LIMITED EDITION PRINT L/E of 200 S/N by the Artist & Eight Pilots Image size: 22"w x 25 11/16"h $550.00
LIMITED EDITION CANVAS L/E of 200 Canvas Prints S/N by the Artist & Eight Pilots Image size: 30"w x 35"h $1295.00
*Note: Canvas prints are shipped in oversized boxes and thus international orders (outside of the Continental U.S.) are subject to additional shipping charges.
Plane Type:B-25 Mitchell
When we get to Chunking, Im going to give you all a party that you wont forget, was Lt. Colonel James Doolittles promise to the 16 B-25 crews aboard the USS Hornet a few days before their historic air raid on Japan. By late afternoon on April 18th, 1942 the relative safety of the China coast was all that Lt. Donald G. Smiths crew had on their minds. The 15th aircraft (# 40-2267) to leave the carriers deck had bombed its targets in Kobe, Japan but the crewmen knew theyd never make their designated landing strip on the Chinese mainland. The weather had become increasingly worse and visibility had dropped to zero. Lt. Smith was forced to ditch his bomber off an island on the Chinese Coast near Sangchow. All of Aircraft 15s crew would eventually make their way to Chunking but sixteen of the other Doolittles Raiders did not. Doolittle himself would rise to the rank of full General. It is the stuff of aviator legend that when the last Raider makes his final flight westward into the days fading light he will be greeted by his fellow Raiders and the General and they will have a party never to be forgotten. When Bill Phillips painted "The Giant Begins to Stir," he embarked on an artists journey that grew to become a visual history of the United States response to the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor: Lieutenant Colonel Jimmy Doolittles air raid on Japan launched, for the first time ever, from the sea. The Greenwich Workshop limited edition of "The Giant Begins to Stir" (co-signed by surviving Doolittle Raiders) was followed by "I Could Never Be So Lucky Again" (co-signed by Jimmy Doolittle) and "Evasive Action at Sagami Bay" (co-signed by surviving Doolittle Raiders.) The final painting in this series is "Westbound: A Date with the General," illustrates the dramatic flight of Lt. Smiths Crew #15. Why chronicle any historical event? asks artist Bill Phillips. Because paintings like "Westbound: A Date with the General,'" he says, help us to understand the times in which we live. Remembering the sacrifices of brave men and women help us to be more aware of how we should view this great country and the freedoms we so often take for granted. In an interesting aside, Bill Phillips father, a character actor in Los Angeles in the 1940s and 50s, played a pilot in the film 30 Seconds Over Tokyo, as well as in Dive Bomber, and as Sergeant Kirby in "A Yank in Korea." The limited edition print and canvas have both been personally autographed by:
-Maj. Gen. USAF David Jones -(Ret.), Col. USAF William Bower -(Ret.), Lt. Col. USAF Richard Cole -(Ret.), Lt. Col. USAF Edward Saylor -(Ret.), Navigator Charles Ozuk, Jr. -Navigator Thomas Griffin -MSgt USAF Edwin Horton Jr.(Ret.) - Engineer Gunner David Thatcher PLANE JUNKIE - Westbound: A Date with the General by William S. Phillips (B-25 Mitchell)