The 'American Volunteer Groups' were
volunteer air units organized by the government of the
USA in order to aid the
Nationalist government of China against
Japan in the
Second Sino-Japanese War.
In an effort to aid the Nationalist government of China and to put pressure on Japan, President
Franklin Roosevelt in 1941 authorized the creation of three clandestine aviation units to be equipped with American aircraft and staffed by aviators and technicians who would resign from the
U.S. Army,
Navy, and
Marine Corps for service in China.
The 1st American Volunteer Group was organized, deployed, and trained before the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, 7 December 1941. It became famous as the
Flying Tigers under the command of
Claire Lee Chennault.
In the fall of 1941, the 2nd AVG was equipped with 33
Lockheed Hudson (A-28) and 33
Douglas DB-7 (A-20) bombers originally built for Britain but acquired by the U.S. Army as part of the
Lend-Lease program passed earlier in the year. The
Central Aircraft Manufacturing Company, fronting for the Chinese and American governments, recruited 82 pilots and 359 ground crewmen from the U.S. Army in the fall of 1941, and an undetermined number (including one pilot) actually sailed for Asia aboard Noordam and Bloemfontein of the Java-Pacific line. Other pilots reported to
San Francisco, and were scheduled to depart aboard the Lockheed Hudsons on December 10. The Douglas DB-7s, meanwhile, were to have gone by freighter to
Africa, where they would be assembled and ferried to China. However, the events of December 7 caused the program to be aborted. The vessels at sea were diverted to
Australia, the aircraft were taken back into U.S. service, and most or all of the personnel likewise rejoined the army, either in Australia or in the U.S.
The 3rd AVG was to have been a fighter group like the 1st. Because the 2nd AVG had been recruited from the U.S. Army, recruiting for the 3rd was to have been limited to the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, starting in the early months of 1942. These plans too were abandoned as a result of the U.S. entry into
World War II.
Bibliography
★ Alan Armstrong - ''
Preemptive Strike: The Secret Plan That Would Have Prevented the Attack on Pearl Harbor'' (Lyons Press 2006) ISBN 1592289134
★ Daniel Ford - ''
Flying Tigers: Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941-1942'' (Smithsonian Books 2007) ISBN 0061246557
★ Royal Leonard - ''I Flew for China'' (Doubleday, Doran 1942)
★ Michael Schaller - ''The U.S. Crusade in China, 1938-1945'' (Columbia University Press 1979) ISBN 0231044550
External links
★
Roster of the 2nd AVG