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UC-43 Traveler
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Photo: Robert Deering 10/18/2012 National Museum of the USAF Wright-Patterson AFB (FFO) Dayton, Ohio |
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One of the most
distinctive U.S. Army Air Forces aircraft
was the UC-43 Traveler, a light transport
biplane with negative or backward staggered
wings. In June 1939 Beech delivered three
examples of its popular commercial Model 17
Staggerwing aircraft for evaluation under
the designation of YC-43. These were later
assigned to the U.S. air attaches at the
American Embassies in London, Paris and
Rome. Early in World War II, the need for a compact executive-type transport or courier aircraft became apparent, and in 1942 the Army ordered the first of 270 Model 17s for service in this country and overseas as UC-43s. These differed only in minor details from the commercial model. To meet urgent wartime needs, the government also purchased or leased additional Staggerwings from private owners including 118 more for the USAAF plus others for the Navy. The aircraft on display, donated by Maj. Richard River, USAF (Ret.), of Chillicothe, Ohio, was flown to the museum in May 1974. Procured by the Army during WWII, it was assigned to the Navy as a GB-2. It is painted as a UC-43 assigned to the 8th Air Force in England in 1943. |
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