The official seal of the re-chartered Civil Air Patrol in 1948. |
On May 26, 1948 Congress passed a bill
re-chartering and organizing the
Civil Air Patrol (CAP) as a voluntary civilian auxiliary to the United State Air Force.
The organization had its roots in
ramp up for Civil Defense on the eve
of the U.S. entry into World War II. New
York City Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia was acting in his capacity as national Director of Civilian Defense when he
signed an Administrative Order creating
CAP on December 1, 1941. The idea was to
engage the large body of civilian
general aviation pilots and planes
in support of the war effort. The pilots were mainly over-aged, disqualified for medical reasons, or exempt from military service on other grounds.
Most of their aircraft would have been grounded for the duration
to conserve fuel if not enrolled for
service.
A World War II recruiting poster for the Civil Air Patrol under the Office of Civilian Defense. |
A CAP plane making a bombing run in anti-submarine action. |
The renewed charter made CAP more
explicitly civilian and forbade future
use in combat roles. Despite the
civilian nature, it came under the authority of the Air Force and was led by a three star general. Units were arranged in regional command, 52 Wings—one for each state, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia—and local
Squadrons and Flights. Members are
organized on a military basis with rank
and uniforms, but are un-paid, and must pay annual dues and provide their own uniforms,
essentially identical to those worn by the USAF.
So, you may ask, why am I spending
valuable blog time on such a relatively obscure organization? Because during my last two years in Cheyenne, Wyoming the CAP was a big part of my life. I was a Civil Air Patrol Cadet, and damn
proud of it.
The image of me in any sort of militaryesque uniform will undoubtedly stun and confound many who know me.
But I grew up the son of a decorated World War II veteran. The
homes of almost every one of my friends prominently featured framed photos of dads, uncles, brothers, and
occasional mothers in uniform. I was
consumed with old war movies on the
afternoon TV movie matinee and
plowed through my father’s large collection of paperback war novels and memoirs starting with Audie Murphy’s To Hell and Back. I had played
war in the back yard and in the school yard as often as cowboys and Indians. I yearned for glory.
I wanted to be a hero. I wanted more than anything else to wear a
uniform in my own framed portrait.
I was not a likely recruit. In ninth
grade I was pudgy, flabby, unathletic, a bookish kid
with thick glasses and few friends. I had quit the Boy Scouts barely making Tenderfoot. But I wanted to belong to something other
than the Dudes and Dames Square Dance
Club. I wanted to be in ROTC, but it was only offered at Cheyenne Central High and I was destined to go to East where they offered the opportunity to wear the blue jacket of the Future Farmers of America instead.
Sorry, but not interested.
Then I caught sight of a smart
looking unit of CAP cadets in the Frontier
Days Parade. It was a natural. Cheyenne, after all was an Air Force town,
home to Frances E. Warren AFB, the
first ICBM base in the country.
Later that summer I prevailed on my
Dad to take me to Tuesday night Flight meeting.
That meant going on base.
Dad drove through the long parade ground at Frances E. Warren Air Force Base, former Ft. Russell, a cavalry post, on my way to my first CAP meeting. |
Warren had been an Army Cavalry post until World War
II. We drove down the long parade ground lined on each side by
sturdy red brick buildings. Deep in the
base we took a left and after a bit arrived at a run down two story building that the Air Force had no better use
for. It doubled as Wyoming Wing Headquarters and home of the Cheyenne Squadron and Cadet Flight.
As unpromising as I was I was allowed to sign some papers, told where to buy a summer suntan uniform and patches,
and to come back next week to be sworn in.
A CAP Wyoming Wing shoulder patch. |
Meetings consisted of an inspection,
a little close order drill, orders of the day, and classes to
prepare us cadets to move up through the ranks as we passed a series of tests—basic flight theory, Air Force history and structure, aerospace technology, radio
procedures, search and rescue procedures, “leadership” and such.
Occasionally a Chaplin would
show up and exhort us to “remain pure,”
whatever the hell that meant.
On weekends we sometimes had fatigue
duty around the building or special
assignments. We were victims in a Civil Defense drill once, another time we tested a new fallout shelter in the State Highway Department building by
staying in it all weekend while pretending
the Ruskies had nuked town—an event locals expected at any minute. We did training to provide ground support for search and rescue
missions.
The Wyoming Wing had one air plane--it's pilots flew their own air craft on many missions--a World War II Stinson L-5. This one is shown in it Army Air Corps markings. |
We were shown the Senior Squadron’s only plane—a flimsy
looking Stinson L-5 observation plane from World War II,
basically a military version of a Piper
Cub. Some of the Cadets got to go up
in it. I never did. I did, however, take a ride with the rest of
the flight in a Wyoming Air National
Guard C-47, a military DC-3 with
the cabin stripped down to haul cargo or passengers on uncomfortable jump
seats and benches.
The best part, of course was the
uniforms. You had sun tans—open collar with short sleeves for summer
or long sleeves with a tie.
Class A’s were Air Force blue blouses and trousers worn with a blue overseas
cap. My Class A’s had an Eisenhower style short jacket. Fatigues
were olive drab worn with high top black boots and the kind of rigid kepi that went out of style with
the U.S. forces when Fidel Castro wore
them. But there were plenty in the surplus stores where we cadets shopped
for our uniforms. I thought I looked
sharp in all of the uniforms—except the fatigues. No one in history has looked sharp in
fatigues.
The summer after my sophomore year, I was sent to a
weeklong Encampment at Lowry AFB in Denver for
advanced training with Cadets from several western Wings. My CO did
not want to send down a contingent without a more senior officer, so I was made
a temporary captain—two pips on the
summer collar.
For a week, we lived the life of Basic Airman recruits. Housed in barracks we were roused at 5 A.M. to shower, make our beds
and report to P.T. following which
we marched to mess. There were classes morning and afternoon plus
fatigue duty around the barracks and grounds.
We were taken to a jet fighter
flight line and allowed to sit in a flight
simulator. But the highpoint—which had been built up to us
all week a test of our endurance—was
being put in a pressure chamber and
then exposed to the equivalent of sudden
loss of cabin pressure at 50,000 feet.
As predicted several of us got sick. My ears
popped painfully and I didn’t get back full hearing for days. But I felt like a he-man.
During CAP summer encampment at Lowry AFB in Colorado we stayed in barracks like these and marched in formation to mess and classes. |
At this point I was actually
considering a career in the Air
Force. I knew my eyesight would prevent me from ever becoming a pilot and that my deficiencies in math and physics would
preclude any of the many technical jobs
in that most technical of all of the services.
I decided I might become a public
information officer. I spent some
Saturday mornings at the Base Public
Information Office. I even typed up
some short articles on CAP
activities for the Base newspaper and sent my first press releases to the local newspapers.
Not long after returning from
Denver, I was given yet another un-earned temporary promotion to Cadet Major and was designated as Cadet Wing Adjutant for the coming year. But before I could even buy the three pip
insignia, my dreams of glory were dashed. My father announced that we were moving to Chicago—Skokie actually.
Although I had planned to transfer
to the Illinois Wing, I would have
had to revert to my real rank—staff sergeant.
Somehow I never got around to it.
Skokie offered new opportunities for a bookish kid. Within a year I was marching against the Vietnam
War and beginning to think about resisting
the Draft when I turned 18.
But somewhere there is a photo taken
by our neighbor Bill Miranda. I’m fully decked out in my Class A’s. It was taken in my staff sergeant stripes
instead of officer pips. But I smiled at
the camera from behind thick horn rim
glasses. Just like those pictures of
my Dad’s generation. Only I had a giant zit on my chin. Oh, well.
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