United States Army Air Force C-47 Skytrain aircraft drop parachutes and supplies over the Rhine in Europe during World War II. Aircraft fly in formation. Paratroopers descend through parachutes. A large number of parachutes coming out of the C-47 Skytrain aircraft. Supplies dropped by the aircraft on the ground through the parachutes. The aircraft fly over after dropping parachutes. View of the ground below.
United States Army Air Force P-47 Thunderbolt in flight in Europe during World War II. The aircraft in flight over snow covered mountainous terrain. A sunset in the background.
United States Army Air Force C-47 Skytrain aircraft drop supplies and paratroopers in Germany during World War II. The aircraft fly in formation. Smoke screens on the ground laid down by the Germans. Aerial view of green fields on the ground. U.S. Army Air Force B-17 Flying Fortress in flight. Paratroopers descend from C-47 Skytrain. A fleet of aircraft fly away after dropping parachutes.
Aerial view of Paris, France during World War II. Aerial view of the Arc De Triomphe and the Eiffel Tower. The Seine River along the Eiffel Tower. A United States Army Air Force Douglas C-47 Skytrain aircraft in flight over the city. Buildings and roads below on the ground.
Gun camera footage of United States Army Air Force Republic P-47 Thunderbolt aircraft strafing ground targets in Germany, virtually unopposed, during final months of World War II in Europe. Shots are seen from three different P-47s of the 9th Air Force, 362nd Fighter Group, 377th Fighter Squadron. Film from Pilot, Martin, shows strafing at targets of opportunity in cities and towns. Film from pilots, McAuley and Carlisle, shows concentration on lines of communication: railroads, roads, bridges, etc. But also show strafing of power plant and a tank on the road.
Gun camera footage from USAAF P-47 of the 378th Fighter Squadron, 362nd Fighter Group, operating from Verdun Airfield, France, during World War 2. The aircraft flown by pilot named Bullock, on March 31, 1945, strafes lines of communication, striking vehicles on roads and trains moving on rail lines. In second sequence, the same pilot, now identified on slate, with the 377th Fighter Squadron, on April 4th, attacks a lone German Me-109 seen flying in thin cloud below him.
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