B-24 LIBERATOR

Canada / Quebec / Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm /
 Second World War 1939-1945, military, aeroplane

Informations on the B-24 LIBERATOR, the type of airplane who crashed in october 1943, on La Montagne Noire.
The Consolidated B-24 Liberator was an American heavy bomber, designed by Consolidated Aircraft of San Diego, California. It was known within the company as the Model 32, and a small number of early models were sold under the name LB-30, for Land Bomber. The B-24 was used in World War II by several Allied air forces and navies, and by every branch of the American armed forces during the war, attaining a distinguished war record with its operations in the Western European, Pacific, Mediterranean, and China-Burma-India Theaters.

Mass production was brought into full force by 1943 with the aid of the Ford Motor Company through its newly constructed Willow Run facility, where peak production had reached one B-24 per hour and 650 per month in 1944.
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Coordinates:   46°15'10"N   74°17'52"W
This article was last modified 13 years ago