Tonight marks the 69th anniversary of the Allied invasion of Sicily. Allies launched the attack the night of 9-10 July 1943. The most heavily fortified and defended area was that of Gela beach. Here is a brief account of one of the many heroes of that invasion.
Naval aviator Cyril G. Lewis had previously experienced the ravages of war. He was serving as an aviator aboard the USS Boise at Cape Esperance, Guadalcanal when the Boise was nearly destroyed the night of 11-12 October 1942.
The USS Boise was a cruiser, not an aircraft carrier. Lewis piloted an unarmed photo reconnaissance plane, was catapulted off the deck to launch, and was required to land in the water and be hoisted back to the deck upon returning from a mission. He was regularly exposed to anti-aircraft and enemy fighter fire. Multiple times he narrowly escaped death as he gathered intelligence information, charted enemy gun and troop emplacements and called in air strikes. The early morning hours of 10 July 1943 was no exception to the rule.
I will need to post a few times to show just a few of the 233 photographs I currently show on my site of the grouping I acquired from Cmdr. Lewis' son last year. The pistol is nothing too special; a s0-so condition 1924 Colt M1911A1 pistol. It's not in good condition, but is all original, except for the WWI vintage common-leg HP barrel. Obviously, the pistol wasn't new when it was issued to Lewis. It was nearly 20 years old when he acquired it. But the story is not really about the pistol; it's about Lewis and his service. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his actions during the early hours of the D-Day invasion of Sicily. Commander Lewis is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
A few photos of the pistol, unique holster, mag pocket, etc. issued to Lewis. When I first was the pistol and holster I was a little disappointed. I'd hoped it would be better condition. I never doubted the holster was used by Lewis. However, it was commercial and I thought I could never document that to Lewis. I was wrong. Mr. Lewis (the son), while showing me all that was with the pistol, produced a letter his father had written his mother, asking her to purchase a shoulder holster. He also showed me a scrapbook with images taken by Life magazine photographer, J.R. Eyerman, while aboard the USS Boise during the invasion of Sicily. Those photos clearly show Lewis with his pistol and that specific (modified) holster.
The pistol; nothing too special.
The modified Brauer Bros. shoulder holster (strap added). The mag pocket with spare mags and the letter requesting his wife to purchase the holster.
A photo taken by Life magazine photographer during the invasion of Sicily, showing Lewis wearing this holster and pistol. Another photo showing him wearing the rig and this magazine pocket with the rounded flap.
More to follow...Information
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