Tuesday, April 30, 2013

FOXNews.com: ACT OF 'GOODWILL': 90-Year-Old Vet Reunited With WWII Bomber Jacket

FOXNews.com
FOX News Channel - We Report. You Decide. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
ACT OF 'GOODWILL': 90-Year-Old Vet Reunited With WWII Bomber Jacket
Apr 30th 2013, 15:48

  • bomberjacket2.JPG

    The jacket's original owner, Robert Arand, says his wife donated it sometime around 1950. Where it's been in the meantime is anyone's guess. (Courtesy: Jennifer Hlad/Stars and Stripes)

  • bomberjacket5.jpg

    Robert Arand says the jacket still fits almost as well as it did in his days as a fighter pilot. (Courtesy: Robert Arand)

  • bomberjacket3.JPG

    John Dodds dons original WWII bomber jacket he bought at a Washington, D.C., thrift shop for $17. He searched for the jacket's original owner, and found him living in Cincinnati.

  • bomberjacket1.JPG

    The leather bomber jacket once owned by World War II pilot Robert Arand has found its way back to Arand. Pentagon employee and military history buff John Dodds bought the jacket for $17 at a Washington, D.C. Goodwill store, and researched the name sewn on it. (Courtesy: Jennifer Hlad/Stars and Stripes)

A military buff like John Dodds could tell right away the leather bomber jacket wasn't just any old coat hanging on a rack at a Washington, D.C., Goodwill shop.

His daughter had noticed it and called him over, and Dodds began to examine it. The leather was a a bit stiff, but it was in good shape, with that perfect vintage patina. On the back was a red-bearded man in a winged helmet, the words "Red Raiders" and "22nd Bomb Group" emblazoned above and below. The jacket had lieutenant bars, a pricetag of $17 and a pretty big clue as to its original owner.

"Robert G. Arand" read the name tag on the front breast, according to Stars and Stripes, which first reported the story of the World War II relic's strange resurfacing at a thrift shop, and its pending return to the 90-year-old Arand, a former B-24 pilot who is alive and well in Cincinnati. 

Dodds, assistant general counsel for the Air Force and an amateur military historian who once helped a friend research his brother who was shot down during the Vietnam War, plunked down the $17. Within 24 hours, he had reached Robert Arand by phone.

They chatted about Arand's time in the 22nd Bombardment Group, a predecessor of today's 22nd Operations Group at McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas. Arand recalled a commander with red hair, Col. Richard Robinson, from whom the group took its nickname. Arand, who flew more than 40 missions in the South Pacific and remained in the military until his retirement in 1983, figures the last time he wore the jacket was in San Francisco, well before settling in Ohio.

"I remember my wife asking if I was ever going to wear it again, and I said I didn't think I would, except for a veterans' parade," said Arand, who believes that his wife may have donated it to a charity in Cincinnati in 1950.

Arand, a father of five, grandfather of eight and great-grandfather of two, told Stars and Stripes he isn't sure how the jacket wound up in Washington, but he "would love to know."

Dodds recently shipped the jacket to Arand, who said it still fits -- if maybe a tad snug in the chest. He's ready to show it off to his family.

"My children and grandchildren are anxious to see it," he said.

Click for more from Stars and Stripes

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.