By my knowledge it is better to not go to ebay for actual accurate appraisal as alot of people just post random numbers even if they are low balling themselves even pawn brokers tend to go to ebay to come up with some sort of price for the items. So my second best thing to do is instead look for someone who actually has the knowledge of the items.
The item i am looking for a true to the book price on my item which is a Steve canyon lunch box now there is damage to it but even things that are a total train wreck have a good value sometimes
Parts missing:
1. The thermos.
2. The original plastic handle.
3. The thermos clip that holds the thermos in place.
4. The stickers.
It did come with a cloth handle which is very un accurate to the time period of which the lunch box is made.
Now by my knowledge is that Steve canyon items are based around a actual war vet known by his birth name of Phillips Gerald Cochran. Below i have found the article of him on Wikipedia so im not 100% if this is everything on him.
Philip Gerald Cochran (born in Erie, Pennsylvania January 29, 1910 – August 26, 1979) was an officer in the United States Army Air Corps and the United States Army Air Forces. Cochran developed many tactical air combat, air transport, and air assault techniques during the war, particularly in Burma during operations as co-commander (with Col John R. Alison) of the 1st Air Commando Group.[1] Cochran was the inspiration behind characters in the Terry and the Pirates and Steve Canyon by Milton Caniff.
Philip Gerald Cochran
Philip G. Cochran.jpg
Colonel Philip Cochran, USAAF, in 1944.
Born
January 29, 1910
Erie, Pennsylvania
Died
August 26, 1979 (aged 69)
Geneseo, New York
Allegiance
United States
Service/branch
U.S. Army Air Corps (1935–1941)
U.S. Army Air Forces (1941–1945)
Years of service
1935—1945
Rank
Colonel
Commands held
1st Air Commando Group
Battles/wars
World War II
North African Campaign
Burma Campaign
Awards
Distinguished Service Medal
Distinguished Service Order (UK) Distinguished Flying Cross
Croix de Guerre (France)
Early life
World War II Edit
North Africa Edit
Major Cochran led the 33rd Fighter Group's "advanced attrition" fighter planes and replacement pilots to the North African campaign. His men called themselves the "Joker Squadron"[2] because the squadron had been designated as "J Squadron" in the plan for the landings in North Africa. In December, 1942 he took the 58th Fighter Squadron into the advanced airfield at Thelepte, an airfield in western Tunisia that had been captured by advancing French troops. His Deputy Commander called him "a colorful individual, a natural leader. "He was aggressive, but not ambitiously so". Cochran soon found himself mentioned in press reports.[5] While flying from Thelepte, Cochran dropped a 500-pound bomb that skipped directly into the German headquarters at the Hotel Splendida, Kairouan, Tunisia.[6] He destroyed telegraph wires by flying over them with a lead weight on the end of a wire attached to the wing of his pursuit plane, a tactic he would employ later in Burma. By the end of hostilities in the theater, he had shot down two German fighter planes.[7]
Though a fighter pilot, Cochran flew the lead C-47 on Christmas Eve 1942 airdropping paratroopers of the 509th Infantry Regiment to destroy the El Djem Bridge in Tunisia. He and his squadron had attempted to destroy the bridge by dive-bombing but had been unsuccessful. He got lost during the night operation and dropped the paratroopers in the wrong direction from the bridge and most of them ended up killed or captured. Prior to his return to the US, he was assigned to XII Training Command where he trained newly arrived fighter squadrons, including the 99th Fighter Squadron, which had just come over after completing their training at Tuskeggee, Alabama.
Cochran developed a reputation for 'getting the job done', and had little respect for those he believed were needlessly obstructing him, regardless of rank. On one occasion, Cochran clashed with General Henri Giraud, commander of all French forces in North Africa. French ground forces, for whom Phil's squadron was flying air support, had been badly mauled by army units under the command of General Erwin Rommel. In a meeting between Cochran and Giraud after the battle, Giraud shouted at Cochran, "There should be more planes, hundreds more!" Cochran retorted, "You've got to fight on the ground! You can't hide behind a rock and have planes do the whole job." A few days later, Cochran received a letter from General Giraud, conceding that the former was correct. Not long after, Col. Cochran was awarded the Croix de Guerre medal by the French government.[8]
Burma Edit
Cochran, by now a Lieutenant Colonel, and John R. Alison (former deputy commander of the 75th Fighter Squadron) were picked by General Hap Arnold as co-commanders of the 1st USAAF Air Commando Group.[9] (While there an informal agreement existed between Cochran and Alison over who was effectively Commander [Cochran] and Deputy Commander [Alison], this arrangement was unofficial. To this day, USAF records indicate Col Cochran and Col Alison as 'co-commanders'.)[10] The 1st Air Commando, among other missions, was assigned the task of supporting Allied Long Range Penetration Groups, of the British Army's Chindits, invading Japanese-held Burma. Some of these forces were designated to fly in by towed gliders; all required resupply by regular airdrops during their missions, as well as air support. Under Cochran's command, the 1st Air Commando's C-47 pilots perfected the tactic of snatching loaded gliders from small areas of ground cleared of jungle vegetation into the air using stretchable nylon ropes, all while flying at 15 to 30 feet using breaks in the jungle canopy.[11] Upon witnessing one of these demonstrations, the Allied theater commander, Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten exclaimed, "Jesus Christ All Bloody Mighty!"[11]
Philip Cochran in his P-51A (background) over Burma.
Col. Cochran ordered the 1st Air Commando to support ground troops without reservation: his sense of humor, aggressiveness, and willingness to risk his planes and pilots in daring support missions soon won the admiration of many officers and men of the Indian Army, who had up to that point had experienced only lackluster support from hard-pressed Royal Air Force squadrons.[12] In particular, the news that Cochran would make light planes and gliders (snatched from the ground by low-flying C-47s) available to evacuate wounded men from combat greatly increased the morale of the long-range jungle penetration forces. One British commander summed up the change by stating, "The commanders' hopes and the soldiers' morale rose sky-high. Now, if we got hit in the middle of Burma, we would not be left under a bush to die."[13] Cochran's infectious confidence and unstinting support for Allied operations in Burma caused Admiral Mountbatten to remark to Cochran "My boy, you are the only ray of sunshine we have had in this theatre this year."[8]
1st Air Commando was also called upon to perform ground support missions for the Long Range brigades, including bombing and strafing attacks. In one incident, where the group's P-51 Mustangs failed to down a single telephone line on wooden poles using bombs, the P-51's used a more daring tactic: "The lead plane swooped and banked...his lower wing tip ripped momentarily across an open space in the jungle, perhaps three feet above the ground...the second plane swerved...straight at us out of the land in a tight turn, wing tip brushing the ground...[We saw] telephone wire hanging around in festoons at the edge of the jungle."[14]
Hand to hand
I would preferably do hand to hand trans actions
Will not accept crypto(any kind of bitcoin), checks, or trade