Close
Boeing Images
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
Workers with A-20B (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Stored Noses
A-20As (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Flight Line
A-20Cs (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) in Final Assembly
A-20B (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Starboard Propeller
A-20A (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) on the Ground with Workers
A-20 (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Lands
A-20A (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) at UCLA
A-20 Havoc Assembly in Santa Monica
A20 (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Preparing to Takeoff
DB-7B (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Takeoff
Last of the A-20 (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc)s Coming Off the Assembly Line
A-20G (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) in Flight
A-20 Havoc Assembly at Long Beach
A-20A (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) on the Ground
A-20A (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) on Ground
Douglas A-20B Havoc Rolls out of Assembly
A-20As (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Flightline
A-20 (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Takeoff
A-20G (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) with Rear Gun Turret
DB-7B (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) on the Ground
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
A-20B (DB-7/A-20 Boston/Havoc) Stored Noses
Douglas A-20 Havoc (1938-1944): The Douglas A-20 Havoc attack bomber, designed for both medium and low-level missions, was one of the most widely used combat planes of World War II. The plane served not only with American air forces, but also those of France, Holland, Great Britain, and Russia. The A-20 earned a well-deserved reputation for bringing itself and its crew home when neither were in the best condition. During the first American air attack on Nazi-occupied Europe (July 4,1942), an A-20 Havoc was so badly damaged that it actually hit the ground but bounced back into the air again. With the aircraft's right propeller shot away and part of the right wing gone, the pilot nursed the plane 300 miles back to safety in England. The A-20 made its first flight on August 17,1939, and 7,098 were produced before the end of the war. (Boeing assembled 380 A-20Cs in Seattle under license from Douglas.)
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Unique identifier
BI282
Boeing ID
c5530
Size
5996px × 4760px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
abundance
airplanes
attack
bombers
canopies
factories
glare
ground shots
historic production status
interiors
manufacturing
military
monoplanes
nobody
nose sections
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
reflections
repetition
structural systems
viewed from above
Restrictions
Manage crops
NAME
RATIO
Square
1 : 1
Portrait
2 : 3
Landscape
3 : 2