Saturday, 11 August 1945, top secret orders were delivered to General Swing for the division to be prepared to move to Okinawa at any time. The division G-3, Colonel Quandt, called Colonel Pearson, “This is an Alert. Have your regiment [187th] ready to move out by air forty-eight hours from now.” Commanders throughout the 11th A/B had their men reassembled, even those on weekend passes had been found and brought back to camp. The lead elements left Luzon immediately. At 0630 hours on the 13th, trucks brought the 187th to Nichols and Nielson Fields for transport and they landed at 1645 hours that afternoon at Naha, Kadena and Yotan Fields on Okinawa. They would remain on the island for two weeks.
C-47’s of the 54th Troop Carrier Wing
It would take the 54th Troop Carrier Wing two days to transport the 11th Airborne using…
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Thank you, Ned. I appreciate your attention to history.
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Made me think about what must have been on people’s minds with the expectation that after all the tough fighting they had been through was just a warm up for invading Japan…
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And they talk about PTSD today, eh?
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The father of a friend of mine growing up had nightmares about the battles he had been in for 20 years+ after the war.
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