can you tell me who  ordered the rations, sir?"
And I replied with a  smile, "No, I cannot." The supply officers   huddled
together, talking and glanced back over  towards me. Then  he walked back
over and assured  me that the rations would be delivered  that  afternoon.
Guess they figured that something big  was up.  They were right. The next
morning we all  boarded the ship.   

Trying to remember  my  naval etiquette, I saluted the Officer of the  Deck
and said "Lt.  McElroy, requesting  permission to come aboard." The officer
returned   the salute and said "Permission granted." Then I  turned aft and
saluted the flag. I made it,  without messing up. It was April 2, and  in
full  sunlight, we left San Francisco Bay . The whole  task  force of ships,
two cruises, four  destroyers, and a fleet oiler, moved  slowly with  us
under the Golden Gate Bridge . Thousands of   people looked on. Many stopped
their cars on the  bridge, and  waved to us as we passed underneath.  I
thought to myself, I hope there  aren't any  spies up there waving. 
Once at sea,  Doolittle  called us together. "Only a few of you  know our
destination, and you  others have  guessed about various targets. Gentlemen,
your   target is Japan !" A sudden cheer exploded among  the men.
"Specifically, Yokohama , Tokyo ,   Nagoya , Kobe , Nagasaki and Osaka .
The Navy  task force will get us as close as possible and  we'll  launch our
planes. We will hit our targets  and proceed to airfields in   China ."
After the  cheering stopped, he asked again, if any of us   desired to back
out, no questions asked. Not on  did, not one.  Then the ship's Captain then
went  over the intercom to the whole  ship's company.  The loudspeaker
blared, "The destination is    Tokyo !" A tremendous cheer broke out from
everyone on board. I  could hear metal banging  together and wild screams
from down below  decks.  It was quite a rush! I felt relieved actually.  We
finally  knew where we were  going.

I set up quarters   with two Navy pilots, putting my cot between  their two
bunks.  They couldn't get out of bed  without stepping on me. It was just
fairly cozy  in there, yes it was. Those guys were part of  the  Torpedo
Squadron Eight and were just swell  fellows. The rest of the  guys bedded
down in  similar fashion to me, some had to sleep on   bedrolls in the
Admiral's chartroom. As big as  this ship was,  there wasn't any extra room
anywhere. Every square foot had a  purpose... A  few days later we
discovered where they had an  ice  cream machine!  
There were  sixteen  B-25s tied down on the flight deck, and  I was flying
number 13. All  the carrier's  fighter planes were stored away helplessly in
the  hangar deck. They couldn't move until we  were gone. Our Army mechanics
were all on board,  as well as our munitions loaders and several   back up
crews, in case any of us got sick or  backed out. We  settled into a daily
routine of  checking our planes. The aircraft were  grouped  so closely
together on deck that it   wouldn't take  much for them to get damaged.
Knowing that my life depended on this  plane, I  kept a close eye on her.  
Day after  day, we met  with the intelligence officer and  studied our
mission plan. Our  targets were  assigned, and maps and objective folders
were   furnished for study. We went over approach  routes and our escape
route towards China . I  never studied this hard back at Trinity. Every
day at dawn and at dusk the ship was called to  general quarters  and we
practiced finding the  quickest way to our planes. If at any  point  along
the way, we were discovered by the enemy  fleet, we  were to launch our
bombers immediately  so the Hornet could bring up  its fighter planes.  We
would then be on our own, and try to make it   to the nearest land, either
Hawaii or Midway   Island . 
Dr. Thomas  White, a  volunteer member of plane number 15,  went over our
medical records and  gave us  inoculations for a whole bunch of diseases
that   hopefully I wouldn't catch. He gave us training  sessions in
emergency first aid,  and  lectured us at length about water  purification
and such. Tom, a medical doctor, had learned how  to  be a gunner just so he
could go on this  mission. We put some new tail  guns in place of  the ones
that had been taken out to save    weight. Not exactly functional, they were
two  broom  handles, painted black. The thinking was  they might help scare
any Jap  fighter planes.  Maybe, maybe not.  

