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Classic Wings Magazine WWII Naval Aviation Research Pacific Luftwaffe Resource Center
When Hollywood Ruled The Skies - Volumes 1 through 4 by Bruce Oriss


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 27, 2016 10:02 am 
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Not often you see photos of PV-1's or PV-2's doing their 'thing' in action. Nice to see as those PV crews were a tough bunch as well. Here's a few photos from the National Archives via The National Museum of the U.S. Navy.

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Pilots of Harpoons and Venturas operating from an advanced Aleutian base gather together in a Quonset hut for a briefing before take-off. Here they are listening to an Aerologist to give them “the word” on the possibilities of the uncertain North Pacific weather, April 5, 1945.

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Lockheed “Ventura” PV bombers, sturdy and well-tested veterans of Navy patrol and attack duty in the north Pacific, stand here on an airfield at an advanced Aleutian air base with several Lockheed “Harpoons: PV medium bombers which are now used for patrol and attacks against the Kuril Islands, April 3, 1945.

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs at an advanced Aleutian air base waiting for action against the Kuril Islands, April 10, 1945

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs at an advanced Aleutian air base waiting for action against the Kuril Islands, April 4, 1945

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs at an advanced Aleutian air base waiting for action against the Kuril Islands, April 4, 1945.

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Ordnancemen placing rockets on launchers and 1800 lb torpedoes in the Lockheed “harpoon PV at an advanced base in the Aleutians for strikes against Japanese shipping and bases in the northern Kruils, April 7, 1945.

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Ordnancemen placing rockets on launchers and 1800 lb torpedoes in the Lockheed “harpoon PV at an advanced base in the Aleutians for strikes against Japanese shipping and bases in the northern Kruils, April 7, 1945

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Ordnancemen placing rockets on launchers and 1800 lb torpedoes in the Lockheed “harpoon PV at an advanced base in the Aleutians for strikes against Japanese shipping and bases in the northern Kruils, April 17, 1945

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Ordnancemen placing rockets on launchers and 1800 lb torpedoes in the Lockheed “harpoon PV at an advanced base in the Aleutians for strikes against Japanese shipping and bases in the northern Kruils, April 17, 1945

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Loading machine gun ammunition in Lockheed “Harpoon” PV in their strikes against the Northern Kuril Islands. Inside the plane. R.W. Medlock, AOMM2, receives a load of ammunition from D.A. Tarkington, AOM2, as they prepare one of the bombers for a strike, April 10, 1945.

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AOM2C C.F. Harris seals the muzzle of a Lockheed “Harpoon” PV machine gun with a protective paper cap as a part of preparing the big medium bomber for a rocket mission against the northern Kurils, April 3, 1945.

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“Flash”, the terrier mascot of this fleet air wing four Harpoon crew which has been flying missions against Japanese installations on Paramushiro and Shimushi Kuril from an advanced Aleutian base. Flash works hard at his job, and goes along on all flights made by his pilot, Lieutenant Junior Grade Lawrence Bradbury, Jr, seen here petting him. Other crew members in the photograph are (left to right); ARM2C Harold L. Sutton; Ensign Joseph John Yakich; Ensign Ralph Kimball Botter; AMM1C Daniel T. Becnel, and AOM1c Robert E. Jenkins, April 17, 1945

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“Flash” fox terrier mascot of the crew of Lieutenant Lawrence Bradbury, Jr, right is all set for take-off, from the Lockheed “Harpoon” PV. Here he’s seen looking things over from the lap of the co-pilot Ensign John Yakich. “Flash” is now a regular passenger on Harpoon attacks against the Northern Kuril Islands, April 17, 1945.

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“Flash” fox terrier mascot of a Harpoon crew which is engaged in strikes against the northern Kuril Islands sits in the radioman’s seat with Ensign Ralph Kimball Potter, Navigator, in a Lockheed “Harpoon” PV. Flash is wearing his identification tag, April 17, 1945.

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PV at an advanced Aleutian air base taxiing out for action against the Kuril Islands, April 9, 1945.

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs making an attack on a base in the northern Kuril Islands, April 6, 1945. U.S.

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs making an attack on a base in the northern Kuril Islands, April 6, 1945.

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs making an attack on a base in the northern Kuril Islands, April 6, 1945

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs flying in formation, from an attack on the Kuril Islands, to an advanced Aleutian base, are welcomed by Lockheed “Lighting” P-38s, April 19, 1945

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Lockheed “Harpoon” PVs flying in formation, from an attack on the Kuril Islands, to an advanced Aleutian base, are welcomed by Lockheed “Lighting” P-38s, April 19, 1945.

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Returning from a mission, Lieutenant R.E. Garnett found that the port engine of his Harpoon was losing oil rapidly, possibly because of damage from debris thrown up by his own rockets in an attack on a Japanese installation. The oil loss became so heavy that he had to feather the prop on this engine and depend on the other to bring him back 400 miles across the North Pacific to his advanced Aleutian base. He got back – as seen here making a successful one-engine landing, April 10, 1945.

