Steve Birdsall wrote:
A real longshot I guess, but I’m hoping to put a possible or probable time and place on this little photo.
Normally I would recommend the
Fuselage Codes website, but I don't think it will help here.
JohnB wrote:
All of which makes me wish for a good one source book about American pilot training in the war [...] but I don't know of an overall examination of the topic in book form.
It's not exactly what you're looking for, but
Chapter 17: Individual Training of Flying Personnel of the
The Army Air Forces in World War II has pretty good coverage of certain of the subject. There's also the paper
We Wanted Wings: A History of the Aviation Cadet Program as well as a number of books and papers in the
bibliography section of the Civilian Pilot Training Program Wikipedia article. Someone wrote a dissertation about accidents in training called
Earning Their Wings (
direct link) with a 16 page bibliography that might offer some suggestions for further reading.
JohnB wrote:
how personal requirements (standards for education, and physical requirements) changed
It only addresses the number of stages and hours per stage, but
Major Changes in Undergraduate Pilot Training, 1939-2002 has an excellent comparison of how it has changed over the years.
JohnB wrote:
Also, how was upgrade training accomplished once a pilot was rated.
There's a historical monograph about the
Pilot Transition to Combat Aircraft from 1944 that might have the answer.
JohnB wrote:
You can piece parts of the story together from reports and articles
I know all of the above sort of just proves your point, but maybe it'll have something useful.
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