These pages continue in process — they are not complete.
Maps
Sincere thanks to Jack Eisner who shared USAF Archive microfilm reel 25866 with me.
Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection
The primary on-line source for maps showing the Allied perspective of Southeast Asia in general, and particularly of northwest Thailand, is the Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection at the University of Texas in Austin. It offers the following :
US ARMY MAPS
Army Map Service Topographic Map Series Index
Burma Series U542 1:250,000 Key Map Series (1955)
Burma Series U542 1:250,000 (1955)
Indochina and Thailand Series L509 1:250,000 Key Map (1954)
Indochina and Thailand Series L509 1:250,000 (1954)
GREAT BRITAIN WAR OFFICE: BURMA, THAILAND MAP
(reissued by the US Army 1943)
Karenni & Southern Shan States. Mea Haung Saun Province
(Series 4218 1:253,440)
Note that, but for the last map, all are post-war. Some period maps are available in the USAF Archives; they are not on-line, but are available as microfilm copies via CDs at a nominal price. Being microfilm, they cannot match the quality of the Perry-Castañeda Collection, but they do provide at least a perspective on the information which was used in decision-making by Allied commands during WWII.
USAF Archives
Maps / charts in the USAF Archives (AFHRA, or Air Force Historical Research Agency) include:
Aeronautical Charts. ((A few are titled AAF Aeronautical Charts; editions vary from “Advance Edition” to”Advance Sheet” to “First Edition”. The maps are only generally dated by sources of information cited from 1941 and 1942. The backs of the charts contain individual map sources, but only one, that for Davao Gulf, was copied onto microfilm. See History of the Aeronautical Chart Service, especially The Wartime Work Load, which reads in part (emphasis added):
(5) Somewhat vague and incomplete historical records indicate the World Aeronautical Pilot Charts were assigned also to the Coast and Geodetic Survey with production records showing 23 sheets printed and delivered by the close of 1942.
All but one of the aeronautical maps found in USAF Archives for the 14th Air Force (and reassembled below) indicate that they were based on information in 1942. Typical are these notes from the chart for Tung Ting Lake:
Compiled for the US Army Air Forces by the Army Map Service, US Army, Washington DC, from source authorities listed on reverse side, August 1942.
Isogenic Lines by USC&GS 1941. Aeronautical data April 1942.
(This information on some charts is illegible or cut off).
Only the Omei Mountain chart carries 1943 dates:
Aeronautical information December 1943
However, the actual publication / issuance date is undefined on any chart.)).[0] USAF Archives have made available some maps via microfilm rolls, specifically 25866, pp 0381-0506, titled “Aeronautical Maps of China”, and 25882, pp 0956-1024, titled “Maps: 14th Air Force”. There does not seem to be any on-line equivalent. The maps later evolved into the TPC (Tactical Pilot Charts) which serve today as flight maps for both commercial and private operations. Unfortunately for me, the one chart of particular interest, covering northern Thailand, No. 677, is missing.
Asia Transportation Map. The map is composed of four parts covering much of China. Three parts are included in the USAF Archives. A full set of originals, as issued by the USAF 653rd Engineering Battalion, is available in the National Library of Australia. which describes the contents in its on-line catalogue as:
Transportation map of China, showing international and province boundaries, transportation, water features, the Great Wall, passes, accommodation, mileage between places and populated places. Includes sheet index and research notes.
There doesn’t appear to have been a sequel issued.
Special PI [Photo Intelligence] Reports.
Maps were generated by the 18th Photo Intelligence [PI] Detachment HQ, Fourteenth Air Force, to accompany various reports.
Report No 40: Railroads in Occupied China. The total number of maps included in the report is not clear; however, a catalog in the Nichibunken Repository lists 13 sections, only three of which are not represented in the USAF Archives listing of maps. The 25866 archive reel contains 23 related maps.
Other reports. In addition, one map each from two other reports by the same intelligence unit are included in the same USAF Archives sequence: Report No 55, about roads in China, and Report No 57, on Japanese railroad shop facilities in China.
The Nichibunken Repository may hold original quality maps associated with all these reports plus those of four more reports listed in its catalogue. USAF archives that I have don’t list any maps associated with the four reports. To this point, I haven’t found any of the reports proper in the USAF Archives.
American Volunteer Group maps. Eighteen sheets provide small maps in Chinese with accompanying information blocks in English for at least 117 airstrips. The sheets in the USAF Archives were apparently reproduced as blueprints. No coordinates are provided for the individual strips and some names don’t appear in Google searches. Some of the microfilm is of such poor quality that the airstrips cannot be identified. The source for the sheets is not clear.