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Members of a Harpoon crew back from a mission against Japanese bases in the northern Kuril Islands are seen here being interviewed by Lieutenant T.R. Butler, Air Combat Intelligence Officer, back to camera at an advanced base in the Aleutians. Seated, diagraming the action is the pilot Lieutenant G. K. Meriwether III standing, (left to right) are ARM3 L.H. Trottier, AMM1C B.O. Barnette, AOM1C W.B. Dean, Ensign N.C. Heywood and Ensign W. J. Prochaska, April 5, 1945

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Last edited by Mark Allen M on Fri Apr 29, 2016 2:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 27, 2016 12:41 pm 
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Very cool Mark. Thanks!

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 27, 2016 6:10 pm 
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Mark Allen M wrote:

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Returning from a mission, Lieutenant R.E. Garnett found that the port engine of his Harpoon was losing oil rapidly, possibly because of damage from debris thrown up by his own rockets in an attack on a Japanese installation. The oil loss became so heavy that he had to feather the prop on this engine and depend on the other to bring him back 400 miles across the North Pacific to his advanced Aleutian base. He got back – as seen here making a successful one-engine landing, April 10, 1945.

Starboard engine, and it looks like it's windmilling, not feathered - must have been a rough flight indeed.
What's the one-engine-out performance of a Harpoon like, with both engines close to the centerline of the fuselage like that? (As opposed to, say, a B-25 with the engines farther apart.)

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 7:59 am 
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Cold, cold, cold, cold ..... cold!!!

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 8:41 am 
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Mark Allen M wrote:
Cold, cold, cold, cold ..... cold!!!

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Now that right there is COLD! :shock:
Great pics Mark.
Robbie 8)

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 9:57 am 
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Great stuff. Being a former VP sailor/flyer I can appreciate the hard work they did.

I operated out of Maine with P-3s and though the WX wasn't as harsh as what those guys faced we definitely had our share of it. I always felt like I was better prepared to operate anywhere, anytime, than the guys who were stationed in FL or Hawaii.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 12:15 pm 
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AFWhite wrote:
Great stuff. Being a former VP sailor/flyer I can appreciate the hard work they did.

I operated out of Maine with P-3s and though the WX wasn't as harsh as what those guys faced we definitely had our share of it. I always felt like I was better prepared to operate anywhere, anytime, than the guys who were stationed in FL or Hawaii.


When I was in VP-19 we would deploy to Misawa, Japan and those winters were killer, seems like that snow would never lighten up! :drink3:


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 1:38 pm 
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Malo,

The winters aren't half as bad now in Misawa as they were when I first got here in '88. Maybe something good has come out of global warming, at least I'm not shoveling snow very often in the winters anymore.

Mac

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 2:11 pm 
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Mac, we were there Dec 82/June 83, thank god they issued us the Mickey Mouse insulated boots, if you missed the bus from the barracks to the hanger and had to walk :shock:


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 8:33 pm 
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Chris, if you look close, you can see the port engine's prop is feathered...Stbd engine is running. Ask Dave Hansen about single engine performance in the Harpoon!
Nice! I have been waiting for pics like these for long-long time!


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 8:33 am 
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The Day the U.S. Navy Bombed a Russian Tanker - From 'The American Warrior'
https://theamericanwarrior.com/2014/12/ ... an-tanker/

"The morning of August 27, 1944 was a cold one (they all were) on Attu Island in the Aleutian chain. There on the edge of nowhere, Fleet Air Wing Four’s Lockheed PV-1 Ventura bombers carried on a fitful war against Japan’s northernmost bases in the Kurile Island group. Whenever the weather cooperated, the Ventura crews would sortie forth to hunt for shipping to bomb and land bases to attack.

Lt. Everett Price and his crew from VB-136 took off that morning just after 0700, bound for Otomari Zaki, one of the islands in the Kuriles. Price had orders to strike at any Japanese shipping encountered, or supplies discovered on the island there. It would be a long flight, and the Venture carried one thousand four hundred and fifty gallons of fuel to feed its twin Pratt & Whitney R-2800 radial engines.

At four thousand feet, Price tried to gauge the wind speed that day by looking down at the waves below. After studying the water, he concluded that the breeze was about half as intense as the 30 knots they had been told to expect earlier that morning. He told his navigator, Ensign George Campbell, to factor that change into his calculations. Not long after, Campbell fixed their position with a sunline and LORAN and he concluded they were 450 miles from their target area and about 175 minutes out. They were also off course to the north of their intended flight path. Campbell made some corrections and passed them to Price.

Later that morning, they spotted the Kamchatka Peninsula, watching it pass by on their starboard side. Flying in and out of clouds, they finally sighted a tall volcanic mountain that they thought was Araido To. A few minutes later, after four hours in the air, somebody called out two vessels off to starboard. Price made them out, perhaps twenty-five miles away. Towering clouds loomed in the distance to the south, and a fog bank hugged the wave tops near the two ships. They were close to the coastline of one of the Kurile Islands, which the aviators thought was Onekotan.

