RyanShort1 wrote:
#4 - We know of at least one other aircraft that had artwork on the nose that doesn't have a widely-circulated "still" of it - that's from a movie capture (if you want to beat me to posting it here, do a search on the afore-mentioned forum on "Avenger")
#5 - It's obvious to me that there is still room for more research to be done regarding the circumstances of the Raid.
Ryan
AU/ACSC/5026/AY07 Air Command and Staff College, Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama
Titled: Major (Retired) Thomas C. Griffin Doolittle Raider - American Hero
by Major Jeffery T. Havnes, USAF dated April 2007
he wrote that "Tom" Griffin (Navigator) was on B-25 number 9, the "
Whirling Dervish".
The hard work ethics instilled by his father paid off with him earning his degree in political science and graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1939.
January 1942 ordered to Columbia, South Carolina, via Mid-Continent Airline at Minneapolis for aircraft modifications where additioanl gas tanks were installed.
The Mitchells also received new bomb shackles and other special equipment.
With his training complete, Griffin's crew had one remaining task before departing Eglin - naming their aircraft.
Griffin and his crew had difficulty on deciding a name until one evening when he mentioned a religious dance called the Whirling Dervish.
The dance was performed by members of a Muslim religious sect predominately in Turkey and definded as:
"A mystical dancer who stands between the material and cosmic worlds. His dance is part of a sacred ceremony in which the dervish rotates in a precise rythm. He represents the earth revolving on its axis while orbiting the sun. The purpose or the ritual whirling is for the dervish to empty himself of all abstract thoughts, placing him in a trance; released from his body he conquers dizziness."
Towards the end of Tom Griffin's training, he and the Intellegence Officer Davey Jones, went to Washington, D.C. to gather charts, target information, and any other relevant information related to the mission. Doolittle placed great trust into Griffin by informing him of the mission details prior to departure from Florida."
Do we have any idea how many planes were actually named, or had nose art?? questions and information keeps coming up. great thread.