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The FReeper Foxhole Studies The Advent of the Metal Plane - June 13th, 2003
All sources listed at the end of thread opening ^

Posted on 06/13/2003 4:37:39 AM PDT by snippy_about_it



Dear Lord,

There's a young man far from home,
called to serve his nation in time of war;
sent to defend our freedom
on some distant foreign shore.

We pray You keep him safe,
we pray You keep him strong,
we pray You send him safely home ...
for he's been away so long.

There's a young woman far from home,
serving her nation with pride.
Her step is strong, her step is sure,
there is courage in every stride.
We pray You keep her safe,
we pray You keep her strong,
we pray You send her safely home ...
for she's been away too long.

Bless those who await their safe return.
Bless those who mourn the lost.
Bless those who serve this country well,
no matter what the cost.

Author Unknown

.

FReepers from the The Foxhole
join in prayer for all those serving their country at this time.

.

...................................................................................... ...........................................

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The Advent of the All-Metal Airplane





Metal-Skinned Aircraft -

Most of the 170,000 airplanes built during World War I were constructed of wooden frames with fabric coverings. These materials were relatively lightweight and available. Anthony Fokker, a Dutch entrepreneur working in Germany during the war, developed a welded-tube steel fuselage to take the place of wood.

German manufacturers built more than 1,000 of these aircraft, which had wooden wings. Hugo Junkers, a German designer, built all-metal aircraft, first using sheet iron. He soon switched to duralumin, a high-strength aluminum alloy developed just before the war. After the war, Junkers developed several all-metal passenger transports.

In the spring of 1920, the American pilot John M. Larsen began demonstrating an imported Junkers all-metal passenger plane designated the JL-6. It created much excitement within the American aviation community. The U.S. Postal Service bought six of the aircraft. The enthusiasm over the JL-6 caused many aviation leaders to call for the development of all-metal aircraft.

The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) declared in its 1920 Annual Report that metal was superior to wood because "metal does not splinter, is more homogeneous, and the properties of the material are much better known and can be relied upon. Metal also can be produced in large quantities, and it is felt that in the future all large airplanes must necessarily be constructed of metal."

NACA immediately began research into all-metal construction, and the U.S. Navy developed duralumin fabrication techniques at the Naval Aircraft Factory. In 1924, the first all-metal commercial airplane, called the Pullman, was produced by William Stout. Glenn Martin Aircraft also developed all-metal aircraft for the U.S. Navy in 1923 – 1924, where the only wooden structure was the engine mount.


The Junkers J.L. 6 represents an important step forward in technology. It was probably the first plane with the fuselage, wings, and skin all constructed of metal.
Credits - NASA


The Junkers J.L. 6 built in Germany in 1919 as the F 13 and imported to the United States by John Larsen to be used as a mail plane.
Credits - NASA

Airplane designers also felt that metal offered other significant advantages over wood, including protection from fire, but in reality, early aircraft metals provided little protection against airplane fires. In fact, despite the enthusiasm over the JL-6, the aircraft had a faulty fuel system causing it to catch fire in flight and the thin aluminum skin between the engine and cockpit melted, allowing flames to burst through at the pilots' feet. Two airplanes were lost within months, and the Post Office quickly sold the remaining four at a huge loss.

Despite the initial great enthusiasm over all-metal construction within the U.S. aviation community and the widespread belief among designers in the superiority of metal in the early 1920s, engineers soon found that metal was not inherently superior at the time. Wood was still lightweight and easy to work with. Over the next decade, aeronautical engineers had a difficult time designing metal wings and airframes that weighed as little as wood.

In late 1920, the Army Air Service contracted with the Gallaudet Aircraft Company for a monoplane bomber with an all-metal fuselage and metal framework wings. The prototype, designated the DB-1 and delivered in late 1921, was grossly overweight and considered a miserable failure. It was quickly retired.


(The DB-1 weighed 11,160 lbs. gross)

By 1929, nine years after the JL-6 had created so much excitement about all-metal airplanes, an aeronautical textbook estimated that metal wings still weighed 25 to 36 percent more than wood wings. By 1930, a decade after the NACA declared metal superior to wood, only five percent of the aircraft in production were of all-metal construction.

One of the big problems with metal was that it buckled when compressed, just like a piece of paper will bend when its ends are pushed together. In comparison, wood does not buckle as easily. By the 1930s, another aircraft design trend known as stressed-skin structures made this problem more acute.

