News

On April 18, 1942, a small group of Army Air Forces aviators changed the momentum of World War II with a single, audacious ...
Known as the Doolittle Raiders, the 80 men who risked their lives on a World War II bombing mission on Japan after the attack on Pearl Harbor were toasted one last time by their surviving comrades ...
Onboard the ship, Doolittle’s Raiders, as the fliers came to be called, were told to memorize and practice an important Chinese phrase: lusha hoo metwa fugi, “I am an American.” Because ...
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo is a war drama film based on the real-life Doolittle Raid, a daring bombing mission on Tokyo during ...
Guests visit the site where the U.S. airmen of the Doolittle Raid were rescued by locals in Quzhou City, east China's ...
This is the former resting place of Leland Faktor, a U.S. engineer and gunner who participated in the Doolittle Raid on Japan during World War II and died when his aircraft crashed in China.
Col. Richard “Dick” E. Cole, the last of the famous Doolittle Tokyo Raiders of World War II, who died April 9 at age 103. The service will be held at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph ...
The USS Hornet Museum proudly announces a significant international cultural exchange with the Doolittle Raid Memorial ... the U.S. and China during World War II. The B-25 artifact has arrived ...
On April 18, 1942, a group of 16 U.S. bombers, led by Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle, took off from the aircraft carrier USS Hornet and air-raided Japanese cities, including Tokyo, in retaliation ...
Robert Seale We honor the memory of Dick Cole, the last surviving Doolittle Raider ... the first U.S. combat mission in World War II—a daring daytime raid to bomb Japan­ using Army Air Forces ...
Guests visit the site where the U.S. airmen of the Doolittle Raid were rescued by locals in Quzhou City, east China's Zhejiang Province, April 17, ...