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Category: December, 1943

December 20, 1943 (Monday)

December 20, 2018 1271941

Fairfield Mud, cold, and rain. Took off 10:45 p.m. for Hickam. Heavy load. Used all of runway (7,500’) 64,500 lbs.

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Posted in: December, 1943

December 19, 1943 (Sunday)

December 19, 2018 1271941

Fairfield Back to Fairfield. Lousy weather. Hop canceled again. Turned in to catch up on sleep. Pan American canceled out…

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Posted in: December, 1943

December 18, 1943 (Saturday)

December 18, 2018 1271941

Fairfield Flew to SF (Fairfield) this morning. Ice & snow north of LA. Bill King takes over and loses us.…

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Posted in: December, 1943

December 17, 1943 (Friday)

December 17, 2018 1271941

San Diego Standing by for takeoff to Hawaii (direct or via SF). Dinner at WAVE barracks with Betty Miller. Night…

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Posted in: December, 1943

December 2, 1943 (Thursday)

December 2, 2018 1271941

San Diego Saw Claire off this morning. It tore a piece out of me to kiss her goodbye.  (Notes through…

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Posted in: December, 1943

December 1, 1943 (Wednesday)

December 1, 2018 1271941

San Diego Last day. Wish she weren’t going, or rather that her mother’d go and leave her here to marry…

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Posted in: December, 1943

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A secret for 75 years

Kailua resident James Claire Nolan kept a secret most of his life. A Navy pilot during World War II, he kept a detailed diary and drew pictures throughout the conflict, a practice frowned upon by security-minded authorities. When he died in the early 1990s, he entrusted the pages to his friend and military historian Burl Burlingame of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Burlingame is now Historian at the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum.

Trained as a navy bomber pilot, Nolan was rushed to the Dutch East Indies as war broke out and returned to Pearl Harbor, where he was pressed into service flying PBY “Catalina” flying boats on patrol.

Later, Nolan served with distinction at the battle of Midway, on Guadalcanal and became the personal pilot for Vice Adm. Aubrey Fitch. Nolan said his proudest moment came when in the summer of ’43 he discovered the slowly sinking bow of USS Helena, sheared off by a Japanese torpedo several days before and covered with desperate survivors. He stuck with the ship until help arrived.

After the war, Nolan joined the US Air Force and continued to fly. In civilian life, he was a historian at Hickam Air Force Base.

We are publishing these diary entries exactly 75 years to the day after these pages were written. Except for very minor spelling and grammatical updates, they are as written — including observations that may seem not “politically correct” these days. It is a look into the mindset of a young man fighting a war across a vast ocean.

This site will remain active for five years. It is sponsored by historical-interpretation company Pacific Monograph.

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