On Sunday, April  14,  we met up with Admiral Bull Halsey's task  force just
out of Hawaii and  joined into one big  force. The carrier Enterprise was
now with us,   another two heavy cruisers, four more destroyers  an another
oiler. We were designated as Task  Force 16. It was quite an impressive
sight to  see, and represented the bulk of what was left  of the  U.S. Navy
after the devastation of Pearl  Harbor . There were over  10,000 Navy
personnel  sailing into harm's way,  just to deliver   us sixteen Army
planes to the Japs, orders of  the  President. 

As we steamed  further  west, tension was rising as we drew  nearer and
nearer to Japan .  Someone thought of  arming us with some old ...45 pistols
that they   had on board. I went through that box of 1911  pistols, they
were  in such bad condition that I  took several of them apart, using the
good parts  from several useless guns until I built a  serviceable  weapon.
Several of the other pilots  did the same. Admiring my "new"  pistol, I held
it up, and thought about my old Model-T.   

Colonel Doolittle   called us together on the flight deck. We all  gathered
round, as  well as many Navy personnel.  He pulled out some medals and told
us how  these  friendship medals from the Japanese government  had been
given to some of our Navy officers  several years back. And now the
Secretary of the  Navy had requested us to return them. Doolittle   wired
them to a bomb while we all posed for  pictures. Something  to cheer up the
folks back  home!

I began to pack my   things for the flight, scheduled for the 19th. I
packed some  extra clothes and a little brown bag  that Aggie had given me,
inside  were some toilet  items and a few candy bars. No letters or
identity cards were allowed, only our dog-tags.  I went down to  the
wardroom to have some ice  cream and settle up my mess bill. It  only
amounted to $5 a day and with my per diem of $6  per day, I  came out a
little ahead. By now, my  Navy pilot roommates were about  ready to get rid
of me, but I enjoyed my time with them. They   were alright. Later on, I
learned that both of  them were killed  at the Battle of Midway. They  were
good men. Yes, very good   men.

Colonel Doolittle  let  each crew pick our own target. We chose the
Yokosuka Naval Base about  twenty miles from   Tokyo . We loaded 1450 rounds
of ammo and four   500-pound bombs... A little payback, direct from  Ellis
County,  Texas! We checked and re-checked  our plane several times.
Everything  was now  ready. I felt relaxed, yet tensed up at the same  time.
Day after tomorrow, we will launch when we  are 400 miles out. I lay in  my
cot that night,  and rehearsed the mission over and over in my   head. It
was hard to sleep as I listened to  sounds of the ship.   

Early the next   morning, I was enjoying a leisurely breakfast,  expecting
another  full day on board, and I  noticed that the ship was pitching and
rolling  quite a bit this morning, more than normal. I  was  reading through
the April 18th day plan of  the Hornet, and there was a  message in it which
said, "From the Hornet to the Army - Good luck,   good hunting, and God
bless you." I still had a  large lump in my  throat from reading this, when
all of a sudden, the intercom blared,  "General  Quarters, General Quarters,
All hands man your  battle  stations!  Army pilots, man your  planes!!!"
There was instant  reaction from  everyone in the  room and food trays went
crashing to the floor. I ran down to my room  jumping through the  hatches
along the way,  grabbed my bag, and ran as fast as I could   go  to the
flight deck. I met with my crew  at the plane, my  heart was pounding.
Someone said, "What's going on?" The word  was  that the Enterprise had
spotted an enemy  trawler. It had  been sunk, but it had  transmitted radio
messages. We had been found   out!

