Foxer55
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How many of you are familiar with the Civil Air Patrol (CAP)?
I hated high school and I hated the school I was going to. Thanks to the Civil Air Patrol in the 1950s, I had some good teenage years. The Civil Air Patrol for our non-U.S. members is an official civilian U.S. Air Force auxiliary organization that was conceived and activated in 1941. It had a fairly illustrious career in WWII, patrolling the eastern U.S. coast for submarines in private aircraft and actually sank two of the boats.
Here is the wiki for CAP…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Air_Patrol
In my time in the CAP I was a member of a very well-known drill team, The Keystone Flight of Squadron 102 of the Pennsylvania Wing. I had so many good friends in CAP, guys and girls, and had so many wonderful experiences throughout the years I was a member. I learned military culture in detail, was treated as a military cadet everywhere, was flown about in U.S. Air Force aircraft, civilian aircraft, learned all the principles of flight in class and on the flight line, and was tempered in military discipline and order. It was one of the most rewarding experiences of my life and I recall that time with great fondness.
Pictured below is the drill team. The first two fellows in the first picture on the front row left both died in aircraft accidents, the second from the left was one of my best friends ever who died in a catapult accident on the USS Independence. Yours truly is fourth from the left.
CAP today performs a lot of air rescue operations when someone is lost in the wilderness and they are also involved in a lot of communications enabling rescue efforts. I don’t hear a lot about them anymore and I don’t believe they are as popular as in the ‘50s during the cold war.
I thought I would post this thread to see if there are other CAP expatriates out there and to highlight one of the things we had all those years ago that was a wonderful growing experience for young men and women.
I hated high school and I hated the school I was going to. Thanks to the Civil Air Patrol in the 1950s, I had some good teenage years. The Civil Air Patrol for our non-U.S. members is an official civilian U.S. Air Force auxiliary organization that was conceived and activated in 1941. It had a fairly illustrious career in WWII, patrolling the eastern U.S. coast for submarines in private aircraft and actually sank two of the boats.
Here is the wiki for CAP…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Air_Patrol
In my time in the CAP I was a member of a very well-known drill team, The Keystone Flight of Squadron 102 of the Pennsylvania Wing. I had so many good friends in CAP, guys and girls, and had so many wonderful experiences throughout the years I was a member. I learned military culture in detail, was treated as a military cadet everywhere, was flown about in U.S. Air Force aircraft, civilian aircraft, learned all the principles of flight in class and on the flight line, and was tempered in military discipline and order. It was one of the most rewarding experiences of my life and I recall that time with great fondness.
Pictured below is the drill team. The first two fellows in the first picture on the front row left both died in aircraft accidents, the second from the left was one of my best friends ever who died in a catapult accident on the USS Independence. Yours truly is fourth from the left.
CAP today performs a lot of air rescue operations when someone is lost in the wilderness and they are also involved in a lot of communications enabling rescue efforts. I don’t hear a lot about them anymore and I don’t believe they are as popular as in the ‘50s during the cold war.
I thought I would post this thread to see if there are other CAP expatriates out there and to highlight one of the things we had all those years ago that was a wonderful growing experience for young men and women.
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