U.S. Coast Guard Aircraft Since 1916

U.S. Coast Guard Aircraft Since 1916
Author: Arthur Pearcy
Publisher: US Naval Institute Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 1991
Genre: History
ISBN:

Building on the highly successful A History of U.S. Coast Guard Aviation, this book details all aircraft used since the Coast Guard introduced its air arm in 1916.

U.S. Coast Guard Aviation

U.S. Coast Guard Aviation
Author:
Publisher: Turner Publishing Company
Total Pages: 174
Release: 1997
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781563113604

Includes list of aviator numbers (names of all those who earned pilots wings, 1916-1996.

Float Planes & Flying Boats

Float Planes & Flying Boats
Author: Robert B. Workman
Publisher: Naval Inst Press
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2012
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781612511078

Most often, when Joint Operations are conducted by a larger service, individual Armed Service Historians tell the story of events ignoring, sometimes even trivialising, participation of the other Armed Services. Sometimes, Navy historians inferred Navy credit for a naval event conducted by a Coast Guard individual or the Coast Guard by documenting the event but ignoring Coast Guard presence. Documentation of history resulting from both similar and diverse contributions and authorities from a different sea-service is lost by this historian approach. For example, Navy historian Roy A. Grossnick, in his June 2001 book United States Naval Aviation, 1910-1995 only mentions Coast Guard participation in early Naval Aviation and the World War once when “The secretary of Navy was advised LT E.F. Stone, USCG was ordered to NAS Pensacola for aviation training.” As this book documents, Coast Guard individuals and the Coast Guard service gave many contributions to the World War and to development and growth of Naval Aviation during that period.

Float Planes And Flying Boats: The Coast Guard And Early Naval Aviation is a single comprehensive volume telling the history of early Naval Aviation; the Navy, the Marine Corps and the Coast Guard. A unified history of all naval aviators, it describes interrelationship and mutual support. In years leading to 1920, the Marine Corps and Coast Guard did not own aircraft. The three sea service’s aviators flew Navy aircraft on Navy missions from Navy ships and Navy Air Stations, commanded by Navy and Coast Guard aviators. The bond between them was born. It was a unique time.

The book is documented with 427 endnotes, and features 281 vintage aviation photographic images and a nautical chart of historical note embedded within its text. This balance of photographs and endnote documentation provides both visual and written history that will come alive for the reader.