- South Atlantic air ferry route in World War II
The provision of war supplies from the
United States to theNorth Africa n theater was difficult, expensive, and time consuming. GermanU-boat s had taken complete control of theNorth Atlantic Ocean routes making shipping in the North Atlantic Ocean hazardous to American warships and merchant vessels. In order to transport American soldiers and war supplies to North Africa, it became necessary to open up an air corridor betweenSouth America andWest Africa . Except for a secondary route throughCentral Africa , this wartime air route was North of theEquator and technically, in the North Atlantic. The phrase "South Atlantic" was used then as now to differentiate this particular route from the important Newfoundland toPrestwick (Scotland) air bridge.While Army engineers did much of the initial work on the airbases and other installations in Greenland and Iceland for the north Atlantic route, the installations for the south Atlantic route was constructed largely by civilian contractors. [cite journal |first=Charles |last=Hendricks |title=Building the Atlantic Bases |journal=Builders and Fighters |pages=36–44]
The south Atlantic air bridge was inaugurated in September 1941 with a B-24 flight from
Miami toCairo - some 10,000 miles compared to the 2,700 mile trip fromMaine toScotland . Using this route, U.S. aircraft were delivered toChina ,India , and theSoviet Union . When weather closed the North Atlantic air route, the South Atlantic route was used as a substitute, albeit a costly one.Moving aircraft to the Middle East and Persian Gulf
One purpose of establishing a South Atlantic air route was to move aircraft from
Florida to theMiddle East and thePersian Gulf by way ofPuerto Rico ,Trinidad ,British Guiana ,Brazil ,Ascension Island ,Liberia ,Sierra Leone , andFrench West Africa to North Africa andAscension Island to the Gold Coast enroute to the Persian Gulf. Many of these bases also played a role in theCaribbean and Atlantic sectors of the North American antisubmarine defense system. American-supplied warplanes played an important role in the pivotal Egyptian battle ofEl-Alamein in October, 1942.Pan American World Airways
Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) was the chosen instrument for building a series of airfields in Africa capable of receiving the planes ferried across the ocean fromRecife , Brazil. Besides its reputation as the world's leading airline, Pan Am already had a major aircraft servicing facility at Recife.Liberia
Because of its proximity to South America,
Liberia became the first major West African bridgehead for the South Atlantic air ferry route. The Liberian Government granted to the United States the use of its territory to store war supplies and to construct military bases in Montserrado County and Grand Cape Mount County at Fisherman's Lake. United States military supplies were collected in Florida, transported through South America to Brazil, then flown from Brazil to the military depot at Roberts Field, where 5,000 African-American troops stored and maintained the inventory. From Roberts Field, the war supplies were flown to their final destinations inMorocco ,Tunisia andAlgeria . [cite journal |first=William R. |last=Stanley |title=Trans-South Atlantic air link in World War II
journal=GeoJournal
publisher=Springer Netherlands
doi=10.1007/BF00806430
volume=33 |number=4
date=August, 1994
url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/luq322hw03n72p13/
accessdate=2007-06-23 ]A few existing and numerous newly constructed airfields between Liberia and
Khartoum served as the emergency landing, refueling, maintenance and housing sites. TheNile was followed downstream from Khartoum.Expanding the route
Once the threat to
Egypt had subsided, the Brazil—West Africa air link was expanded to include a route through Central Africa, primarily to tap a supply ofuranium from what was then theBelgian Congo (nowDemocratic Republic of the Congo ).Khartoum served a new air ferry route toBritish India viaAden andKarachi . Transport aircraft used in the China-Burma -India theatre of operations were supplied over this ever-expanding air link. A spur toBasra inIraq andTehran inIran enabled the establishment of a secret diplomatic connection to theSoviet Union before the critical and decisive struggle atStalingrad began in earnest. General Doolittle's survivingTokyo raiders returned to the United States over segments of this long air route.Legacy
Most of these airfields lost their locational significance after the war. A few, however, were to become the international airports of their country. One example is
Roberts International Airport in Liberia.References
Further reading
* Trans-South Atlantic air link in World War II GeoJournal Springer Netherlands ISSN 0343-2521 Issue Volume 33, Number 4 / August, 1994 pp. 459-463
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