|
Home Page
About
CAP
CAP
History
Civil
Air Patrol
Missions
Membership
Requirements
Squadron
Locator
CAP
Chaplain Service
CAP
Specialties
Contact
The
Recruiting Team
Downloads |
|
Pearl Harbor propelled the United States into
World War II, but many Americans saw the AXIS threat long before Dec. 7,
1941. Among them were nearly 150,000 men and women involved in aviation.

As early as 1938, they began to argue for the
creation of an organization to harness their aviation resources to aid
the nation in the event America entered the conflict. Their efforts, led
by writer-aviator Gill Robb Wilson and supported by Gen. Henry
"Hap" Arnold, resulted in the creation of the Civil Air Patrol
on Dec. 1, 1941 - one week before Pearl Harbor.
First organized under the Office of Civilian
Defense, headed by former New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, Civil Air
Patrol members became the "Minutemen" of World War II,
volunteering their time, resources, and talents to defend the nation's
borders and fill the gaps as men and resources were being mobilized to
fight abroad.
The War Department, especially the Army Air
Forces, recognized the important roles performed by CAP. In April 1943,
CAP was reassigned from the Office of Civilian Defense to the War
Department and placed under the jurisdiction of the Army Air Forces.

"After the German surrender, one of Hitler's
high-ranking naval officers was asked why the Nazi U-boats had been
withdrawn from U.S. coastal waters early in 1943. The answer was
exploded in a curt guttural: 'It was because of those damned little red
and yellow planes!'"
- -- From Robert E. Neprud's Flying
Minute Men
These Flying Minutemen, all volunteers,
performed valiantly during the war. They performed many missions
including coastal patrol to search for enemy submarines, search and
rescue missions throughout the United States, cargo and courier flights
to transfer critical materials and personnel, and even towing targets so
Army Air Corps personnel could practice air-to-air gunnery techniques -
a very risky mission with new gunners.

In all, these volunteers amassed a stunning record
- flying more than half-a-million hours, sinking two enemy submarines,
and saving hundreds of crash victims.
A thankful nation recognized the vital role CAP
played during the war and understood the organization could continue to
provide invaluable help to both local and national agencies.
On July 1, 1946, President Harry Truman signed
Public Law 476 that incorporated CAP as a benevolent, nonprofit
organization.
And on May 26, 1948, Congress passed Public Law
557 which permanently established CAP as the Auxiliary of the new U.S.
Air Force. This law also gave the Secretary of the Air Force the
authority to provide financial and material assistance to the
organization.
|