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Main AdminThis weekends extra.
B-29 "3d Marine Division",named in honor of the ground forces that helped secure Iwo Jima for the Allies in March 1945. They later named Major General Graves B. Erskine, commander of the 3d Marine Division, “Honorary Plane Commander” at a ceremony held on the island.
Took part in the August 14, 1945 raid,which would be the last Allied combat run of the Second World War. -
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Main AdminThis weekends photos.
Three photos of 109 Sq Mosquitos when based at RAF Little Staughton in 1944.
The use of Oboe was worked out using Mosquitos of 109 Squadron. After four months work the device was put into service to mark the bomb aim point against Düsseldorf on 1 January 1943. The use of Oboe equipped Mosquitos to mark targets was crucial to the success of the RAF's campaign against the Ruhr. The squadron continued performing marking duties till the end of the war, including the last raid on Berlin on 21 April 1945. As the war finished it used its accurate navigation equipment to help drop supplies in the Netherlands. The squadron was disbanded on 30 September 1945 at RAF Little Staughton it had carried out 5,421 operational sorties with the Mosquito with the loss of 18 aircraft. -
Main AdminThis weekends extra,
KG 2 bombers were stationed at Dutch airfields for quite some time. One of the Dornier Do 217s of the 7./KG 2 was given a light paint camouflage for operations over the North sea, which made it less noticeable. The aircraft was therefore known to the personnel of the Kampfgeschwader as 'der weisse Gustav'. Here the aircraft warms up its engines at Gilze-Rijen.
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Main AdminThis midweeks photos taken at RNZAF Station Ohakea, This aircraft brought Lord Reith from Sydney to New Zealand..
Commando (Air Ministry serial number AL504) was a very long range Consolidated Liberator II aircraft adapted for passenger transport, to serve as the personal aircraft of Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Commando disappeared without a trace on 27 March 1945 over the North Atlantic Ocean, while on a flight from RAF Northolt to Lajes Field in the Azores, en route to Ottawa in Canada. The cause of the disappearance of the aircraft remains unknown to this day.
On delivery Commando had a regular Liberator nose and tail configuration despite the internal modifications but was later converted to have a covered nose and also the same single tail fin used on the Consolidated PB4Y-2. The VIP ("Very Important Person[s]") interior had comfortable seating, an electric galley and even a bed, installed for Churchill. After the second extended trip, Churchill never again flew in Commando, instead switching to Ascalon, an Avro York. -
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