The Doolittle Raid of April 18, 1942, was a daring American bombing mission that, despite causing minimal physical damage to Tokyo, fundamentally shifted the strategic calculus of World War II by forcing Admiral Yamamoto to launch the Midway campaign, which resulted in the decisive defeat of four Japanese fleet carriers and permanently crippled Japan's ability to project offensive naval power across the Pacific.
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The Day America First Bombed TokyoHinzugefügt:
A wooden case lined with blue velvet holds 80 silver goblets. Nearly all of them face down. Rims pressed into the velvet, bases turned toward the ceiling.
Each goblet is engraved with a name. One of them in the first column just below the topmost goblet is still standing upright.
On April 22nd, 2022, at a ceremony in Fort Walton Beach, Florida, a man named Rich Cole reaches into the case and lifts his father's goblet, the last one still standing, and hands it to his sister, Cindy Cole Chow. She turns it over. She hands it back. Her brother places it gently in the velvet, rim down, name facing the blue. All 80 goblets now face the same direction. 80 goblets, 80 men, one mission.
It is December 21st, 1941, 14 days after Pearl Harbor. President Franklin Roosevelt meets with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and says simply that Japan must be bombed, not for military effect, for morale, for proof that the United States can reach across the Pacific and touch the people who touched them first. His generals begin working the problem. And the problem is this.
There is no way to do it. Japanese forces have swept through Burma, Thailand, Malaya, Singapore, and the Philippines.
The Pacific is contracting by the week.
No Allied airfield exists within range of the Japanese home islands. The Navy's carrierbased planes are too small to carry a useful bomb load over that distance. Landbased bombers are too large to operate off a carrier deck. The gap between what the president wants and what physics permits seems in January 1942 to be absolute.
Then Navy Captain Francis Low, the assistant chief of staff for anti-ubmarine warfare, flies over Naval Station Norfolk and sees something below. On the runway at Chambers Field, someone has painted the outline of a carrier deck for landing practice. Low lands his plane and drives to see Admiral Ernest King. Army medium bombers, the right kind, modified correctly, might be able to take off from a real carrier deck. Not land on one, just take off one time. King passes the idea to General Henry Arnold. Arnold gives it to a 45-year-old lieutenant colonel named James Harold Doolittle.
Jimmy Doolittle is not a young man's idea of a war hero. He is compact, 5'4, built like the middleweight he was in Gnome, Alaska, where he grew up trading punches with anyone who would take the bet. He holds a doctorate in aeronautics from MIT, the first such degree ever awarded in the United States. He was the first pilot to fly solely on instruments. He won air races in the 1930s and ran Shell Oil's aviation department before the army called him back. He is on paper too valuable to risk. He is in practice exactly the kind of man who considers that argument beside the point. When Arnold gives him the planning assignment, Dittle does not ask for time to consider. He asks, "Which aircraft?"
The answer is the North American B-25 Mitchell. A twin engine medium bomber that with the right modifications might just barely be capable of what the plan requires. On February 3rd, 1942, two B-25s lift off the deck of the USS Hornet while she is at sea. The plan is approved. There is a photograph from those weeks. Dittle stands beside a 500B bomb and wires something to it. Medals of friendship awarded to American citizens by the Japanese government before the war. He is grinning.
Something has already been decided. In March 1942, 140 men from the 17th Bombardment Group arrive at Eglund Field in Florida and begin 3 weeks of training. They are told almost nothing about. White lines are painted on a runway to simulate a carrier deck. The men run the fully loaded B-25s toward those lines again and again, hauling the heavy planes into the air in distances the aircraft were never designed to manage. They practice lowaltitude bombing, night flying, overwater navigation with no landmarks and no radio guidance. The B-25s are being rebuilt around them. The radio, 230 lbs of it, comes out. In the tail where the defensive gun turret was removed, two wooden handles are fitted and painted to look like machine gun barrels. The bomb bay gets a steel tank holding 265 extra gallons of fuel. A handmade bomb site improvised from spare parts replaces the classified Nordon.
Each plane will carry four 500 lb bombs, a small bottle of whiskey for each man, and almost nothing else. One of the men who signs up lists his occupation as gunner. His name is Dr. Thomas White. He is a flight surgeon, and he has packed accordingly. Surgical instruments folded beneath his gear, two pints of his own blood ready, because he refuses to let these crews go without a physician.
