Showing 31 - 40 of 48

Story Ben Kuroki: A Story We All Need to Know Posted on May 06, 2020

After Pearl Harbor, a Nebraska farm boy named Ben Kuroki volunteered for the U.S. Army Air Corps. He could not have been more American: born in the breadbasket of America, one of ten children, growing up in a small town of with a population of about 500, vice-president of his high school senior class.

Topics: People Asian American or Asian people World War II
Story Blackbirds and Lightnings Posted on May 05, 2020

Curator Michael Hankins examines the history of the World War II fighter plane P-38 Lightning and its connections with the fan-favorite SR-71 Blackbird.

Topics: Aviation Aircraft Military aviation Cold War World War II Reconnaissance
Story The Naval Aviation You’ve Never Heard Of Posted on May 04, 2020

Naval aviation curator Laurence Burke explores a lesser known type of naval aviation — spotter planes, a role mainly filled by Vought OS2U Kingfishers.

Topics: Aviation Aircraft Military aviation World War II
Story Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter Posted on May 01, 2020

Few American fighter pilots on their own survived a turning, twisting, close-in dogfight against a capable Japanese pilot flying a Mitsubishi A6M Zero during World War II. Curator Russell Lee explores in a new blog.

Topics: Aircraft Military aviation War and Conflict World War II
Story Sleeker and Faster: The Impact of the Full Scale Wind Tunnel Posted on Apr 20, 2020

Curator John Anderson explores the impact of the NACA's Full Scale Wind Tunnel on creating faster and sleeker airplanes to help the Allies win World War II.

Topics: Aviation Technology and Engineering War and Conflict World War II
Story Flak-Bait Survives the War Posted on Apr 17, 2020

On April 17, 1945, 75 years ago to this day, Flak-Bait's Army Air Forces crew led it on its 200th mission.

Topics: Aircraft Technology and Engineering War and Conflict World War II
Story The Myth of the German “Wonder Weapons” Posted on Apr 13, 2020

Aeronautics curator Michael Neufeld examines the myth of the Nazi wonder weapons and the oft-repeated statement that if Germany had had the V-2 and other "wonder weapons" sooner, they may have won the war.

Topics: Technology and Engineering Missiles Rockets War and Conflict World War II
Story The World War II Veteran Hidden in Plain Sight Posted on Apr 10, 2020

Beneath the colorful exterior of our Goodyear C-49 control car, which provided coverage at sporting events in the 1980s, lies a World War II veteran. Museum historian Tom Paone explores its service. 

Topics: Aviation Balloons World War II
Story How World War II Killed the Flying Boat Posted on Apr 06, 2020

Curator Bob van der Linden looks at the history of the flying boat, and how infrastructure investments during World War II changed commercial aviation. 

Topics: Aviation Aircraft Commercial aviation World War II
Story Pat the Pilot: American Aviatrix, WAFS Member, and Allied Liaison Posted on Apr 02, 2020

Aline “Pat” Rhonie made a perfect three-point landing in her 125 hp Luscombe Phantom when she touched down in Manchester, New Hampshire, on June 6, 1940. Owned by Rhonie, the plane was a Warner-powered, high-wing, two-seat cabin monoplane that she flew as the American Liaison for the French Aero Club. Rhonie piloted civilian and military aircraft throughout the United States as an American aviatrix and eventual member of the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron, yet her mission traversed international borders to support the Allied cause.  

Topics: Aviation People Women War and Conflict World War II