Price and his copilot, Ensign Francis Praete, banked the PV-1 toward the two vessels while the crew studied them with binoculars. One looked like a Japanese picket ship. The other was a tanker–a prime target for the Navy crews.

Game on. Price pushed the yoke forward and dove to the attack. They dropped down to seventy-five feet and leveled off. The tanker seemed to be making about ten knots on a northeasterly course, and Price positioned the PV-1 for a beam attack.

Four thousand feet from the target, Price opened fire with the Ventura’s bow guns. He two second burst fell wide of the ship, chewing up the swells just forward of the tanker’s bow. He corrected, and hammered the vessel with a long, eight to ten second burst. The plane’s five .50 caliber machine guns spewed out about five hundred rounds, tearing through the bridge and superstructure, puncturing the hull and causing extensive damage.

Closing at 240 knots, Price kept firing, walking the nose back and forth with rudder inputs to try and suppress the anti-aircraft fire that was now directed against them. Several guns were located fore and aft on the tanker, and while they were not using tracers, the crew could see their muzzle flashes and feel near-misses buffet their aircraft.

This was the critical moment. Price remained laser-focused on executing their bomb run, Praete next to him on the controls as well. Between them crouched Paul Gavin, the radioman. He held a K-20 camera in hand and was shooting photographs of the attack.

The intercom suddenly lit up with chatter, but Price was so focused he couldn’t make out what was being said. Then Gavin suddenly pounded on his shoulder. Price ignored him. The tanker swelled before them, its masts well above the PV-1. One mistake now, and they’d careen into the ship and all be killed.


Lieutenant Price triggered the bomb release. Three bombs were supposed to fall out of the bay at hundred foot intervals. The first, an incendiary, failed to arm. The second, a 500lb General Purpose bomb, hung on the rack and failed drop. The third, another incendiary, released perfectly. It struck the tanker directly amidships and punctured a meter square hole in the hull about six feet above the waterline.

Price pulled up at the last possible moment, narrowly missing the tanker’s mast. As they cleared the area, Gavin snapped photos of the vessel burning, smoke boiling from the direct hit. It was a masterful masthead level bombing run, the sort perfected by the 5th Air Force, then passed on to the U.S. Navy’s bomber squadrons.

Except that the tanker was the Russian USSR Emba, a Suamico class fleet oiler built in Portland, Oregon. Completed in May 1944 she was handed over to the Russians as part of our Lend-Lease program at the end of June. The Russians had crewed it for only two months when Price’s crew put a hole in her hull.

It turned out that the chatter on the intercom during the bomb run came from the plane captain, Paul Knoop, who had spotted “USSR” written on the Emba’s side. Gavin also spotted Russian markings, which was why he started hitting Price’s shoulder.

When the PV-1 returned to Casco Field on Attu, Price found himself in the middle of an international incident. It turned out the crew had erred in their navigation and had wandered over the Russian sealane between the U.S. and Vladivostok. This sealane accounted for 50% of all the material sent by the United States to the Soviet Union during the war. Gasoline, oil, trucks, raw materials, railway cars and locomotives were all delivered via the Pacific Route. Armaments, aircraft, ammunition were all prohibited due to the touchy neutrality issues between Russia and Japan, so everything carried through Japanese waters had to be non-combat related.

An investigation commenced almost at once. A U.S. Navy inspection team examined the Emba on September 2, 1944, counting over a hundred and fifty bullet holes on the bridge alone. Other rounds pierced the hull and narrowly missed the ship’s doctor. Fortunately, the bomb hit did not compromise the Emba’s watertight integrity and caused no casualties.

Price and Phaete were disciplined for their mistake, though what that discipline was is lost to history now. Fleet Air Wing Four redoubled its ship identification efforts, and went over the recognition signal procedures with all air crew."


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A squadron of PV-1 Ventura's at Amchitka in late 1943.

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A VB-136 PV-1 Ventura takes off from Casco Field, Attu Island in the fall of 1944.

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A VB-136 PV-1 Ventura on mission

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A VB-136 PV-1 Ventura on mission

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One of Gavin’s photographs that he shot with the K-20 while crouched between Price and Phaete. Here, the PV-1 crew is making their attack on the tanker.


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The final seconds of Price’s bomb run. Photo again taken by Gavin.


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Moment of impact. Price’s third bomb strikes Emba amidship. Emba survived the war and the Soviet Union turned her back over the United States in 1948. She was renamed Shawnee Trail, AO-142 and served

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The message that no squadron commander wants to receive. Ever.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 8:45 am 
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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 8:58 am 
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More random PV-1's ...

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Last edited by Mark Allen M on Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:13 am, edited 3 times in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:00 am 
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Aerial view of facilities at Hawkins Field, Betio Island, Tarawa Atoll. The PV-1 Ventura aircraft pictured probably belonged either to VB-142 or VB-144.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:05 am 
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A few more S Pacific PV-1's ...

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PV-1 with wing damage

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PV-1 "Drop Shot'

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PV-1 'Drop Shot' Tarawa

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Lockheed PV-1 Ventura - Tacloban Air Field - Philippines

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