Before this time, aircraft achieved much of their structural strength through their internal frameworks. But in a stressed-skin structure, the covering contributed much of the structure's strength and the internal framework is reduced. This provided a streamlined external surface for the airplane, but made metal buckling failures more likely.

In order to combat the problems of compressive buckling, metal structures had to be complex, with curves and riveting and reinforcement. This dramatically increased the costs of such an aircraft. By 1929, some manufacturers were making metal wings that were as light as wooden ones, but by the end of the 1930s, all-metal airplanes were significantly more expensive than wood and fabric airplanes.

Metal also presumably was more durable than wood, which warped, splintered, and was eaten by termites. But duralumin also had severe corrosion problems. It turned brittle. Unlike iron or steel, which rusted from the outside in, duralumin weakened internally and could fail suddenly in flight. Duralumin corroded even more in salt spray and the U.S. Navy eagerly sought a solution.

The Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa) and the Federal government cooperated to develop a material known as Alclad, which consisted of an aluminum alloy bonded to pure aluminum. Alclad solved many of the corrosion problems of duralumin. Soon other alloys were developed that proved effective as well and during the 1930s, all-metal airplanes became much more common.

By the mid-1930s, wood was no longer used on American multi-engine passenger aircraft and U.S. combat aircraft. But in 1938, the British airplane company, de Havilland, began work on a fast, unarmed bomber named the Mosquito. It was one of the most successful British aircraft of World War II, able to fly faster and higher than most other aircraft. More than 7,700 Mosquitoes were built. They were made of spruce, birch plywood, and balsa-wood, proving that even in the era of all-metal planes, older materials could still achieve impressive results.


The famous British Mosquito - U.S. Air Force Museum







By the early 1930s, aircraft design and construction technology throughout the world had advanced to the point where it was possible to mass-produce all-metal airplanes. There had been an all-metal plane as early as WWI but it was an exception. Most airplanes of the war period and the 1920s had been primarily of wood and fabric construction, although many later ones had tubular steel fuselage frameworks.



The Air Corps' first all-metal monoplane bomber was the Boeing B-9.


The YB-9 was originally owned, developed and tested by Boeing as the XB-901 (NX10633). The plane was based on the Model 200 commercial transport, but was enlarged and adapted to the bomber role. The YB-9 was powered by two Pratt & Whitney R-1830-13 radial engines which gave it a top speed of 163 mph. Later in its service life, the YB-9 was fitted with the same engines powering the Y1B-9A service test aircraft bringing its top speed to 188 mph.; as fast as the US Army pursuit planes of the time.



A total of 7 aircraft were built: the prototype YB-9, a liquid-cooled engined Y1B-9, and five service test Y1B-9As. The aircraft never entered production mainly because there were even better aircraft being designed which would change the course of US bomber development.

TYPE- Boeing YB-9
Number Built/Converted - 1
Remarks- Boeing XB-901
Notes:
Serial number: 32-301
Originally Boeing-owned NX10633, XB-901 (Model 215)

SPECIFICATIONS
Span: 76 ft. 9 in.
Length: 51 ft. 6 in.
Height: 12 ft. 8 in.
Weight: 12,663 lbs. gross
Armament: 2 .30-cal. machine guns and 2,200 lbs. of bombs
Engines: Two Pratt & Whitney R-1830-13 radials of 575 hp. each
Crew: Four

PERFORMANCE
Top speed: 163 mph. at sea level
Cruising speed: 137 mph.
Service ceiling: 19,400 ft.
Range: approximately 500 miles with a full normal bomb load

Produced during 1932-33, the B-9 was outclassed by its contemporary all-metal Martin B-10 and only seven were purchased.


MARTIN B-10


Considered modern for its time. It flew on Hap Arnold's Alaska trip in 1934.
Credits - U.S. Air Force Museum


The B-10, the first of the "modern-day" all-metal monoplane bombers to be produced in quantity, featured such innovations as internal bomb storage, retractable landing gear, a rotating gun turret, and enclosed cockpits. It was so advanced in design that it was 50% faster than its contemporary biplane bombers and as fast as most of the fighters. When the Air Corps ordered 121 B-10s in the 1933-1936 period, it was the largest procurement of bomber aircraft since WW I. It also ordered 32 B-10 type bombers with Pratt and Whitney rather than Wright engines and designated these B-12s.

