They were the eyes of the greatest air armada of all time. Their weapons were speed, cunning, and a camera lens. Passing through flak and enemy fighters, their pilots found the targets.
Then, after the bombs were dropped, they passed back through the hornet's nest to record what had been accomplished. All the while, their mechanics and technicians worked in the open air, exposed to rain, heat, ice, and snow to keep the planes flying.
They were the photo reconnaissance squadrons of World War II, and theirs may be the greatest war story never told. This website is dedicated to telling the tale of one of those heroic units: the 33rd Photographic Reconnaissance Squadron of the US Army's 9th Air Force.
How This Website Works
Information on this website is divided into chapters that are equivalent to chapters in a book. You access the introductory pages for these chapters from the chapter drop-down list located in the upper left corner of every webpage of the 33rd PRS Online. For a quick overview of how to use the navigation features of this website to find data quickly and easily, take a few minutes to browse through the tips in the topic drop-down list below.
The 33rd PRS Online uses popup windows to present historical information only, and these windows only appear if you click a clearly marked link. We don't use popup windows for advertising. If you use popup window blocker software, it may keep the popup windows in this website from displaying. If you click a link, and nothing happens, we suggest that you disable your popup blocker software while visiting the 33rd PRS Online.
Can You Help Us?
We're always updating the 33rd PRS Online with new material donated by squadron veterans, their families, their friends, and interested third parties. If you have information to share about the 33rd PRS, such as photos, letters, and anecdotes, we need to hear from you.
Original materials are handled with utmost care and promptly returned. High quality scans and color photocopies are also welcome. All submissions and donations are fully credited when featured as part of this website. To find out more, click "Contacting Us" from the selection box in the upper left corner of this page.
A Final Word Before You Go On
What was it like to serve in World War II? You'll find some answers to that in this website, but it might be helpful to remember this wartime observation by frontline correspondent Ernie Pyle:
Was war dramatic, or wasn't it? Certainly there were great tragedies, unbelievable heroism, even a constant undertone of comedy. But when I sat down to write, I saw instead: men at the front suffering and wishing they were somewhere else, men in routine jobs just behind the lines bellyaching because they couldn't get to the front, all of them desperately hungry for somebody to talk to besides themselves, no women to be heroes in front of, damned little wine to drink, precious little song, cold and fairly dirty, just toiling from day to day in a world full of insecurity, discomfort, homesickness, and a dulled sense of danger.
...I knew of only twice that the war would be romantic to the men: once when they could see the Statue of Liberty and again on their first day back in the home town with the folks. (Here is Your War, Ernie Pyle, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1943, page 102)
Next time you see a World War II veteran, say thanks.
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