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B-17D Flying Fortress Wing Assembly
B-17D Flying Fortresss Outside Boeing Factory
B-17D Flying Fortresss Outside Boeing Factory
B-17D Flying Fortresss Outside Boeing Factory
B-17B Flying Fortress Assembly
B-17B Flying Fortress Wing Jig
B-17 Flying Fortress Manufacturing
B-17 Flying Fortress Final Assembly
Riveters Assembling a B-17 Flying Fortress
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5000th B-17 Flying Fortress Rollout
B-17E Flying Fortress Parked in Front of Boeing at Night
5,000th B-17 Flying Fortress Rollout
Installation of B-17G Flying Fortress Chin Turret
Woman Inside B-17G Flying Fortress Chin Turret
362nd B-17G Flying Fortress Comes Off the Production Line
362nd B-17G Flying Fortress Comes Off the Production Line
B-17E Flying Fortress Framing Cradle
5,000th B-17 Flying Fortress Delivery Ceremony
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B-17D Flying Fortress Seen Through Factory Doors at Night
As the storm of World War II shook the world, Boeing-designed B-17 bombers darkened European skies, dropping 640,036 bombs on designated targets. Described by General H. H. Hap Arnold, as the backbone of our worldwide aerial offensive, the B-17 Flying Fortress served in every World War II combat zone. Boeing, Douglas, and Lockheed Vega produced 12,731 B-17s at plants across the country, and the four-engine bombers became legendary for their ability to stay in the air after taking brutal poundings.
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Unique identifier
BI210616
Boeing ID
p572
Type
Image
Size
3600px × 2880px 9MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
airplanes
bombers
buildings
busy
dark
exteriors
factory workers
glare
grid patterns
ground crews
ground shots
hangars
head on views
historic production status
manufacturing
military
monoplanes
night
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
scanned from film negative
silhouettes
tarmac
two people
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