Yes, many months later there was an air raid against Japan called Doolittle's Raid. They flew in big bombers over Japan and dropped bombs. It was a real morale booster for the US.
2, 2 planes crashed by 2 people. Many more were on the plane but two people were flying them.
Many people sheltered in the London Underground (commonly known as "The Tube").
We had to get all of our naval vessels out of mothballs. Many had been decommissioned and designated for destruction. Many of these same vessells saw extensive conflict in the South Seas.
On 18 April 1942 Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle led the "Doolittle Raid". This was the first American air attack on the Japanese main land. The attack did little material damage but did demonstrate that Japan was vulnerable, raised American morale, and Doolittle was promoted 2 steps to Brigadier General. On 10 March 1945 Major General Curtis LeMay commanded the firebombing of Tokyo. This was the most devastating bombing of the war. With casualty estimates ranging from about 100,000 to many times that, it was more devastating than the initial casualty count of either atomic bomb.
Yes, many months later there was an air raid against Japan called Doolittle's Raid. They flew in big bombers over Japan and dropped bombs. It was a real morale booster for the US.
2, 2 planes crashed by 2 people. Many more were on the plane but two people were flying them.
No plane crashed into the White House.
2,224 people.
59 people
30-70 people
11 dang people
one album - called 'Eliza Doolittle'
like 15
4
John Brown killed 7 innocent people in the raid of Harper ferry
At least 22 people