Carrier Air Group Commanders: The Men and Their Machines.Lawson, Robert L. Carrier Air Group Commanders: The Men and Their Machines. Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 4880 Lower Valley Road, Atglen, PA 19310-9717. 2000. 216 pp. Ill. $45. An unusual piece of historical research and compilation Compiling a program. See compiler. , complemented with a great collection of photos, this book fills a void. There have been many books and articles on squadrons and overall organization in Naval Aviation Naval aviation is the application of manned military air power by navies. Maritime aviation is the operation of aircraft in a maritime role under the command of land based forces such as RAF Coastal Command or United States Coast Guard. , but little has appeared on one of the most important mid-level managerial positions--the leader of the carrier air wing. A retired senior chief photographer and founder of The Hook magazine, Lawson dug into archives to piece together the story. The first designated senior aviator aboard carriers was the "senior air rep," who became the air group commander in 1938. Each carrier's squadrons were organized into a group. After WW II, the groups became wings, changing the group commander to the air wing commander, but the abbreviation abbreviation, in writing, arbitrary shortening of a word, usually by cutting off letters from the end, as in U.S. and Gen. (General). Contraction serves the same purpose but is understood strictly to be the shortening of a word by cutting out letters in the middle, "CAG CAG 1 Chronic atrophic gastritis 2 Coronary angiography, see there " has remained part of the lexicon of carrier aviation. This book is divided into sections on organization, biography and aircraft. There is also a fairly good folio (1) Text management software for the professional reference publishing market from Fast Search & Transfer, Oslo, Norway and Boston, MA (www.fastsearch.com). Known as FAST Folio since its acquisition in 2004 from NextPage, Inc. of profiles of pre-Vietnam aircraft in CAG markings, and several color photos of Vietnam-period aircraft without profiles. The bio section has some surprising individual details. For example, a paragraph on LCdr. Dixwell Ketcham, CO of VF-6B in Saratoga's (CV 3) air group, discloses that he attained two-star rank, and lived to 103! A fine collection of trivia and historical data, the narrative carries through to the Super CAG program of the early 1980s, and "The Men" section contains reminiscences by selected CAGs, from WW II through Desert Storm. Bob Lawson has given us a ready reference source and an enjoyable browse (1) To view the contents of a file or a group of files. Browser programs generally let you view data by scrolling through the documents or databases. In a database program, the browse mode often lets you edit the data. See Web browser. in a seldom-covered area of a favorite topic. |
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