24 February 2012

The 24th Combat Mapping Squadron: Unsung Heroes of the Pacific War



Squadron emblem of the 24th Combat Mapping Squadron
While much has been written about the superiority of the Consolidated B-24 Liberator versus the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress in the Pacific Theater during the Second World War (in short, it could carry more a longer range and at higher speeds than the B-17), there is one role that the B-24 played in the Pacific that still remains relatively unknown to most, that of combat mapping. The missions flown in particular by the 24th Combat Mapping Squadron in the China-Burma-India theater were of tremendous contribution to the overall war effort even though the crews of the 24th CMS fought their battles with rolls of film rather than bombs. 

On 2 September 1942, the 24th Combat Mapping Squadron was established as the 24th Photo Mapping Squadron at Petersen Field in Colorado Springs, Colorado. They were subsequently moved to Will Rogers Field in Oklahoma City to operate the reconnaissance variant of the Consolidated B-24 Liberator which was designated the F-7. Prior to the creation of an independent United States Air Force, the "F" designator was used for photo reconnaissance aircraft while the "P" (for Pursuit) was used for fighter aircraft. The first F-7s arrived in January 1943 as basic conversions of the B-24D Liberator which removed all bombing equipment and replaced with eleven cameras. All the defensive armament of the Liberator was retained. Most of the conversions to F-7s were done at Lowry Army Air Field in Denver, but additional examples were also converted by Northwest Orient Airlines at their Minneapolis maintenance base. Most of what the 24th did in Oklahoma City was the training of crews to prepare for deployment to the Pacific. Unlike other reconnaissance crews, though, the 24th CMS would be tasked with providing detailed aerial photography of the China-Burma-India area for the creation of detailed navigation maps as well as other types of maps needed for the war effort. 

The unit arrived at Guskhara, India in January 1944 with improved versions of the F-7 which were designated F-7A. The F-7A photo recon Liberator was based on the nose-turret equipped B-24J Liberator. A trimetrogon arrangement of cameras were mounted in the nose (an additional window was fitted in the lower side of the nose for the lateral cameras of the trimetrogon cameras) and a pair of vertical cameras for stereo-photography were fitted in the aft bomb bay (a pair of windows were fitted in the aft bomb bay). The additional windows were the identifying features of the F-7A. The forward bomb bay carried additional fuel tanks while the aft bay was sealed shut to provide a compartment for the camera technicians and environmental systems that kept the cameras and long rolls of film at a constant temperature. Again, like the original F-7 variant, the full defensive armament was retained. 

Developing the photos from a mapping mission.
The first missions to map the CBI area commenced in March 1944 in support of the US Army Air Forces' Tenth and Fourteenth Air Forces- it was the Fourteenth Air Force under General Claire Chennault that replaced the original American Volunteer Group which was also known as the "Flying Tigers". In addition, the 24th CMS also flew missions mapping Burma in support of the British 14th Army. While provisionally based in India, the squadron sent detachments of aircraft to operate from forward bases in China as well as more remote parts of India closer to the Burmese border. At the time, the only heavy bomber group based in China was the 308th Bombardment Group which flew B-24Js. The only logistical route for the support of the war effort in China came via the air route over the Himalayas called "The Hump". Frequently the B-24Js of the 308th BG had to be stripped of armament and fly their own bombs and fuel supplies from India over "Hump" the bases in China. It usually took three "Hump" missions by a single B-24J to transport the bombs and fuel needed for it to fly a single mission from China against Japanese targets all along the Pacific Coast of China, Vietnam, and Malaya. The photo-mapping F-7As of the 24th CMS also flew their own transport missions over the "Hump", with 182 "Hump" crossings made in 1944, often at well above maximum gross takeoff weight. Six F-7As were lost on these transport missions alone in 1944. 

Large areas of China lacked any maps at all, much to the frustration of the 308th BG. Many of the missions to map the interior of China were well over 2,500 miles in length. In addition, detailed mapping flights were made over Malaya (modern-day Malaysia), Vietnam, Thailand, and Burma. During the summer of 1944 the Japanese went on the offensive in central China to eliminate the forward bases of the 308th BG and numerous overflights of territory being contested were made to provide battlefield commanders accurate maps to blunt the Japanese offensive. Detailed maps were also made from overflights of all the Pacific ports of China that were being used by the Japanese to bring supplies to their forces in area. A less hazardous mission involved photo-mapping the entire supply routes from Allied bases in India over the "Hump" to Chinese forward bases. Air Transport Command's pilots benefited from a detailed map that covered a 50-mile wide strip from Calcutta all the way to Kunming in central China. 
24th CMS Consolidated F-7A Liberator. Note the camera windows.

