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  1. The pathway taken to becoming a pilot also changed during the course of the war. The charts on the right/left highlight the differences between 1941 and 1944. Of course obtaining Pilot’s Wings did not mark the end of training. Qualified pilots were sent to Operational Training Units to make them ready for front-line duties.

    • What did pilots do during World War II?1
    • What did pilots do during World War II?2
    • What did pilots do during World War II?3
    • What did pilots do during World War II?4
    • What did pilots do during World War II?5
  2. Established in June 1942, Air Transport Command was the largest user of service pilots during World War II, and many former ATC pilots later signed contracts to fly for civilian airlines. In August 1943, the WAFS and the WFTD were combined into a new organization that was labeled as the Womens Airforce Service Pilots, WASP for short.

    • What did pilots do during World War II?1
    • What did pilots do during World War II?2
    • What did pilots do during World War II?3
    • What did pilots do during World War II?4
    • What did pilots do during World War II?5
  3. Jan 30, 2006 · I was an RAF pilot in World War II. In 1941 the Air Ministry started a programme of six-month university courses as initial training for RAF aircrew cadets. I was on the first of these to be held ...

  4. During World War II, aviation firmly established itself as a critical component of modern warfare from the Battle of Britain in the early stages to the great aircraft carrier battles between American and Japanese Pacific fleets and the final delivery of nuclear weapons. The major belligerents, Germany and Japan on the one side and Britain, the ...

  5. U.S. pilot Louis Curdes was one of three to shoot down a aircraft from Italy, Germany and Japan. Pilot Robin Olds married Hollywood starlet Ella Raines. The 20 Most Famous Pilots In WWII. WW2 Pilots. 1. Francis Gabreski. During World War II countless aerial battles raged in deadly skies above throughout the globe.

  6. Philip Howard Leckrone was from Salem, Illinois, in the United States. An accomplished private pilot, he travelled to Britain to volunteer with the RAF, and joined No. 616 Squadron in September 1940. In October he transferred to No. 71 Squadron, the first of the RAF’s ‘Eagle’ squadrons formed from American volunteers.

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  8. Credited with 22 aerial victories, over 10 shared and probable victories, and another 11 confirmed damaged enemy planes, Bader was a fierce and fearless pilot. His rule of the British skies ended on 9th August 1941, when he was shot down over the French coast. Interred as a prisoner of war in the infamous Colditz Castle, Bader was well received ...

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