Eastern India, including Bengal, Jharkhand and Odisha were home to fighter and bomber squadrons from the 10th USAAF's India Air Task Force. Many of these bases were converted to IAF or civil use after 1945, but several were abandoned. Here is what became of these....
The airport near the present day IIT Kharagpur was known as the Hijli Base Area hosted the United States Army Air Force XX Bomber Command 58th Bombardment Wing in early 1945. The airport no longer exists but its runway provides the alignment for the Hijli Railway station. ImageImage
Asansol airport was established in 1941 by the RAF. From 1943 B-17s of the USAAF 7th Bombardment Group were based here. Abandoned after the war, the outline of the aprons are visible in the ecological park to the south-west of the frame below. Image
Piardoba Airfield airfield in India, located south of Bishnupur was built in 1942 to house four B-29 squadrons from the USAAF's 462nd Bombardment Group. Closed in September 1945. Airfield is abandoned and in disrepair, with abandoned dispersal areas and taxiways visible. ImageImage
Guskhara was a photo-recon base for the Tenth Air Force during 1944–1945. It housed six squadrons of B-24, P-38 and P-61 aircraft as part of USAAF 8th Photographic Reconnaissance Group. Abandoned in 1945, the runway and dispersal areas are encroached on and in disrepair. Image
Dudhkundi Airfield is located SE of Jhargram. It was built in 1942 and hosted in turn B-24 and then B-29s of the 444th Bombardment Group. Closed in 1945, it is in a state of disrepair but its runways and aprons are largely untouched and could provide site for a future airport. ImageImageImage
Known as Roosevelt Nagar north of Calcutta, the old USAAF transport base at Kalyani is now located well within this township. Remains of the parallel runway are found with the University campus, as can remains of the USAAF temporary billet sheds. ImageImage
Pandaveswar Airfield was home to several USAAF units including 7th and 12th Bombardment Group(B-24 and B-25). Closed in 1946 the remains of both main runways (16/34, 04/22) are visible in aerial photography, along with numerous dispersal pads and aprons. Image
Built in 1942, Charra was originally built for the 444th Bombardment Group. It eventually became a transport base when the B-29s relocated to Dudhkundi. It was closed in June 1945.Traces of runways and taxiways can be viewed from the air. Image
Salboni Airfield was built for the USAAF but used by the RAF's 159 and 356 Squadrons (B-24) from 1942 to 1946. Today the remains of the runways and aprons are visible but are now part of the Reserve Bank of India's currency printing complex. ImageImageImage
Built in 1942, Chakulia airport in present day Jharkhand was home to B-29s from the USAAF's 40th Bombardment Group, Abandoned in 1945, it remained a notified area with a ban on construction. There are proposals to revive it in the future. ImageImageImage
Digri Airfield near Uparsolbankati was built in 1942 and used primarily by the RAF's Liberator Squadrons including 355, 357, 358 squadrons. Closed and abandoned in 1945, the runways and aprons are relatively well preserved. ImageImageImage

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More from @RupakChatto

Jul 13
Built in 1942, Chakulia airport in present day Jharkhand was home to B-29s from the USAAF's 40th Bombardment Group, Abandoned in 1945, it remained a notified area with a ban on construction. There are proposals to revive it in the future.
Digri Airfield near Uparsolbankati was built in 1942 and used primarily by the RAF's Liberator Squadrons including 355, 357, 358 squadrons. Closed and abandoned in 1945, the runways and aprons are relatively well preserved.
Read 8 tweets
Jul 13
A folk song in Raag Manjh Khamaj (Dadra) popularized by Vd.Prabha Atre, performed by Kaushiki Chakraborty
"Radha rangili mero naam, aaj jaiyo saware jamuna kinare mora gaon"

via @YouTube
Here is the 1973 recording by Vidhushi Prabha Atre
Read 6 tweets
Jul 8
The assassination of former Prime Minister #Shinzo_Abe Abe has come as a shock to many who have followed his career. 🇯🇵 unfortunately has a history of political #assassinations dating back to the early 20th century.
Here is list of attempts on serving Prime Ministers in #japan
In July 1960, Shinzo Abe's grandfather, Prime Minister Shinsuke Kishi, was stabbed Kishi six times in the thigh Aramaki Taisuke, a member of the right-wing group "Dahuahui". He needed 30 stiches to close the wound but survived.
On May 15, 1932, 11 radical young naval officers shot and killed Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi. He was the leader of Japan's constitutionalism faction in favor of disarmament, which aroused strong dissatisfaction from the Japanese military.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 30
“Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone.”
― John Maynard Keynes

#Polymath and and #economist. Image
Between 1901, (age 18) and 1915, Keynes kept a quarterly tabulation of his sexual partners (both male and female). Entirely fitting hobby for a budding economist. Among his many male lovers was Benoy Kumar Sarkar, identfied as Indian nationalist and social scientist. Image
In 1925 Keynes fell in love with and married Russian ballerina Lydia Lopokova. They would remain married until his death in 1946. Image
Read 6 tweets
Feb 16
Geetoshree #SandhyaMukhopadhyay (সন্ধ্যা মুখোপাধ্যায়)) passed away at the age of 90 on 15 February 2022. She was the doyen of Bengali playback music and a household name in both Bengals.
Sandhya, was she was popularly known, was born in Dhakuria, Calcutta, on 4 October 1931 to Narendranath Mukherjee, a railway official, and Hemprova Devi. She was the youngest of six children.
By her teen years she was already being trained in Hindustani Classical Music under the tutelage of Pandits A. T. Kannan and Chinmoy Lahiri.
Read 20 tweets
Feb 15
Given the current goings-on in #Ottawa I'm reminded of a book the late Gilles Paquet and I did in 2012 surveying the plans and aspirations for Canada's capital over its lifetime.

The Unimagined Canadian Capital: Challenges for the Federal Capital Region amazon.ca/dp/0986871648/…
The federal government's challenge in Ottawa is that apart from federally owned NCC lands and buildings, it is reliant entirely on municipal and provincial law enforcement. Ottawa is a mere municipality in the Province of Ontario and the Feds are one of many who reside here.
To learn more about how different capitals are governed see our 2011 book
mqup.ca/finance-and-go…
Read 4 tweets

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