During the early morning hours of September 9, 1942, in a bold attempt to retaliate for the Doolittle Raid, Japanese pilot Nobuo Fujita, launched from submarine I-25, dropped incendiary bombs near Brookings, Oregon, aiming to ignite massive forest fires. https://youtu.be/oeP5EKOfJ7s?si=VmzlKaYu5XBWsKPb The operation involved a Yokosuka E14Y floatplane, catapulted into the Oregon sky with the intent…
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Travel for Aircraft By joseph may on December 18, 2020 at 11:05 AM
“They’re Killing My Boys!”: the History of Hickam Field and the Attacks of 7 December 1941, J.Michael Wenger, Robert J. Cressman, and John Di Virgolio, 2019, ISBN 9781682474587, 272 pp.
“They’re Killing My Boys!”: the History of Hickam Field and the Attacks of 7 December 1941 by J. Michael Wenger, Robert J. Cressman, and John F. Di Virgilio
“They’re Killing My Boys!” is the third title (the previous two books were reviewed in the previous posts) of a trilogy centered upon the disastrous series of attacks by the Japanese Empire bringing the U.S. directly into World War II. The authors create a unique approach, as well, by researching the details of a myriad of individual actions both U.S. and Japanese and knitting them into the tapestry of the actions at Hickam Army Air Field on 7 December 1941. The three authors collectively possess expertise and proficiency beyond most indivi
Travel for Aircraft By joseph may on December 14, 2020 at 12:02 PM
“This Is No Drill”: the History of NAS Pearl Harbor and the Japanese Attacks of 7 December 1941, J. Michael Wenger, Robert J. Cressman, and John F. Di Virgilio, 2018, ISBN 9781682471814, 260 pp.
“This Is No Drill”: the History of NAS Pearl Harbor and the Japanese Attack of 7 December 1941 by J. Michael Wenger, Robert J. Cressman, and John F. Di Virgilio
“This Is No Drill” is the second title (the first book was reviewed in the previous post) of a trilogy centered upon the disastrous series of attacks by the Japanese Empire bringing the U.S. directly into World War II. The authors create a unique approach, as well, by researching the details of a myriad of individual actions both U.S. and Japanese and knitting them into the tapestry of the actions at Naval Air Station (NAS) Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. The three authors collectively possess expertise and proficiency beyond most in