There is one other detail noticed by no one until it is too late to matter. On Captain Edward York's aircraft at a depot in Sacramento, both carburetors have been replaced by maintenance workers. A change made without York's knowledge, without Doolittle's knowledge before the mission. York is Doolittle's operations officer, the only West Point graduate among the raid crews. He is a meticulous man. He does not know his plane has been changed. He files his orders and prepares for Japan.
On April 1st, 1942, 16 modified B-25s are loaded onto the flight deck of the USS Hornet at Naval Air Station Alama. The following morning, she steams out of San Francisco Bay beneath a heavy fog bank, her deck stacked railto-rail with olive drab bombers.
The Hornet joins Vice Admiral William Holsey's Task Force 16 and turns west.
14 days of ocean separate them from the launch point. 500 m off the Japanese coast, enough fuel in the tanks to reach the designated airfields in China's Xedang Province. The plan is precise. It has to be. The margin is thin enough to cut yourself on. During the crossing, the raiders gunners practice in the rear of the planes, firing at kites flown from the ship. Final target briefings are given. The men learn in some detail what they are flying toward and in somewhat less detail whether they are coming back. The arithmetic is not comfortable. The fuel numbers work on paper in calm conditions from the right distance.
On the morning of April 18th, the arithmetic stops working.
At 3:10 a.m., radar operators on the USS Enterprise pick up a Japanese picket boat, the Nitto Maru number 23, far outside the expected patrol zone. The task force engages and sinks it. Not before it sends a contact report back to Japan. Tokyo receives the warning.
American naval forces approaching.
Confirmed. And the warning is real. It is received and it is effectively useless because no Japanese planner can conceive of what it actually means. The threat, if genuine, must be conventional carrier aircraft. Short range small bombs. The idea of army medium bombers launching off a carrier deck from 650 mi out simply does not exist as a category of threat inside the Japanese air defense mind. The warning is sent. It is filed in a place that does not yet exist. Holly does not know this. What he knows is that surprise may be gone and the task force is exposed. He makes the call.
Launch now, not in 12 hours as planned now. Not from 500 m from where they are.
The fuel math does not survive this decision. From this distance, with this wind, no aircraft will reach the designated airfields in China. Doolittle calls the crews together. He tells them what has changed. He gives every man the option to stand down. Not a single airman takes it.
At 8:20 a.m., Doolittle's B25, the first in line nearest the bow, given the shortest stretch of deck, sits at the end of a runway that ends in open ocean.
The flight deck rises and falls 20 ft in the Pacific swells. Salt spray breaks over the bow. The deck crew clings to anything fixed. In the cockpit, Doolittle sits at the throttles. Beside him, Dick Cole, 26 years old, hands resting on his own set of controls, watches the bow, waiting for the moment the deck begins to rise. The technique is this. You feel the ship climbing a swell and you go. You use the upward pitch of the deck to give you what the runway cannot. You trust that the ocean below is far enough down. And then you fly. Doolittle's engines roar to full power. The plane rolls 500 ft of deck.
400 3. The bow drops toward the water.
The plane leaves the deck with the ocean right there. And then it is not. The B-25 climbs.
15 planes follow one by one through the gray churning morning. Somewhere between the third and fourth plane, a voice comes over the ship's intercom. It says, "Army, man your planes. They are already gone."
The bombers fly west to 200 ft above the water. 6 hours of ocean, mostly silence, fuel burning at a rate the calculations can barely accommodate. And then Japan rises out of the sea. It is noon on a Saturday in Tokyo. Spring, mild, 60°, partly cloudy. Japan's citizens have lived their entire lives under the assumption that their homeland cannot be reached. They have been told this. They believe it. The planes appear at rooftop level over the city low enough to see faces and the people on the ground look up. They wave. The olive drab bombers with the white American stars pass overhead and Tokyo waves at them. Dittle climbs to,200 ft. Four incendiary bombs fall over a large factory at 12:30 p.m.
He turns west. Behind him, the other planes strike an oil tank farm, a steel mill, several power plants. In Yokosuka, a bomb from Lieutenant Edgar Mroyy's plane strikes the carrier Rayuho on her deck, nearly finished, weeks from launch, and delays her commissioning until November. Eight primary targets are struck. Five secondary. The B-25s are virtually untouched. The interceptors that rise to meet them come too late. Six schools and an army hospital are also hit. The bombs do not distinguish.
The planes are gone before Tokyo's sirens finish wailing. The flight toward China takes everything the crews have. A tailwind helps, but not enough.
The fuel gauges move steadily toward empty and below them as night comes on, China is black and fogged and silent.
