Commemorate Those Who Flew In The "Doolittle Raid" Over
Japan
Eighty silver goblets
commemorating each man who flew in the "Doolittle Raid" over Japan
were added to the collection of the National Museum of the US Air
Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH Wednesday.
"We are honored in the trust you place in us. We will honor and
respect that trust." retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Charles D.
Metcalf, director of the museum, told the eight raiders attending a
reunion at the base this week on the 64th anniversary of the famous
raid.
The "Doolittle Tokyo Raiders" were volunteer airmen from the US
Army Air Forces, the predecessor of the US Air Force, who on April
18, 1942, flew 16 B-25 Mitchell airplanes in an attack against
Japan during World War II. Army Lt. Col. James H. "Jimmy" Doolittle
led the raid.
The goblets, which were presented to the raiders by the city of
Tucson, AZ in 1959, have taken a highly symbolic place in the
history of military aviation, US Air Force officials said.
The goblets were previously housed at the US Air Force Academy,
in Colorado Springs, Colo. In 1973, retired Lt. Col. Dick Cole,
Doolittle's co-pilot during the raid on Japan, built a portable
display case to transport the goblets to the raiders' annual
reunions.
At every reunion the surviving Doolittle Raiders meet privately
to conduct a "Goblet Ceremony." After toasting the raiders who have
died since the last reunion, they turn the deceased men's goblet
upside down. Each goblet has the raider's name engraved twice - so
that it can be read if the goblet is right side up or upside
down.
In addition, the president of Hennessy Company gave Jimmy
Doolittle a bottle of 'Hennessy Very Special' cognac, vintage 1896,
the year of Doolittle's birth. When there are only two raiders
left, these two men will open the bottle and have a final toast to
their departed comrades, Air Force officials said.
"I've been wondering who the other guy is going to be to enjoy
the bottle of cognac," Cole, who officially presented the goblets
to the museum, quipped during the ceremony.
The goblets will be displayed alongside a B-25 bomber at the
museum, which receives more than 1 million visitors per year,
museum officials said.
"Airmen have a proud heritage that we can call upon as we move
forward to an unlimited horizon that is ahead of us. The Raiders
are not only a part of our Air Force heritage, but they are our
heroes," Lt. Gen. Arthur J. Lichte, assistant vice chief of staff
and director of the Air Force Staff, said during the ceremony.
Lichte credited the Doolittle Raiders with helping turn the tide
in the Pacific theater during the war. "The eventual triumph of the
Allies was certainly not a given, but the raiders set us on the
path to victory and on a path that we will follow for many years to
come," he said.
The general said the Doolittle Raiders define what it means to
be an airman, and their legacy serves as an inspiration.
"Our young airmen are inspired by the innovation of their
forefathers and, of course, all these raiders," Lichte said. "We
pledge to take the heritage we inherited from you and continue to
protect our nation, so that you can be proud of America's next best
generation."
Editor's Note
-- the original bottle of Hennessy V.S. given to Doolittle was
actually stolen from the Air Force Academy visitor's center in
1971. While the graduating class that year was able to secure a
replacement bottle from the Hennessy Company -- also vintage 1896
-- the whereabouts of the original bottle remain a
mystery.
"It's not the brightest moment in Air Force Academy
history," Col. Mark Wells, head of the history department at the
Air Force Academy, told the Tucson Citizen in 2004.
While the incident was embarassing to the Academy, Doolittle
himself was reportedly unfazed by the incident. 'If I'd have been a
cadet, I'd have probably stolen it, too,' Doolittle wrote in
response to cadets who sent a letter to him to tell Doolittle of
the incident, Wells told the Citizen.
(Aero-News thanks Steven Donald Smith, American Forces Press
Service)