WWII Plane Found in Boneyard Refurbished in Time for D-Day

Published: May 23, 2019, 3 p.m.

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One C-47 troop carrier was so visible in the D-Day Invasion of World War II that it was emblazoned with its own message for Adolph Hitler: \\u201cThat\\u2019s all\\u2026 brother.\\u201d

It\\u2019s been nearly 75 years since that day, and you might assume that one of the lead aircraft of the main invasion force would be on display in a museum somewhere \\u2013 but you\\u2019d be wrong.\\xa0

A few years back, an Air Force historian named Matt Scales was researching the late Lt. Col. John Donalson of Birmingham, AL who was reportedly credited with piloting the lead aircraft that dropped the main group of paratroopers along the French coast in preparation for the assault on June 6, 1944.

All told, 900 planes carried the message of \\u201cThat\\u2019s all\\u2026 brother\\u201d but Donalson\\u2019s was one of the leads because it was equipped with an early form of a radar system. When Scales dug deeper, he discovered that the plane \\u2013 which had changed hands many times over the years \\u2013 had never crashed or been damaged, and was actually sitting in an aircraft boneyard in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

Texas-based Commemorative Air Force preserves military aircraft and set to work on the plane, which was badly corroded and partially disassembled. After rebuilding the piston engines and adding \\u201cmodern navigation and radio equipment and a fresh coat of paint,\\u201d it was air-ready once more, making its inaugural flight in February of last year.

Now the C-47 will join other vintage planes at D-Day 75th anniversary ceremonies in June, including a staged reenactment where \\u201cparatroopers\\u201d will be dropped along the French coast at Normandy.

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