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The Warbirds' Swansong...

Poser Aviation posted on Feb 21, 2011
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Description


Jeep BeyondVR B24 Neiwill Inspired by Neiwills Art work, about nose art ... I can only imagine the three young vets from Arizona who landed a job working at Kingman reclamation, pulled up to this beautiful old bird one afternoon, and stood there at first in silence. Thinking about what they had been through. The sounds of the big birds engines firing up, taking off fully loaded for, yet one more mission. Thinking about the good times they shared with their brothers in arms, and about those lives that were lost during the long campaigns. Then in the heat of the day, the memories subsided as they gazed with great pride and admiration at the nose art work of this magnificent airplane. It was then they made a pact ... to make sure this "Mona Lisa" of B 24's was the last to go. May be some one would come and save her from becoming a washer or dryer or toaster ... maybe just maybe Warbirds' Swansong Taken from May 1947 Arizona Highways by JERRY MCLAIN After WW II more than 7,000 retired army bombers, fighters, and training planes were left standing row on row at the old Kingman Army Air Field five miles east of Kingman, Arizona, now Storage Depot 41 of the War Assets Corporation. It was the world's greatest concentration of aircraft in one area at one time, covering five square miles. Kingman Army Airfield was a flexible gunnery base which once had an army population of 17,000 officers and men. 5,437 of the planes, offered for competitive bidding with the provisions that they would not be used for flight purposes since they were not adaptable for civilian use, were purchased for $2,780,000 by Martin Wunderlich, a Jefferson City, Missouri, contractor. (it is rumored that the fuel drained from these planes was sold for more than the purchase price of the planes) But so outstanding was "the Kingman depot's safety record that in the delivery of 7,000 planes involving an estimated 21,000 flying men, there wasn't a fatal accident. Only planes with low flying time were "pickled," yet Kingman soon had 1,100 such B-24 s standing wing tip to wing tip. At one time last summer the Kingman storage records showed 2,567 B-24 Liberators, 1,832 Flying Fortresses, 478 of the P-38 Lightnings, another 200 of the P-38 photo planes, 37 of the the B-29 Superforts, not to mention 141 B-25 Billy Mitchell medium bombers and hundreds of P-47 Thunderbolts, P-40s of Flying Tiger fame and the A-26s, then America's newest and fastest medium bombers. The depot sold B-17s at $13,750 and B-25s at $8,250. Prices asked on other types of aircraft included the A-26 at $2,000 each; P-61, $6,000 each; P-47, $3,500 each; P-40, $1,250 each, andA-24, $1,650 each. None but American citizens coul9, purchase planes at Kingman, and before being offered for sale the ships were stripped of all confidential equipment such as bomb sights, radar and some radio installations. MOHAVE MUSEUM OF HISTORY & ARTS KINGMAN. ARIZONA

Comments (5)


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Osper

12:20PM | Mon, 21 February 2011

Nice info and job. By the way the price for the aircraft you listed also included a full load of fuel.

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T.Rex

2:26PM | Mon, 21 February 2011

My, thanks for the info. I had all but forgotten about Kingman. A fine complement to neiwil's work. And, a very good image, indeed. It captures the solitude. I'm just wondering about where the engine and propeller are. Keep up the good work! :-)

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franco7

2:51PM | Mon, 21 February 2011

As Neiwill mentions in his work ... they removed the propeller and the engines,(at least after a certain time). They were stocked in a different section. Thats the reason the nose are up off the ground.

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neiwil

7:18PM | Mon, 21 February 2011

Whoa! that is so cool, though sad....all those planes and so few left.Great render and fantastic info, I hadn't looked into Kingman. Read some good news regarding Warbirds today....There are no complete Dornier 17 bombers of any type in the world....or at least there weren't.Do17 works number 1160 of Kampfgeschwader 3 has been found almost intact in 50 feet of water off Goodwin Sands,Kent.The RAF Museum are going to raise it this Spring and then it will go on display at Hendon...that's one back from extinction :-)

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steelrazer

8:17PM | Mon, 21 February 2011

A P-40 at $1250!!!! Sheesh, I would have bought one just to have in the front yard so I could sit in it and dream! Of course, now a pack of cigarettes cost damn near that much. Nice work, unusual subject, and very effective lighting and composition.


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