General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold once called the B-10 the air power wonder of its day. In 1934, he led ten B-10s on a 8,290 mile flight from Washington, D.C. to Fairbanks, Alaska and back. Although Air Corps B-10s and B-12s were replaced by B-17s and B-18s in the late 1930s, China and the Netherlands flew export versions in combat against Japan.

The aircraft on display is painted as a B-10 used in the 1934 Alaskan Flight. The only remaining B-10 known, it was an export version sold to Argentina in 1938. Donated by the Government of Argentina to the U.S. Government for the Air Force Museum in 1970, it was restored by the 96th Maintenance Squadron. (Mobile), Air Force Reserve, at Kelly AFB, Texas, in 1973-76.

SPECIFICATIONS
Span: 70 ft. 6 in.
Length: 44 ft. 9 in.
Height: 15 ft. 5 in.
Weight: 14,700 lbs. loaded
Armament: Three .30-cal. machine guns, 2,200 lbs. of bombs
Engine: Two Wright R-1820's of 775 hp. each
Cost: $55,000

PERFORMANCE
Maximum speed: 215 mph.
Cruising speed: 183 mph.
Range: 1,370 miles
Service Ceiling: 24,000 ft.


The Air Corps' first all-metal fighter was the Consolidated P-25 of 1933.

Consolidated Y1P-25



The original YP-24 design was carried on by designer Robert J. Woods at Consolidated Aircraft Corporation as the Y1P-25. The Y1P-25 was similar to the YP-24 but was generally more streamlined and replaced the wooden YP-24 wing with one of all-metal construction.

Two Y1P-25s were ordered by the Army Air Corps in 1932. The first airframe (S/N 32-321) was fitted with a turbo-supercharger giving it a maximum speed of 247 mph. The Y1P-25 was destroyed in a crash on January 13, 1933.

The second airframe (S/N 32-322) was designated as Y1A-11 (attack bomber). This aircraft did not include a supercharger and featured a clipped vertical stabilizer. The Y1A-11 was also destroyed in a crash on January 20, 1933.

The accidents were not considered to be caused by faulty design and an order was placed with Consolidated Aircraft Corp. for what was to become the P-30.

Although only two were procured, the P-25 design was modified into the P-30, later redesignated the PB-2, of which 54 were purchased in 1935.

TYPE - Y1P-25
Number built/Converted - 1
Remarks - Improved YP-24


TYPE - Y1A-11
Number built/Converted - 1
Remarks - Attack version of Y1P-25

SPECIFICATIONS (Y1P-25)
Span: 43' 10.25"
Length: 29' 4"
Powerplant: Curtiss V-1570-57 "Conqueror" with G.E. form F-2G supercharger, 625 bhp at 2450 rpm at 20,000 ft.
Armament: Two .30 .cal. machine guns firing through the propeller, one .30 cal. gun aft.
Max. Speed: 247 mph
Aircraft crashed before completion of altitude and range tests



Detroit-Lockheed YP-24




An experimental pursuit plane, a two-place, low-wing fighter, with retractable landing gear. Designed by Detroit Aircraft Corporation engineer Robert J. Woods. Metal-skinned fuselage built in Detroit and wooden wing plus final assembly done at Lockheed Aircraft Corporation in Burbank, California. Termed by Lockheed the XP-900.

Completed in 1931, and sent to Dayton, Ohio for testing on 29 September 1931. Air Corps contracted for 5 Y1P-24s and 5 YA-9s (attack bomber version), but they were never completed, as Detroit-Lockheed went bankrupt in 1931. Designer Woods went with Consolidated Aircraft in Buffalo, NY which continued styling in a new ship designated the Y1P-25, further continued as the P-30 and P-30A.

The original and only YP-24 was destroyed on 19 October 1931 after the landing gear malfunctioned (wouldn't extend) and the pilot was forced to bail out.

