Video Details
TitleOral history of James Wall
CreatorWall, James; Richter, John
Dates
Date Created
Descriptive Information
LanguageEnglish
A video recording of an in-person interview conducted by John Richter with Captain James Wall on March 18, 2014. Born on March 18, 1920, Wall served in the United States Army Air Force during World War II. After graduating from Texas A&M, he was called to active duty in 1941, initially serving in the War Department before transferring to flight training and becoming a fighter pilot.
Wall talks about flying P-51 Mustangs in combat missions over India, Burma, and China. He describes engaging in dogfights, engaging bombers, and striking enemy supply lines. During a mission in China, his plane was damaged by friendly fire, forcing him to bail out. He was captured by Chinese soldiers and given over to the Japanese and spent nine months as a prisoner of war. He details the harsh conditions of captivity before his eventual liberation at the war's end.TopicsVeterans
World War, 1939-1945
Prisoners of war
Mustang (Fighter plane)
Aeronautics, Military
United States. Air Force
United States. Army Air Forces
San Antonio Aviation Cadet Center (Tex.)
Burma
World War, 1939-1945
Prisoners of war
Mustang (Fighter plane)
Aeronautics, Military
United States. Air Force
United States. Army Air Forces
San Antonio Aviation Cadet Center (Tex.)
Burma
Physical Descriptions
ExtentDigital video file; video length 00:37:55
MediumOral histories
TypeMoving image
Formatvideo/mp4
Contributing Institutions
Held By
Clemson University Libraries. Special Collections and Archives
Hosted By Clemson University Libraries
Identifiers
Digital Identifiercuvohp_2014oh0005
Permanent Linkhttp://purl.clemson.edu/7047DC2D3D632107FE023958F33288FD
Batch ID20260409122042
