Remembering the Dragon Lady  
Memoirs of the Men who Experienced the Legend of the U-2 Spy Plane
Published by Helion and Company
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781907677854
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ISBN: 9781907677854 Price: INR 1695.99
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With heightened tensions mounting in the Cold War, President Dwight Eisenhower's request for more accurate intelligence information on the Soviet Union was the spark that ignited the U-2 project. Modified USAF bombers began overflights of the Soviet Union in 1951, but existing lower flying aircraft in the US inventory were vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire and a number of cross-border flights were shot down.

To meet the challenge and improve the survivability, the Lockheed Corporation received approval for their revolutionary design of a new recon aircraft on December 9, 1954. The company began work under a heavy veil of secrecy with only 81 people, including 25 engineers. A test pilot flew the first flight on August 1, 1955, after only eight months of production, a record-breaking result for rollout of a new project, especially one this complex and innovative. A dedicated and inventive group of contractors came together to support the project with partial pressure suits for pilots, high-resolution cameras, and an engine that could carry the aircraft to altitudes of 70,000 feet and higher.

Nicknamed the Dragon Lady, the U-2 has flown over Cuba, Alaska, North and South poles, Vietnam, Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, and Afghanistan. The U-2 is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. More recently it flew over the hurricane ravaged US Gulf Coast to collect imagery of the destruction over a 90,000 square mile area.

First-person memoirs of many of the men who supported the early US spy plane project are included in this book. They include pilots, maintenance specialists, a flight surgeon, photographic specialists and some family members. The US also trained U-2 pilots from Taiwan and the UK and some of their photos and memoirs are in this collection.

An example of the entries in the book include one pilot's experience on a flight over the North Pole when he discovered his instrumentation was inaccurate due to the magnetic fields and realized almost too late that he was flying directly toward the Soviet Union. Maintenance technicians recalled working long hours to prepare aircraft for historic flights over Cuba. Photographic specialists remembered the difficult conditions in Vietnam, and the care required to download the exposed film of North Vietnamese targets from the cameras in the aircraft. All of these experiences were achieved under Top Secret security conditions and on a "need to know" basis.

'Remembering the Dragon Lady' presents the reader with an impressive collection of U-2 first-person recollections.
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With heightened tensions mounting in the Cold War, President Dwight Eisenhower's request for more accurate intelligence information on the Soviet Union was the spark that ignited the U-2 project. Modified USAF bombers began overflights of the Soviet Union in 1951, but existing lower flying aircraft in the US inventory were vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire and a number of cross-border flights were shot down.

To meet the challenge and improve the survivability, the Lockheed Corporation received approval for their revolutionary design of a new recon aircraft on December 9, 1954. The company began work under a heavy veil of secrecy with only 81 people, including 25 engineers. A test pilot flew the first flight on August 1, 1955, after only eight months of production, a record-breaking result for rollout of a new project, especially one this complex and innovative. A dedicated and inventive group of contractors came together to support the project with partial pressure suits for pilots, high-resolution cameras, and an engine that could carry the aircraft to altitudes of 70,000 feet and higher.

Nicknamed the Dragon Lady, the U-2 has flown over Cuba, Alaska, North and South poles, Vietnam, Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, and Afghanistan. The U-2 is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. More recently it flew over the hurricane ravaged US Gulf Coast to collect imagery of the destruction over a 90,000 square mile area.

First-person memoirs of many of the men who supported the early US spy plane project are included in this book. They include pilots, maintenance specialists, a flight surgeon, photographic specialists and some family members. The US also trained U-2 pilots from Taiwan and the UK and some of their photos and memoirs are in this collection.

An example of the entries in the book include one pilot's experience on a flight over the North Pole when he discovered his instrumentation was inaccurate due to the magnetic fields and realized almost too late that he was flying directly toward the Soviet Union. Maintenance technicians recalled working long hours to prepare aircraft for historic flights over Cuba. Photographic specialists remembered the difficult conditions in Vietnam, and the care required to download the exposed film of North Vietnamese targets from the cameras in the aircraft. All of these experiences were achieved under Top Secret security conditions and on a "need to know" basis.

