PART 1 OF 6
Recently some additional negatives were located from the photo collection of Richard Kamm, whose pictures I have posted in the past on this forum. I thought they were exciting and so have decided to post a selection of them for you. I have 76 pics to post. I'm not crazy about the recent trend of having a separate thread for each photo, but 76 is too many for one thread, so I'm breaking them down into posts of about 10-12 pics each, ending where there is a natural break.
It will help to know a little about Dick to understand the slides.
Dick joined the USAAF in 1947 and served as an aircraft mechanic. He did his basic training at Lackland, then went to mechanic school at Keesler Field in Biloxi, Miss. (then the AF's largest mechanic training base), then took one of the first jet engine courses at Chanute in Illinois. By the end of 1947 he was maintaining RP-80s in the Panama Canal Zone, and went on to serve as crew chief on F-80s and F-84s in Europe, then flight engineer on B-29s, B-36s, and B-47s back in the States. After leaving the service in 1962 he continued to work in aviation, ultimately teaching aircraft maintenance at Parks College and being active in the antique, homebuilt, and aviation history communities. He was awarded the FAA's Charles Taylor "Master Mechanic" certificate, which is pretty much the FAA's Hall of Fame for civilian mechanics.
These 127-format negatives came to me with no information, but it's clear that they date from Dick's training days in 1947, mostly at Keesler Field. There are also pictures from local civil airports, probably around New Orleans.
Many of these old negs are not in the best shape. Some were mis-focused, incorrectly exposed, or improperly developed to begin with, and they've collected quite a few scratches and a crinkle or two in the past 60 years. I have cleaned them up only a little. Still, I think you'll like them. They contain a mixture of civil and military types, a photographic journal of what was flying around the Biloxi/New Orleans area 60 years ago this year. Probably nobody has looked at most of these pictures in more than 50 years. I hope you enjoy them.
There being no obvious order of the pics, I am presenting the pics in alphabetical order by manufacturer. All of the information below is my own research and conjecture, and I would love to tap the expertise out there by having you all chime in about the pics. So, on to the first manufacturer:
AERONCA
A proud owner next to his Aeronca K or KC.
Handsome Aeronca Chief NC85890. Evidently parked at the Aeronca dealer with another new Chief right behind it. The sign on the hangar invites you to FLY! an Aeronca with a price of $10, but it isn't legible whether that is per hour, per ride, or what. Whatever it is, I'll take it.
BEECH
In a field of surplus BT-13s, Beech Staggerwing NC4512N, an aircraft that has survived as a restored classic now registered to an owner in Delaware, see:
http://www.abpic.co.uk/search.php?q=N4512N&u=reg
Interesting Beech SNB marked "XT-241". Does any of you Navy tailcode experts know what "XT" stands for? It has the bomber-trainer nose and what looks like a fairing for an upper turret.
Another interesting twin Beech, this time a civil one NC75642, with what appears to be a faired- or painted-over bomber-trainer nose.
Nice clean C-45, 44-67262. Note curtains in cabin windows.
BOEING
"Starduster" was a veteran B-17G 44-6393 converted to VIP transport configuration in the immediate postwar years. Subsequently it was sold to Bolivia and after some years as a military and civil transport there it was reacquired by the USAF for museum display. You can see it today at the March Field Museum, Riverside, CA. It looks pretty good now, but not as good as it did in 1947. See:
http://www.warbirdregistry.org/b17regis ... 46393.html
More prosaic B-17G 44-8095, apparently in use as an instructional airframe.
B-17G 42-102737, whose fate is listed on Baugher's page as "reclamation/scrap at Keesler Field, TN Oct 13, 1950."
An unidentified lifeboat-equipped SB-17G, no doubt maintained at Keesler for rescue duties in the nearby Gulf.
We'll return to the Sikorsky later, for of present interest is that the background of this picture shows the war-weary B-29s lined up at Keesler for use as instructional airframes. They still bear their wartime bomb group tail markings. Let's take a closer look, shall we?
B-29 42-24732, "Hore-Zontal Dream," claimed five trips over the Hump, three Japanese ships, two fighters, and 28 bombing missions while with the 678th BS, 444 BG. You can find wartime shots of it at these two sites, sporting fewer mission symbols:
http://news.webshots.com/photo/26173948 ... 3163wnZEWz
http://www.444thbg.org/678thbombsq.htm
It's a pity this one, or at least its nose section, wasn't preserved.
The same could be said for 42-24590 "Celestial Princess". See wartime shot from Tinian here:
http://www.mrprophead.com/b29nose.htm
And see color profile here (third thumbnail from bottom):
https://www.aviationillustration.com/sh ... 9afe7f115e
The other side of one of the B-29 noses shows the 462nd BG's distinctive insignia.
Not a B-29. Not a B-50, either. 42-93845 was the one and only XB-44, Boeing's first trial lash-up of R-4360 engines on a B-29 airframe to prove the concept to itself and the Air Force. Other than the nacelles it is a stock B-29, distinguisable from a B-50 by the original shorter vertical tail. By 1947 this aircraft would have served its purpose (the first true B-50 flew that year) and apparently was retired to Keesler as an instructional airframe, perhaps for trainees who would later service the B-50.