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  1. James Harold Doolittle dit Jimmy Doolittle (14 décembre 1896 - 27 septembre 1993) est un pilote américain, pionnier du développement de l'aviation de l'entre-deux-guerres. Officier de l' USAAF pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, il conçut et mena en avril 1942 un raid audacieux qui porte son nom, le raid de Doolittle — le premier bombardement de Tokyo par les forces américaines.

  2. 10 de sept. de 2023 · James H. Doolittle, mission leader of Special Aviation Project No 1 (The Tokio raid, also known as the Doolittle Raid) James Doolittle was the pilot of the first plane that took off from the USS Hornet on 18-04-1942 @ 08.20 am ship time USS Hornet - Take off @ 35 40 N 153 40 E. Raised in Nome, Alaska, Doolittle studied as an undergraduate at University of California, Berkeley, graduating with ...

  3. 1717 East Randol Mill Road Suite 301 Arlington, TX 76011. 817-274-1861. media@mohmuseum.org. Contact Us. One-time. monthly. Choose a one-time amount. $500. $100.

  4. The words of Gen. James H. Doolittle, the commander of the Tokyo Raid, are from an interview conducted in 1980. Narrator: April 18th, 1942. Sixteen B-25s, Mitchell medium bombers, sit on the pitching deck of an aircraft carrier at sea. Their mission, bomb Tokyo, just four months after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

  5. James Harold "Jimmy" Doolittle (Alameda, 14 de dezembro de 1896 — Pebble Beach, 27 de setembro de 1993) foi um pioneiro da aviação e general da Força Aérea dos Estados Unidos durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, comandante do histórico Ataque Doolittle, o primeiro bombardeamento a Tóquio na guerra, em Abril de 1942, pelo qual foi condecorado com a Medalha de Honra, a mais alta e rara ...

  6. A few years later, on May 9, 1932, Capt. A. F. Hegenberger further proved that instrument flight was possible when flew without a check pilot to make the first blind solo flight using instruments only, at Dayton, Ohio. Doolittle’s flight took only 15 minutes, but those minutes proved that a plane could be flown with only instruments.

  7. And, on July 6, 1989, President George H.W. Bush awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, our nation's highest civilian honor, to James Harold "Jimmy" Doolittle. At the age of 96, General Jimmy Doolittle died at his home in Pebble Beach, California, on September 27, 1993. Befitting his impact on U.S. aviation history, Doolittle was buried ...