The C-53 Skytrooper’s battered fuselage is incongruous here in the small town of Pianma in one of China’s most remote corners. The transport aircraft is a relic of one of the Second World War’s most overlooked chapters – The Hump airlift.
May 4th, 2011
Snapshot from the road: an unexpected World War II memorial
By: WildChina | Categories: On the Road
Far from the ferocious battles in the Pacific, Allied forces were also waging a heroic and strategically vital campaign in the early 1940s to stop China from falling to Japanese forces. One part of this campaign was the team of rough-and-tumble fighter pilots of the Flying Tigers volunteer group and subsequent Air Force fighter pilot squadrons that achieved success against enemy fighters and bombers by using innovative tactics to make up for inferior equipment.
But equally important was the 42-month airlift over the spine of the Himalayan Mountains that kept Allied forces in China supplied after Japanese forces cut off the Burma Road, a vital overland supply route. The route from northern India to air bases across southwest China is known as “The Hump,” after the nickname that pilots gave to the high mountain ranges that it passed over.
The Hump airlift, which began in 1942, is estimated to have delivered 650,000 tons of cargo, including drums of precious aviation fuel for Allied fighter planes based in Kunming, Baoshan and other hastily-constructed airfields across Yunnan. The legacy of this effort lives on today: WildChina clients visiting Yunnan via provincial capital Kunming’s Wujiaba Airport are actually landing at a former World War II airstrip.
The resupply missions were operated by the China National Aviation Corporation (CNAC) with heavy support from the United States. CNAC was a branch of China’s embattled Kuomintang government, which was fighting a multi-front war against Japanese forces and had largely retreated to Sichuan and Yunnan in southwest China.
Supplies had to get through to China regardless of weather conditions, which added another layer of danger to the risky business of flying heavily-laden propellor planes over high Himalayan passes. The plane we are looking at now in Pianma was one of the airlift’s many casualties.
Pianma is along Yunnan’s western border with Myanmar. The town is situated in an extremely remote area on the western slopes of the Gaoligong mountain range. The jungles and mountains surrounding it are lonely and hauntingly beautiful. It is near here that an American pilot named Jimmy Fox and his two Chinese crew members crashed on 11 March 1943 while making the return flight to India from Kunming.
The C-53′s wreckage was discovered near Pianma by a hunter in 1996. Local people then reconstructed it and housed it in the memorial hall in which we are now standing, which was built with assistance from American donors. The reconstruction consists only of a shell with no wiring or instruments, and it is missing half a wing. There are parts of two engines and a wheel on display as well, and a collection of photos, books and other Hump and Flying Tigers memorabilia.
Pianma is about the last place one expects to find a World War II museum, but as we have also noted recently while visiting Christian churches in the nearby Nu River valley near the Tibetan border, travel has the capacity to reveal remarkable collisions of past and present.
If you’re interested in China’s fascinating World War II history, consider our journey, “The Flying Tigers Route – 60 Years On,” or contact us today to let us craft a custom China experience that visits Pianma and other great spots the country.
Comments on "Snapshot from the road: an unexpected World War II memorial"
Recent Posts
08/13/2012
All Categories
- Adventure Travel in China (29)
- Aman at Summer Palace (1)
- Aman wedding (2)
- Bishan (1)
- Chelin Miller (7)
- Chic China shopping (3)
- China Photography Tours (2)
- China's Top Restaurants (7)
- Culture (113)
- Educational travel in China (20)
- Environment (65)
- Exclusive Access China (14)
- Food (46)
- Holidays and Festivals (36)
- In the News (161)
- Kat Don (1)
- Luxury China Hotels (4)
- Luxury China Travel (5)
- Naoki Japanese Restaurant (1)
- News You Can Use (27)
- On the Road (181)
- Press Trip 2010 (8)
- Qinghai Earthquake (8)
- Sichuan-Earthquake (15)
- Sustainable Travel (10)
- Tea in China (4)
- Travel Tips (124)
- Uncategorized (20)
- What We're Reading (34)
- Where the Wild Things Are: A WildChina Series (4)
- WildChina Announcements (26)
- WildChina Awards (6)
- WildChina Causes & Partnerships (4)
- WildChina Collection (8)
- WildChina Corporate Travel (3)
- WildChina Experts (81)
- WildChina Explorer Grant (9)
- WildChina Featured Journey (6)
- WildChina on the Web (15)
- WildChina Travel Guide (19)
- Zhang Mei (16)
adventure travel China
Beijing
Chelin Miller
Chengdu
China
China escorted tour
China for Foodies
China travel
Chinese food
Customized tours to China
Dali
ecotourism
Forbidden City
Great Wall
Guizhou
Hangzhou
Heather Graham
Jeff Fuchs
Lijiang
Mei Zhang
National Nature Reserve
new york times
off the beaten path China tours
qinghai
responsible travel
shanghai
Shangri-la
Sichuan
Sichuan-Earthquake
sustainability
sustainable travel
sustainable travel China
Tibet
travel in China
travel to China
UNESCO
WildChina
wild China
WildChina Explorer Grant
WildChina guides
Xi'an
xinjiang
Yunnan
yushu
Zhang Mei
Archives
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
Blog Roll
Blogroll
- Blue China – Peter Schindler
- Jeff Fuchs and Templar Tea along The Tea Horse Road
- Jeff Fuchs' Tea and Mountain Journals
- John Pomfret
- Mei's China Travel Tips
- NPR–Chengdu Diary
- Pékin Fine Arts
- Pomfret’s China
- Professor Yang Fuquan's Blog
- ShowShanti
- The International Ecotourism Society Blog
- The Opposite House HouseVibe
- The Perrin Post
- Tom Swick: Travels
- URBN Hotels Blog
- WildChina
- WildChina Collection









Leave a Reply