Douglas C-47A Skytrain

 

 

Specifications

Type:

Military Cargo and

 Civilian Passenger

First Flight:

December 1935

Wingspan:

95 feet 6 inches

Length:

63 feet 9 inches

Height:

17 feet

Weight:

17,865 pounds

Capacity:

Five

Status:

Display - Static

 

Officially called Dakotas in England and Skytrains in the United States, soldiers usually referred to C-47s as “Gooney Birds” or “Goonies.” The C-47 is a toughened up version of the successful Douglas DC-3 passenger plane with improved engines, cargo doors big enough to admit a jeep, a strengthened rear fuselage and a beefed up floor to hold loads of equipment. After the war during the Berlin Airlift in 1946, “Goonies” helped supply a city from the air, with everything from candy to coal. The Museum’s C-47 took part in the D-Day Allied Invasion, dropping paratroopers from the 101st Airborne over Normandy, France, and eventually returned to the United States after the war. The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry donated this aircraft to the Museum.