ww2John wrote:
Ryan FR1 "Fireball" - prop in front & turbojet in the back.
There are pictures around showing it flying with a stopped prop.
That exact photo is the one used in one of my oldest and most cherished aircraft reference books,
Combat Aircraft of the World - from 1909 to the present, (c) 1969 by G. P. Putnam's Sons, edited & compliled by John W. R. Taylor of Jane's.
CAW lists the powerplants as a 1,350 hp Wright R-1820-72W up front and a 1,600 lb. thrust GE I-16/J31 turbojet in the rear fuselage - the combination of which always struck me as making for a very dense/heavy fuselage!
In addition to being credited as the very first completely flush-riveted USN fighter or to have all-metal (no fabric) control surfaces, CAW also credits the Fireball as making the very first "jet' landing on an aircraft carrier ever when on Nov. 6, 1945, an FR-1 Fireball assigned to VF-1E was conducting carrier quals on the USS Wake Island and experienced a failure of the R-1820, forcing it to land using only the turbojet engine for propulsion.
Sounds like a pretty significant historical aircraft - glad to see one has been preserved.
Original contracts for as many as 1,300 Ryan FR-1's were cancelled at the end of the war, but 66 examples were delivered. Initial testing was carried out by Navy Squadron VF-66, but most aircraft were later transferred to VF-41, which was later re-designated VF-1E.