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  2. Naval Air Station Pensacola shooting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Air_Station...

    Naval Air Station Pensacola shooting. On the morning of December 6, 2019, a terrorist attack occurred at Naval Air Station Pensacola in Pensacola, Florida. [3][4][5] The assailant killed three men and injured eight others. [6][7][8] The shooter was killed by Escambia County sheriff deputies after they arrived at the scene. [9]

  3. 2019 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress crash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_Boeing_B-17_Flying...

    The aircraft involved was a 74-year-old Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, military serial number 44-83575 (variant B-17G-85-DL) with civilian registration N93012. [4] The aircraft was painted as a representation of a different B-17G, [ 5 ] Nine-O-Nine , with military serial number 42-31909 (variant B-17G-30-BO), which had been scrapped shortly after ...

  4. Charlie Brown and Franz Stigler incident - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Brown_and_Franz...

    Brown's B-17 began its ten-minute bomb run at 8,320 m (27,300 ft) with an outside air temperature of −60 °C (−76 °F). Before the bomber released its bomb load, flak shattered the Plexiglas nose, knocked out the #2 engine and further damaged the #4 engine, which was already in questionable condition and had to be throttled back to prevent ...

  5. Nine-O-Nine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine-O-Nine

    December 15, 1943. In service. December 15, 1943–December 7, 1945. Nine-O-Nine was a Boeing B-17G-30-BO Flying Fortress heavy bomber, of the 323d Bombardment Squadron, 91st Bombardment Group, that completed 140 combat missions during World War II, believed to be the Eighth Air Force record for most missions without loss to the crews that flew ...

  6. Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing B-17 Flying ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accidents_and_incidents...

    A TB-17G, built as a B-17G-70-BO, 43-37700, [90] of the 325th Combat Crew Training Squadron, [109] Avon Park Army Airfield, Florida, crashes six miles S of Ridgeland, South Carolina, after the number 2 (port inner) engine catches fire at 10,000 feet during a flight from Stewart Field, New York, to its home base in Florida. Pilot Lieutenant ...

  7. University of Texas tower shooting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Texas_tower...

    Whitman at age two. Charles Joseph Whitman was born on June 24, 1941, in Lake Worth, Florida, the eldest of three sons born to Margaret Elizabeth (née Hodges) and Charles Adolphus Whitman Jr. [8]: 4 Whitman's father (b. 1919) had been abandoned as a child and raised in a boys' orphanage in Savannah, Georgia, and described himself as a self-made man who ran a successful plumbing business, in ...

  8. Colin Kelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Kelly

    Colin Purdie Kelly Jr. (/ ˈ k oʊ l ɪ n / KOH-lin; July 11, 1915 – December 10, 1941) was a World War II B-17 Flying Fortress pilot who flew bombing runs against the Japanese navy in the first days after the Pearl Harbor attack. He is remembered as one of the first American heroes of the war after ordering his crew to bail out while he ...

  9. The Swoose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Swoose

    Under restoration at the National Museum of the United States Air Force. The Swoose is a Boeing B-17D-BO Flying Fortress, USAAF serial number 40-3097, that saw extensive use in the Southwest Pacific theatre of World War II and survived to become the oldest B-17 still intact. It is the only early "shark fin"-tailed B-17 known to exist, and the ...