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OUR HISTORY
Volunteers Serving America in Times
of Need
Civil
Air Patrol was conceived in the late 1930s by legendary New Jersey
aviation advocate Gill Robb Wilson, who foresaw aviation's role in war
and general aviation's potential to supplement America's military
operations. With the help of New York Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, the
new Civil Air Patrol was established on December 1, 1941, just days
before the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
The CAP insignia, a red
three-bladed propeller in the Civil Defense
white-triangle-in-blue-circle, began appearing on private aircraft
everywhere. CAP initially planned only on liaison and reconnaissance
flying, but the civilian group's mission expanded
when German
submarines began to prey on American ships off the coast of the United
States
and CAP planes began carrying bombs and depth charges."
A
CAP crew first interrupted a sub attack on a flight out of Rehoboth
Beach, saving a tanker off Cape May, N.J. Since radio calls for
military bombers were often unproductive, unarmed CAP fliers dived in
mock attacks to force subs to break and run.
The CAP coastal patrol flew 24 million miles, found 173 submarines,
attacked 57, hit 10
and sank two. By
Presidential Executive Order, CAP
became an auxiliary of the Army Air
Forces in 1943.
A
German commander later confirmed that coastal U-boat operations were
withdrawn from the United States "because of those damned little red
and yellow airplanes."
In all, CAP flew a half-million hours during the war, and 64 CAP
aviators lost their lives in the line of duty.
The U.S. Air Force was created as an independent armed service in 1947,
and CAP was designated as its official civilian auxiliary the following
year.
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OUR FUTURE
Advanced Technologies Take CAP
Beyond the Eyeball
Access to high-tech equipment will always be
important for CAP, since its members train extensively for their
missions and depend on the organization to provide the resources they
need. CAP already owns a fleet of 550 single-engine aircraft, hangared
in strategic locations throughout the country, for members to use. Now
CAP is purchasing new equipment – radios, digital cameras,
laptops, digital satellite phone systems and new aircraft –
all to make CAP an even better-equipped and cost-effective resource.
CAP has an all-volunteer Advanced Technologies Group to keep an eye on
high-tech breakthroughs that might impact future missions.
Among those breakthroughs CAP has tested are
personal locator beacons, night vision, infrared imaging and
hyperspectral imaging. CAP has also testing digital satellite
communications for transmitting photos and video in real time from
search sites back to mission bases. With such technology as the
super-accurate High Frequency Surface Wave Radar, CAP can identify
suspected targets and call in probable locations to waiting aircraft.
The planes can then go to those locations for crews to take
high-resolution photos for fast transmission to the ground.
With hyperspectral imaging systems, CAP can
have sensors onboard aircraft to detect and/or gather reflected light
from man-made or natural objects on the ground. This form of imaging
can discriminate among materials based on physical properties,
depending on how the materials reflect or emit light.
CAP’s Advanced Technologies Group continues to identify the
best equipment on the market today, figure out how it can work with
existing equipment and follow up with extensive field testing.
References to
http://www.cap.gov/visitors/about/our_history.cfm and
http://www.cap.gov/visitors/about/our_future.cfm .