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Recent Posts
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By Spathologist · Posted
I dug up the specifications for browning given by Springfield Armory to LF&C in January 1918 for their manufacture of sabers. You may or may not want to skip the cyanide step. In March of 1918, LF&C was authorized to also use a parkerizing process on the guards. Further correspondence from LF&C in September 1918, requesting permission to skip the step of polishing the back of the guard before finishing, shows LF&C was still browning the guards and not using parkerization. -
By DiGilio · Posted
The web page you linked to is just a cut and pasted reference by the Air Force showing a unit's lineage and assignments along with a basic operations summary copied from on-hand sources. Here is one for the 26th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron. They were stationed in Japan and then the Philippines through the late 1940s and 1950s. One sentence. It is normal. https://usafunithistory.com/PDF/20-29/26 WEAPONS SQ.pdf You can see at the bottom of the 45th's page one of the sources is "Unit history. 67 Tactical Reconnaissance Wing with the United Nations Forces, Korea. 1954." That is the kind of thing you would want to look for. But whoever wrote the summary didn't have anything on hand regarding the unit's time in Japan. It does not mean some kind of summary of the units' activities in Japan doesn't exist. -
By DiGilio · Posted
The 45th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron was not the only tac recon squadron in the pacific. The 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing, which the 45th was a part of, had a number of squadrons spread across Japan. At the start of the second Taiwan Strait crisis, the 15th Tac Recon Squadron was at Kadena air base on Okinawa. The 11th and 12th were at Yokota air base (near Tokyo) along with the wing headquarters. The 67th TRW had also absorbed the 6007th Reconnaissance Group in 1957, retaining its 6091st Reconnaissance Squadron. The 45th up at Misawa was the farthest from Taiwan, 1500 miles away. From the mid-50s due to the risks and diplomatic issues, overflights and that sort of thing began to be shifted to more covert or deniable operations. Taiwanese pilots were trained and had recon aircraft transferred to them and the CIA of course had its U-2s. At the time of the crisis the ROC air force had a recon force of 7 RF–86Fs, 25 RF–84Fs, and one RB–57A. CIA U-2s of Detachment C (home-based out of Atsugi) are known to have flown at least 6 missions over China during the crisis. You seem to be assuming because there is not a lot of information about a unit, down to all its flight and mission details, something extreme must have happened and it is being covered up. I would just caution against that kind of thinking. -
By WEAVER45 · Posted
I am unsure if these numbers hand written on the left side of the general orders are the numbers on the medals. On the same roll I found a LOM award with a number written next to it which is 5281 and a silver star with the number 4211. 4211 is a very low number for WWII silver star awards. what does everyone else think? -
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By Keystone · Posted
Looks like my files got shrunk down so as not to be readable. Let me try again. Tim -
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