1. F4F-3 (BuNo 4009), F-5, VF-2 (reassigned from VF-3), flown by Lt. Noel A. M. Gayler, USS Lexington (CV-2), Battle of the Coral Sea, 8 May 1942.
2. F4F-3 (BuNo 4000), Black 24, VMF-221 (MAG-22), flown Captain Marion E. Carl, Battle of Midway, 4 June 1942.
3. F4F-4 (BuNo 5174), White 1, VF-3, flown LtCdr Jimmy Thatch, USS Yorktown (CV-5), Battle of Midway, 4 June 1942.
4. F4F-4 (BuNo 5244), White 13, VF-3, flown Lt(JG) William N. Leonard, USS Yorktown (CV-5), Battle of Midway, 4 June 1942.
5. F4F-4 (BuNo 5123), White 21, VF-3, flown Lt(JG) E. Scott McCluskey, USS Yorktown (CV-5), Battle of Midway, 4 June, 1942.
6. F4F-4 (BuNo 5238), White 14, VF-10, flown Ens. Edwin Lewis “Whitey”, Feightner, USS Enterprise (CV-6), 30 January 1943.
7. F4F-4 (BuNo unknown), Black 6, VMF-121 (MAG-14), flown 2nd Lt. Thomas H. Mann, Guadalcanal, November 1942.
8. F4F-4 (BuNo 03430), White F22, VF-11, flown Lt. Vernon E. Graham, Guadalcanal, June 1943.
9. F4F-4 (BuNo 11757), White F20, VF-11, flown Lt(JG) Bob Maxwell, Guadalcanal, June 1943.
10. F4F-4 (BuNo 4087), Black 22, VF-41, flown Lt(JG) Charles A. “Windy” Shields, USS Ranger (CV-4), Operation Torch , 8 November 1942.
11. F4F-4 (BuNo 11762), Black 9-F-15, VF-9, flown Ens. Louis Menard, USS Ranger (CV-4), Operation Torch, 8 November 1942.
Nationality markings (hereinafter: insignia) on US Air Force planes were used for the first time in 1916, during the suppression of the so-called Pancho Villa's rebellion in Mexico. Interestingly, they only showed a red star - confusingly similar to those that were later used on Soviet machines. However, in the period from May 1917 to February 1918, a white star was used as the insignia of American airplanes in a circular blue field with a red circle in the center. This designation returned in 1919 and was used until 1942. In May this year, the insignia was changed by removing the red circle in the center, due to the possibility of confusion with the Japanese military aircraft markings. During Operation Torch, in November 1942, a yellow dust jacket was applied around the blue field of the white star. However, in the summer of 1943, the white star in the blue field received white ribbons on both sides, and from August 1943 until January 1947 - blue dust jackets were added to the ribbons. In January 1947, the official designation of USAF aircraft was introduced, which is actually valid to this day (2019) - a white star on a blue background, with two ribbons in a blue dust jacket with a single horizontal red stripe on each ribbon. In the 1980s, the low visibility insignia were introduced, i.e. insignia with the graphic layout of the insignia but painted with a uniform white, black or gray paint.
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