The navigation beacons that were supposed to guide them to the airfield at Gujo.
The Chinese on the ground had heard aircraft engines in the fog and assumed a Japanese attack. They did what any sensible people do in that situation.
They turned out every light. The men flying toward them had no way to know this. They had crossed the Pacific. They had bombed Japan. They had flown six more hours in the dark. And the people they were flying toward could not guide them home because nobody had told the people they were flying toward that they were coming. Every plane is on its own.
Dittle, unable to find a runway in the mountains, orders his crew to bail out.
He follows. His B-25 crashes into a mountain side. He lands with a sprained ankle in a waterpowered padmill and spends the night there. In the morning, several young students find him and escort him to the Western Jedjang administration. And there, a primary school teacher named Zhuan, who speaks some English, brings his crew back together. Lieutenant Robert Hoover brings his plane down wheels up into a rice patty near Ningbo in Japanese occupied territory. His crew sets fire to the plane and walks for 3 days through hostile country before friendly locals find them and put them on a boat.
Corporal Leland Factor, 21 years old of Crew 3, dies when his parachute fails on bailout. He is buried by a missionary named John Burch, the man after whom the John Burch Society would later be named.
Sergeant William Dieter, 29, and Sergeant Donald Fitz Morris, 23, are also lost on bailout. Lieutenant Ted Lawson flies Crew 7's plane low over a beach and brings it around for a landing. A quarter mile from the shore, the engines quit. The plane goes into the water. Four of the five men aboard are seriously injured. Two local fishermen pull them from the surf. Dr. Thomas White, the man who listed himself as a gunner, sets up his instruments in a village building and amputates Lawson's left leg. He gives him two pints of his own blood. Lawson survives.
He will write a book about it and Captain Edward York, precise West Point trained, loyal to his orders, looks at his fuel gauges and understands something no other crew member on this mission understands. His carburetors, replaced without his knowledge in Sacramento, have been running his engines at a fundamentally different efficiency than every other plane in the formation. His numbers are not like their numbers. His numbers leave him one option. He turns north. He lands in the Soviet Union. The Soviets intern York and his crew for over a year, then arrange a quiet escape that allows both governments to maintain without embarrassment the polite fiction that nothing unusual has occurred. York followed his orders for every mile of this mission. The single moment he broke them was the moment physics gave him no alternative. Of 16 planes, 15 are lost in the waters and mountains of China.
Eight of the 80 men are captured. On April 20th, Dittle sends a wire from the embassy in Chungqing to General Arnold in Washington. It reads, "Tokyo successfully bombed due to bad weather on China coast. Believe all airplanes wrecked. Five crews found safe in China so far. He believes he has failed. He has lost every aircraft under his command. He has inflicted by his own accounting negligible military damage.
He expects court marshal. He will receive the Medal of Honor.
The eight captured raiders are transported to Tokyo, tried at a military court, and sentenced to death.
Five sentences are commuted. Three are not. At 4:30 in the afternoon on October 15th, 1942, three American airmen are brought by truck from a Shanghai prison to public cemetery number one outside the city. A proper ceremony is conducted as prescribed by Japanese military procedure. Then they are shot.
Lieutenant Dean Hallmark, 28 years old. Lieutenant William Pharaoh, 24.
Sergeant Harold Spatz, 21.
The five men whose sentences were commuted remain in confinement on starvation rations for 3 years. One of them, Lieutenant Robert Mater, dies in December 1943.
The remaining four are freed by American troops in August 1945.
Four Japanese officers are later tried for war crimes against the captured raiders. All four are convicted.
But the eight captured men were not the only ones who paid. The fishermen who pulled Lorson from the surf. The school teacher who spoke English, the farmers who hid strangers in their barns, the villagers who transported a badly wounded man through enemy territory on a riverboat at night through country where being found meant death. These people stayed behind when the Americans left.
They stayed in their villages in Jaang and Djang Xi provinces in the same houses where they had sheltered soldiers who had fallen from the sky. The soldiers left things behind. Grateful men always do. Parachute silk, empty ration cans, a cigarette, a military canteen, small things, the kind kept in a drawer as a story to tell. On April 20th, 1942, the same day Doolittle sent his wire.
Emperor Hirohito signed an order.
