Great Pics

The Magic Carpet that flew everyone home.

 

74 years ago today, May 8, 1945, was VE Day ... Victory in Europe Day.  Germany had been defeated and the War in Europe ended.  But the Allies were still fighting another war ... against Japan in the Pacific which ended three months later in August, 1945.

 

Getting the soldiers home after World War II was a massive job.  More than 12 million U.S. military and civilian personnel were deployed around the world when the fighting stopped.  Getting the troops home was a topic for which official plans had been made, but those plans were not adequate.  What developed was a mesh-mash-make-do plan that actually worked.  A lot of people pitched in, did their small parts or their large parts ... and it worked.

 

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Soldiers returning home on the USS General Harry Taylor in August 1945

 

When Germany fell in May 1945, the U.S. Navy was still busy fighting in the Pacific and couldn’t assist.  The job of transporting 3 million men home fell to the Army and the Merchant Marine.  Three hundred Victory and Liberty cargo ships were converted to troop transports for the task.

 

During the war, 148,000 troops crossed the Atlantic west to east each month.  The rush home ramped this up to 435,000 a month for more than 14 months.

 

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Hammocks crammed into available spaces aboard the USS Intrepid

 

In October 1945, with the war in Asia also over, the Navy started chipping in, converting all available vessels to transport duty.  On smaller ships like destroyers, capable of carrying perhaps 300 men,

soldiers were told to hang their hammocks in whatever nook and cranny they could find.

 

Carriers were particularly useful, as their large open hangar decks could house 3,000 or more troops in relative comfort, with bunks, sometimes in stacks of five welded or bolted in place.

 

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Bunks aboard the Army transport SS Pennant

 

The Navy wasn’t picky, though: cruisers, battleships, hospital ships, even LST's were packed full of soldiers yearning for home.  Two British ocean liners under American control, the RMS Queen Mary and RMS Queen Elizabeth, had already served as troop transports before and continued to do so during the operation, each capable of carrying up to 15,000 people at a time, though their normal,

peacetime capacity was less than 2,200.

 

Twenty-nine ships were dedicated to transporting war brides; women married to American soldiers during the war.

 

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Troops performing a lifeboat drill onboard the Queen Mary in December 1944, before Operation Magic Carpet

 

The Japanese surrender in August 1945 came none too soon, but it put an extra burden on Operation Magic Carpet.  The war in Asia had been expected to go well into 1946 and the Navy and the War Shipping Administration were hard-pressed to bring home all the soldiers who now had to get home earlier than anticipated.

 

The transports carrying them also had to collect numerous POW's from recently liberated Japanese camps, many of whom suffered from malnutrition and illness.

 

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U.S. soldiers recently liberated from Japanese POW camps

 

The time to get home depended a lot on the circumstances. USS Lake Champlain, a brand new Essex-class carrier that arrived too late for the war, could cross the Atlantic and take 3,300 troops home a little under 4 days and 8 hours.  Meanwhile, troops going home from Australia or India would sometimes spend months on slower vessels.

 

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                Hangar of the USS Waspduring the operation

 

There was enormous pressure on the operation to bring home as many men as possible by Christmas 1945.  Therefore, a sub-operation, Operation Santa Claus, was dedicated to the purpose.

 

Due to storms at sea and an overabundance of soldiers eligible for return home, however, Santa Claus could only return a fraction in time and still not quite home but at least to American soil.

 

The nation’s transportation network was overloaded.  Trains heading west from the East Coast were on average 6 hours behind schedule.  Trains heading east from the West Coast were twice that late.

 

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The crowded flight deck of the USS Saratoga.

 

The USS Saratoga transported home a total of 29,204 servicemen during Operation Magic Carpet,

more than any other ship.

 

Many freshly discharged men found themselves stuck in separation centers but faced an outpouring of love and friendliness from the locals.  Many townsfolk took in freshly arrived troops and invited them to Christmas dinner in their homes.  Still others gave their train tickets to soldiers and still others organized quick parties at local train stations for men on layover.

 

A Los Angeles taxi driver took six soldiers all the way to Chicago.  Another took a carload of men to Manhattan, the Bronx, Pittsburgh, Long Island, Buffalo and New Hampshire.  Neither driver accepted a fare beyond the cost of gas.

 

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Overjoyed troops returning home on the battleship USS Texas

 

The Christmas deadline could not be met.  The last 29 troop transports, carrying some 200,000 men from the China-India-Burma theater, arrived to America in April 1946, bringing Operation Magic Carpet to an end, though an additional 127,000 soldiers still took until September to return home and finally lay down the burden of war.

 

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