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B-25C Mitchell on Tarmac
B-25D Mitchell on Ground
B-25D Mitchell on the Field
B-25J Mitchell on Ground
B-25C Mitchell Flying Low
B-25 Mitchell Bomber
The 30,000th North American Airplane, a B-25 Mitchell, on Tarmac
B-25H Mitchell in Flight
B-25C Mitchell Converted as Transport for General Hap Arnold
B-25G Mitchell
Flying Pair: B-25H Mitchell and B-25J Mitchell
B-25 Mitchell in Flight
B-25G Mitchell on Ground with Fuel Truck
B-25 Mitchell on Flight Test Ramp
B-25H Mitchell in Flight
B-25J Mitchell Flight Formation
B-25H Mitchell Bomber Layout
B-25H Mitchell Flying over Landing Target
Restored B-25J Mitchell on the Boeing McAir Ramp in St. Louis
B-25C Mitchell Converted as Passenger Plane for North American Aviation
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B-25 Mitchell on Tarmac
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.
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Unique identifier
BI210312
Boeing ID
84a-10
Type
Image
Size
6000px × 4800px 82MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
airplanes
blue
blue skies
bombers
brown
clouds
day
exteriors
full body views
gray
ground shots
historic production status
left front views
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
sunshine
tarmac
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