Detroit-Lockheed YP-24

TYPE - YP-24 / Y1P-24
Number Built/Converted - 10
Remarks - low-wing, two-place monoplane project cancelled

SPECIFICATIONS
Span: 42' 9.25"
Length: 28' 9"
Powerplant: Curtiss Conqueror V-1570-23 of 602 hp.
Armament: One .30 .cal. and one .50 cal. machine gun firing through the propeller, one .30 cal. gun aft.
Max. Speed: 214.5 mph
Service Ceiling: 26,400 ft.
Range: 556 miles
Serial Number: 32-320

Consolidated P-30



PB-2



The P-30 was the first production aircraft ordered by the Army Air Corps with retractable landing gear, an enclosed and heated cockpit (for the pilot), and an exhaust driven turbo-supercharger. After the loss of the Y1P-25 (S/N 32-321), the Army ordered four improved examples and designated the aircraft P-30 (S/N 33-204 - 33-207). These aircraft were used for evaluation. The gunner in the rear cockpit was prone to black-out during sharp turns or dive recovery, but the Army was sufficiently pleased with the aircraft to place a production order for 50 aircraft on 6 December 1934.

The production aircraft (S/N 35-1 thru 50) were initially designated P-30As, but were later reclassified as PB-2As (Pursuit, Bi-place). The retractable landing gear was manually operated by the pilot through a hand crank located in the cockpit. The fixed-pitch propeller of the P-30 was replaced with a Curtiss Electric constant-speed propeller in the P-30A.

TYPE- P-30 P-30A
Number Built/Converted -450 Remarks - Improved Y1P-25; became PB-2 Improved P-30; became PB-2A

P-30 A

SPECIFICATIONS (P-30A)
Span: 43' 11"
Length: 30' 0"
Height: 8 ft. 3 in.
Powerplant: Curtiss V-1570-61 with G.E. form F-3 supercharger of 700 hp. at 15,000 ft.
Armament: Two .30 .cal. machine guns firing through the propeller, one .30 cal. gun aft.
Max. Speed: 274.5 mph at 25,000 ft. and 255.5 mph at 15,000 ft.
Cruising Speed: 215 mph
Service Ceiling: 28,000 ft.
Weight: 4,306 lbs. empty/5,643 lbs. (max.)









TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: aircorp; freeperfoxhole; historyofflight; michaeldobbs; planes; samsdayoff; usairforce; veterans
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The first all-metal fighter ordered in quantity was the Boeing P-26; 139 were purchased in 1932-36.


The Boeing P-26A was the first all-metal monoplane fighter produced in quantity for the U.S. Army Air Corps. Its nickname was the "Peashooter. "
Credits - U.S. Air Force Museum

The P-26A was the first all-metal monoplane fighter (pursuit plane) produced in quantity for the U.S. Army Air Corps, affectionately called the "Peashooter" by its pilots. It was also the last Army Air Corps pursuit aircraft accepted with an open cockpit, a fixed undercarriage, and an externally braced wing. Significantly faster in level flight than previous fighters, the P-26A's relatively high landing speed caused the introduction of landing flaps to reduce this speed.

Boeing initially designed the P-26 in 1931, designating it first as Model 248 and in December 1931 as the XP-936. The company provided three test airframes, which remained Boeing property, with the frugal Air Corps providing the engines, instruments, and other equipment. The first flight occurred on March 20, 1932. The Army Air Corps purchased the three prototypes and designated them as P-26s. The Air Corps purchased a total of 111 of the production version, designating them as P-26A, and 25 of later -B and -C models.

The P-26 was the Army Air Corps front-line fighter before it was replaced during 1938-40 by the Curtiss P-36A and the Seversky P-35. An export version was sold to China in 1934 where it was used against the Japanese. It was also used by the Philippine government against the Japanese in December 1941 when all were destroyed in combat.

This P-26A reproduction is painted to represent the commander's aircraft of the 19th Pursuit Squadron, 18th Pursuit Group, stationed at Wheeler Field, Hawaii, in 1938.

More P-26A images...


As initially displayed in the Hall of Honor


Top Right side view


Top Front view


Right side view


Front view detail


Left side center fuselage detail

SPECIFICATIONS
Span: 27 ft. 11.5 in.
Length: 23 ft. 10 in.
Height: 10 ft. 5 in.
Weight: 2,197 lbs. empty/2,955 lbs. (max.)
Armament: Two fixed .30 caliber machine guns or one .50 and one .30 caliber machine gun; up to 200 lbs. of bombs
Engine: Pratt & Whitney R-1340-27 "Wasp" radial of 500 hp.
Crew: One
Cost: $16,567

PERFORMANCE
Max. speed: 234 mph/203 knots
Cruising speed: 199 mph./172 knots
Range: 360 statute miles/313 nautical miles
Service ceiling: 27,400 ft.





