Click to open image viewer. CC0 Usage Conditions ApplyClick for more information. Single-engine, single-seat, German World War I biplane fighter; 160-horsepower Mercedes D.IIIa water-cooled engine.
Historians consider it one of the best planes of World War I, maybe the best. After the war, it was the first fighter stationed at Mitchel Field, then a fledgling military base adjacent to Roosevelt ...
The Fokker D.VII was the most advanced fighter aircraft of the 1914-18 war. ( (John Weatherseed)) There's an air war in the town of Knowlton in Quebec's Eastern Townships involving a First World War ...
Given the many questions that remain unanswered, there is no legal basis for restitution at the present time. This is why the plane is provisionally going on display at the National Military Museum ...
When World War I ended in 1918, the Armistice required, among other things, that Germany turn over 1,700 warplanes, including “all D.VII’s.” Thus did the Allies compliment the boyish Dutchman whose ...
The brothers Leon and Robert Morane designed this monoplane with fellow engineer Raymond Saulnier in 1913. The fragile L was meant for reconnaissance, but by the war's start Saulnier had attached ...
Vintage Aviation News on MSN
Pfalz D.XII Goes Back on Display in Seattle
After a 2.5-year restoration, The Museum of Flight in Seattle places its original Pfalz D.XII fighter from WWI back on public display.
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