The Navigation Case: Training, Flying and Fighting the 1942 to 1945 New Guinea War
The Navigation Case reveals the drama and sacrifice expended by America’s pioneering pilots’ first ever demonstration of air superiority, during the greatest campaign in U.S. Air Force history.

An aged and glossy leather briefcase was discovered when our family house was cleaned out and sold. We came to learn that my father had meticulously collected his military documents, private letters, and souvenirs, and packed them away in this—his pilot’s navigation case.

From randomly within, a newspaper article tumbled out. It described a massive typhoon in New Guinea causing “horror and tragedy” and resulting in incredible untold loss of men and aircraft. But larger questions remained unanswered: What was my father, or any American, doing in New Guinea, of all places? If America was fighting Japan, why were we fighting in New Guinea?

Aviation as an industry was in its infancy. The sagas of pioneering pilots detail fascinating but deadly cadet training and violent air missions. The narrative flourishes into an incredible story giving the context for all the Pacific war stories from Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Midway island, and Iwo Jima, up to the avoidable catastrophes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
1138725797
The Navigation Case: Training, Flying and Fighting the 1942 to 1945 New Guinea War
The Navigation Case reveals the drama and sacrifice expended by America’s pioneering pilots’ first ever demonstration of air superiority, during the greatest campaign in U.S. Air Force history.

An aged and glossy leather briefcase was discovered when our family house was cleaned out and sold. We came to learn that my father had meticulously collected his military documents, private letters, and souvenirs, and packed them away in this—his pilot’s navigation case.

From randomly within, a newspaper article tumbled out. It described a massive typhoon in New Guinea causing “horror and tragedy” and resulting in incredible untold loss of men and aircraft. But larger questions remained unanswered: What was my father, or any American, doing in New Guinea, of all places? If America was fighting Japan, why were we fighting in New Guinea?

Aviation as an industry was in its infancy. The sagas of pioneering pilots detail fascinating but deadly cadet training and violent air missions. The narrative flourishes into an incredible story giving the context for all the Pacific war stories from Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Midway island, and Iwo Jima, up to the avoidable catastrophes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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The Navigation Case: Training, Flying and Fighting the 1942 to 1945 New Guinea War

The Navigation Case: Training, Flying and Fighting the 1942 to 1945 New Guinea War

by John E. Happ
The Navigation Case: Training, Flying and Fighting the 1942 to 1945 New Guinea War

The Navigation Case: Training, Flying and Fighting the 1942 to 1945 New Guinea War

by John E. Happ

Hardcover

$30.00 
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Overview

The Navigation Case reveals the drama and sacrifice expended by America’s pioneering pilots’ first ever demonstration of air superiority, during the greatest campaign in U.S. Air Force history.

An aged and glossy leather briefcase was discovered when our family house was cleaned out and sold. We came to learn that my father had meticulously collected his military documents, private letters, and souvenirs, and packed them away in this—his pilot’s navigation case.

From randomly within, a newspaper article tumbled out. It described a massive typhoon in New Guinea causing “horror and tragedy” and resulting in incredible untold loss of men and aircraft. But larger questions remained unanswered: What was my father, or any American, doing in New Guinea, of all places? If America was fighting Japan, why were we fighting in New Guinea?

Aviation as an industry was in its infancy. The sagas of pioneering pilots detail fascinating but deadly cadet training and violent air missions. The narrative flourishes into an incredible story giving the context for all the Pacific war stories from Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Midway island, and Iwo Jima, up to the avoidable catastrophes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781642939613
Publisher: Knox Press
Publication date: 11/23/2021
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

John E. Happ is a contributing author to the Journal of the American Revolution, has written for the World War One website The 75th Artillery C.A.C., and the adventure magazine Atlantic Coastal Kayaker.

A native of the Chicago area but immersed in the contrasting narratives of foreign cultures since college in Spain, he speaks five languages. His varied assignments in Germany, Switzerland, the Philippines, and Japan contributed greatly to his research into the origins of the Pacific War resulting in this, his first book, The Navigation Case.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Discovery 9

Chapter 2 Stout Field, January 1945 16

Chapter 3 Dreams Interrupted 30

Chapter 4 From Civilian to Soldier 45

Chapter 5 MacArthur Redraws the "Line" 54

Chapter 6 Pioneering Instrument Flying 63

Chapter 7 The Japanese Keep Coming 70

Chapter 8 Forming an Air Corps Bomb Group 84

Chapter 9 The Battle of the Bismarck Sea 95

Chapter 10 Patton's Shadow 105

Chapter 11 Turning Point 118

Chapter 12 Into the Unknown 131

Chapter 13 From Huon to Hollandia 143

Chapter 14 The Vogelkop Peninsula 183

Chapter 15 The Departure 222

Chapter 16 Processing and Redistribution 227

Chapter 17 MAET 246

Chapter 18 The Final Flight 260

Chapter 19 Full Circle 277

Chapter 20 End of the New Guinea War 286

Appendix Summary Cadet Pilot Training 294

Bibliography 296

Selected Index 304

Notes to Text 309

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