Utility Aircraft

Utility Aircraft

War Eagles’ collection of utility aircraft represent a broad category of both equipment and troop transport planes, reconnaissance, observation, and forward air control.


Douglas C-47A –The Douglas DC-3 was built in 1935 and quickly became the standard for U.S. air carriers. The U.S. Army Air Force saw huge potential in the DC-3 as a cargo and troop carrier and bought thousands under the military designation C-47. They formed the backbone of military transportation throughout WWII in the European theater. This included D-Day and Market Garden as well as flying the Burma-China “Hump” and later during the Cold War in the Berlin Airlift.
War Eagles’ DC-3 was delivered to the U.S. Army as a C-47 on April 26, 1944. It flew on D-Day as well as Operation Market Garden, transporting airborne troops and towing gliders that brought in jeeps and artillery too large for the C-47 to airdrop.
After the war, it was converted into a civilian DC-3 that flew for Phillips Petroleum for 27 years. It also flew for at least seven different regional airlines before being purchased by museum founder John MacGuire in 1985.

Featured Utility Aircraft

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