Liaison pilot
A liaison pilot was a World War II United States enlisted pilot, whose wings bore an "L" in the center. They flew light single engine liaison aircraft. Included were many enlisted aviation students who washed out of pilot training after having soloed and were given the opportunity to become liaison pilots. Flight training consisted of about 60 hours of flying time and stressed such procedures as short field landings and takeoffs over obstacles, low altitude navigation, first aid, day and night reconnaissance, aerial photography, and aircraft maintenance. Unarmored and unarmed—except perhaps for a .45 pistol or .30 carbine—these men in 28 different squadrons flew low and slow with wheels, skis, or floats. They flew varied and often hazardous missions in nearly every theater—medical evacuation from forward areas; delivering munitions, blood plasma, mail, and other supplies to front lines; ferrying personnel; flying photographic or intelligence missions; serving as air observers for fighters or bombers; and other critical yet often unpublicized missions.[1]
During the campaign to recapture the Philippines, pilots of the 25th Liaison Squadron flew a dozen Stinson L-5 Sentinel aircraft in short 30-minute flights (December 10–25, 1944) delivering supplies (including a 300-bed hospital) to the 6,000 men of the 11th Airborne Division isolated in the mountains of Leyte. In another mission, an Army officer wounded in the chest in New Guinea was evacuated in a liaison aircraft as the pilot pumped a portable respirator with one hand while he flew the aircraft with the other. In the northwestern U.S., some liaison pilots flew forest patrols (Project Firefly) watching for fires ignited by incendiary bombs carried across the Pacific beneath unmanned Japanese high altitude balloons.[2]
References
- ↑ http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/history/wwii/ce44.htm Archived December 4, 2004 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/history/wwii/ce45.htm Archived February 6, 2005 at the Wayback Machine
- "WWII Combat Europe: Liaison Pilots", National Museum of the United States Air Force, retrieved December 1, 2007
External links
- United States Army Air Force - Liaison Pilot - Picture gallery of various types of liaison pilots wings issued by the United States Army Air Forces
- International Liaison Pilot and Aircraft Association (ILPA) - Association of liaison pilots and enthusiasts
- United States Army Aviation Museum - Largest collection of liaison aircraft in the USA
- Lbirds.com - Information about liaison pilots, aircraft, and restorations.