Schlagwort-Archive: D-Day

D-Day Squadron Announces European Tour in 2024

The D-Day Squadron announces at this year’s EAA AirVenture a plan to return to Europe in 2024 for the 80th anniversary of D-Day in France and the 75th anniversary of the Berlin Airlift in Germany. In 2019, the D-Day Squadron took a fleet of 15 WWII-era DC-3s to England, France, and Germany. Following the 2019 successful mission, the D-Day Squadron has continued to be present at multiple flyovers, aviation events, and warbird-themed airshows.

“Having led the DC-3’s journey to Europe in 2019, the D-Day Squadron earned a global presence that’s provided our organization to grow, multiply our DC-3 presence and even launch the DC-3 Society where we actively aid operators and enthusiasts with maintenance, operations, airworthiness, and displays,” shared Eric Zipkin, director of operations and mission chief pilot for the D-Day Squadron. “We won the War because of our logistical abilities, it’s only appropriate we, as the stewards of this noble aircraft, continue to fly and maintain the very airframe that was the backbone to achieving victory.”

Orchestrating a tour of this magnitude takes considerable resources and cooperation from several different organizations. The D-Day Squadron is advising several DC-3s operations in North America, Europe and Southeast Asia planning to participate in Europe 2024. The Commemorative Air Force (CAF), the World’s Largest Flying Museum, is one of the organizations that will collaborate with the D-Day Squadron for the tour. CAF President Hank Coates said, “We are excited to work with the D-Day Squadron on another mission to Europe. When we participated in 2019, it was wonderful to see how many people were impacted by seeing our aircraft and aircrews paying tribute to these important moments in history.”

Planning for the mission is already underway. A volunteer committee of seasoned professionals is being established to help organize and manage logistics in support of another remarkable mission to honour, pay tribute, and commemorate World War II veterans. Source: ‚Warbirdnews‚.

How Local Military Gliders Contributed to D-Day Invasion

June 6th, 1944, the start of “Operation Overlord,” better known to millions as “D-Day,” when the Allied Forces began their assault on German forces located on the western front of Europe. The Supreme Commander of Allied Forces was General Dwight D. Eisenhower, who gave words of encouragement in his D-Day speech to the troops headed to France. Though much has been chronicled about those beach landings, the paratroopers and the air support of bombers and fighters, few remember or have heard about the men assigned to the fleet known as “Silent Wings,” the military gliders. Because of their close proximity to the following events, Lockport, Joliet and Romeoville all share in the credit for the beginnings of the United States Military Glider program.

Owner Stan Corcoran moved his headquarters of the Frankfort Sailplane Company from Frankfort, Michigan to Joliet in the early 1940’s. Stan Corcoran’s aircraft was designed to soar and stay aloft for hours on end, using the popular thermal currents found here in the flatlands of the Midwest. In 1941, before America entered World War II, the U.S. Army Air Corps began a glider program to develop pilots capable of using these engineless aircraft in assaults. The government sought both a 9-seat and 15-seat glider from the Frankfort Sailplane Company.

Although their experimental aircraft failed to meet the military stress test the Army Air Corps did find that Frankfort’s “Cinema I” sailplane was ideal for training pilots and so they gave the first-ever military contract for gliders to Frankfort Sailplane. Stan Corcoran, the designer, who was originally from Hollywood, California, liked to name his gliders “Cinema.” Frankfort Sailplane manufactured about 60 of these planes and they were dubbed TG-1A’s, short for a one-seat training glider. These pilots would later learn how to handle the heavier and bulkier Waco CG-4A Gliders used in the D-Day invasion. A short distance from Joliet are Lockport and Romeoville, the site of Lewis University. Before it became a university, it was just a high school with an enrollment of 15 students and was first known in 1932 as Holy Name Technical School whose curriculum specialized in aviation technology. It was operated by the priests of the Chicago Archdiocese of the Catholic Church, with the land donated by a couple from Lockport.

Later named the Lewis School of Aeronautics to honor its philanthropist, Frank J. Lewis, the airfield became famous as a site of national soaring contests prior to the war and was referred to as the Frankfort-Lewis School of Soaring, in Lockport. Lewis Aeronautical suspended classes in 1942 and handed the campus over to the U.S. Navy as a training site for their WWII Navy pilots using powered aircraft. Almost 6,000 men became glider pilots during WWII because Frankfort Sailplane originated the military glider pilot program. As a matter of fact, one of Stan Corcoran’s TG-1A training planes is on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. General William Westmoreland put it best about the glider pilots. He remarked; “They were the only aviators during WWII who had no motors, no parachutes, and no second chances.” Quelle: ‚WSPY News.com‚.

D-Day Flugzeug kehrt in Normandie zurück

Das Flugzeug, das 1944 die Landung der Alliierten in der Normandie anführte, wird zum 75. Jahrestag der Invasion nach Frankreich zurückkehren. Die „That’s All, Brother“ wäre fast für immer zerstört worden. Zwei Historiker fanden das historische Flugzeug auf einem Schrottplatz in Wisconsin und retteten es so für die Nachwelt. Es soll bei der Zeremonie zum „D-Day“ im Juni Fallschirmspringer absetzen. Zuvor werde es die ursprüngliche Reise noch einmal machen, heißt es auf der Website des Flugzeugs. „Das wird ziemlich beeindruckend“, so der Pilot Tom Travis, der das Flugzeug fliegen wird. „Wir werden um die Freiheitsstatue fliegen und dann nach Labrador. Dann nach Grönland um zu tanken und nach Island um zu übernachten. Dann nach Schottland und Duxford, England.“ Quelle: ‚Euronews.com‚.