These five little items came with no story other than they came together. But they might be telling a story and I'm trying to track it down. Thanks to Mike Furline's find of the grave, here is the information I have generated. I would appreciate any help on this one.
First, about the airplane. There were 176 P-40F-10-CU’s made. AAF serials were 41-14423/14599. The aircraft were distinguished by having manual instead of electrically operated cowl flaps. This information comes from this page:
http://www.p40warhawk.com/Variants/P-40F.htmAs for Desert Air Force aircraft, there were three AAF squadrons equipped with P-40F’s- the 64th, 65th, and 66th. 41-14596 would have been with one of them, and it is a -10-CU. Out of a total of 75 operational planes, 41-14537 could be one of those. But the seller said these dog tags came with the data plate, so I’m assuming they came home together.
This is the information on the 85th Chemical Mortar Battalion:
Overseas: Arrived SFPE 20 Jul 1944, New Guinea 24 Aug 1944, Los Negros Is 4 Oct 1944, Philippines 20 Oct 1944
Campaigns: Bismarck Archipelago, Leyte, Luzon, New Guinea
. FYI, a Chemical Mortar Battalion fired 4.2 inch mortars which were originally used for smoke and to distribute chemical ordnance. But they wound up being used as infantry support through most of WWII; after WWII, a 4.2 inch mortar company was included in each Infantry Regiment.
References:
http://www.4point2.org/hist-85D.htmhttp://www.4point2.org/85cmb.htmI don’t know if Company D had the same experience of the other companies, but I’m assuming 1LT Gracie was killed in the Leyte Gulf Invasion October 1944. I doubt he got these data plates after he was killed, so I am looking for a wreck of a P-40F that was present in New Guinea or Los Negros Island, between 24 August 1944 and sometime early in October 1944. That should narrow down what unit used the P-40F. I am assuming it was salvaged home because it wasn’t reparable in theatre. But it was sitting somewhere that an enterprising 1LT could go pry off a pair of data plates when no one was looking.
I'd appreciate any guidance on which units used P-40F's in the Pacific. That would help track down what happened to this aircraft. The story of the P-40 and the story of 1LT Gracie intersect somewhere. I'd appreciate any help making that connection. I have listed these items for sale, but I would really like to help put together the story because I don't want it to get lost. I know there are people out there better at this stuff than me, so anybody got any ideas?