'Remembering the Dragon Lady' presents the reader with an impressive collection of U-2 first-person recollections.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • From Idea to Reality
    • A Temporary Unit was Born
    • A New Dimension: Development of the U-2 Program
  • A Tribute to Our Leader
    • In Memory of Our Leader
  • The Chosen Few
    • The Chosen Few Dragon Lady Pilots
    • The Ranch
    • Anthony P. (Tony) Bevacqua
    • Harry N. Cordes
    • Richard Giordano
    • Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle
    • Charles B. Stratton
    • Carmine Vito
  • Flying with the Lady
    • Julian Anderson
    • Buddy L. Brown
    • Richard (Dick) Callahan
    • Orville Clancy
    • Ward Graham
    • Patrick J. Halloran
    • Roger Herman
    • Anthony Martinez
    • Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle
    • Jack D. Nole
    • Chris Pocock
    • Francis G. (Frank) Powers
    • Daniel W. (Danny) Schmarr
    • Robert M. Wood
  • It Took a Dedicated Team …
    • What is NEPHO?
    • Glenn R. Chapman
    • Alexander R. (Alex the Old) Dulevitz
    • Gary (Shorty) Erdman
    • Gerard (Jerry) Fogel
    • B. C. Fowler
    • Joe Franklin
    • Robert H. Ingram
    • Jose F. (Lops) Lopez
    • James D. Manis
    • William L. Ming
    • Loomis L. (Robbie) Robertson
    • Joseph (Rooster) Robinson
    • Charlie Rogers
    • Gene Stoddard
    • John W. Washburn
    • Buck A. Young
  • Dressing Up and Stepping Out
    • The Development of the Partial Pressure Suit
    • 4080th SRW Physiological Support Division
    • James W. May
    • Lewis C. Nelson
    • Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle
    • Joseph (Joe) Ruseckas
    • Thomas J. (Woody) Woodall
  • Dragon Lady Doctors
    • Robert W. Paret
  • Dragon Lady Caregivers
    • Maintenance
    • James E. Ballard
    • Hugh W. Bell
    • Donald E. (Donnie) Brown
    • Harold A. (Brownie) Brownback
    • Swinton Burroughs
    • James E. (Soup) Campbell
    • Joseph (Joe) Chapman
    • George Debinski
    • Russell (Ed) Eddington
    • Carlton L. (Lyn) Fite
    • Frank T. Hayes
    • Richard Kemp
    • Arthur L. (Art) Kveck
    • Harry R. Magill
    • Samuel R. McDowell, Jr.
    • Marion E. Neal
    • Roger (‘Big O’) Owens
    • Glenn Simmons
    • Richard W. Staats
    • William J. Turpin
    • Gordon E. (Joe) Warner
    • Albert (Dan) White, Jr.
  • To Launch a Recon Around the World
    • Cuban Missile Crisis
    • Buddy L. Brown
    • Richard Henry
    • Joe Glenn Hyde, Jr
    • Ward G. Graham
    • Charles W. Kern
    • Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle
  • Alaska, North Pole and Vietnam Flights
    • Robert C. Birkett
    • Buddy L. Brown
    • Bill E. Bye
    • Edward B. Dixon
    • Roger Herman
    • Michael (Mike) Horochivsky
    • Charles W. Kern
    • Cozier Kline
    • Ray B. Lodin
    • Charles (Chuck) Maultsby
    • Gerald E. (Jerry) McIlmoyle
    • Victor L. (Vic) Milam
    • James K. Rogers
  • Family And Community
    • Buddy L. Brown
    • John Harvey
    • James S. Long
    • Patricia McIlmoyle
    • Clifford B. (Cliff) Melton
    • William T. (Rody) Rodenbach II
  • Royal Air Force U-2 Pilots
    • Royal Air Force U-2 Pilots
    • Martin Bee
    • Richard (Dick) Cloke
  • Republic of China Air Force U-2 Pilots
    • Republic of China Air Force U-2 Pilots
  • Recommended Reading
  • eBooks published by Helion & Company
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