Photos/Information courtesy of the US Air Force Museum.

Today's Educational Sources:
www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/
www.centennialofflight.gov

1 posted on 06/13/2003 4:37:40 AM PDT by snippy_about_it
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: *all
Today starts a new direction for Fridays at the Foxhole.

I'll be preparing Monday and Fridays threads and SAMWolf will continue as always the other five days of the week.

After six long months, SAMWolf will now get two days off per week!

Fridays at the Foxhole will be a mix of many different topics delivered with the hope of continued education and discussion.

We appreciate all our Foxhole readers and posters. Your participation, individually and collectively, provides a wealth of information that contributes to the threads and enhances what we do here.

Often, I have no idea what you are talking about, LOL, which then requires research on my part to gain an understanding. Thus was born the Friday Foxhole thread.

I hope to cover a wide range of material to enable a better understanding of military equipment, military units, occassional biographies, and topics we think might interest our readers.

Friday threads will attempt to support the discussion we have here and hopefully fit in nicely with the mission SAMWolf has brought to the Foxhole.

Any and all suggestions for future threads are welcomed.

2 posted on 06/13/2003 4:43:46 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: All

3 posted on 06/13/2003 4:44:11 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: w_over_w; hardhead; 4.1O dana super trac pak; 4integrity; Al B.; Alberta's Child; Alkhin; ...
.......FALL IN to the FReeper Foxhole!

.......Good Morning Everyone!


If you would like added or removed from our ping list let me know.
4 posted on 06/13/2003 4:45:25 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: *all
P-26 A In Flight


5 posted on 06/13/2003 5:42:07 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: snippy_about_it
On This Day In History



Birthdates which occurred on June 13:
40 Gnaeus Julius Agricola Roman general; conquered Wales, No. England
823 Charles II (the Bald) king of France (843-77), emperor (875-77)
1396 Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy
1752 Fanny Burney England, author (Camille, Evelina)
1773 Thomas Young proponent of the wave theory of light
1786 Winfield Scott American army general/presidential candidate
1821 Albert duc de Broglie, France, premier (1873-74, 1977)
1831 James Clerk Maxwell physicist, formulated electromagnetic theory
1859 Sydney Webb, England, writer/wife of Beatrice Potter
1865 William Butler Yeats Ireland, poet (Wild Swans at Coole-Nobel 1923)
1881 Lois Weber 1st US woman film director (What Do Men Want?)
1892 Basil Rathbone Johannesburg S Africa, actor (Sherlock Holmes)
1893 Dorothy L Sayers England, novelist (9 Taylors)
1894 Mark van Doren Ill, author (The Happy Critic)
1897 Paavo Johannes Nurmi Finland, 5K runner (Olympic-gold-1924)
1899 Carlos Ch vez Mexico City, conductor/composer (Sinfon¡a India)
1900 Ian Hunter S Africa, actor (Sir Richard-Robin Hood)
1903 Harold "Red" Grange "Galloping Ghost" of football (Illinois Bears)
1911 Albert Cleage famous African
1911 Luis W Alvarez physicist (Nobel-1968)
1912 Mary Wickes St Louis Mo, actress (Dennis the Menace, Julia, Doc)
1913 Ralph Edwards Merino Colo, TV host (This is Your Life)
1915 J Donald Budge US tennis player (1st to hold world's 4 major titles)
1918 Ben Johnson Foraker Okla, actor (Chisum, Battle Force, Dillinger)
1920 Knut Nordahl Sweden, soccer players (Olympic-gold-1948)
1926 Paul Lynde Mt Vernon Ohio, comedian (Uncle Arthur-Bewitched)
1935 Christo Bulgaria, artist, wrapper (Running Fence)
1940 Bobby Freeman SF, rocker (Do You Want to Dance)
1941 Robert Forester Rochester NY, actor (Banyon, Nakia)
1941 Tom Hallick Buffalo NY, actor (Search)
1943 Edward Skorek Poland, volleball player (Olympic-gold-1976)
1944 Joe Amato NHRA top fuel drag racing champion (1991)
1945 Ronald J Grabe NYC, Col USAF/astronaut (STS 51-J, STS 30, STS 42)
1947 Peter Holm boyfriend of Joan Collins
1951 Richard Thomas NYC, (John Boy-Waltons, Last Summer, Johnny Belinda)
1962 Ally Sheedy NYC, actress (St Elmo's, Short Circuit, Maid to Order)
1963 Bettina Bunge Switz, tennis player (Virginia Slims of Calif 1983)
1963 Catarina Lindqvist Sweden, tennis player (Swedish Open 1986)
1968 Deniece Peterson rocker (5 Star-Silk & Steel)
197- Charlie Rivera singer (Menudo)
1971 Broderick nonuplets Sydney Australia (7 of 9 survived infancy)
1986 Ashley Olsen actress (Full House)
1986 Mary Kate Olsen actress (Full House)





