


PRODUCTION

Douglas Aircraft Plant -
A-26
production
line (NARA photo)

Riveter
on
an A-20 at the Douglas Aircraft Plant in California (NARA Photo)
SERVICE & MAINTENANCE
1781st Ordnance S&M (Aviation)
There
were several support Companies of specialist units on our fields.
Collectively, they were referred to as the Sub-Depot.
When an aircraft was ready to have something done to it that the
aircraft's Crew Chief's crew did not do; he or the Line Chief would
contact the Sub-depot to get the required specialist crew to come
to the aircraft to do the job.
When battle damage was excessive, the aircraft was towed to the
Sub-depot
area of the field where it was worked on until it was ready to fly
again.
One Company was a Chemical Bomb Company. At Viillaroche AF in
France, they kept their stockpile of Chemical Bombs in the 668 BS area.
The commander was Captain Sheehan, a New York State man who we
got to know well.
(Back in WW ONE the Germans used chemical gas on
American troops
and caused a lot of serious casualties. If the Germans were to
use Chemicals
in WW TWO, Captain Sheehan's Company was ready to load our
airplanes up with their
Chemical Bombs and we would retaliate. Fortunately for the Germans we
never had to get the order to drop the Chemical Bombs.)
(Submitted by Wayne Downing)

50 caliber machine
gun belts being
assembled
in England (NARA photo)

Bomb Handling -
Wethersfield (F.J. Cachat photo)

Bomb Loading an A-20
Havoc (NARA photo)