The weather was   crummy, the seas were running heavy, and the  ship was
pitching  up and down like I had never  seen before. Great waves were
crashing  against  the bow and washing over the front of the deck.  This
wasn't going to be easy! Last minute  instructions were given. We were
reminded to  avoid non-military targets, especially the  Emperor's  Palace.
Do not fly to Russia , but fly  as far west as possible, land  on the water
and  launch our rubber raft. This was going to be a   one-way trip! We were
still much too far out and  we all knew  that our chances of making land
were  somewhere between slim and none.  Then at the  last minute, each plane
loaded an extra ten  5-gallon  gas cans to give us a fighting chance  of
reaching China .   

We all climbed   aboard, started our engines and warmed them up,  just feet
away  from the plane in front of us and  the plane behind us. Knobby,
Campbell ,  Bourgeois and me in the front, Williams, the  gunner  was in the
back, separated from us by a  big rubber gas tank. I called  back to
Williams  on the intercom and told him to look sharp and   don't take a nap!
He answered dryly, "Don't  worry about me,  Lieutenant. If they jump us,
I'll just use my little black broomsticks  to  keep the Japs off our tail."


The ship headed  into  the wind and picked up speed. There was now  a near
gale force wind and  water spray coming  straight over the deck. I looked
down at my   instruments as my engines revved up. My mind was  racing. I
went  over my mental checklist, and  said a prayer? God please, help us!
Past  the  twelve planes in front of us, I strained to see  the flight  deck
officer as he leaned into the  wind and signaled with his arms for  Colonel
Doolittle to come to full power. I looked over  at Knobby  and we looked
each other in the eye.  He just nodded to me and we both   understood.

With the deck  heaving  up and down, the deck officer had to  time this just
right. Then I saw  him wave  Doolittle to go, and we watched breathlessly to
see  what happened. When his plane pulled up  above the deck, Knobby just
let out  with,  "Yes! Yes!" The second plane, piloted by Lt.    Hoover ,
appeared to stall with its nose up and  began falling  toward the waves. We
groaned and  called out, "Up! Up! Pull it up!"  Finally, he  pulled out of
it, staggering back up into the  air,  much to our relief!  One by one, the
planes in front of us took  off. The deck pitched  wildly, 60 feet or more,
it looked like. One   plane seemed to drop down into the drink and
disappeared for a  moment, then pulled back up  into sight. There was sense
of relief with  each  one that made it. We gunned our engines and  started
to roll  forward. Off to the right, I saw  the men on deck cheering and
waving  their  covers! We continued inching forward, careful to  keep my
left main wheel and my nose wheel on the  white guidelines that had  been
painted on the  deck for us. Get off a little bit too far left   and we go
off the edge of the deck. A little  too  far to  the right and our wing-tip
will  smack the island of the ship. With the    best seat on the ship, we
watched Lt. Bower take  off in  plane number 12, and I  taxied up to  the
starting line, put on my  the brakes and  looked down to my left.  My main
wheel was   right on the line. Applied more power to the  engines, and I
turned my complete attention to  the deck officer on my left, who was
circling  his paddles. Now my adrenaline was really  pumping! We  went to
full power, and the noise  and vibration inside the plane went  way up. He
circled the paddles furiously while watching  forward  for the pitch of the
deck. Then he  dropped them, and I said, "Here We  Go!" I  released the
brakes and we started rolling  forward, and  as I looked down the
flight-deck  you could see straight down into the  angry  churning water. As
we slowly gained speed, the  deck  gradually began to pitch back up. I
pulled  up and our plane slowly  strained up and away  from the ship. There
was a big cheer and whoops   from the crew, but I just felt relieved and
muttered to myself,  "Boy, that was  short!"

We made a wide  circle  above our fleet to check our compass  headings and
get our bearings. I  looked down as  we passed low over one of our cruisers
and could   see the men on deck waving to us. I dropped down  to low level,
so low we could see the whitecap  waves breaking. It was just after  0900,
there  were broken clouds at 5,000 feet and visibility  of  about thirty
miles due to haze or something.  Up ahead and barely in  sight, I could see
Captain Greening, our flight leader, and Bower   on his right wing. Flying
at 170 mph, I was able  to catch up to  them in about 30 minutes. We were
to stay in this formation until  reaching  landfall, and then break on our
separate ways.  Now we  settled in for the five hour flight.   Tokyo , here
we come!   

