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PSM
04-10-2019, 09:58
Richard E. Cole, Co-Pilot Crew 1:

DALLAS — Retired Lt. Col. Richard "Dick" Cole, the last of the 80 Doolittle Tokyo Raiders who carried out the daring U.S. attack on Japan during World War II, died Tuesday at a military hospital in Texas. He was 103.

Robert Whetstone, a spokesman for Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, confirmed Cole's death. Cole's daughter, Cindy Chal, said he was having some heart issues but had walked into the emergency room.

Cole, who lived in Comfort, Texas, had stayed active even in recent years, attending air shows and participating in commemorative events including April 18, 2017, ceremonies for the raid's 75th anniversary at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force near Dayton, Ohio.

Cole was a Dayton-area native who recounted riding his bicycle as a child to watch planes at McCook Field, a military testing air base there. He dreamed of being a pilot and after attending Ohio University, enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1940. Stationed in South Carolina, he signed up as a volunteer for a secret mission he knew would be dangerous, but not much else about. They trained at Eglin Air Force to fly B-25 bombers on short takeoffs, in preparation for flying off an aircraft carrier.

The Raiders launched their assault April 18, 1942, in B-25 bombers from the USS Hornet. Suspecting they had been detected by Japanese patrols, they left farther away from Japan than planned.

The crews of the 16 planes were "very quiet" as they neared Japan, Cole recalled, saying his role next to Doolittle was to "be seen, not heard. ... You didn't speak until spoken to." But the country song "Wabash Cannonball" started running through his head and he unconsciously began tapping his toe, which caught Doolittle's attention. He shot Cole a look, he recalled with a laugh.

Doolittle soon ordered bomb bay doors opened, and the attack was on against what turned out to be limited anti-aircraft fire in the surprise attack.

They then headed to China, running out of fuel. Cole said Doolittle gave the command to prepare to bail out as they neared the coast, adding: "I wish you all good luck."

Cole said it was scary to parachute into a dark "unknown" in rough weather. His parachute caught in a tree, leaving him dangling but safe. Chinese partisans helped lead him and other Raiders to safety.

Three Raiders died trying to reach China, and eight were captured by Japanese soldiers. Three were executed, and a fourth died in captivity.

Cole recalled that Doolittle was distraught at first, upset that he had lost all of his planes and some of his men. Doolittle would later receive the Medal of Honor.
The raid inflicted scattered damage while providing a psychological lift back home. The stunned Japanese military diverted resources after a string of Pacific successes.

"Seven decades later, we are still awed by the sheer audacity of the Doolittle raid and the incredible men whose grit and bravery made it possible," Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi of California said when the Congressional Gold Medal was awarded to the Raiders in a 2015 ceremony. "Though time has thinned their ranks, it will never dim the daring of their deeds."

Cole continued to fly missions in the China-Burma-India theater until 1944, and had peacetime service assignments in several states.

In an AP interview in April, 2017, Cole described as "a somber affair" the toast he planned to carry out to end a long Raider tradition. Using goblets engraved with their names, they each year lifted them and sipped cognac in tribute to those who had gone before. Retired Staff Sgt. David Thatcher died in 2016 at age 94 in Missoula, Montana.

Doolittle organized reunions that became annual affairs, and Cole was a regular. He also took part in other special events, including leading a special public "final toast" ceremony at the museum in 2013, when four Raiders were still alive. He said then: "May they rest in peace."

He said in April 2017 he hadn't expected to be the last survivor, since he was older than most on the mission.

Cole attributed his longevity to being an optimist and living a life of "moderation." He said he believed he spoke for all Raiders when he said they didn't want any more recognition than all the others who put their lives on the line in the war effort.

"We don't want to be remembered any more than the rest of the people who took part in beating the Japanese," Cole said. "They started it, and we finished it."
Chal said a memorial service is planned for April 18 at Randolph Air Force Base in San Antonio. She said her father will be buried later at Arlington National Cemetery.

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/04/10/last-doolittle-raider-richard-cole-ohio-native-dies/3420815002/

http://www.doolittleraider.com/raiders/cole.htm

Rest in Peace, Raiders!

Sohei
04-10-2019, 10:17
Humble man! May you rest in peace, Sir and thank you for your service to your country.

TOMAHAWK9521
04-10-2019, 12:58
God Bless you, Sir. Be at peace.

The Reaper
04-10-2019, 15:00
Sir:

Thank you for your service, and your courage.

RIP.

TR

Stobey
04-10-2019, 18:22
Rest is peace sir - and thank your for your service. May Almighty God welcome you and bless your family.

https://www.thenewamerican.com/culture/history/item/31984-last-of-the-doolittle-raiders-dies-in-texas

Swoop
04-11-2019, 04:57
Rest In Peace Sir and God Bless the “Greatest Generation”!


DOL

JJ_BPK
04-11-2019, 06:39
RIP Warrior, Vaya con Dios :(

mojaveman
04-11-2019, 10:07
One of my favorite military special operations.

Rest in peace Sir.

Badger52
04-11-2019, 17:23
One of my favorite military special operations.

Rest in peace Sir.Ditto. Rest in Eternal Peace Sir! And man, those first crews had even less deck to launch from being at the front.
Serious Brass Ones. Hand Salute.
:lifter

Divemaster
04-15-2019, 07:06
I had the honor of meeting Dick Cole a couple of times, and attended his 100th birthday celebration. Helluva man.

PSM
04-15-2019, 10:36
Saturday night I watched Thirty Seconds over Tokyo and Last night I watched The Purple Heart.

Since both movies were made before the end of the war they both contained misinformation. For instance, in TPH, one of the charges against the crew was that they machine-gunned citizens. Before the raid, the aircraft had their guns removed to reduce weight. They were replaced by broomsticks painted black as a deterrent to any pursuing fighter aircraft.