Posted on 09/05/2015 3:50:34 PM PDT by jazusamo
On Monday, one of the last two surviving members of the WWII Doolitte Raiders will celebrate his 100th birthday.
As one of the original Doolittle Raiders, retired Lt. Col. Richard Coledefied all the odds in what was considered a suicide mission to bomb Japan in 1942.
Mr. Cole was co-pilot for Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle, who led 16 B-25 bombers on the mission that is considered an event that changed the nations morale following the devastating attack on Pearl harbor.
He was one of 80 fighters who volunteered for the dangerous, top-secret mission. The Raiders planned to take off from the deck of the U.S.S. Hornet, bomb targets in Japan and land in China. But the Japanese Navy detected the Hornet and the takeoff point was moved 200 miles, leaving the airmen with a very slim chance of making it all the way back to China after bombing the targets in Japan.
The Doolittle Raid marked the first time that bombers would attempt to take off from a carrier. The planes had less than 250 feet of runway, and as the first plane to take off, Mr. Cole and Mr. Doolittles plane had the least amount of runway to get up to speed for takeoff.
In an interview with The Washington Times, Mr. Cole attributed his survival and his long life to sheer luck.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
Absolutely right.
“Do the thing and you shall have the power.”
(Ralph Waldo Emerson)
BTTT
I'm sure the machinists could have quickly popped the top turrets and riveted a sheet of aluminum over the holes in short order but probably no one on the Hornet knew what effect that would have on flight characteristics.
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