Meet the 19 WWII planes of the D.C. flyover
During the Arsenal of Democracy Flyover
on Friday, a wide array of legendary World War II aircraft will be seen
over the Mall. Here’s a guide to recognizing them. The aircraft will
depart from Culpeper and Manassas regional airports around 11:30 a.m.
and will fly in 15 flyover formations. The first formation is estimated to be over the Lincoln Memorial at 12:10 p.m.
Formation 1: Trainer formation
Boeing Stearman PT-17/N2S
The fixed-gear
biplane trained more military pilots, including Navy flier George H.W.
Bush and the Tuskegee Airmen, than any other basic trainer in World War
II.
Top view
Wingspan: 32 ft.
Side view
Length: 24 ft.
North American AT-6/SNJ
Army, Navy and
Marine pilots learned how to dogfight and shoot in this single-engine
advanced trainer, which also saw “action” in Hollywood movies about
World War II, standing in for Japanese aircraft.
Top view
Wingspan: 42 ft.
Side view
Length: 29 ft.
Beech AT-11 Kansan
Developed as a
civilian transport aircraft, the two-engine plane was given a glassed-in
nose and trained bombardiers and pilots for America’s bombers.
Top view
Wingspan: 48 ft.
Side view
Length: 34 ft.
Piper L-4 Grasshopper
The military
version of the famous Piper Cub flew for reconnaissance and artillery
spotting missions, evacuated the wounded and transported supplies.
Flying low and slow in France, it spotted German tanks and sometimes
destroyed them with bazooka fire.
Top view
Wingspan: 35 ft.
Side view
Length: 22.5 ft.
Formation 2: Pearl Harbor
Curtiss P-40 Warhawk
Claire Lee
Chennault’s American Volunteer Group – the Flying Tigers -- made this
single-engined fighter, outmoded at the start of the war, famous through
their hit-and-run tactics against the Japanese in China. The British,
the Russians and other allied air forces used it in all theaters.
Top view
Wingspan: 37 ft.
Side view
Length: 32 ft.
Formation 3: Doolittle Raid
North American B-25 Mitchell
This bomber was
used by Col. Jimmy Doolittle in the Tokyo Raid in 1942. During World
War II, this plane was flown by many allied air forces, including those
of the Dutch, British, Chinese, Russians and Australians.
Top view
Wingspan: 67.5 ft.
Side view
Length: 53 ft.
Formation 4: Battle of Midway
Grumman F4F Wildcat
In the early
years of the Pacific war, skilled Navy and Marine pilots held their own
against the superior Japanese Zero through innovative tactics and the
ruggedness of this single-engine fighter. Marine Capt. Joe Foss
surpassed Eddie Rickenbacker’s World War I mark for kills with the
Wildcat.
Top view
Wingspan: 38 ft.
Side view
Length: 29 ft.
Douglas SBD Dauntless
The rugged dive
bomber, which first flew in 1940, became one of the most decisive
weapons of World War II by sinking four Japanese aircraft carriers at
the Battle of Midway, turning the tide of war in the Pacific.
Top view
Wingspan: 41.5 ft.
Side view
Length: 33 ft.
Consolidated PBY Catalina
The versatile
twin-engine Navy flying boats were known as “Dumbos” for air-sea rescue
missions and “Black Cats” for night torpedo raids against the Japanese,
but their most pivotal moment was spotting the Japanese fleet at the
Battle of Midway while the U.S. fleet remained undetected.
Top view
Wingspan: 104 ft.
Side view
Length: 64 ft.
Formation 5: Guadalcanal Campaign
Grumman F4F Wildcat
In the early
years of the Pacific war, skilled Navy and Marine pilots held their own
against the superior Japanese Zero through innovative tactics and the
ruggedness of this single-engine fighter. Marine Capt. Joe Foss
surpassed Eddie Rickenbacker’s World War I mark for kills with the
Wildcat.
Top view
Wingspan: 38 ft.
Side view
Length: 29 ft.
Formation 6: Yamamoto Shootdown
Lockheed P-38 Lightning
Co-designed by
the legendary designer Kelly Johnson, creator of Lockheed’s “Skunk
Works,” the twin-engine fighter was dubbed “the fork-tailed devil” by
the Germans. It had its greatest success in the Pacific, where America’s
leading aces flew it against the Japanese. P-38 pilots shot down the
bomber carrying Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto, the architect of the Pearl Harbor
attack, in a daring long-range ambush.
Top view
Wingspan: 52 ft.
Side view
Length: 38 ft.
Formation 7: Ploesti Raid
Consolidated B-24 Liberator
The
most-produced heavy bomber in history. It flew in every combat theater
during World War II between 1943 and 1945. More than 18,000 Liberators
were produced.
Top view
Wingspan: 110 ft.
Side view
Length: 66 ft.
North American P-51 Mustang
Made its first
flight in 1940 and operated primarily as a long-range escort fighter and
ground-attack fighter-bomber. The Mustang possessed excellent speed and
maneuverability and was last used in combat by the USAF during the
Korean War. Foreign air forces used it until the early 1980s.
