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  • Recent Posts

    • Hermanus
    • rtd_sf_eng
      I keep forgetting to add some of my badges to this thread.    
    • The Rooster
      "The equipment of the Lady has made its way all over the world. Many small pieces of equipment were stripped off by members of the search parties and kept as souvenirs. Many items of clothing and equipment, including two government-issue watches that would still run, were found with the remains of the crew. These items are on display at the Quartermaster Museum, Fort Lee, Virginia. There is also some Lady equipment in the Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, one of the major items being a propeller. All the small arms went to the Libyan police, and all the rafts were eventually thrown away because over the years they had been ruined by the heat. The first Air Force party at the crash site found flight suits hanging undisturbed in the bent fuselage, and in odd corners they found cigarettes, gum, and bits of flight rations. The butts in one ashtray had been smoked down to the last puff, probably slowly and almost confidently, the way a young flyer might drag on a weed during his first mission. In another tray they had been crushed out by nervous hands, the way a man smashes a cigarette when he is out of time. The radio set from the Lady was removed and installed in the recovery C-47, where it worked perfectly in place of a radio that had failed on the flight from Wheelus. The story has it, though, that this aircraft some time later went down with all aboard lost. Thus began the “jinx” stories. Several servomotors that had once driven some of the instruments on the Lady were installed in a C-54 assigned to Wheelus. On a Thanksgiving Day flight to Bengazi, carrying mail and Thanksgiving turkeys, one of the plane’s engines feathered, and even with maximum power on the other three engines the crew had to dump all cargo in order to make Bengazi safely. But the most tragic of the “jinx” incidents involving parts from the ghost bomber happened with an Army Otter observation aircraft. Only the armrests had been removed from the Lady and installed in the Otter. Shortly thereafter, the Otter crashed into the Gulf of Sidra. No trace of its ten-man complement was ever discovered. Amongst the scattered debris washed up on the Libyan coast by the waves was an armrest. These incidents have added an air of mystery to the old “ghost bomber.” In fact, it is said that native caravans skirt the site of the crash because they believe it is haunted. And as the years pass, the haunted aspects of the Lady Be Good will grow more fixed with each repetition of her anguished saga. "   https://www.ladybegood.net/index.htm
    • hink441
      Just obtained a wheel from what I believe to be from a Grumman S-2 Tracker. It was listed as a C-2 Greyhound wheel but I’m not sure that was correct.    This one is pretty complete, missing some screws but otherwise good. Very pleased it has the Grumman decal and the decal from the rework done in 1970 by NARF Quonset Point.     
    • General Apathy
      . Hi Patlee,   It's taken me until 2025 to find this post you made in 2010, you are 100% correct it is for the post-war US Army medical litters 1970's onward I believe.     regards lewis    ...
    • easterneagle87
      Group of three I got in a mixed lot a while back. 50 Mile Club US Army, 100 Mile Club US Army Europe and one I hadn't seen before 101 Mile Club US Army  
    • ludwigh1980
      I have never commented in this thread and follow it daily. Just some random thoughts of how times have changed. Youth driving heavy farm machinery for harvesting the fruits of the earth and other hazards of progress.  In such irony to how many youths have died in the same area for differing visions of the world that may or may not have been their own. Caissons and tanks and jeeps and halftracks to combines and bailers.  Though the cacophony of battle and destruction only whisper like a half-forgotten nightmare in the pock marked walls in now vibrant and bustling villages, war has moved on....for now. 
    • Haze99
      Yes, part of the past few years "loosening" of standards to accommodate certain idiosyncrasies. (The aftermath of a particular incident & mindset in DC) 
    • Haze99
      37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team SSI U.S. Army National Guard soldiers assigned to Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 125th Infantry Regiment, Michigan Army National Guard, tactically maneuver through a system of trenches during Exercise Baltic Viking near Alūksne, Latvia, June 8, 2025. The infantryman practiced trench warfare operations and suppressing fire. The U.S. military conducts multinational training and exercises across Europe to increase lethality and strengthen partnerships with NATO allies and regional security partners. (Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Rose Di Trolio)
    • The Rooster
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