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Linked assets
Air Travel in the 1950s
Air Travel in the 1950s 
DC-4
DC-4 
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DC-4 in Flight Above Los Angeles

Douglas DC-4: With 24 firm commercial orders, production of the DC-4 began in the spring of 1939. But before the first was completed, the start of World War II necessitated the DC-4's reconfiguration as a military transport under the Army Air Force designation of C-54. (The DC-4 was known in the Navy as the R5D.) The plane made its first flight on February 14, 1942, with 1,162 being built as transports. Between 1942 and 1945, DC-4s successfully completed 79,642 transoceanic flights in support of the war effort, with only three ditchings, one of which was a test. A single C-54, nicknamed Sacred Cow, was built as the first official presidential transport aircraft. After the war, many were converted to commercial airliners. In addition 79 new DC-4s were delivered to airline customers in 1946 and 1947. Military DC-4s gained fame as the principle transport used during the 1948-1949 Berlin Airlift. 
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Unique identifier BI2436 
Boeing ID lk49125 
Type Image 
Size 5998px × 4515px   25MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1940s
aerial views
air to air
airplanes
blur
cities
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
flying
full body views
grid patterns
historic production status
left front views
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
sunshine
unpainted
urban areas
viewed from above
vintage / retro
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