General comment: The quality of the microfilm images varies widely; compounding the problem was, no doubt, the condition of the originals, some of which were obviously well-used. Some of the larger maps were copied in as many as eight separate images, probably following the manner in which the maps had been folded to fit into office file folders. In many instances, gaps exist between adjoining images for a map because those folds were not opened, or if opened, not properly flattened. Wrinkles were not corrected. Dimensional instability (irregular stretching) was common, but this could not be corrected during the microfilming process. Originals had been set on the scanning platen without much attention to proper alignment; the resulting images were up to 3° out of kilter, which made fitting them together difficult.
I started reassembling the various maps as an interim effort, for my own use, on the assumption that scanned images were available somewhere on-line — I just hadn’t found them. I made no attempt to correct for the problems cited above, except to realign the images so that they could be at least roughly fitted together. Photoshop has a unique complement of “transformation” tools allowing correction for skew and warp, useful for correcting the results of paper stretching irregularly, but the program’s complexity — for which read user-unfriendliness, and its time-consuming nature didn’t seem to justify its use for an interim effort. Because of the stretching plus the many gaps between component images, Microsoft’s Ice, a panorama program, couldn’t be used. Instead I used Microsoft Publisher, a lesser program, for fitting the images together manually. It didn’t help that most of the maps were based on various Lambert Projection standards which were not compatible Google Earth.
Hopefully someone will recognize some of the maps and point me to existing presentations on-line, or motivate someone who knows of accessible originals to speak up, so that they can be digitized and put on-line.
USAAF AERONAUTICAL CHARTS
Index map((Extract from “World Pilotage Chart Index” on reverse of Aeronautical Chart titled “Davao Gulf” (USAF Archive microfilm reel 25882 p0902-0903) (typical of detail on reverses of Aeronautical Charts in this 1942 series) [My ref: \03400 USFE Cmd Documentation\USAF Archives\_TOPICS\_Charts, Aeronautical\].))
Reassembled charts which are available for download in the list following are highlighted in yellow. I note with some irony that I’ve not found the single chart highlighted in red — it is what I need for this project which focuses on northwest Thailand, and it is what started this exercise:
Listing of reassembled charts ((Compiled from information on individual chart margins.))
Chart names are linked to files for downloading. Some do have sufficient clarity and quantity of detail to possibly justify their printing as large as 135cm x 103cm (53 in x 41 in); but relying on a computer monitor is more convenient.
Map No | Title | Coordinates | Micro-film |
288 | Taching Mountain | N4000-E10700 | 1/431 |
332 | Koko Lake | N3600-E9500 | 1/396 |
380 | Peninsula of Korea | N3600-E12300 | 1/438 |
381 | Shantung Peninsula | N3600-E11600 | 1/446 |
382 | Hwang River | N3600-E10900 | 1/463 |
383 | Alashan Mountains | N3600-E10200 | 1/402 |
384 | Wei River | N3200-E10200 | 1/381* |
385 | Lo River | N3200-E10900 | 1/389* |
386 | Hungtze Lake | N3200-E11600 | 1/454 |
387 | Saishu Island | N3200-E12300 | 1/472 |
388 | Kyushu | N3200-E13000 | 1/480 |
494 | Tung Ting Lake | N2800-E10800 | 2/956* |
495 | Omei Mountains | N2800-E10200 | 2/960 |
496 | Kunyang Lake | N2400-E10100 | 2/1012 |
499 | Cape Fuki, Taiwan | N2400-E11900 | 2/1017 |
500 | Okinawa Island | N2400-E12500 | 2/964 |
554 | Brahmaputra River | N2400-E8900 | 2/988 |
555 | Lake Erh, India | N2400-E9500 | 2/993 |
556 | Irrawaddy River | N2000-E9500 | 2/997 |
557 | Mount Victoria, India (Note a) | N2000-E8900 | 2/1001 |
613 | Niitaka Mountains, Taiwan | N2000-E11900 | 2/1004 |
614 | Island of Hong Kong | N2000-E11300 | 2/1008 |
615 | Hainan Strait | N2000-E10700 | 2/967 |
616 | Koi River, Indo-China | N2000-E10100 | 2/932 |
617 | Gulf of Tonkin | N1600-E10200 | 2/944 |
619 | Cape Bolino, Philippine Islands | N1600-E11400 | 2/948 |
620 | Babuyan Islands, Philippine Islands | N1600-E12000 | 2/952 |
677 | Gulf of Martaban | N1600-E9600 | na |
678 | Bay of Bangkok | N1200-E9600 | 2/928 |
737 | Cape Varella, French Indo-China | N1200-E10800 | 2/910 |
738 | Tonle Sap | N1200-E10200 | 2/1021 |
855 | Davao Gulf, Philippine Islands | N400-E12400 | 2/898 |
na | Drawing legend, index (typical) | na | 2/902 |
Scale of charts is 1:1,000,000.
