The Raiders Remember
In an annual ceremony, the last of the Doolittle Raiders recall their part in victory over Japan.
- By Paul Hoversten
- Photographs by Robert Seale
- Air & Space magazine, September 2011
In his flight jacket with 17th Bomb Group patch, Dick Cole looks ready to fly Panchito, a restored B-25J, at a Raider gathering in Punta Gorda, Florida, last March.
Robert Seale
(Page 2 of 2)
THE RAID’S NINTH BOMBER, Whirling Dervish, missed its target: a military factory in southern Tokyo. Its bombs hit the Tokyo Gas and Electric Company next door. “We flattened that instead,” says Tom Griffin, the airplane’s navigator. “We didn’t know we’d hit it until some time later, when the facts came out about the mission.” For Griffin, the raid was just the start of a long war. Rescued after bailing out over China, he returned to combat duty as a navigator on B-26 bombing runs over North Africa and Italy.
On July 4, 1943, a week shy of his 26th birthday, Griffin was shot down over Sicily and taken prisoner by the Germans. “It was a long 22 months,” says Griffin, now 95. “I spent it trying to think up ways to escape. It was our job to keep the Germans busy, so we gave them as much trouble as we could.”
When the war ended, he returned home and opened an accounting office in Cincinnati, Ohio. Because tax time is the busiest period for accountants, he was able to begin attending the mid-April reunions only after he closed the practice in the early 1980s. Two other Raiders attend the reunions: Ed Saylor, an engineer on bomber 15, TNT, and Bob Hite, copilot on bomber 16, Bat Out of Hell, are not pictured. At a final reunion, the last two are to open a bottle of Hennessy cognac from 1896 (the year Doolittle was born) and toast their departed colleagues. Says Griffin: “Dick Cole and I have a big thing going about that, who’s going to be the last. We say it’ll be us and we’ll be having that toast.”
Historians say that although the raid caused minimal damage, it had great strategic impact. American morale, still hurting over Pearl Harbor, soared, and Japan at once saw itself vulnerable to air attack. That impression pushed the Japanese navy to try to capture Midway Island, a decisive loss that heralded Japan’s defeat.
Paul Hoversten is the executive editor at Air & Space/Smithsonian.





Comments (5)
We are so fortunate to have these living links to our past among us!
Thank you for a great article, and a great magazine.
Posted by don on August 22,2011 | 04:01 AM
The paragraph about David Thatcher really made me think about the people we meet in our daily lives. Do you suppose any of the people he delivered mail to in Missoula--some for many years perhaps--knew he was a Doolittle raider? My guess is probably not.
Posted by Ken Snyder on September 18,2011 | 02:12 PM
We owe so very much to those 80 who dared to carry the first attack to the homeland of the enemy in the very early days of the war. They led the way, knowing the odds were against their being able to return. Such fearless breed of men are national heroes forever!
Let us never forget them! Ralph Wayne Austin, Texas
Posted by Ralph Wayne on October 20,2011 | 08:42 PM
I would like to obtain a print of the Doolittle Raiders article photo of David Thatcher & the B-25 "Panchito".
Having attended two of the Doolittle Raider reunions in Columbia, SC, where they started out, and having flown in "Panchito," this photo would be a welcomed addtion to my already full walls! EDITORS' REPLY: You need to contact the photographer directly; he owns the rights to those photographs, and he is the one to talk to about buying a print.
Robert Seale:
http://www.robertseale.com
Posted by Stewart G. Young, MD, USMC helo pilot 1972-78 on November 1,2011 | 07:34 PM
How may I procure a print of the photo of Doolittle Raider David Thatcher & Panchito the B-25, as featured in "The Raiders Remember" in the September 2011 issue of "Air & Space?"
Thanks,
Stewart G. Young, MD, USMC helo pilot 1972-78, "Panchito" passenger, and & Doolittle Raider 50th Reunion attendee.
EDITORS' REPLY: You can email the photographer, Robert Seale, at robert [at] robertseale [dot] com
Posted by Stewart G. Young on March 22,2012 | 04:53 PM