Into The Valley Site Map

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Introduction to the book, Into The Valley, and to this Web site.

Author

Biographical information on Col. Charles H. Young, including the barnstorming era, the Army Air Corps in the 1930s, the airlines, and the war. Also includes links to a short description of the duties of IX Troop Carrier Command units and a brief profile of the pioneering phase of transport aviation, with emphasis on the Airmail era.

Author’s Wartime Diary

The current passage features a description of Normandy from the cockpit of a lead aircraft shortly after midnight on 6 June 1944, as the airborne assault began, spearheading history’s most famous invasion. The current page includes a link to a map of the routes that American and British Troop Carrier serials flew on the Normandy missions.

Reviews

Book reviews of Into The Valley. Includes USAF, WWII scholars, and TC and Airborne authors. 

Foreword

Written by Gen. John R. Galvin, this is the Foreword for Into The Valley. It offers a concise description of the book’s content, and places it in historical context. A short bio of Gen. Galvin is linked to this page.

From
the Book

This is a series of first-hand accounts and historical background on the Normandy mission. It begins in France, where anticipation, and frustration, is running high. It switches to England, at Upottery Field, where preparations for the invasion are in high gear. Stories from pilots, paratroopers and the wartime mayor of Ste Mère Eglise, the first town in France liberated by the Americans. For additional historical information on this mission, see the Historical Overview, Normandy.  

Selections “From the Book” will change periodically to correspond to IX Troop Carrier Command’s major missions, and will feature first-hand accounts of the action from Into The Valley

Historical
Overview

This is a summary of the evolution and development of Troop Carrier with emphasis on the European theater of war. Written by the editor of Into The Valley, this page includes links to photographs of each Airborne-Troop Carrier operation described.

Airborne
Chronology

Brief descriptions of major events in the development of Airborne-Troop Carrier, from 1918-1945. This chronology, which is linked to the Historical Overview, covers all theaters of war in WWII and includes the major airborne operations of both Allied and Axis powers.

Maps & Photos

Photographs are displayed on the HomeAuthor, and in the selection From the Book. In addition, many other photos display from links in the Historical Overview. A number of these photos are rare. 

The U.S. and British Troop Carrier Normandy route map is linked to the Authors wartime diary: D-Day, Normandy. map of the Normandy DZ-LZ area is included in the current selection From the BookNote: To expand the maps, wait for the map to load. The Expansion icon will then display in the lower right portion of the map; click this icon to display the full-size map.

Normandy: Field Order
No. 1

The main body of the 50th TC Wing Field Order No. 1, adapted by Wing from the IX TCC field order of the same name. This document contains at least one surprise in its instructions to pilots who missed the intended DZ or LZ on the initial run-in. This document is available for viewing in as a PDF file.

References 

The Bibliography for Into The Valley. The historical narratives in the current selection in From the Book cite sources listed here.

Order
the Book

The order form for the book, Into The Valley, The Untold Story of USAAF Troop Carrier in World War II, From North Africa Through Europe, by Col. Charles H. Young.

Links

A list of sites that may be of value to folks who are interested in the history of USAAF Troop Carrier operations in World War II.

News

News that pertains to USAAF Troop Carrier. Currently this includes information about posting of an original copy of “Field Order No. 1,” a historic document pertaining to the Normandy air assault missions. 

Sights & Sounds

Audio and video clips of Troop Carrier action from WWII archives and personal collections.


 

 

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Last modified: 01 Jun 2008