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Classic Wings Magazine WWII Naval Aviation Research Pacific Luftwaffe Resource Center
When Hollywood Ruled The Skies - Volumes 1 through 4 by Bruce Oriss


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 23, 2014 3:08 pm 
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Included were the name tag from Ogawa's flight jacket, a letter he'd carried with him on his last mission, some photographs of his friends, the buckle from his parachute harness, a smashed pocket watch, a fair amount of money. Some items were stained with the kamikaze pilot's blood.

Wonder why he was carrying "a fair amount of money"?

Returning such items to the family is okay sometimes; but if it was me, I'd have sent those items down to the National Naval Aviation Museum for display rather than giving them to the family. Sorry, but in this case over 300 Americans paid the ultimate price for that "memorabilia" - it can just stay here.

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PostPosted: Sun Mar 23, 2014 6:12 pm 
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Interesting post Chris, I tend to have mixed feelings about your point. He served his country, he did his duty, even though that mean't killing Americans, he still did what was required. He was the product (and victim IMO) of a different time and a different culture. As much as it was/is tragic to Americans the results of his mission, his family and relatives had no way to control the events and outcome of his mission and shouldn't be held responsible. This is reason enough for me to believe they (his next of kin) should (and did) receive his belongings.

Even though the mixed feelings perhaps are valid and the wounds are still deep, the war has long been over and compassion and reconciliation are all that should really matter anymore. War is a horrible thing and there are never any winners. It would be nice to think that someday we as humans could finally come to terms with that.

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PostPosted: Sun Mar 23, 2014 6:21 pm 
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... And a bit more bits of interest ...

Actor Paul Newman's connection to the USS Bunker Hill.

"He had been nominated six times for best-actor Oscars (Cat on a Hot Tine Roof 1958; The Hustler, 1961; Hud, 1963; Cool Hand Luke, 1967; Absence of Malice, 1981; and The Verdict, 1982), and he won the actor-of-the-year award at the 1958 Cannes Film Festival for The Long Hot Summer, with Joanne Woodward. This down-to-earth, Budweiser-drinking (counteracted by daily workouts), regular-guy superstar has made a career of turning in memorable performances. Delighting his audiences time after time in films including Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Sting, (1973), and The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972), Paul Newman was finally recognized with an Academy Award for his portrayal of The Hustler's Fast Eddie Felson, now middle-aged, in The Color of Money (1986)."

What's not so well known about Paul Newman the actor was Paul Newman the WWII service member.

Paul Leonard Newman enlisted in the U.S. Navy on 22 January 1943. Newman was sent to the Navy V-12 program at Yale, with hopes of being accepted for pilot training. But this plan was foiled when a flight physical revealed him to be color-blind. So he was sent instead to boot camp and then on to further training as a radioman and gunner. Qualifying as a rear-seat radioman and gunner in torpedo bombers, in 1944 Aviation Radioman Third Class Newman was sent to Barber's Point, Hawaii, and subsequently assigned to Pacific-based replacement torpedo squadrons (VT-98, VT-99, and VT-100). These torpedo squadrons were responsible primarily for training replacement pilots and combat aircrewmen, placing particular importance on carrier landings. During his two years in the Pacific the Newman luck held, especially on one occasion when his pilot fell ill and their aircraft was grounded. The rest of the squadron was transferred to an aircraft carrier operating off the coast of Japan, where a kamikaze hit the carrier, inflicting heavy casualties on the men and aircraft of Newman's squadron.
While he was with VT-99, training personnel in TBM-1Cs, TBM-3s, and TBF-1cs, the squadron moved to Eniwetok, then to Guam, and in January 1945 on to Saipan. This remained its base of operations until its decommissioning nine months later. The squadron would ferry replacement pilots and aircraft to carriers around the fleet. Though Newman did see scattered combat, his closest brush with death came in May 1945. Operating from Saipan, Newman and a number of other aircrews from his squadron had been ordered with their TBM Avenger aircraft to be replacements onboard the Essex-class aircraft carrier USS Bunker Hill (CV-17) operating off Okinawa. But Newman’s pilot got sick, grounding the aircraft and crew until he could recover. Just days later, on May 11, two Japanese kamikaze aircraft hit the ship within 30 seconds and in the resulting fires and explosions 346 sailors were killed — among them, the entire contingent from Newman’s squadron.
A VT-99 contingent including Newman was aboard the aircraft carrier Hollandia (CVE-97), which was operating about five hundred miles off Japan when the Enola Gay dropped its atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Finally, Paul Newman served with Carrier Aircraft Service Unit 7, one of many shore-based carrier air-group support units. CASUs operated the facilities, serviced and rearmed, made repairs, and handled routine upkeep and administrative duties. Newman's CASU was based in Seattle, conveniently located for his discharge at Bremerton, Washington State, on 21 January 1946. He was decorated with the American Area Campaign Medal, the Good Conduct Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal.

Link here
http://www.wwiijeepparts.com/ForSaleSto ... ductId=219

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PostPosted: Sun Jul 27, 2014 9:16 pm 
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Does anybody know who flew the Corsair with the number 157 from VF84 o Bunker Hill? I built a Testors kit a few years back with those markings and was just wondering. It looks like that plane is in the tenth photo in the first post.


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