Williams was in  the  back emptying the extra gas cans into the  gas tank as
fast as we had  burned off enough  fuel. He then punched holes in the tins
and   pushed then out the hatch against the wind. Some  of the fellows  ate
sandwiches and other goodies  that the Navy had put aboard for  us... I
wasn't  hungry. I held onto the controls with a firm  grip  as we raced
along westward just fifty feet  above the cold rolling  ocean, as low as I
dared  to fly. Being so close to the  choppy  waves  gave you a true sense
of speed. Occasionally our   windshield was even sprayed with a little
saltwater. It was an  exhilarating feeling, and I  felt as though the will
and spirit of our  whole  country was pushing us along. I  didn't  feel too
scared, just anxious. There was a lot  riding on this thing, and on   me.

As we began to  near  land, we saw an occasional ship here and  there. None
of them close  enough to be  threatening, but just the same, we were feeling
more edgy. Then at 1330 we sighted land, the  Eastern shore of   Honshu .
With Williams now on  his guns in the top turret and Campbell  on the  nose
gun, we came ashore still flying low as  possible,  and were surprised to
see people on  the ground waving to us as we flew  in over the  farmland. It
was beautiful countryside.   

Campbell, our   navigator, said, "Mac, I think we're going to be  about
sixty  miles too far north. I'm not  positive, but pretty sure." I decided
that he  was absolutely right and turned left ninety  degrees,  went back
just offshore and followed  the coast line south. When I  thought we had
gone  far enough, I climbed up to two thousand feet to   find out where we
were. We started getting fire  from  anti-aircraft guns. Then we spotted
Tokyo   Bay , turned west and put  our nose down diving  toward the water.
Once over the bay, I could see   our target, Yokosuka Naval Base. Off to the
right there was  already smoke visible over Tokyo  . Coming in low over the
water, I  increased  speed to 200 mph and told everyone, "Get    Ready!" 

When we were close   enough, I pulled up to 1300 feet and opened the  bomb
doors.  There were furious black bursts of  anti-aircraft fire all around
us,  but I flew  straight on through them, spotting our target,  the
torpedo works and the  dry-docks. I saw  a big ship in the  dry-dock just as
we flew over  it. Those flak bursts were really  getting close  and bouncing
us around, when I heard Bourgeois   shouting, "Bombs Away!" I couldn't see
it, but  Williams had a  bird's eye view from the back and  he shouted
jubilantly, "We got an  aircraft  carrier! The whole dock is burning!" I
started  turning  to the south and strained my neck to  look  back and at
that  moment saw a large  crane blow up and start falling over!...    Take
that! There was loud yelling and clapping  each other  on the back. We were
all just  ecstatic, and still alive! But there  wasn't much  time to
celebrate. We had to get out of here and   fast! When we were some thirty
miles out to sea,  we  took  one last look back at our target,  and could
still see huge billows of  black   smoke. Up until now, we had been flying
for  Uncle  Sam, but now we were flying for   ourselves.

We flew south over   open ocean, parallel to the Japanese coast all
afternoon. We saw  a large submarine apparently  at rest, and then in
another fifteen  miles, we  spotted three large enemy cruisers headed for
Japan .  There were no more bombs, so we just let  them be and kept on
going. By  late afternoon,   Campbell calculated that it was time to turn
and   make for China . Across the East China Sea , the  weather out  ahead
of us looked bad and overcast.  Up until now we had not had time  to think
much  about our gasoline supply, but the math did not   look good. We just
didn't have enough fuel to  make it! 

Each man took  turns  cranking the little hand radio to see if  we could
pick up the promised  radio beacon.  There was no signal. This is not good.
The  weather  turned bad and it was getting dark, so  we climbed up. I was
now flying  on instruments,  through a dark misty rain. Just when it really
looked hopeless of reaching land, we suddenly  picked up a strong  tailwind.
It was an answer to  a prayer. Maybe just maybe, we can make   it!