By 1945 the 24th CMS had mapped 455,000 square miles of territory in India, Burma, Thailand, and Malaya. An additional 435,000 square miles of China were also mapped. The greatest challenge in the area for the 24th CMS wasn't Japanese resistance as the F-7As operating singly or in pairs were usually left alone but the weather. An astounding 50% of the missions flown were unsuccessful because of bad weather in the areas to be mapped!

Just prior to the end of the Pacific War the 24th CMS had a forward detachment also based in Clark AB in the Philippines to assist with mapping of that nation as the last of the Japanese resistance was mopped up. Following the Japanese surrender, another detachment was established in Sydney, Australia, to assist the Australians with the mapping of the continent which lasted well into 1946. By that point, the unit was converting to the photo reconnaissance version of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress, the F-13A. The unit returned stateside in late 1947 to Hamilton AFB in California before being disbanded in 1953 at Lake Charles AFB, Louisiana. 

Sources: B-24 Liberator Units of the CBI (Osprey Combat Aircraft No. 87) by Edward M. Young. Osprey Books, 2011, p88-89. Combat WWII Squadrons of the United States Air Force: The Official Military Record of Every Active Squadron, edited by M. Maurer and the USAF Historical Division. Smithmark Publishers, 1992, p126-127. Photos: University of Chicago, Mark Styling (illustrator for the Osprey title).

8 comments:

  1. I have a bunch of photos from the 24th CMS. In fact the plane above Rice Pattie Hattie I have a couple pictures of. My wife's grandfather was part of this group and I have a nunch of pictures of the folks in it looks like Burma. I have a bunch of pictures of the crews, some with the same marking of 24CMS, as well as a bunch of the different plane pictures. Though the picture of RPH above shows the emblem for the 24CMS - the picture I have of the plane does not have this.

    Ed Gorman

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    1. Ed,

      My grandfather was the co-pilot on one of the crews of Rice Pattie Hattie. I would love to exchange photos and stories with you. Please send me a message with your email!

      Nathan

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    2. I would love to see whatever photos you have from the 24th CMS, as I am a professional modeler and modifying a B-24J to an F-7A. In particular, I am trying to ascertain what the camera's looked like that were used on these particular aircraft.

      Greg

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    3. Ed,

      I know that this post is older, so don't know if you will pick this up. However, I have been doing some geneology on my grandfather who was in the 24th CMS. I was wondering if I could get a copy of the pictures you might have. My grandfather was a tail gunner in the 24th CMS and we don't have a lot of pictures of him from that time. I don't have the name of the plane, but the pilot was Ed Davis and co-pilot Marvin Kingins. I have a picture of the crew, but nothing of the airplane or other pics from that time. Any help you could provide would be appreciated. His plane was shot down in one of the later missions, and although he survived, we were trying to find some pictures from that time. I can send a copy of the picture I do have if that would help. Anything you have would be appreciated. You can send me an email to
      twinter280@gmail.com

      Trent

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    4. Ed, My father was the pilot of the Rice Pattie Hatttie, His name is William P Schaus Sr., He told me stories about his plane and the name until now I haven't found much info about this. I am interested in all the info I can find as I would love to tell his great grandkids about him.

      William P Schaus Jr.
      email: snokums@cox.net

      Thank you very much

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    5. Hi Ed,
      Not sure anyone checks this anymore but guess I'll try anyway. I've been trying to find information and pictures of the 24th CMS for a while now and would love to talk about the photos you have and your wife's grandfathers experiences. I'm interested in the 24th because I'm interested in the larger photo reconnaissance mission in the CBI theater. The 24th CMS along with the 9th PRS and 20th TRS formed the 9th PR Group. Hope to hear from you. Thanks.
      cdhammerbeck@gmail.com

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  2. i have a set of letters from this detachment was wondering if i could pull together others to make a book

    Thanks

    eric marquardt
    adoptfam@gmail.com
    608-219-0380

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    Replies
    1. I also have pictures to share of several aircraft. My father was attached to the 24th CMS 1944-1945
      I understand my father wrote home to his mother, but I do not have any letters. cummink2@comcast.net

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