“Coordinates” refer to the subtitles on the maps which in turn refer to the coordinates at the lower left of each chart. While latitudinal coverage is consistently 4°, longitudinal coverage increases with latitude. For the maps here:
From latitude N4° to N32°, charts cover 6° of longitude
Between latitudes N32° and N40°, 7° of longitude
For N40° to N44° , 8° of longitude
This information is barely visible in the index map above, appearing as a number, 6, 7, or 8, in the upper left corner of each rectangle.
“Microfilm numbers” include a prefix to identify USAF Archive microfilm reels sourced:
1. 25866
2. 25882
The number “1” or “2” is followed by a slash and the starting page for each sequence of images comprising one map. The number of pages per map varies.
An asterisk indicates that more than one edition was provided in the archive microfilm, but only one version was included here. Generally the earlier / earliest was chosen, unless its quality was much poorer than the later edition.
Note a: “Coordinates” for Mount Victoria are as shown in the listing; the chart itself is incorrect, showing N2400 instead of N2000.
ASIA TRANSPORTATION MAP
The map is divided into four parts, arranged thusly:
Lanchow | Peiping |
Kunming | Canton |
The map covers land transport, ie, roads and railroads. Air facilities are not included in the map legend. Dates, as noted, vary. For Lanchow, the USAF Archive grouping includes a map in a different format. For maps other than Lanchow, scale is 1:2,000,000; that for Lanchow is undefined.
Title | Coordinates (date) | Microfilm |
Lanchow (Sheet NW) |
N3100-E9230/1200×1600 (04 Jun 45) | 72-78 |
Peiping (Sheet NE) |
N3200-E11000/1200×1200 (xx Mar 45) | 8-17 |
Kunming (Sheet SW) |
N1800-E9800/1400×1000 (xx Mar 45) | 98-109 |
Canton (Sheet SE) |
N1800-E10800/1300×1400 (xx xxx 44) | 85-97 |
In the column, “Coordinates”, first numbers are approximately those for the coordinates intersecting near the bottom left of the sheet; following the slash are the dimensions of the sheet in degrees of latitude and longitude. The numbers on the right can be added to those on the left to identify the coordinates of each corner in round numbers. Example, Canton: the coordinates at the lower left of the actual sheet are N18° E108°. The sheet covers a rectangle, measuring 13° N-S and 14° E-W. Calculating for the coordinates at the upper right of the sheet results in, in round numbers, N18°+13°=N31°, E108°+14°=E122°. Coverage between different editions of a map section may vary: for example, the Canton section in 1945 was redefined as N1800-E10900/1300×1000.
“Microfilm” refers to starting page numbers for images in USAF Archives microfilm reel 25866.
The “653rd Engineer Bn, USAF” is credited with having assembled the map. Three parts are dated “Revised: Mar 1945”. Curiously, the USAF didn’t come into formal existence until more than two years later: 18 September 1947. That suggests that, while revised in March 1945, they weren’t published until after the USAF came into existence — or perhaps “USAF” was merely a typo.
