73 Votes (4.78 Moyenne) et 7.436 Vues  

N47TB — - N47TB - "That's All, Brother". The C-47 that led the flight of 800 C-47s had crossed the channel on D-Day.
/images/icons/csMagGlass.png moyen / grand / plein format

N47TB —

Soumis

N47TB - "That's All, Brother". The C-47 that led the flight of 800 C-47s had crossed the channel on D-Day.

Comments

Please log in or register to post a comment.

ken kemper
Nice photo Jeff of a most historical aircraft !!
Pierre Everaert
The "leading"aircraft on D-Day... now doing demo flights in Texas. I found some more details about the D-Day flight on line...

By the end of the first full day of the D-Day combat (July 6, 1944), more than 23,000 paratroopers had landed by parachute or gliders, most of them carried to war by one single aircraft type - the Douglas C-47.

Affectionately known as the "Gooney Bird," the C-47 was the primary military transport of the Allies during the Second World War. More than 10,000 were built, with most serving with the Army Air Forces as the C-47 Skytrain, the U.S. Navy as the R4D, and the Royal Air Force as the Dakota. The Soviet Union built 6,000 under license as the Lisunov Li-2, while even the Japanese foe built 400 - ironically under license - as the L2D.

The C-47 was sturdy, reliable, and rugged, and was capable of carrying 6,000 pounds of cargo over long distances. The C-47 served the nation with distinction for over 35 years in many guises and names. But perhaps its most important contribution was in the skies over Normandy on June 5 and 6, 1944.
Samuel Bixler
Please don't make up aircraft codes-- this is a DC3 in the ICAO list, which is what FA seems to be using in the photos database. Yes, I know it's actually a C-47.
a mentor
Sorry Samuel; everyone but you are aware of the differences 'twix DC-3 & C-47. What FA and the ICAO think is irrelavent ... life happens without either of them.
a mentor
Sadly, the ICAO was created in April '47
(see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Civil_Aviation_Organization)

all type codes prior to '47 are then 'a figment of someones imagination', easpecially for airframes with several variations.
see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Douglas_DC-3_family_variants for the different types attributed to the Douglas DC-3
sal derosa
An original “work horse”!! Made with diligence and flown with determination!!!
jesse kyzer
lot of history with this ol' bird
https://www.aerialvisuals.ca/AirframeDossier.php?Serial=46794
Robin Rebhan
The famous light signal over the Channel June 6, 1944. Dit Dit Dit DAH ! Code for "V" for Victory.
Or in France Viva La France!
My father combat engineer at Normandy after making it off the beach came across a French Citizen cheering Americans, his house was bullet and shrapnel riddled. My dad said you could have been killed here! The reply was "Yes! But we would have died free!".
All I can say is I'm grateful to all those planes and pilots that made freedom possible for so many!
serge LOTH
AHHHH
serge LOTH
JEff this is not a plane ! it's a part of history!!!
Steven Miller
Jeff,
Another brilliant image perfecty exposed!

Pierre,
Thank you for the interesting history.
Thinking of D-Day and the bravery and commitment of the landing forces is hard to consider without tears of thanks for those brave souls.
a mentor
don't forget the Berlin Airlift from 26 June 1948 to 30 September 1949 to carry supplies to the people of West Berlin,

see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin_Blockade
Ed Schijf
What a beautiful picture of this work horse that helped to end World War II!! I can still hear the sound of the engines when they flew over Holland!
David Ingram
Embassies and AF bases were still using them as base birds into the 70s with the Navy using the Super version (C-117) Caught rides on both on my TDYs. I remember you rode facing aft on the Navy ones.
JOURNAL DE L'ACTIVITE
Vous voulez une recherche complète sur l'historique de N47TB depuis 1998? Achetez maintenant. Recevez-le dans l'heure.
Date Avion Provenance Destination Départ Arrivée Durée
No Recent History Data
Les utilisateurs élémentaires (l'inscription est gratuite et facile !) peuvent voir 3 months d'historique. S'inscrire
 

Se connecter

Vous n'avez pas de compte? Inscrivez-vous maintenant (gratuitement) pour des fonctionnalités personnalisées, des alertes de vols, et plus encore!
Saviez-vous que le suivi des vols FlightAware est soutenu par la publicité ?
Vous pouvez nous aider à garder FlightAware gratuit en autorisant les annonces de FlightAware.com. Nous travaillons dur pour que notre publicité reste pertinente et discrète afin de créer une expérience formidable. Il est facile et rapide de mettre les annonces en liste blanche sur FlightAware ou d’examiner nos comptes premium.
Abandonner