IN THE GREAT SWEEP OF WORLD WAR II aviation history, attention often falls on the machines that attacked—fighters clawing for altitude, bombers droning toward distant targets. Yet scattered across the vast oceans of the war were aircraft whose mission was not destruction, but salvation.
The Consolidated PBY Catalina was one of those aircraft.
Slow, ungainly, and often dismissed as outdated even during the war, the Catalina became something extraordinary in the hands of the U.S. Army Air Forces’ Emergency Rescue Squadrons. To a downed airman floating in the endless Pacific, the white flying boat circling overhead meant something more than an airplane. As Lt. Laurence B. Craig so eloquently described, it meant warmth, food, safety—and the possibility of seeing home again.
In this issue, RAF pilot and historian Clive Rowley…