The Doolittle Raiders
Eighty brave men made a near-suicidal first attack on Japan about four months after Pearl Harbor.
- President Franklin Roosevelt wanted a quick response to the Japanese ambush on Hawaii to demonstrate to the Japanese that they were not invulnerable to attack, and to give a much-needed boost to American morale.
- Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle was selected to plan and lead the Raid from the USS Hornet.
- Much has been written about the daring raid and the frightening escape through China, but little has been written about these brave men's lives before and after the Raid.
- This collection of biographical sketches tells us much about who these men were.
Much of the biographical material was obtained from a private collection of Raider information and memorabilia that Ellen Lawson collected over a fifty-year period. Ellen was the widow of Maj. Ted Lawson—a Raider and author of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
[AuthorName]By George A. Nolta[/AuthorName][AuthorBio]George Nolta is a graduate of UC Berkeley and an Air Force veteran. His friendship with Ellen Lawson—widow of a Doolittle Raider who was author of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo—led to the writing of this book.[/AuthorBio][NumIllustration]16 images[/NumIllustration][CoAuthor][/CoAuthor][SubTitle]What Heroes Do after a War[/SubTitle][ColorPattern]16 images[/ColorPattern]Original: $16.99
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Description
Eighty brave men made a near-suicidal first attack on Japan about four months after Pearl Harbor.
- President Franklin Roosevelt wanted a quick response to the Japanese ambush on Hawaii to demonstrate to the Japanese that they were not invulnerable to attack, and to give a much-needed boost to American morale.
- Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle was selected to plan and lead the Raid from the USS Hornet.
- Much has been written about the daring raid and the frightening escape through China, but little has been written about these brave men's lives before and after the Raid.
- This collection of biographical sketches tells us much about who these men were.
Much of the biographical material was obtained from a private collection of Raider information and memorabilia that Ellen Lawson collected over a fifty-year period. Ellen was the widow of Maj. Ted Lawson—a Raider and author of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
[AuthorName]By George A. Nolta[/AuthorName][AuthorBio]George Nolta is a graduate of UC Berkeley and an Air Force veteran. His friendship with Ellen Lawson—widow of a Doolittle Raider who was author of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo—led to the writing of this book.[/AuthorBio][NumIllustration]16 images[/NumIllustration][CoAuthor][/CoAuthor][SubTitle]What Heroes Do after a War[/SubTitle][ColorPattern]16 images[/ColorPattern]












