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Dec.
14 1896 - |
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James Harold Doolittle, American
aviator and army officer, who led the first U.S. air raid on Japan during World
War II. Born in Alameda, California, Doolittle served in World War I as a
gunnery and flight instructor. After the war he was chief of experimental flying
for the U.S. Army Air Corps, and in 1922 he became the first pilot to fly across
the U.S. in less than a day. During the 1930s he managed the aviation department
of the Shell Oil Company. On April 18, 1942, in the early stages of World War
II, Doolittle led his celebrated bombing attack on Tokyo, for which he was
awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor and promoted to the rank of brigadier
general. During the same year he was placed in command of the U.S. aviation
forces taking part in the invasion of North Africa, and in 1944 he was given
command of the Eighth Air Force, stationed then in England and later in Okinawa.
He became a lieutenant general in 1944. In 1946 he retired from active military
duty and returned to the Shell Oil Co., from which he retired in 1959. |
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