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FROM MAINE TO MEXICO

From Main to Mexico Book

For the first eighteen months of America's war against the German submarines operating off its Atlantic and Gulf Coast shores, the nation had little to fight back with except for the civilian volunteers of the CAP Coastal Patrol--brave men flying single engine land planes far from land to try to locate and attack the underwater menace. They flew more than 24,000,000 miles over water, spotted 173 submarines, dropped bombs or depth charges against 57 of them, and were officially credited with sinking or damaging at least two. These accomplishments were paid for with the loss of 90 planes and the lives of 26 Coastal Patrol members, most of them perishing far at sea.

This is the story of the unheralded volunteers as told by more than two hundred survivors of the fight--the pilots, observers, mechanics, radio and plotting board operators, linemen, guards, and office workers who served at twenty-one Coastal Patrol bases reaching from Bar Harbor, Maine to Brownsville, Texas.  Now in their seventies and eighties, these men and women tell of the satisfaction in serving their country, their excitement with daily base activities, their ingenuity in improving the often primitive conditions in which they lived and worked, and their dedication in returning to the fight after harrowing crashes and ditching  of small planes in the ocean.  More than one thousand of the three thousand who served in the Coastal Patrol at one time or another are mentioned by name.

Book Review. CAP News August 1997

Lt. Col,. Leonard A. Blascovich
CAP National Historian

 I received this book in the mail with a letter asking me to possibly review it.  So I cracked the book and started to read.

From the start, I was mesmerized, I grabbed a cup of coffee and 141 pages later I had made my first dent in a book I truly could not put down.

The various first- and second- person stories, vignettes and photographs of Civil Air Patrol's Coastal Patrol were outstanding.  I found myself transported back to the dark days of World War II, around 1942 and '43 and looking at events through the eyes of CAP's unheralded warriors. Warriors who flew more than 24 million miles, spotted 173 submarines and sunk or damaged at least two.

The stories, as told by more than 200 members, are funny, poignant and set whit pathos.  They provide a stark realization -- CAP would not be the great organization it is today without the magnificent efforts of these heroes.  They were real people -- founders of a beneficial volunteer organization.

Mr. Keefer clearly has the ability to gather the thoughts of those who fought along America's coast line.  He descriptively captures their incredible experiences.  He makes that part of history flow.

As I turned the last page, I realized this was the most informative and truly enjoyable book I had read in some time.  In fact, I put it right up there with the "Flying Minute Men."  Bottom line:  It should be in every CAP member's Library.  Now I think I'll sit back and wait for the movie!

Curators Comments:

What more can I say, Lt. Col,. Blascovich has said it all, except where you can purchase this outstanding book.

COTU Publishing
P. O. Box 2160
Reston, VA  20195-0160
703-742-8260

$32.95 hardcover, 544 pages, 217 photos and maps

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