June 6th, 2019 marks 75 years since D-Day and the invasion of Normandy. The invasion was by far the largest and most complex invasion ever staged in verifiable, recorded history, and as historians look back on D-Day, they all agree that without the C-47 Skytrain — a dual-engine transport plane that lumbers along at 120mph — it wouldn’t have been possible for the Allies to have even planned such a massive attack, let alone carry it out and defeat the Nazis.
California’s Douglass Aircraft produced over 10,000 C-47s for the war effort, and this meant that the US needed pilots. One of those pilots was Alfred Pepper, a young butcher from Pennsylvania who had always wanted to fly. His wish came true after he failed to master becoming an airplane mechanic. As Mr. Pepper puts it, “They tried to make a mechanic out of a meat cutter, and it didn’t work.” His training as a C-47 pilot went well, however, and he eventually logged over 1,200 hours flying troops and supplies in the Pacific Theater during WWII.

“We flew over what they called ‘coastal waters’, dropping supplies and troops,” Pepper told me. Amazingly, Pepper sometimes carried out these missions without a navigator, relying on a watch, compass and the patterns of waves below him to find his drop zones. By the time the war had ended, he’d flown in New Guinea, the Southern Philippines, Luzon, and the Bismark Archipelago and was adorned with five service stars for his service in the South Pacific, a Presidential Distinguished Unit Citation, a Good Conduct Medal, a Philippine Liberation Ribbon with another battle star, and a World War II Victory Medal. After all this, Mr. Pepper returned to the USA, married his sweetheart, and commenced a long career in the meat industry.
Lieutenant Alfred Pepper is now 98-years-old. Pepper’s grandson saw an article I’d written about the standard TOCKR D-Day C-47 watch, the dial of which is made from scrap metal from a C-47 named “That’s All Brother” that led the paratrooper invasion of Normandy. This article alerted the Pepper family to the fact that there are over 20 restored C-47s still flying in the US, all operated by the Commemorative Air Force.
As I write this, the CAF’s pilots are flying a dozen of those noisy and slow C-47s over the Atlantic to Normandy to help celebrate D-Day, but before they embarked on that journey they received one very important mission Stateside: to take Lieutenant Alfred Pepper up in a C-47 for the first time in 75 years.
Austin Ivey, founder of the aviation-oriented TOCKR Watches, is the grandson of a WWII C-47 pilot named Eugene Xerxes Martin Jr, who flew the famous Skytrains in the China-Burma-India Theater throughout WWII. It was his grandfather’s service as a pilot that inspired Ivey to start TOCKR back in 2016, which released its first watches in 2017. When Ivey learned about Mr. Pepper and his scheduled flight, Ivey immediately set out to make him a special timepiece, which has since been named the D-Day C47 Alfred Pepper. The Pepper is a 42mm bronze pilots watch made with metal from the aforementioned C-47, “That’s All Brother.”