This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
The Life Magazine images on Google have some really interesting pictures,although they aren't all that easy to find and the captions are often less than helpful or occasionally obviously wrong.That said,it's worth the effort to see what's there.
These pictures are listed under: U.S.Army's Interceptor Command conducting training Date: 1941 Photographer: George Strock
I assume that this picture had a caption in the magazine referring to the vehicle tracks showing up from the air
probably since things were so relaxed that 2 ton trucks had "TANK' painted on their canvas bed covers and some ground troops used plywood cutouts as 'machine guns'
Great find, Larry, nice one. A world away from the USAAF's strength a year later.
Note the shift in the 'moving' ground in the B-23 air to ground shot.
Oscar Duck wrote:all that's missing is Laurel and Hardy
Luckily they were missing a real enemy.
Apart from the different aircraft, it looks a lot like the pre-war exercises on Continental Europe, with the Polish, French and other air forces of the pre-invasion era.
They were fortunate there wasn't a land border with Germany.
Hmmm... a 1941 photo of P-40s in revetments, dispersed in the trees, covered with branches... What if we'd done that on December 7? It might have made the second wave a whole lot more intersting.