Posted on 04/18/2015 12:01:58 PM PDT by Retain Mike
One week after Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt began pressing the U.S. military to immediately strike the Japanese homeland. The desire to bolster moral became more urgent in light of rapid Japanese advances. These included victories in Malaya, Singapore, the Philippines, Wake Island, Guam, and the Dutch East Indies, as well as sinking the British battleships Prince of Wales and Repulse.
Only improbable, audacious ideas warranted consideration, because submarines confirmed Japan placed picket boats at extreme carrier aircraft range. One idea even involved launching four engine heavy bombers from China or Outer Mongolia to strike Japan and fly on to Alaska. Captain Francis Low, a submariner, first broached to Admiral Ernest King the idea of flying Army Air Corps medium bombers from an aircraft carrier. King thought Lows foolish idea might be have merit and ordered him to contact Captain Donald Duncan, Kings air operations officer. Duncan reviewed the specifications of all Army Air Corps bombers and decided the B-25 could be modified to do the job. King then sent Low and Duncan to General Hap Arnold who bought the idea and directed Colonel Jimmy Doolittle to make the raid happen.
By mid-January 1942 Doolittle began assembling the planes and crews. As one of the first MIT aeronautical engineering graduates he could not only agree with Duncans initial assessment, but in choosing the B-25B knew exactly how to turn a possibly into a reality. Since few Army personnel underwent training or had experience for operations involving ocean navigation, crews were chosen from the 17th Bombardment Group flying anti-submarine patrols from the newly build airfield at Pendleton Oregon.
Unaware of this pending mission, the 24 crews flew to Minneapolis where the bombers received extensive modifications. Installing auxiliary fuel tanks increased capacity over 70%. Range eventually increased from about 1,000 to 2,500 miles by also utilizing flying configurations and practices designed to conserve fuel. Increased fuel weight then required removing a 230 pound liaison radio. The lower twin 50cal. remote control turret was later removed at Eglin Field in Florida saving 600 pounds. An armored 40gal fuel tank was then inserted. Cameras were installed to record bombing results.
While in Minneapolis Captain David M. Jones told the officers their destination was not Columbia, South Carolina for anti-submarine patrol. They were asked to volunteer for a dangerous, important, and interesting mission for which no information could be given. Nearly everyone volunteered even though most were new to their trade. Of the 16 pilots Doolittle actually took on the raid, only five had won their wings before 1941 and all but one was less than a year out of flight school.
Jimmy Doolittle, now a Lieutenant Colonel, met all 140 of them in Eglins operations office. He said, If you men have any idea that this isnt the most dangerous thing youve ever been on, dont start this training period ..This whole thing must be kept secret. I dont want you to tell your wives ..Dont even talk among yourselves about this thing. Now does anyone want to drop out? Nobody dropped out.
The crews began training with Lieutenant Henry L. Miller, USN (who later became an Honorary Tokyo Raider) on Elgin Field 48 days before the raid. The crews used a remote runway flagged to mark available carrier deck length. In three weeks the crews learned to take off at near stalling speeds of 50-60 miles per hour, overloaded, and in just over a football field length. At Pendleton pilots had used a mile long runway to build up speed to 80-90 miles per hour.
As the mission armament officer, Captain Charles Ross Greening improvised substitutes after removal of the top secret Norden bombsight and the lower gun turret. At Elgin he and Tech Sergeant Edward Bain designed a substitute bomb sight with two pieces of aluminum. The Mark Twain device could be rapidly fabricated in the base metal shop and provided superior accuracy for this low-altitude bombing assignment. On board the Hornet Greening installed a pair of black-painted broom handles in each aircraft's tail cone to intimidate attacking enemies.
Twenty two bomber crews hedgehopped across country to San Francisco. The sixteen crews who reported no problems had their planes lifted aboard ship. Those who reported problems, however minor, were devastated when Doolittle excluded them from the mission.
The Hornet left the U.S. and joined the Enterprise at sea April 13, 1942. Now two of the four American carriers in the Pacific with 14 escorts and 10,000 crew members steamed towards Japan. The Army crews shared quarters with the navy squadrons. Edgar McElroy, pilot of #13 aircraft remembers bunking with two members of Torpedo Bomber Squadron Eight. He later learned that they along with all but one member of the squadron died at the Battle of Midway.
From radio traffic analysis, the Japanese knew the carriers that had eluded their six carrier strike force on December 7 were underway somewhere in the Western Pacific. Unbeknownst to the Americans, the Japanese patrolling picket boats were 650 miles, not 300 miles, offshore to provide the intelligence needed for an overwhelming counterattack.
On April 18 the U.S. task force encountered this picket line 170 miles before their planned launch. The pilots rushed to their planes as the ship plowed into the wind and 30 foot swells. Each aircraft received at this last minute 11 extra 5gal gas cans. A Navy officer twirled a flag, listened for the right tone from the revving engines, and felt for the precise moment to release them on the pitching deck. The pilots, who had never flown from a carrier, saw the ships bow reaching into a grey sky, and then falling into a dark angry ocean sending salt spray across the deck. When released, they quivered down a bucking flight deck keeping the left wheel on a white line to just miss the superstructure by six feet. Every plane lifted safely from a rising deck into the stormy sky; even Ted Lawson who discovered he had launched with flaps up and initially plunged towards the ocean.