In total darkness  at  2100 hours, we figured that we must be  crossing the
coastline, so I  began a slow, slow  climb to be sure of not hitting any
high ground   or anything. I conserved as much fuel as I  could, getting
real  low on gas now. The guys  were still cranking on the radio, but after
five  hours of hand cranking with aching hands and  backs, there  was utter
silence. No radio  beacon!  Then the red light started   blinking,
indicating twenty minutes of fuel  left. We started  getting ready to bail
out. I  turned the controls over to Knobby and  crawled  to the back of the
plane, past the now collapsed  rubber  gas tank. I dumped everything out of
my  bag and repacked just what I  really needed, my  .45 pistol, ammunition,
flashlight, compass,   medical kit, fishing tackle, chocolate bars,  peanut
butter and  crackers. I told Williams to  come forward with me so we could
all be  together  for this. There was no other choice. I had to  get us as
far west as possible, and then  we had to jump. 

At 2230 we were up  to  sixty-five hundred feet. We were over land  but
still above the  Japanese Army in China . We  couldn't see the stars, so
Campbell  couldn't get  a good fix on our position. We were flying on  fumes
now and I  didn't want to run out of  gas before we were ready to  go. Each
man filled  his canteen, put on his Mae West life jacket and   parachute,
and filled his bag with rations,  those "C" rations  from the Presidio. I
put her  on auto-pilot and we all gathered in the   navigator's compartment
around the hatch in the  floor. We  checked each other's parachute  harness.
Everyone was scared, without a   doubt.  None of us had ever done this
before! I said,  "Williams first, Bourgeois  second, Campbell third,
Knobloch fourth,  and  I'll follow you guys! Go fast, two seconds  apart!
Then count  three seconds off and pull  your rip-cord!" 

We kicked open the   hatch and gathered around the hole looking down  into
the  blackness. It did not look very  inviting! Then I looked up at Williams
and gave  the order, "JUMP!!!" Within seconds they were  all gone.  I turned
and reached back for the  auto-pilot, but could not reach it,  so I pulled
the throttles back, then turned and jumped.  Counting  quickly, thousand
one, thousand two,  thousand three, I pulled my  rip-cord and jerked  back
up with a terrific shock. At first I   thought that I was hung on the plane,
but after  a few agonizing  seconds that seemed like hours,  realized that I
was free and drifting  down.  Being in the total dark, I was disoriented at
first but  figured my feet must be pointed   toward the ground. I looked
down  through the  black mist to see what was coming up. I was in a   thick
mist or fog, and the silence was so eerie  after nearly  thirteen hours
inside that noisy  plane. I could only hear the whoosh,   whoosh  sound of
the wind blowing through  my shroud lines,  and then I heard a loud  crash
and explosion. My   plane!

Looking for my   flashlight, I groped through my bag with my  right hand,
finally  pulled it out and shined it  down toward the ground, which I still
could not  see. Finally I picked up a glimmer of water and   thought I was
landing in a lake. We're too far  inland for this  to be ocean. I hope! I
relaxed  my legs a little, thinking I was about  to splash  into water and
would have to swim out, and then  bang.  I jolted suddenly and crashed over
onto my  side. Lying there in just a  few inches of water,  I raised my head
and put my hands down into   thick mud. It was rice paddy! There was a
burning pain, as if  someone had stuck a knife in  my stomach. I must have
torn a muscle or  broke  something. 

I laid there dazed   for a few minutes, and after a while struggled  up to
my feet. I  dug a hole and buried my  parachute in the mud. Then started
trying to   walk, holding my stomach, but every direction I  moved the water
got deeper.  Then, I saw  some lights off in the distance. I  fished around
for my flashlight and signaled one time. Sensing   something wrong, I got
out my compass and to my  horror saw that  those lights were off to my
west. That must be a Jap patrol! How dumb  could  I be! Knobby had to be
back to my east, so I sat  still and  quiet and did not move.  

