Probably two years ago I was walking around a gun show in Dallas and saw a guy selling a plastic bag full of "pilot stuff" for $20. Just looking at the age of it I said what the hell and picked it up. Took it home - totally forgot about it.
I was digging through some stuff this evening and stumbled across it in a box and went through it. It's the flight training records of a Lt. John J. Kirby who went through pilot training in early 1943. He transitioned from the PT-17 Stearman to the AT-9 Jeep to the B-24 best I can tell. I've got notes from his ground schools on meteorology, flight planning, aircraft systems, bombing patterns, etc. Documents from a few different training schools.
The coolest thing I found through all of the material was in one of his notebooks. Amongst nice 40's cursive writing you'd occasionally find a bold note he had added in such as "work on this on next flight" or "don't trust Mr. Cross so much!".
And then there was this one that reminded me of how we all felt the first time we took to the skies by ourselves:
I imagine Lt. Kirby went on to command his B-24 in Europe. Though I've no connection to him, I'm going to keep looking for what I can based on his name and what I believe is his 'serial number' on a couple of the books. I hope he made it through the war and back stateside safely. Any suggestions for tracking info down on him are greatly appreciated!