Air-To-Ground Battle For Italy [Illustrated Edition]
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The story of a young fighter pilot from basic training through the end of the war in Europe, this short memoir is a welcome addition to the literature of World War II aviation. It is noteworthy for a number of reasons. It illuminates the world of tactical aviation, which has taken a backseat to stories of strategic bombing and air superiority combat...Perhaps most importantly, it combines the immediacy of contemporary impressions with the reflections possible after a long and distinguished Air Force career.
Michael C. McCarthy was part of the first wave of young Americans who joined up in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. His peer group...arrived at the North African front in the spring of 1943 as part of an enormous bow wave of American human and industrial mobilization. His account of flight training is one of the best available anywhere and captures—in microcosm—the huge undertaking required to produce thousands of highly trained combat crews for the Allied war effort. McCarthy and his comrades joined the veterans of the prewar Army Air Corps who had held the line from El Alamein through the desperate battles around Kasserine Pass. McCarthy spent his entire war with the 57th Fighter Group, first flying the Curtiss P-40 Warhawk and later the powerful Republic P-47 Thunderbolt.
His battlefield was not in the stratosphere over the Third Reich...His war began with a ferry flight from Lagos, Nigeria, to Cape Bon, Tunisia, after the Axis defeat in North Africa; through the invasion of Sicily in July 1943 and the long slog up the Italian peninsula in 1943-1944 including landings at Salerno, Anzio, and the battles around Monte Cassino, with a brief detour in support of the invasion of southern France. Their unglamorous business was conducting interdiction and close air support, part of a lengthy and costly combined-arms effort to leverage the Germans out of their powerful defensive positions on the Italian peninsula.
Michael McCarthy
Michael McCarthy grew up on a farm in West Cork, Ireland. His first poetry collection Bird's Nests and Other Poems won the Patrick Kavanagh Award. His second collection At The Races won the Poetry Business Competition judged by Michael Longley. His childen's books have been translated into seventeen languages. He works as a priest in North Yorkshire.
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Air-To-Ground Battle For Italy [Illustrated Edition] - Michael McCarthy
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Text originally published in 1963 under the same title.
© Pickle Partners Publishing 2015, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
AIR-TO-GROUND BATTLE FOR ITALY
MICHAEL C. MCCARTHY
Brigadier General, USAF, Retired
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
FOREWORD 5
ABOUT THE AUTHOR 6
PREFACE 7
INTRODUCTION 8
CHAPTER 1 – GREAT ADVENTURE BEGINS 11
CHAPTER 2 – THREE MUSKETEERS TIMES TWO 17
CHAPTER 3 – AIR-TO-GROUND BATTLE FOR ITALY 29
CHAPTER 4 – OPERATION STRANGLE 42
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 63
ILLUSTRATIONS 64
FOREWORD
The events in this story are based on the memory of the author, backed up by official personnel records. All survivors are now well into their eighties. Those involved in reconstructing the period, the emotional rollercoaster that was part of every day and each combat mission, ask for understanding and tolerance for fallible memories.
Bruce Abercrombie, our dedicated photo guy, took most of the pictures. My brother-in-law, Chuck Lynch, recovered much of their original clarity. Paul Carll, with the best mind of any of us for names, dates, and details of daily events, also helped in many ways. I absolve them of any responsibility for mistakes in this work.
Four sons and seven daughters each had a hand in convincing me to tell this remarkable story. But three wonderful people in my life were particularly effective in motivating me to begin and, especially, to finish the job. They are my son Jerry, daughter Maureen, and my lovely wife, Eileen, who tolerated no procrastination.
img2.jpgMICHAEL C. McCARTHY
Brigadier General, USAF, Retired
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
img3.jpgBorn in Boston, Massachusetts, the oldest of six with five sisters, this first-generation Irish-American signed up for the Aviation Cadet program after Pearl Harbor. He survived the testing process and completed pilot training on 4 January 1943, as a 21-year-old second lieutenant with silver wings, new gold bars on his shoulders, and an assignment to Sarasota, Florida, to learn how to fly and operate the P-40 weapon system in a combat environment.
In April 1943, this combat-ready fighter pilot joined the 57th Fighter Group southeast of Tunis on the Cape Bon peninsula. He stayed with that distinguished air-to-ground fighter group until May 1945. The air-to-ground battle for Sicily and Italy was the focus of daily combat operations. German defenses extracted a fearful price from those Allied fighter forces whose mission was to attack and destroy them.
The arrival late in 1943 of the P-47 Thunderbolt made it possible to win the air-to-ground war and enabled many to survive to tell the story. This is his story of two years in that environment with his classmates from the first big post-Pearl Harbor pilot training class, 43-A.
