Sunday, May 19, 2013

CAF Centex Air Wing - "Yellow Rose" participates in largest gathering of B-25 in 40 years!

CAF Centex Air Wing's - B-25, the "Yellow Rose" participates in the 68th Doolittle Raiders reunion, the largest gathering of the remaining B-25 in 40 years!

17 B-25 Medium Range bombers preparing for take off from Wright Patterson AFB, Ohio, and flying in formation over the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force to pay tribute to the Doolittle Raiders in a ceremony to honor their fellow airman that could not be in attendance.
Jimmy Doolittle's B-25 Medium Range bombers takes off from the USS Hornet April 1942 as part of "Doolittle Raiders" historic bombing of Japan.

On April 22, 2010, 17 B-25 bombers attended the reunion, to honor the 4 surviving original airmen on the 1942 raid.

Here are four great videos of the event and flight.




April 22, 2010The following report of the 68th Doolittle Raiders Reunion, held last weekend in Dayton, Ohio, comes from Ken Kula, EAA 404432 of Manchester, New Hampshire, who drove 13.5-hours to attend. - Editor
CAF Centex's own "Yellow Rose".

The Doolittle Tokyo Raiders Association Reunion was held Friday through Saturday, April 16-18, at the U.S. Air Force Museum abeam Wright Patterson AFB, Dayton, Ohio. There are eight surviving crew members of the 80 who flew on the mission and four attended the reunion, including 88-year-old MSgt. David Thatcher (engineer/gunner - aircraft #7); 90-year-old Lt. Col. Robert Hite (co-pilot of aircraft #16 - the last one off the USS Hornet); 92-year-old Maj. Thomas Griffin (navigator and mission planner - aircraft #9); and 94-year-old Lt. Col. Richard Cole (co-pilot of aircraft #1 - Jimmy Doolittle’s plane, see photo below). 
Photo of Air Crew No. 1

Crew No. 1 in front of B-25 #40-2344 on the deck of the USS Hornet, 18 April 1942. From left to right: (front row) Lt. Col. Doolittle, pilot; Lt. Richard E. Cole, copilot; (back row) Lt. Henry A. Potter, navigator; SSgt. Fred A. Braemer, bombardier; SSgt. Paul J. Leonard, flight engineer/gunner. (U.S. Air Force photo)
CAF Centex scale model of USS Hornet during take-off.
CAF Centex's own highly detailed scale model at its Museum in San Marcos, Texas

The distinctive chevron arrangement needed for extra distance just prior to take off.
Actual 1942 photo of the USS Hornet showing the distinctive chevron arrangement.

All four men had numerous public autograph sessions, with hundreds of people in a line snaking through the museum, waiting for every two-hour session. We attended a 45-minute media conference to ask questions and hear their stories on Friday afternoon.
The "Yellow Rose", CAF Centex Wing's B-25

A few items of note: one member said it was common to for B-25 pilots to be deaf in their left ear because their engines were notoriously loud. Lt. Col. Hite, co-pilot on #16, said he had no doubt he’d make it off the Hornet OK because the other 15 had already done it. Co-pilot in #1, Lt. Col. Cole, said he wasn’t afraid being first to takeoff because he was alongside the best pilot in the group, then-Maj. Doolittle!

The other half of the weekend’s festivities centered around the gathering of 17 B-25s, the largest gathering of the North American-built bombers since the making of the film Catch-22 (1970) more than four decades ago. Staging out of Grimes Field in nearby Urbana, Ohio, the planes thundered onto the museum grounds Saturday morning, landing on a private runway behind it. They were presented on static display Saturday for the public, and departed Sunday around noon to perform a 17-ship fly past to open a commemorative ceremony for the Doolittle Raiders at the Museum.


The gathering included one of each version: B-25A, B-25D, B-25H, PBJ (Navy/Marine version), plus 13 B-25Js. The fly past on Sunday was spread out in three columns filling the sky for some 30 seconds. The rumble of 34 Wright Cyclone engines overhead was chilling and thrilling at the same time. I’d hate to have been underneath the bombers as they delivered their payloads in wartime, but then I marveled at the resourcefulness and dedication it took to put these aircraft all overhead at once for the reunion.

We were honored to be able to watch and listen to the men, who volunteered for their mission. At the time, I don’t think they knew of the raid’s importance. Only historians have brought out the two main impacts of the 16-ship raid - that America’s morale soared, for it was a much-needed early victory in the war, and Japan was immediately put on the defensive because they now needed to protect their homeland, slowing down their offensive plans that, up until that point, had resulted in a string of victories.



For More in formation on The Central Texas Wing of The Commemorative Air Force 

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