Morgan originally intended to call the B-17, Little One, after his pet name for her, but after Morgan saw the movie Lady for a Night, in which features a riverboat named the Memphis Belle, he proposed that name to his crew Morgan’s sweetheart, Margaret Polk, a resident of Memphis, Tennessee. The aircraft was the namesake of pilot Robert K. Whilst not famous for one particular thing it was one of the first B17 Flying Fortress aircraft to survive 25 combat missions with its crew intact. Memphis Belle is a household name, largely thanks to the film of the same name. Spirit of St Louis is now preserved in the Smithsonian’s Milestones of Flight centre. Spirit of St Louis was a single engined monoplane and one of its most distinctive features is that it had no front windscreen, something Lindbergh was used to flying mailbags! Lindbergh left New York on the 20th May 1927 and landed in Paris 33hrs later. Lindberg did achieve this though in 1927, in his custom built monoplane name The Spirit of St.
Louis Spirit of St LouisĬrossing the Atlantic these days is an everyday occurrence these days but back in the 1920’s it was a hazardous affair so when Charles Lindbergh announced he was going to cross the Atlantic, on his own, people must have thought him mad!
The aircraft is now preserved at the Evergreen Aviation Museum.
Perhaps hopeful of a second flight, Hughes retained a full crew for the Spruce Goose right up until his death in 1976. The flight lasted for around 1 mile and never got above 70ft. Powered by 8 3,000hp Engines it was built as a strategic flying boat for transatlantic flights during World War II however it only flew once in 1947. Howard Hughes’ H-4 Hercules “Spruce Goose” is the largest flying boat ever built and has the largest wingspan of any aircraft in history. Since 2003, the entire restored B-29 has been on display at NASM’s Steven F. Tibbets selected the aircraft whilst it was still on final assembly. Enola Gay Enola Gay Boeing B-29 Superfortressĭropping the first atomic bomb in history is always going to get you a place in the history books and that’s exactly what happened for Colonel Paul Tibbets and his crew onboard the Boeing B-29 Superfortress “Enola Gay”.Įnola Gay carried out her duty on the 6th August 1945 when Tibbets and his crew dropped the atomic bomb “Little Boy” on the city of Hiroshima Japan, it also took part in the 2nd atomic raid on Nagasaki flown by another crew.īuilt in May 1945 the name Enola Gay came from Col. Here’s our top 5 most famous and iconic planes. We’re not talking types here like Concorde or the Jumbo Jet, we’re talking iconic planes such as Enola Gay or the Spruce Goose, planes that everyone knows just by the mere mention of their name. Every now and again an aircraft goes down in history.