It was a cold dark   lonely night. At 0100 hours I saw a single light  off
to the  east. I flashed my light in that  direction, one time. It had to be
Knobby! I  waited a while, and then called out softly,  "Knobby?"  And a
voice replied "Mac, is that  you?". Thank goodness, what a  relief!
Separated by a wide stream, we sat on opposite   banks of the water
communicating in low voices.  After daybreak  Knobby found a small rowboat
and  came across to get me. We started  walking east  toward the rest of the
crew and away from that   Japanese patrol. Knobby had cut his hip when he
went through the  hatch, but it wasn't too awful  bad.

We walked together   toward a small village and several Chinese came  out to
meet us,  they seemed friendly enough. I  said, "Luchu hoo megwa fugi! Luchu
hoo    megwa fugi!" meaning, "I am an American! I am an   American!" Later
that morning we found the  others. Williams had  wrenched his knee when he
landed in a tree,  but he was limping  along  just fine. There were hugs all
around. I have  never   been so happy to see four guys in  all my life! 

Well, the five of  us  eventually made it out of China with the help  of the
local Chinese  people and the Catholic  missions along the way. They were
all very  good  to us, and later they were made to pay terribly  for it, so
we found out afterwards. For a couple  of weeks we traveled across  country.
Strafed a  couple of times by enemy planes, we kept on   moving, by foot, by
pony, by car, by train, and  by airplane. But  we finally made it to India .


I did not make it   home for the baby's birth. I stayed on their  flying a
DC-3  "Gooney Bird" in the  China-Burma-India Theatre for the next several
months.  I flew supplies over the Himalaya  Mountains, or as  we called it,
over "The Hump"  into China . When B-25s finally arrived  in India  , I flew
combat missions over Burma , and then  later in  the war, flew a B-29 out of
the   Marianna Islands to bomb Japan again  and again.  

After the war, I   remained in the Air Force until 1962, when I  retired
from the  service as a Lt. Colonel, and  then came back to Texas , my
beautiful   Texas  .  First moving to Abilene and then we  settled in
Lubbock , where Aggie taught school  at MacKenzie Junior High. I worked  at
the S  & R Auto Supply, once again in an atmosphere  of  machinery, oil and
grease.  

I lived a good life and raised two wonderful sons that I am very proud of.
I feel blessed in many ways. We have a great country, better than most folks
know. It is worth fighting for. Some people call me a hero, but I have never
thought  of myself that way, no. But I did serve  in the company of heroes.
What we did, will never leave  me. It will always be there in my fondest
memories. I will always think of  the fine and  brave men that I was
privileged to serve with.   Remember us, for we were soldiers once and
young. With the loss  of all aircraft, Doolittle believed that the raid had
been a failure, and  that he would be court-martialed upon returning  to the
states. Quite to the contrary, the raid proved to be a tremendous  boost to
American morale, which had plunged following the Pearl Harbor attack. It
also caused serious doubts in  the minds of Japanese war planners. They in
turn recalled many seasoned  fighter plane units  back to defend the home
islands,  which  resulted in Japan's weakened air capabilities at the
upcoming  Battle of Midway  and other South Pacific campaigns.   

Edgar  "Mac" Mc Elroy,  Lt. Col., U.S.A.F.  (Ret.)  passed away at his
residence in Lubbock, Texas early on the morning of Friday, April 4, 2003.  

  _____  

  _____  



William R. Mann
Lt. Colonel, US Army, Retired
Aut Pax Aut Bellum!



"noli nothis permittere te terere" 



"The fabric of American empire ought to rest on the solid basis of THE
CONSENT OF THE PEOPLE. The streams of national power ought to flow from that
pure, original fountain of all legitimate authority." - Alexander Hamilton,
Federalist No. 22, December 14, 1787








-- 
   

"It is curious that physical courage should be so common in the world and
moral courage so rare" --- Mark Twain








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