Deaths which occurred on June 13:
323 -BC- Alexander the Great dies of fever at Babylon
574 John III, Italian Pope (561-74), dies
939 Leo VII, Italian Pope (936-39), dies
1886 King Ludwig II of Bavaria drowns
1946 Edward Bowes radio host (Major Bowes Amateur Hour), dies at 71
1961 Ben Jones Missouri, horse trainer (Citation, Whirlaway), dies at 79
1962 Sir Eugene Goossens composer, dies at 69
1972 Clyde McPhatter singer of the drifters, dies of a heart attack
1977 Tom C Clark former Supreme Court Justice, dies in NY at 77
1979 Darla Hood actress (Little Rascals), dies
1982 King Khalid of Saudi Arabia, dies at 69
1986 Benny Goodman the clarinet playing King of Swing, dies in NY at 77
1987 Geraldine Page actress (Blue & Gray), dies at 62





Reported: MISSING in ACTION

1966 BURKART CHARLES W. SELKIRK NY.
1966 GIERAK GEORGE G JR. SPRINGFIELD NY.
[HIT TARGET NO TRACE]
1966 GLANVILLE JOHN T JR. MANDHAM NJ.
[HIT TARGET NO TRACE]
1966 KERR EVERETT O. BELMONT MA.
1966 LURIE ALAN P. CLEVELAND OH.
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY DRV, ALIVE IN 98]
1966 LAMBTON BENNIE R. INDIANAPOLIS IN.
[HIT TARGET NO TRACE]
1966 PYLE DARREL E. COMPTON CA.
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY DRV " DECEASED-KILLED IN PLANE CRASH, ALASKA, 1974"]
1968 CARTER JAMES D. CLARKSTON MI.
[REMAINS RETURNED 1993 AND IDENTIFIED 09/95]
1969 STORY JAMES C. BERWYN IL.
1969 WARD NEAL CLINTON COLLEGE STATION TX.
1972 FULTON RICHARD J. CHANDLER AZ.
[03/28/73 RELEASED BY DRV]
1972 HANSON GREGG O. ROSELLE IL.
[03/28/73 RELEASED BY DRV. ALIVE IN 98]

POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA.





