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Doolittle Raid Memorial Hall Museum

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Details:

In the Shuitingmen historical neighborhood. Museum


The museum remembers the Chinese-American cooperation in rescuing the American "Doolittle Raiders" in 1942 during WW2.  The museum opened in 2018 and consists of many displays and remembrances of the Chinese who assisted the American flyers evade the enemy capture. The Chinese military and civilians launched a massive rescue operation, successfully evacuating 64 American pilots, with 51 of them finding refuge in Quzhou.


Some information on the Doolittle Raid from the National Museum of the Pacific War:

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Americans devised a plan to strike cities in the Japanese home islands. Though it had never been tried, the plan called for launching Army bombers off Navy aircraft carriers. The North American B-25 Mitchell bomber proved to be the most suitable aircraft because of the distance it could fly as well as the payload in bombs it could deliver on target.

Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle volunteered in January 1942 to lead the strike. He and his crews trained in B-25s for carrier take-offs at Eglin Field, Florida. Pilots would have about 400 feet of deck runway to get airborne. The crews did not train for landing on carriers as the plan called for the bombers to take off while at sea, proceed over targets in Japan, and then land at friendly fields in China. Prior to the mission, technicians removed unnecessary equipment from the bombers and installed more fuel capacity. Volunteer crews trained in short take-offs, evasive maneuvers, and low altitude approaches and bombing.

Cranes loaded sixteen B-25s onto the deck of USS Hornet (CV-8) at Alameda on 1 April 1942. The Hornet then steamed to join USS Enterprise (CV-6) and the rest of Task Force 16 (TF-16), under the command of Vice Admiral William Halsey.

Early in the morning on 18 April 1942, a Japanese fishing trawler serving as an early-warning picket boat spotted TF-16 and sent a radio message warning Tokyo of the American carriers. This caused Doolittle to launch the raid 10 hours earlier and 200 miles farther out than originally planned.

The Doolittle Raiders attacked targets in Tokyo, Yokohama, Yokosuka, Nagoya and Kobe. Most bombers made it to China, a few ditched at sea, and one crew elected to land in the Soviet Union. Of the 80 Raiders, 3 were killed in action while 8 became prisoners of war in Japan. The others were assisted by the Chinese to return to duty.

All 80 Raiders received the Distinguished Flying Cross while Doolittle received the Medal of Honor for his planning and leadership. While the Doolittle Raid inflicted minimal material damage in Japan, it did shatter the Japanese perception of invulnerability while boosting American morale.


Monument Text:

 

Commemorates:

People:

James Harold 'Jimmy' Doolittle

William Frederick “Bull”  Halsey

Units:

17th Bomber Group

Task Force 16

U.S.S. Enterprise (CV-6)

U.S.S. Hornet (CV-8)

U.S.S. Nashville (CL-43)

United States Air Force

United States Army

United States Navy

US Army Air Corps

Wars:

WWII

Battles:

Pacific Theater

Other images :