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USA - A2 Fliegerjacke mit mailing - 2nd Lt. KENNETH LANE GLEMBY

USA - A2 Fliegerjacke mit mailing - 2nd Lt. KENNETH LANE GLEMBY

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BESCHREIBUNG & FOTOS
Beobachten
Epoche 1918 — 1945
Land Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 1918 - 1945
Material
Maße
Hersteller
Gewicht
Los K-9267
EAN 2000000819075
Los K-9267
Epoche 1918 — 1945
Land Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 1918 - 1945
EAN 2000000819075
Material
Maße
Hersteller
Gewicht
Epoche 1918 — 1945
Land Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 1918 - 1945
Los K-9267
Material
Maße
EAN 2000000819075
Hersteller
Gewicht

Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 1918 - 1945
USA - A2 Fliegerjacke mit mailing - 2nd Lt. KENNETH LANE GLEMBY


Beschreibung

Very nice patched, painted and identified A-2 flight jacket belonging to 2nd Lt. Kenneth Lane Glemby of the 514th Fighter Squadron, 406th Fighter Group, 9th Air Force. This is the pinnacle of A-2 jacket collecting, featuring patch and superb artwork on the back. The jacket is in very nice worn condition. Leather is free of dry rot, holes, rips and tears. Original cuffs and knits with some slight wear. The front is patched with the squadron patch of the 514th fighter squadron known as the « THE RAIDER SQUADRON », cotton embroidery thread on wool felt. The interior of the jacket is in very nice worn condition. The original contract and manufactures tag is present « J.A. DUBOW MFG. CO / CHICAGO, ILL. » » and sized « 36 ». The Glemby’s laundry number « G6106 » is painted on the lining. Zipper is present and fully functional with no problems opening or closing, manufactured by « TALON ». The back of the jacket features the painted emblem of the squadron. The rank of 2nd Lieutenant is painted on both shoulder straps. All additional informations can be find on the pictures below, including pictures of Lt. Glemby, letters, books, etc… Do not miss this special opportunity to own the pinnacle of painted A-2 jacket, the likes of which do not surface often on the open market.

HISTORY:

Established as a dive-bomber attack squadron at Key Field, Mississippi on 1 March 1943, Trained with numerous attack aircraft both at Key Field and at Congree Army Airfield, South Carolina until May 1944. Converted to a Fighter-Bomber squadron and deployed to the European Theater of Operations (ETO) in March 1944. Assigned to IX Fighter Command.

Entered combat with P-47 Thunderbolts in May when the Allies were preparing for the invasion of the Continent. Provided area cover during the landings in Jun, and afterward flew armed-reconnaissance and dive-bombing missions against the enemy, attacking such targets as motor transports, gun emplacements, ammunition dumps, rail lines, marshalling yards, and bridges during the campaign in Normandy. Helped prepare the way for the Allied breakthrough at St Lo on 25 July

Moved to the Continent early in August 1944 and continued to provide tactical air support for ground forces. Aided the Allied drive across France, operated closely with ground forces and flew interdiction missions during the drive to the Moselle-Saar region. Shifted operations from the Saar basin to the Ardennes and assisted the beleaguered garrison at Bastogne after the Germans had launched the counteroffensive that precipitated the Battle of the Bulge. Operated almost exclusively within a ten-mile radius of Bastogne from 23–27 December 1944, attacking tanks, vehicles, defended buildings, and gun positions. Flew escort, interdiction, and close-support missions in the Ruhr Valley early in 1945 and thus assisted Allied ground forces in their drive to and across the Rhine.

Remained in Europe after V-E Day, being assigned to United States Air Forces in Europe for duty in Bremen, Germany (AAF Station Nordholz) with the army of occupation. Inactivated on 20 August 1946, personnel and equipment being assigned to 86th Fighter Group keeping with Air Force policy of having low-numbered units active as much as possible.


Zustand
2