On this day...
432 -BC- Origin of Metonic Cycle
1373 Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of Alliance (world's oldest) signed
1611 John Fabricius dedicates earliest sunspot publication
1774 Rhode Island becomes 1st colony to prohibit importation of slaves
1777 Marquis de Lafayette lands in US
1789 Mrs Alexander Hamilton serves ice cream for dessert to Washington
1798 Mission San Luis Rey de Francia founded in California
1836 US patent #1 (after 9,957 unnumbered patents), for locomotive wheels
1837 1st Mormon missionaries to the British Isles leave Kirtland, Ohio
1855 The opera "Les Vˆpres Sicilenne" is produced (Paris)
1863 Samuel Butler publishes 1st part of "Erewhon," Christchurch, NZ
1866 House passes 14th Amendment
1871 Hurricane kills 300 in Labrador
1873 J C Watson discovers asteroid #132 Aethra
1879 A Borrelly discovers asteroid #198 Ampella
1886 Fire destroys nearly 1,000 buildings in Vancouver, BC
1888 Congress creates the Department of Labor
1889 2' of snow accumulates in Rawlins Wyoming
1890 Eagle Ave in the Bronx is cut out & named
1895 Emile Levassor wins 1st Paris-Bordeaux-Paris auto race (24 kph)
1898 Yukon Territory of Canada organized, Dawson chosen as capital
1900 China's Boxer Rebellion against foreigners & Christians
1905 NY Giant Christy Mathewson 2nd no-hitter, beats Chic Cubs, 1-0
1907 Lowest temp ever in 48 US states for June, 2øF in Tamarack Calif
1910 Pilot Charles Hamilton makes 1st 1-day round-trip from NY to Phila
1910 William D Crum, a SC physician, appointed minister to Liberia
1913 Yanks win 13th game of year after losing 36 games
1918 Philles & Cards tie 8-8 in 19 innings
1921 Yanks' pitcher Babe Ruth hits 2 HRs beating Tigers 11-8
1924 Yanks win by forfeit over Tigers, their 3rd forfeit win
1927 Ticker-tape parade welcomed Charles A Lindbergh to NYC
1930 22 people killed by hailstones in Siatista Greece
1933 1st sodium vapor lamps installed (Schenectady NY)
1933 Federal Home Owners Loan Corporation authorized
1934 C Jackson discovers asteroid #1349 Bechuana
1935 James T Braddocks beats Max Baer for HW boxing champ
1937 Joe DiMaggio hits 3 consecutive HRs against St Louis Browns
1940 Paris evacuated before the German advance
1942 1st V-2 rocket launch, Peenemnde, Germany; reached 1.3 km
1944 Nazi Germany begins V-1 (Fieseler Fi-103) buzz-bomb attacks
1946 1st transcontinental round-trip flight in 1-day, California-Maryland
1947 1st night game at Fenway Park (Red Sox 5, White Sox 3)
1948 Babe Ruth's final farewell at Yankee Stadium, he dies Aug 16th
1955 Mercedes racing car kills 77 at Le Mans France
1957 Ted Williams becomes 1st ALer to have 2, 3-HR games in a season
1966 Supreme Court's Miranda decision; suspect must be informed of rights
1967 Thurgood Marshall nominated as 1st black Supreme Court justice
1969 Mick Taylor leaves John Mayall Band & joins the Rolling Stones
1969 T Smirnova discovers asteroid #2111 Tselina
1970 Beatles' "Let It Be," album goes #1 & stays #1 for 4 weeks
1970 Beatles' "Long & Winding Road," single goes #1 & stays #1 for 2 weeks
1971 NY Times began publishing "The Pentagon Papers"
1971 Perth Observatory discovers asteroids #1806 Derice & #1978 Patrice
1972 T Smirnova discovers asteroid #2604
1973 Garvey, Lopes, Cey & Russell play together for 1st time, set record of staying together as an infield for 8+ years (LA Dodgers)
1975 Felix Aguilar Observatory discovers asteroid #2219 Mannucci
1977 Convicted assassin James Earl Ray recaptured [?]
1980 Paul McCartney releases "Waterfall"
1980 Rep John Jenrette Jr (D-SC) indicted in "Abscam" investigation
1980 UN Security Council calls for South Africa to free Nelson Mandela
1981 39 Unification church couples wed in Germany
1981 Teenager fires 6 blanks at Queen Elizabeth II
1981 Tom Snyder interviews Charles Manson on "Tomorrow"
1982 Fahd becomes king of Saudi Arabia when King Khalid dies at 69
1983 Pioneer 10 becomes 1st man-made object to leave Solar System
1986 Pres Reagan criticizes South African state of emergency
1986 Steve Garvey 1st ejection from a game, after Atlanta's triple-play
1987 Daniel Buettner, Bret Anderson, Martin Engel & Anne Knabe complete
cycling journey of 15,266 mi from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska to Argentina
1988 Boston Red Sox are 10 games back in AL, & go on to win the AL East
1988 George Harrison releases "This is Love"
1988 US Supreme Court refuses to hear Yonkers argument they aren't racist
1989 Detroit sweeps Los Angeles, for the NBA championship
1990 Boeing 767 sets nonstop commercial flight, Seattle to Narobi Kenya
1990 Wash DC mayor Marion Barry announces he will not seek a 4th term,
1991 NHL owners present contract to players (leads to Apr 1, 1992 strike)





Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

Yemen Arab Rep : Reform Movement Day
Massachusett : Children's Day - - - - - ( Sunday )
Paraguay : Chaco Peace Day (1935) - - - - - ( Sunday )
Shelby, Mich : National Asparagus Festival - - - - - ( Thursday )
Great Britain : Queen's official birthday (National Day) - - - - - ( Saturday )