Special PI [Photo Intelligence] Reports maps
Maps associated with the following special reports are available for download as shown:
Special Report No 40: Railroads in Occupied China | |||
I | Peiping-Hankow RR pp 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 |
249 | |
II | Tientsin-Pukow RR pp 1 , 2 |
219 | |
III | [no information in USAF Archives] | na | |
IV | Canton-Kowloon RR p 1 | 227 | |
V | Wuchang-Liuchow RR pp 1 , 2 | 235 | |
VI | Lung-Hai RR pp 1 , 2 | 257 | |
VII | Tatung-Puchou (Tung-Pu) RR pp 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 |
129 | |
VIII | Shantung (Tsinan-Tsingtao) RR p 1 |
115 | |
IX | Shihchia chuang-Taiyuan (Cheng-Tai) RR pp 1 , 2 , 3 | 187 | |
X | Shihchiachuang-Tehsien (Shih-Te) RR p 1 |
211 | |
XI | Hengyang-Canton section of the Canton-Hankow RR pp 1 , 2 , 3 | 158 | |
XII | Shanghai-Nanking-Wuhu RR [no information in USAF Archives] |
na | |
XIII | Peiping-Mukden RR [no information in USAF Archives] |
na | |
Special Report No 32: Shipbuilding & repair, facilities & activity of the Hong Kong- Kowloon area [no information in USAF Archives] |
|||
Special Report No 53: Japanese ship repair & shipbuilding facilities [no information in USAF Archives] | |||
Special Report No 55: Highways in Northern Chekiang & Southern Kiangsu Provinces, China | |||
Special Report No 57: Japanese railroad shop facilities in occupied China | |||
Special Report No 64: The Grand Canal [no information in USAF Archives] |
AVG: American Volunteer Group (Chennault’s original Flying Tigers)
The following titles are included in USAF Archive microfilm 25866, indexed as “Airfields in China”. Most include a small information block stating:
American Volunteer Group Confidential Secretariat |
The maps are without coordinates and have no scale; most are undated, but the mention above of the AVG requires a date before the organization disbanded on 04 July 1942 (the sheet that includes Loiwing does have a handwritten “Jan. 10, 1942” over the information block). Curiously all the maps use metric dimensions and all include Chinese characters which would indicate that they were of Nationalist Chinese origin. The individual documents vary widely in quality. Only two of the best are available here for download:
1st Route Air Force HQ: 2nd Air Base Airfields |
641 | |
Suining Nanchung Pai-shih-i Ipin Tsunyi Chungking Tsunyi Siushan Szenan Tzekiang Tuhshan |
||
1st Route Air Force HQ: 3rd Air Base Airfields |
637, 657 | |
Wanhsien Liangshan Erishih Laifeng |
||
1st Route Air Force HQ: 9th Air Base Airfields |
655 | |
Siushan Szenan Tzekiang Tuhshan |
||
2nd Route Air Force: 6th Air Base Airfields |
595, 617 | |
Hengyang Hengchow Linling Paoking Chenhsien Changting Langgen Namyung Namcheng Suichwan Sinfeng (dup? see 12th under 2nd) |
||
2nd Route Air Force HQ CAF: 10th Air Force Airfields |
605 | |
Nantan Ishan Wuming Yangtang I’shan (?) Wuhsuan Paise Kweilin |
||
2nd Route Air Force HQ: 12th Air Base Airfields |
589 | |
Ta-yu Changting Lungyen Namyung Namcheng Suichwan Sinfeng Kanchow Kian |
||
3rd Route Air Force HQ: 1st Air Base Airfields |
578 | |
Santai SungPan Chengtu Tapingsze |
||
3rd Route Air Force HQ: 8th Air Base Airfields |
631 | |
Chengtu Neisiang Paoki Laohokow Nanchen Kushih Hsienyang Nanyang |
||
3rd Route Air Force HQ: 8th Air Base Airfields (Sht No 2) |
627 | |
Kwangyuan Layang Lushih Sian Ankang |
||
3rd Route Air Force: 11th Air Base Fields |
613 | |
Sintsing Shwangliu Kiungla Sichang Ma-an (?), (?) Jungking |
||
4th Route Air Force HQ: 7th Air Base Airfields |
671 | |
Minhsien Chingning Kuyuan Sifengchen Lintiao Tungkucheng Chungchuants’un Tungsincheng Ninghsia Chungwei Tienshui |
||
4th Route Air Force HQ 7th Air Base Airfields (Sht No 2) |
665 | |
Lanchow Sikucheng Pingliang Lintiao Sining |
||
4th Route Air Force HQ: 14th Air Base Airfields |
659 | |
Ansi (?) Changyeh Chiuchuan Wuwei |
||
Airfields Directly Under the Commission | 621 | |
Shih hsien Chuchow (Chuhsien) Chuki Kienou Yusha Pucheng Lishui |
||
4th Air Base HQ: Aerodromes | 582 | |
Chaotung Suntien Kutsing Chanyi Tsingchen Kweiyang Anshun |
||
5th Air Base HQ: Aerodromes | 649 | |
Tengchung Paoshun Hsiangyun Mengshih Loiwing |
First published on Internet | ||
Topic expanded and selection of downloadable maps enlarged |