Top view
Wingspan: 37 ft.
Side view
Length: 32 ft.
Formation 8: Escorting the Bombers
North American P-51 Mustang
Made its first
flight in 1940 and operated primarily as a long-range escort fighter and
ground-attack fighter-bomber. The Mustang possessed excellent speed and
maneuverability and was last used in combat by the USAF during the
Korean War. Foreign air forces used it until the early 1980s.
Top view
Wingspan: 37 ft.
Side view
Length: 32 ft.
Formation 9: Big Week
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress
First used in
combat in 1941 (though prototypes were flown before then), the B-17 is
one of the most famous bombers ever built. This aircraft was pivotal in
the destruction of Germany’s industrial fabric and the allied victory in
Europe.
Top view
Wingspan: 104 ft.
Side view
Length: 74 ft.
Formation 10: D-Day
Douglas C-47/R4D Skytrain
The military
version of the famed DC-3 airliner carried paratroopers into combat in
the D-Day invasion and cargo from India to China over “The Hump,” the
famed route over the Himalayas.
Top view
Wingspan: 95.5 ft.
Side view
Length: 64 ft.
Formation 11: Leyte Gulf
Grumman TBM Avenger
The heaviest
carrier-based U.S. aircraft of the war was developed by Grumman and made
by General Motors. It first saw action at the Battle of Midway and was a
mainstay of the carrier wars. Future president George H.W. Bush flew it
in combat.
Top view
Wingspan: 54 ft.
Side view
Length: 41 ft.
Curtiss SB2C Helldiver
A carrier-based
dive bomber produced between 1943 and 1945. Versions of this aircraft
were used by the Navy and were in active service in other countries
until the mid-1950s.
Top view
Wingspan: 50 ft.
Side view
Length: 37 ft.
Formation 12: Battle of the Bulge
Douglas A-26 Invader
The fastest
U.S. bomber of World War II served with distinction in Europe as a light
attack bomber and stayed in service through the Cold War and Vietnam.
It is still used today as a water bomber to fight forest fires.
Top view
Wingspan: 70 ft.
Side view
Length: 50 ft.
Formation 13: Iwo Jima
Vought F4U Corsair
The gull-winged
Corsair was the first U.S. fighter to exceed 400 mph in level flight.
Late to enter carrier service because of landing gear problems, it
became famous flying from island bases in the Pacific with such
squadrons as the Black Sheep Squadron led by Marine Corps ace Gregory
“Pappy” Boyington. The Japanese called it “Whistling Death,” and it
served through World War II and the Korean War. It served in Central
American air forces until the early 1970s.
Top view
Wingspan: 41 ft.
Side view
Length: 34 ft.
Formation 14: Final Air Offensive
Boeing B-29 Superfortress
A long-range
heavy bomber that entered active service toward the end of World War II.
One of the largest aircraft of its time, the B-29 was used in the
nuclear attacks on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
1945.
Top view
Wingspan: 141 ft.
Side view
Length: 99 ft.
Formation 15: Missing Man Formation
Grumman TBM Avenger
The heaviest
carrier-based U.S. aircraft of the war was developed by Grumman and made
by General Motors. It first saw action at the Battle of Midway and was a
mainstay of the carrier wars. Future president George H.W. Bush flew it
in combat.
Top view
Wingspan: 54 ft.
Side view
Length: 41 ft.
Vought F4U Corsair
The gull-winged
Corsair was the first U.S. fighter to exceed 400 mph in level flight.
Late to enter carrier service because of landing gear problems, it
became famous flying from island bases in the Pacific with such
squadrons as the Black Sheep Squadron led by Marine Corps ace Gregory
“Pappy” Boyington. The Japanese called it “Whistling Death,” and it
served through World War II and the Korean War. It served in Central
American air forces until the early 1970s.
Top view
Wingspan: 41 ft.
Side view
Length: 34 ft.
Curtiss P-40 Warhawk
Claire Lee
Chennault’s American Volunteer Group – the Flying Tigers -- made this
single-engined fighter, outmoded at the start of the war, famous through
their hit-and-run tactics against the Japanese in China. The British,
the Russians and other allied air forces used it in all theaters.
Top view
Wingspan: 37 ft.
Side view
Length: 32 ft.
North American P-51 Mustang
Made its first
flight in 1940 and operated primarily as a long-range escort fighter and
ground-attack fighter-bomber. The Mustang possessed excellent speed and
maneuverability and was last used in combat by the USAF during the
Korean War. Foreign air forces used it until the early 1980s.
Top view
Wingspan: 37 ft.
Side view
Length: 32 ft.
SOURCE: Arsenal of Democracy Flyover,
National Museum of the U.S. Air Force, National Air and Space Museum,
Air & Space Magazine, National Naval Aviation Museum, Air Force
Historical Research Agency, Boeing and the Library of Congress. GRAPHIC:
Shelly Tan, Denise Lu, Alberto Cuadra, Vincent Rinehart, Samuel
Granados and Kevin Uhrmacher. Published May 7, 2015.
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