Religious Observances
RC : Mem of St Anthony of Padua, patron of lovers, poor





Religious History
1525 German Reformer Martin Luther, 42, married former nun Katherine von Bora, 26. Their 21-year marriage bore six children. Kate outlived her husband (who died in 1546) by six years.
1742 English founder of Methodism John Wesley wrote in his journal: 'Oh, let none think his labor is lost because the fruit does not immediately appear.'
1816 Birth of Edward F. Rimbault, the English church organist who composed the hymn tune to which is sung 'O Happy Day, That Fixed My Choice.'
1876 The Presbyterian Church in England merged with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland, in creating a more uniform representation of the Reformed faith in the British Isles.
1897 Birth of Reuben Larson, missionary pioneer who in 1931 (along with Clarence W. Jones) co-founded the World Radio Missionary Fellowship. Since 1969, WRMF has been headquartered in Opa Locka, Florida.

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.





Thought for the day :
"Never stand between a fire hydrant and a dog."
6 posted on 06/13/2003 5:42:24 AM PDT by Valin (Age and deceit beat youth and skill)
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To: SAMWolf
I'll be preparing Monday and Fridays threads and SAMWolf will continue as always the other five days of the week.
After six long months, SAMWolf will now get two days off per week!

SLACKER! :-)

7 posted on 06/13/2003 5:44:53 AM PDT by Valin (Age and deceit beat youth and skill)
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To: snippy_about_it
Present!
8 posted on 06/13/2003 5:51:55 AM PDT by manna
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To: snippy_about_it
Good morning, snippy. You know how I love those airpower threads.
9 posted on 06/13/2003 6:00:56 AM PDT by CholeraJoe (White Devils for Sharpton. We're bad. We're Nationwide)
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To: snippy_about_it
Good Morning, Snippy.

We're dodging thunderstorms here thios morning. Flooding in some places around Hobart. More storms in the forecast for today.

10 posted on 06/13/2003 6:11:18 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: manna
Good!
11 posted on 06/13/2003 6:11:54 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: CholeraJoe
You know how I love those airpower threads.

I do indeed. Enjoy!

12 posted on 06/13/2003 6:15:09 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: E.G.C.
I am soooooo tired of this rain. Enough already!! We are wet and covered with clouds again today. :(
13 posted on 06/13/2003 6:16:16 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; *all

Good morning snippy, Sam and Foxhole residents!

14 posted on 06/13/2003 6:16:21 AM PDT by Soaring Feather
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To: bentfeather
Good Morning feather, that's a lovely blue iris, they're very pretty. Thank you.
15 posted on 06/13/2003 6:17:40 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it
Hey Snip~

Wow . . .

16 posted on 06/13/2003 7:37:43 AM PDT by w_over_w (LSU 20 Baylor 5 - - - On to Omaha for CWS 2003 - - - Geaux Tiguhs!)
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To: w_over_w
Thanks
17 posted on 06/13/2003 7:38:45 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it
Good Morning Snippy.

Great job on the thread today. You put a lot of work into it and it shows.


18 posted on 06/13/2003 9:32:17 AM PDT by SAMWolf (If you can't make it good, make it big.)
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To: Valin
1944 Nazi Germany begins V-1 (Fieseler Fi-103) buzz-bomb attacks

Germany answered the invasion of France by launching its first V-1 against London on the night of June 12-13. By July 21, 4,059 V-1s had been fired, 3,045 of which reached England. Although the "secret weapon" did little to alter the course of the war in France, it killed 3,875 people and injured 24,960 others, forcing the Allies to divert some airpower to bomb V-1 launching sites.

To add to Germany's difficulties, the Allies invaded the French Riviera by air and sea on August 15. Caught in a giant pincer movement, the Germans started to evacuate France. Allied columns on the ground then began advancing so rapidly that they outdistanced their logistical support and had to be supplied from the air. German forces, under constant attack from the air and hotly pursued on the ground, pulled back to the Siegfried Line and by Sep. 12, most of France and Belgium was in Allied hands.

19 posted on 06/13/2003 9:40:12 AM PDT by SAMWolf (If you can't make it good, make it big.)
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To: Valin
:-( Guilty
20 posted on 06/13/2003 9:41:03 AM PDT by SAMWolf (If you can't make it good, make it big.)
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