Watchdog
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For some reason, this hasn't received much media coverage. I sometimes wonder, are we so caught up in the sensationalistic (and often petty) events of 2016 that we forget the people who did so much to make our freedoms what they are today.
Staff Sergeant David Thatcher, one of the last two living Doolittle Raiders, has passed away at the age of ninety-four. He was a lifelong resident of Montana.
He was the engineer-gunner on the B-25 that was famously named "The Ruptured Duck". He was only twenty-one-years-old when he went on the mission made even more famous by the film, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
The Doolittle Raid made history in 1942. Bombers the size of the B-25 had never taken off from the deck of an aircraft carrier.
The raid showed the Japanese that they were not invulnerable, and it went a long way towards boosting the morale of all U.S. troops.
What made the airmen even more courageous was the fact that they knew ahead of time that they would not have enough fuel to return to any allied held airfields. They knew they'd have to ditch, they knew they might not survive.
Sergeant Thatcher has gone off into that Wild Blue Yonder now, still "climbing high into the sun".
God rest his soul.
Staff Sergeant David Thatcher, one of the last two living Doolittle Raiders, has passed away at the age of ninety-four. He was a lifelong resident of Montana.
He was the engineer-gunner on the B-25 that was famously named "The Ruptured Duck". He was only twenty-one-years-old when he went on the mission made even more famous by the film, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
The Doolittle Raid made history in 1942. Bombers the size of the B-25 had never taken off from the deck of an aircraft carrier.
The raid showed the Japanese that they were not invulnerable, and it went a long way towards boosting the morale of all U.S. troops.
What made the airmen even more courageous was the fact that they knew ahead of time that they would not have enough fuel to return to any allied held airfields. They knew they'd have to ditch, they knew they might not survive.
Sergeant Thatcher has gone off into that Wild Blue Yonder now, still "climbing high into the sun".
God rest his soul.