The bombers proceeded independently to Tokyo, Yokohama, Yokosuka, Nagoya and Kobe. While underway the industrial targets had been briefed by Lt Stephen Jurika who was naval attaché in Tokyo 1939-1941. He imparted information from not only his own travels, but from a Soviet counterpart who had spent several years researching possible bombing targets. The Soviet Union was long aware of Japans plans to attack both China and U.S.S.R. (strike north), or to attack colonial possessions of the U.S, Netherlands and Britain (strike south).
Colonel Doolittle considered the raid a failure. Every plane had been lost. One plane and crew was interred in the Soviet Union. Fifteen crashed in China resulting in three crewmen deaths. Eight crew members were captured of whom three were executed and one starved to death in Japanese prison camps. He saw the raid as secondary to the bombers safely arriving and providing Chennaults air force an offensive capability.
However, the raid proved a crucial moral victory demonstrating Americans could do the impossible even if their battle fleet was blasted to wreckage, and they were losing an army in the Philippines. The Imperial Navy suffered a devastating loss of face, because Admiral Yamamoto had guaranteed the Emperor that the Americans would never attack their home islands.
Partial Bibliography:
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo by Ted Lawson
Charles Ross Greening, Colonel United States Air Force http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/crgreening.htm
Greening, Colonel Charles Ross (1914-1957), HistoryLink.org Essay 10320 http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=10320
Captain David M. Jones http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_M._Jones
The Navy Targets Tokyo http://www.usni.org/magazines/navalhistory/2015-04/navy-targets-tokyo
Letters from the Precipice of War (Steven Jurika) http://www.usni.org/magazines/navalhistory/2014-01/letters-precipice-war
Sorge: A Chronology (Excerpts 1942) http://richardsorge.com/excerpts/1942/index.html
The Official Website of The Doolittle Tokyo Raiders http://doolittleraider.com/
Doolittle Raiders 70th Anniversary: http://www.washingtontimes.com/specials/doolittles-tokyo-raid/ http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=doolittle+raiders+70th+anniversary&qpvt=doolittle+raiders+70th+anniversary&FORM=IGRE http://doolittlereunion.com/
North American B-25 Mitchell http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-25_Mitchell
Pendleton Field http://www.ohs.org/education/oregonhistory/historical_records/dspDocument.cfm?doc_ID=C9A94F93-E10A-57A0-B694B0AFFE69184C
A final toast for the Doolittle Raiders http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/14/opinion/greene-doolittle-raiders
Jonna Doolittle Hoppes "Jimmy Doolittle Raid" presentation at Historic Flight Foundation http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgt8PMoRGG8
Doolittle Raiders: The Last Reunion (VIDEO) http://salem-news.com/articles/may302013/doolittle-raiders-rn.php
Doolittle Raider forum, etc. http://www.doolittleraider.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=128&t=579 http://www.dontow.com/2012/03/the-doolittle-raid-mission-impossible-and-its-impact-on-the-u-s-and-china/ http://www.historynet.com/countdown-to-the-doolittle-raid.htm
April 18 is the anniversary of the mission and I offer this essay annually as a reminder. Men like these should never be forgotten. The reference and links contain much more information for those interested.
Thanks for posting this!
Thanks for posting this!
But it was Eglin base in Florida not Elgin.
The best war documentary I have seen is by Ken Burns, “The War” 2007. I watch it every year..sometimes twice
Thank you for posting this.
One irony that I think many over look is the The aircraft was a B25B MITCHELL bomber.
General Billy Mitchell an advocate for air power and one of the men who predicted the Pearl Harbor bombing, twenty years earlier. At that point, his army career was over, because all the Wizards of Smart (thanks Rush) “knew” war was obsolete and the Japanese were so backward they could not possibly do something like that.
As a kid, I used to delight to talk with guys from various theaters, missions, etc. It was kinda like a collection. I meet and knew guys who were waist gunners on B25s, B17 radio and turret gunners, various pilots, POWs, one guy who survived Bataan, another guy who flew the “Hump” (he was shocked I even knew about it), at D-Day, Iwo, Guadalcanal, etc.
Now those guys are getting harder and harder to find.
The Army knew how to get things done.
Mitchell was actually dead by the time Pearl Harbor happened.
There’s a neat short story titled “Billy Mitchell’s Overt Act” that has him acceptng the demotion and staying in the AAC. Where he ends up in command of the B-17 squadron on Oahu in late 1941. Very good read.
Thank you for posting this!
I’ve said this before of LtC Doolittle’s raiders - there were so many courageous acts in WW2 (of which my own Dad fought).
But few were as audacious as this one. We let the Japanese know they were indeed touchable.
Bump!
Thus, the battle of Midway only a few months after the Tokyo raid. We know how that turned out...
The more direct result of the bombing was a pin prick to Japanese industry while resulting in the slaughter of thousands of Chinese who were rounded up and executed for helping the American pilots make their way to safety. The majority of these Chinese had no connection to this final chapter. It's reminiscent of the Nazi's slaughter of an entire Czech village after the assassination of a prominent German general...
Two remain.
It’s an Alternate History story.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.