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Lucky Bastards’ Club
George Shepard was my wingman on April 17, 1945 . We were issued the usual equipment and rode to our ships on the hood of a Jeep. The weather was fine that day. We took off about 9 a.m., formed up and headed to meet up with our assigned Bomb Group. I don’t recall any […]
December 2020 Articles
For more authentic and thrilling stories, check out other articles from this issue! For your reading pleasure includes both online and downloadable PDF version.
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Confined in a microworld of levers, switches, and instruments, Royal Australian Air Force Flight Sergeant James Denman Harvey slid his Curtiss P-40’s eight-piece canopy backwards and looked down. Hammered by tropical heat and skin slippery in perspiration, he studied the surface of a newly captured airstrip called “Tadji.” Harvey and fellow No. 78 Squadron pilots […]
Kittyhawk Jungle Rescue
Confined in a microworld of levers, switches, and instruments, Royal Australian Air Force Flight Sergeant James Denman Harvey slid his Curtiss P-40’s eight-piece canopy backwards and looked down. Hammered by tropical heat and skin slippery in perspiration, he studied the surface of a newly captured airstrip called “Tadji.” Harvey and fellow No. 78 Squadron pilots […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
During his initial exposure to Libyan skies as a Canadian with Royal Air Force 94 Squadron on March 23, 1942, 21-year-old Lt. James Francis Edwards, a former Saskatchewan farm boy, helped escort 12 South African Air Force Douglas A-20 Havoc bombers to an Axis-held airfield marked as Martuba on intelligence charts. From this dust-blown patch […]
Flying into the Lion’s Jaws
During his initial exposure to Libyan skies as a Canadian with Royal Air Force 94 Squadron on March 23, 1942, 21-year-old Lt. James Francis Edwards, a former Saskatchewan farm boy, helped escort 12 South African Air Force Douglas A-20 Havoc bombers to an Axis-held airfield marked as Martuba on intelligence charts. From this dust-blown patch […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
The Air Combat Museum boasts an impressive and growing collection of old iron, including the P-51 Mustang “Worry Bird” featured in this story. This 1944 model saw combat service during WW II and is painted as one flown by Bob Frisch of the 339th Fighter Group based at Fowlmere, England. Pictured above: Mike George started […]
Air Combat Museum—home of the Worrybird
The Air Combat Museum boasts an impressive and growing collection of old iron, including the P-51 Mustang “Worry Bird” featured in this story. This 1944 model saw combat service during WW II and is painted as one flown by Bob Frisch of the 339th Fighter Group based at Fowlmere, England. Pictured above: Mike George started […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
In June of 1941, at age 20, Joseph Paul Lynch entered the Naval Aviation Cadet program. He earned his wings and a Marine Corps commission in May of 1942. His first combat tour was in the Solomon Islands with VMF-112, flying F4F Wildcats and F4U Corsairs. Lieutenant Lynch was shot down once in the Solomons, […]
The Marines’ Last Dogfight – The Corsair Was One Tough Bird
In June of 1941, at age 20, Joseph Paul Lynch entered the Naval Aviation Cadet program. He earned his wings and a Marine Corps commission in May of 1942. His first combat tour was in the Solomon Islands with VMF-112, flying F4F Wildcats and F4U Corsairs. Lieutenant Lynch was shot down once in the Solomons, […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
Burrows’s 21 black-and-white shots of a Marine helicopter crew on a mission near Da Nang are, by now, among the most recognizable images of the Vietnam War—14 brief pages of photographs in a popular news magazine, the record of a single day in the lives of four or five young Marines. One needs to recall […]
A Human Record of War: Life magazine 1965
Burrows’s 21 black-and-white shots of a Marine helicopter crew on a mission near Da Nang are, by now, among the most recognizable images of the Vietnam War—14 brief pages of photographs in a popular news magazine, the record of a single day in the lives of four or five young Marines. One needs to recall […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
Combat aircraft assigned to ground fighting battalions, brigades and divisions of the Army belong to pure Army aviation—not the Air Force—and trace their origins to June 6, 1942, when the first fabric-covered light planes joined artillery units. The Cessna L-19 Bird Dog, probably the Army’s most famous airplane, resulted from a 1949 decision to replace […]
The Army’s L-19
Combat aircraft assigned to ground fighting battalions, brigades and divisions of the Army belong to pure Army aviation—not the Air Force—and trace their origins to June 6, 1942, when the first fabric-covered light planes joined artillery units. The Cessna L-19 Bird Dog, probably the Army’s most famous airplane, resulted from a 1949 decision to replace […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
1942-45. It was a long time ago, but even today at 96, the events are crystal clear. It was about pilots and crews. It was about a whole generation of kids who grew up very quickly. It was about depending on people, in a way you would probably never again depend on someone, and they, […]
One Lucky Bastard! Tales from an ETO Mustang Pilot
1942-45. It was a long time ago, but even today at 96, the events are crystal clear. It was about pilots and crews. It was about a whole generation of kids who grew up very quickly. It was about depending on people, in a way you would probably never again depend on someone, and they, […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart -
Aboard each of the thousands of B-17 Flying Fortresses that left the soil of England bound for targets in Europe were 10 young men. Outwardly, they were no different from any late-teen or early-twenties boy you’d meet anywhere in America. Same faces, same names, same youthful vigor and sense of invincibility. But on their shoulders […]
Bomber Crew Chronicles – B-17 Crewmen Remember their German Missions
Aboard each of the thousands of B-17 Flying Fortresses that left the soil of England bound for targets in Europe were 10 young men. Outwardly, they were no different from any late-teen or early-twenties boy you’d meet anywhere in America. Same faces, same names, same youthful vigor and sense of invincibility. But on their shoulders […]$1.99 $1.99 - Add to cart
Featured Digital Issue
Best Deal! Read all of these articles in our December issue for only $7.99. Read it here on ReadyRoom with our easy-to-use digital reader or download the PDF version
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Feature Articles
One Lucky Bastard! Tales from an ETO Mustang Pilot( 10 ) /
Lucky Bastards' Club( 10 ) /
Air Combat Museum—home of the Worrybird( 10 ) /
A Human Record of War: Life magazine, 1965( 10 ) /
Kittyhawk Jungle Rescue( 10 ) /
Flying into the Lion's Jaws( 10 ) /
The Marines' Last Dogfight - The Corsair Was One Tough Bird( 10 ) /
Bomber Crew Chronicles - B-17 Crewmen Remember their German Missions( 10 ) /
The Army's L-19( 10 ) /
December 2020 Issue
$7.99 $7.99 - Add to cartON THE COVER: Roaring right above John Dibbs's camera lens is Mike George's "Worry Bird," a beautifully
restored P-51 Mustang and combat survivor of the 339th Fighter Group that was stationed in England
during WW II. "Worry Bird" is currently hangared at the Air Combat Museum in Springfield, Illinois. (Photo by John Dibbs/planepicture.com)
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