| The first AC-47s
were ordered in 1940 and by the
end of World War II, 9,348 had
been procured for Army Air Forces
use. They carried personnel and
cargo, and in a combat role, towed
troop-carrying gliders and dropped
paratroops into enemy territory.
Few aircraft are as well known
or were so widely used for so
long as the C-47 or "Gooney
Bird" as it was nicknamed.
The aircraft was adapted from
the Douglas DC-3 commercial airliner
which appeared in 1936.
After World War II, many C-47s
remained in U.S. Air Force service,
participating in the Berlin Airlift
and other peacetime activities.
For 11 months, the Berlin Airlift
sustained the city's 2.5 million
residents in one of the greatest
feats in aviation history. At
the start of the airlift the main
aircraft used was the C-47. They
first were to carry 80 tons of
milk, flour and medicine, and
the C-47 was the first fatality
crash near Wiesbaden, Germany,
killing all on board.
During the Korean War, C-47s hauled
supplies, dropped paratroops,
evacuated wounded and dropped
flares for night bombing attacks.
In Vietnam, the C-47 served again
as a transport, but it was also
used in a variety of other ways
which included flying ground attack
(gunship), reconnaissance and
psychological warfare missions.
This aircraft in a actual combat veteran of ‘Operation Overlord”, the D-Day invasion of Hitler’s “Fortress Europe. Shortly after midnight on June 6, 1944 it helped open the invasion by dropping paratroopers behind enemy lines.
Today it is restored as an AC-47 Gunship from Vietnam. It is painted in the colors and markings of “Spooky 71” of the 4th Special Operations Squadron, based at Cam Ranh Bay, Republic of Vietnam.. In “Spooky 71” in the night skies just outside of Saigon , on February 24,1969, USAF Sergeant John L. Levitow earned the Congressional Medal Of Honor.
PERFORMANCE
Maximum speed: 232 mph
Cruising speed: 175 mph
Range: 1,513 miles
Service
ceiling: 24,450 feet
To learn more about the pilot of the AC-47, click here!
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