Eagle Biography
James F. "Pappy" Brewer
America built history's longest logistical pipeline in World War II--14, 000 miles across
two oceans to India and over the Himalayan Mountains into China. James "Pappy
" Brewer and his comrades formed the last link in the chain by airlifting materiel
across the Santsung Range, an extension of the Himalayas known to pilots as "The
Hump" or "The Rockpile." Born in 1916 in Arkadelphia, Arkansas, he
enlisted in the National Guard at the age of 19 and was commissioned shortly before Pearl
Harbor. His C-46 crew was among the first trained in the US for operations in the
China-Burma-India (CBI) Theater. There, he transported heavy cargoes on a treacherous
route over some of the world's worst terrain to support Chennault's "Flying
Tigers," LeMay's bomber force, and various Allied armies in Southeast Asia.
After 14 months in the CBI Theater, Brewer was reassigned to C-54 operations across the
North Atlantic.
When the Russians blockaded Berlin in the summer of 1949, he flew one of
the first airlift sorties into the besieged city. Following 61 round trips, he returned
to the United States and helped train additional C-54 crews for Europe. He later helped
establish training schools for new C-97 and C-124 transport crews. These schools
eventually became MAC's training wing now located at Altus AFB. Assigned in 1953 as the
operations officer in a weather reconnaissance squadron at Hickam AFB, he flew WB-29s and
WB-50s in the perilous business of tracking and penetrating typhoons across the northern
Pacific and monitoring American and British nuclear weapons tests. In a later job at the
Pentagon, he became a key figure in integrating Air Reserve forces into regular Air Force
operations, and helped plan the C-130 and C-141 programs. After retiring in 1965 as a
colonel with almost 14,000 flying hours, Brewer moved to Georgia and began a second
career with Lockheed in the C-5A program. He has also been an active member of the Hump
Pilots Association and recently served as its president.
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| More About The Eagle: |
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1983
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The Curtiss C-46 Commando was the largest twin-engine transport used
in World War II. With cargoes weighing up to 13 tons, "Pappy"
Brewer flew these aircraft on flights across the "Hump" between
India and China. Thunderstorms, 100-mph winds, frightening turbulence, and
extreme icing combined to make the route a pilot's nightmare. The accident
rate was appalling; veteran pilots referred to a 500-mile portion of the
route as "The Aluminum Trail" because there was a wreck for almost
every mile of its length.
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