I would not doubt that if her plane was in the ocean that there would be parts remaining. Most definitely the engines. I would not doubt that the airframe would be intact and identifiable.
However I don't believe that she crashed in the ocean. As far as I know, Ballard declined to search for...
This is really not new information! I heard about this in the early 1960's from my father who served in the central Pacific during WWII. It was common knowledge to those who served in the Marshall Islands that Earhart landed on one if the islands of Mille Atoll, was picked up by the Japanese...
A very nice find indeed.
The Army uniforms of the WW-II era certainly had a very classy look. I often wondered why they went to that hideous green blouse and trousers with the mint-green shirt when they had such a good look in the 40's.
Thanks for sharing you new treasure!
Unreal is an understatement. I'm not sure what word could possible apply to his modeling. He has certainly taken it to a new level. I spent over two hours looking over his work. If anyone is interested, look at his "walkaround" section and I'm sure you will understand his level of detail and...
Stateside he served at Parris Island, followed by school at Memphis. From there he joined Marine Bombing Squadron Six-Thirteen (VMB-613)--a PBJ squadron--at Cherry Point. He trained there, at NAS Boca Chica, and MCAAF Newport. He left San Diego on Thanksgiving day 1944 and went to Kwajalein...
I'd just like to point out that the medal's correct name is the "Medal of Honor" not the "Congressional Medal of Honor." It amazes me that the society representing Medal of Honor recipients would choose a name that perpetuates an erroneous name (Congressional Medal of Honor Society)...
Scott: As an aircraft mechanic type, I'm sure with your engineering ability you could come up with a dandy! The one thing though you have to remember is that you must have wind to make it work. There was a constant breeze from the ocean in the Marshall Islands. It would work fine where I...
I'd love to see someone build a functional "Marshall Island Maytag." The thing to remember though is to not limit yourself to the drawing. I have some 1945 movie footage of these things in operation and none of them was the same. Some had six blades, others only had two. One guy even built...
One of the things that amazes me about the WW-II era is the ingenuity displayed by the guys in uniform to make even mundane tasks interesting.
I learned that on the Marshall Islands (as well as some other places) Leathernecks, SeaBees and AAF personnel constructed wind-powered washing...
I just completed the dubbing process on my boondockers and I agree 100-percent with your statement. Although polish was not supposed to be used on field shoes, I applied some cordovan very lightly after dubbing them and they came out looking like the real mac-coy. The dubbing process also...
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