General Shanroku Harta assembled approximately 200,000 troops of the China Expeditionary Force and sent them into Za Jiang and Jang Xi with two purposes. Find any remaining American airmen and punish everyone who had helped them. When Japanese soldiers arrived in a town or a village, guilt was presumed. Not individual guilt, collective guilt. Every resident, men, women, children, down to the livestock was assumed to have been complicit. The question was not whether you had helped an American. The question was whether you lived nearby. Villages where any American material was found, a scrap of parachute, a can with English writing, a cigarette stub, were treated as having passed judgment on themselves.
The things the crews had left behind as thanks became evidence. That evidence became a death sentence.
Japanese biological warfare units brought nearly 300 pounds of paratyphoid and anthrax cultures into the campaign area, contaminating wells and food supplies. Cholera, typhoid, plague.
Around 1,700 Japanese soldiers died from their own pathogens when the biology turned back on them. The Chinese dead are harder to count. Provincial records from Ja Jiang alone document tens of thousands killed in 1942.
An American priest named Vincent Smith reported to American newspapers in 1943 that more than 250,000 Chinese civilians had been murdered in the search for Doolittle's flyers.
General Clare Chen cited the same figure. American historians James Scott, Richard Frank, and John Haymon have examined that claim and treated it seriously. The honest answer is that somewhere between tens of thousands and a quarter million people died over nearly 4 months of that campaign. At any point in that range, the number is staggering.
Father Wendelyn Dunker, who witnessed what the Japanese left behind, wrote that they passed through like a swarm of locusts, leaving nothing but destruction and chaos. For two generations, the Chinese government suppressed this story. The people of Zed Jang and Djangi largely kept it among themselves.
In Washington, the story being told was a different one. Roosevelt, when asked where the raid had launched from, answered with a straight face that it came from Shangriila, the fictional paradise of James Hilton's novel.
The crowd laughed. The truth would not be declassified for a year. Dittle was promoted twice. From Lieutenant Colonel directly to Brigadier General, skipping the rank of colonel entirely.
The raid appeared on recruitment posters across the country. It was the proof America could hit back. What no one in the planning room had accounted for was what the raid would do to the strategic calculations of Admiral Isuroku Yamamoto. The home islands had been struck. The machinery of air defense had visibly failed.
Yamamoto, already planning the expansion of Japan's defensive perimeter, now moved with urgency to attack Midway Island to draw out and destroy what remained of American naval power in the Pacific and close the perimeter for good. The resulting battle in June 1942 destroyed four Japanese fleet carriers.
It permanently crippled Japan's ability to project offensive naval power across the Pacific. The do little raid had inflicted minimal military damage. The Japanese response to it produced the most decisive naval defeat of the entire war. A morale operation. 16 planes, 80 men, bombs on factories, and accidentally on schools. And through the chain of fear and pride and miscalculation, it set in motion the turning point of a war.
Doolittle never stopped thinking about the Chinese. The silver goblets were a gift in 1959 from the city of Tucson, Arizona. 80 sterling cups, each engraved with a raider's name, twice, in fact.
Once on the right side of the goblet and once on the bottom, so the name could be read even after it was turned over. Dick Cole built the blue velvet case that holds them. He built it himself, measuring and fitting each space. For decades, the raiders gathered every year and called the role. The living answered, the goblets of the dead already faced down. The living raised the upright cups filled with 1896 Hennessy cognac, Doolittle's favorite from the year of his birth, and drank to those who had gone. The reunions grew quieter year by year. The standing goblets fewer, the roll call shorter.
Richard Cole. Dick Cole, the 26-year-old co-pilot who had sat beside Doolittle with his hands on the throttles, who had watched the bow of the Hornet fall toward the Pacific and felt the plane lift, died on April 9th, 2019 at the age of 103.
He was the last.
On April 22nd, 2022, his son reached into the blue velvet case and lifted his father's goblet, the last upright one in the first column just below Dittles, and handed it to his sister. She turned it over. She handed it back. He placed it in the velvet. Rich Cole said afterward that the legacy of the raiders might best be understood in one simple fact.
They volunteered. that do little gave every man repeated chances to step back that not one of them did. On October 25th, 2018, 3 and 1/2 years before that last ceremony in Florida, a memorial hall opened in Kuhou Jiang Province, China. Descendants of the Dittle Raiders attended the opening. Most of them were elderly by then, crossing the ocean to honor not only their forebears, but the people of Kujo, the soldiers and civilians who had taken in strangers falling from the sky and paid afterward with everything they had. Two ceremonies, two kinds of memory, one event. Doolittle wrote in his autobiography that the raid was meant to make the Japanese people doubt that their leaders could protect them. that in this it succeeded.
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