Planes Parked on Noses Await Call to Service

Item

When the six new primary flying schools of the Gulf Coast Air Training Center opened to train pilots for national defense, primary training planes aplenty were ready for instructors and students. The planes, built while the fields were under construc- tion, had been ferried to Randolph Field, Tex., and parked on their noses to save hangar space. It was a simple task to haul them out and fly them to the new fields.

Title (Dublin Core)

Planes Parked on Noses Await Call to Service

Subject (Dublin Core)

Article Title and/or Image Caption (Dublin Core)

Planes Parked on Noses Await Call to Service

Language (Dublin Core)

Eng

Temporal Coverage (Dublin Core)

Date Issued (Dublin Core)

1942-02

Is Part Of (Dublin Core)

pages (Bibliographic Ontology)

27

Rights (Dublin Core)

Public domain

Source (Dublin Core)

References (Dublin Core)

Archived by (Dublin Core)

Enrico Saonara

Item sets