James Doohan, Star Trek’s loveable engineer ‘Scotty’, first gained military experience in the Royal CanadianArmy Cadet Corps, then was commissioned as an artillery officer in the Royal Canadian Army at the outbreak of the war in September 1939. He trained in England
from 1940, but his first combat mission did not come until 1944 – the historic invasion of Normandy at Juno Beach on D-Day. After the landing, Doohan shot two German
snipers, then led his men to higher ground through a field of anti-tank mines, where they took defensive positions for the night. In the darkness Doohan was hit by 6 rounds of friendly fire courtesy of a twitchy Canadian Bren gunner, taking 4 shots in his leg, one in the chest, and one through his right middle finger. His right middle finger had to be amputated, something he kept hidden during his acting career. Luckily, the bullet to his chest was stopped by a silver cigarette case which he kept in his breast pocket. After recovering from his injuries Doohan trained as a pilot with the Royal Canadian Air Force, in support of the Artillery. Although never actually a member of the RCAF, Doohan was once labelled the “craziest pilot in the Canadian Air Force” for daring to slalom a plane between telegraph poles on Salisbury Plain, which earned him a serious reprimand in the spring of 1945.
DeForest Kelley, Star Trek’s Dr ‘Bones’ McCoy, was called into military service in March 1943, but did not serve overseas. He worked as a public relations writer and control tower operator for the US Army Air Corps in Roswell, New Mexico. In January 1945 Kelley was transferred to a motion picture unit in CulverCity, California.
Gene Roddenberry was best known for creating the science fiction series Star Trek. With an interest in aeronautical engineering and a pilot’s license, he joined the US Army Air Corps in 1941. He flew combat missions in the Pacific Theatre with the “Bomber Barons” of the 394th Bomb Squadron. In total, he flew 89 missions for which he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal before he was discharged in 1945. Roddenberry maintained an ongoing association with aviation world over the years. After the war he worked as a commercial pilot for Pan Am, and during the mid-sixties he spent much of his spare time, while working on Star Trek, at California’s Monterey Peninsula Airport with a group of aviation enthusiasts flying World War 2 fighters.