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B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Gets Towed from the Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Wing Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Small Parts Production Line
B-25 Mitchell Fuselage Assembly
B-25 Mitchell Fuselage Assembly
Jig Assembly for the B-25 Mitchell
B-25 Mitchell Final Assembly
B-25 Mitchell Landing Gear on Assembly Line
B-25 Mitchell Production
Workers Crating a B-25 Mitchell Wing for Shipping
B-25 Mitchell Manufacturing
Family Day at North American Aviation, Crowd with B-25 Mitchells, 1944
B-25 Mitchell Engine Tests
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After Lunch, Workers Return to the B-25 Mitchell Assembly Line
Named after General 'Billy' Mitchell, America's foremost supporter of air power, the B-25 Mitchell first flew on Aug. 19, 1940, and was the first multiengine design to go beyond the prototype stage. North American Aviation built more than 11,000 B-25s for the U.S. Army Air Forces and the U.S. Navy, which called it the PBJ, plus 50 each for China and Great Britain. The B-25 bomber had a wingspan of 67 feet and was 52 feet 11 inches long. One version, the B-25H, was the most heavily armed attack bomber of its time, with a 75-millimeter gun, up to 14 .50 caliber machine guns and 5,000 pounds of bombs carried in an internal bomb bay. Nearly 10,000 B-25s were produced between 1940 and 1945.
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Unique identifier
BI25800
Boeing ID
81-324e
Type
Image
Size
3950px × 5100px 19MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
abundance
adults
airfields
airplanes
bombers
buildings
crowds
day
exteriors
factories
factory workers
gray skies
ground shots
haze
historic production status
manufacturing
military
military livery
monoplanes
occupations and work
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
repetition
scanned from film negative
text
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