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  • Recent Posts

    • General Apathy
      . hi earlymb,   well it seems you are getting it all together, and I hope there was some help in the post I made, hopefully you will have a finished Jeep that last another eighty years.   it was great to watch Johan last Sunday just reach into his Jeep and start the Jeep with his hand on the starter switch without any need for choke or accelerator all down to good earthing contacts, no whirling of the starter just brrrmmmh straight off from a six volt system.     Having several Jeeps back in the late 70's these are some of the earthing straps I still have       Norman D. Landing, Forum Normandy Correspondent, 04 June  2O26.   ..      
    • manayunkman
      Leaping lizards Matt, what a treasure trove of information and some mighty fine material.
    • manayunkman
      The patch in the original posting that originated for sale in Pennsylvania.   There was a Naval Air Station at Willow Grove, it’s a long shot but might help.   Back in the early 90s I got a Navy pilots group from a pilot who flew out of the Grove and had his squadron patch on a summer weight jacket like yours.   I can’t get more specific than that unfortunately.
    • jumpship
      Based on the movement list below, dated 6 Dec 1943, with him as a passenger, he was a Flight Chief with the 738th BS.   Per the link below for another BS, ref a Flight Chief: "Each of the squadron's four flights had one Flight Chief, who supervised a minimum of four Crew Chiefs and eight Assistant Crew Chiefs. The four Flight Chiefs reported to one Line Chief, who was under the supervision of the Engineering Officer and his assistant officer." So, he was responsible for a number of men who kicked the tires and lit the fires, so to speak- all important aircraft maintenance.   https://b26.com/page/WW2-556th-Bomb-Squadron-387th-Bomb Group-Engineering-Section.htm     Source: NARA   Dan
    • Colt.45-94
      A unique canteen in my collection, it's a French Mle.1877/15, 2-liter canteen, colonial Khaki color cover, rather than the standard "Horizon Blue". I believe it was used by volunteer with the American Ambulance Service (pre-1917). It is heavily Graffitied
    • Titanfan
      He was overseas with the 15th air force in Italy. 454th bg, 738th bs. No air medals or dfc, so may have been in an instructor role due to his high rank.
    • Titanfan
      Misspelled first name on the photo. Please note mother's and father's name here...
    • easterneagle87
      That is amazing! 2000 miles of ocean, divided by 29 days = 68(+) miles a day. In am truly in awe.
    • easterneagle87
      I totally missed the connection of the other two buckles I had posted. WOW!! Those were three are very interesting! Thanks for pointing them out, as I was... what three buckles? 
    • JerseyDevil117
      Why does it need to be WW2? The unit was reactivated in the early 60s, had a German made pocket patch similar design. At that time tour jackets were popular aswell. 
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