PREFACE
Pearl Harbor galvanized America to convert peacetime production capacity to war levels, intensify recruiting, and expand every facet of its military training system. Those of us who wanted to fly found on Monday, 8 December 1941, that a difficult written test would satisfy the two years of college prerequisite to enter the Aviation Cadet aircrew-training program. We still faced a rigorous physical exam and batteries of psychological and intelligence evaluations plus specific aptitude tests. The process was intense, demanding, and time consuming. Only 41 survivors of several hundred original applicants in the Boston area became aviation cadets on 18 March 1942. Five days later, we reported to Santa Ana Army Air Base, California, for preflight training—the first of four phases en route to pilot, navigator, or bombardier wings.
Santa Ana was a new base with no roads or buildings. Tents were used for every purpose. The wettest rainy season in years converted the base into a muddy quagmire. Amazingly, the program stayed on schedule despite almost impossible living and working conditions. I found a remarkable can-do attitude to be characteristic of Army personnel in every step of the training process.
Our class opened a new primary flight school in Scottsdale and a new basic flight school in Marana, both in Arizona. Neither was ready for occupancy, but the Army made do and opened on time, producing graduates who met course completion standards despite obvious handicaps. On 4 January 1943, Class 43-A graduated from Luke Field on schedule with more than 400 new pilots. Other advanced flying bases produced similar numbers to provide a steady flow of young Americans to support theater requirements for combat aircrews.
Operational P-40 training in Sarasota, Florida, started two weeks later. The schedule provided the necessary 40 hours for each of us in eight weeks. By the end of March, we reported to Dale Mabry Field, Tallahassee, Florida, for overseas processing. With our gear, we boarded a new four-engine C-54 for Africa via Miami, Trinidad, Belem, Ascension Island, and Accra. Many of us volunteered to ferry P-40s from Lagos (down the coast from Accra) through equatorial Africa to Cairo—an unlikely saga, completed successfully—without maps or navigational aids. That ferry trip was the first example of an indomitable can-do determination to complete the mission. That attitude became the defining characteristic of leadership philosophy in the 57th Fighter Group. Those selected for positions of greater responsibility had to demonstrate leadership capability—the ability to think under pressure and the determination to get the job done.
The last two chapters focus on highlights of the more memorable missions that took place during two years of bitter fighting between implacable enemies—one who never gave ground willingly, and one who never quit trying to find a better way to get the job done. For the most part, the events are accurate accounts with due allowance for fallible memories of participants who have survived some 60 years since these events demanded and received complete concentration from all who were part of the 57th Fighter Group. At a recent gathering of old fighter pilots, everyone agreed with the sequence of the missions but each of us had a different memory of where we were flying in the formation.
INTRODUCTION
World War II produced countless soldiers’, sailors’, and air-men’s stories. All of these personal accounts have some value, but few of them saw the light of day. Keeping a diary was strictly against regulations (not that this stopped everyone), and most returning vets preferred to forget the war and focus on the opportunities offered by the GI Bill and the postwar boom. Few took the trouble to put pen to paper and revisit traumatic and life-altering times. Some of the resulting efforts are intensely personal, written only for the veteran’s immediate family and closest comrades. A few, such as E. B. Sledge’s With the Old Breed at Pelelieu and Okinawa (Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1981), have become classics. Others are of enduring value for today’s military professionals, as they illuminate important lessons about leadership, training, combat motivation, and other timeless topics for those who will face them on future battlefields. As the World War II generation passes from the scene, the supply of such accounts will inevitably diminish.
The air war produced a small but significant body of noteworthy aircrew memoirs. Prominent among these are Bert Stiles’ Serenade to the Big Bird (New York: Norton, 1952), an account of United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) B-17 operations over Germany in 1944; Guy Gibson’s Enemy Coast Ahead (London: Michael Joseph, 1946), perhaps the best of the Royal Air Force Bomber Command aircrew memoirs; and Alvin Kernan’s Crossing the Line: A Bluejacket’s World War II Odyssey (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1994), offering valuable perspectives on the carrier war in the Pacific from an enlisted man’s point of view. Such memoirs capture the drama of aerial combat and the romance of aviation, and broaden and deepen our understanding of the experience of war.
Air-to-Ground Battle for Italy is a recently written personal account that takes its place alongside the well-known works mentioned above. The story of a young fighter pilot from basic training through the end of the war in Europe, this short memoir is a welcome addition to the literature of World War II aviation. It is noteworthy for a number of reasons. It illuminates the world of tactical aviation, which has taken a backseat to stories of strategic bombing and air superiority combat. It takes place in a theater of war often considered a backwater when compared to the events in Western Europe or the Central Pacific. Perhaps most importantly, it combines the immediacy of contemporary impressions with the reflections possible after a long and distinguished Air Force career.
Michael C. McCarthy was part of the first wave of young Americans who joined up in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. His peer group, graduates of aviation cadet Class 43-A, arrived at the North African front in the spring of 1943 as part of an enormous bow wave of American human and industrial mobilization. His account of flight training is one of the best available anywhere and captures—in microcosm—the huge undertaking required to produce thousands of highly trained combat crews for the Allied war effort. McCarthy and his comrades joined the veterans of the prewar Army Air Corps who had held the line from El Alamein through the desperate battles around Kasserine Pass. McCarthy spent his entire war with the
