| The 339th Fighter Squadron was activated on
3 October 1942 and assigned to the 347th Fighter Group
throughout WWII. They operated from Henderson Field , Guadalcanal
until 29 December 1943; Sterling Island, 15 January 1944; Sanpor, New
Guinea, 15 August 1944; and moving to two more bases before ending up
in California on 30 December 1945.
The squadron flew the P-39 and P-40, but it was in
the P-38 Lightning that their aerial victories really added up.
The high point of the squadron's combat operations was one of the most
famous missions ever undertaken, the downing of Admiral Yamamoto’s
airplane over Bouganville, in the Solomon Islands.
The Allies, who had broken the Japanese codes,
intercepted a random radio transmission detailing the Admiral’s plan
to visit Kahili airdrome on Bouganville. Yamamoto had conceived
and executed the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the Chiefs of Staff planned
to shoot down his aircraft enroute to Bouganville.
Only the P-38 Lightning could handle this mission
which involved a flight of almost a thousand miles. The mission
was assigned to the 339th Fighter squadron, whose P-38's flew at wave
top levels to arrive two minutes before Yamamoto's plane reached the
planned intercept position.
The ambush succeeded and the remains of the downed
Betty bomber lays in the undergrowth of the jungle, a grim reminder of
the awesome influence of airpower on that fateful day of 18 April
1943.
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Size
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5 1/2 inches (14 cm) by
5 inches (13 cm). |
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Materials
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Embroidered on blue wool felt. |
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