Dozens of vintage airplanes flew over Washington, DC to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the victory in Europe in World War II. The air show, dubbed “The Arsenal of Democracy,” featured trainers, fighters and bombers used by the Allies.
Flying as low as 1000 ft (300 meters) above the National Mall, a total of 56 planes, comprising nineteen different types of aircraft, symbolically reenacted major WWII air campaigns in which the US participated, from Pearl Harbor to the atomic bombing of Japan.
Nearly 300 WWII veterans were expected at the World War II Memorial in the center of the Mall, with thousands of spectators observing the commemorative wreath-laying ceremony that preceded the flyover.
Jesse M. Baltazar, a survivor of the Bataan Death March in the Philippines, told RT that the flyover reminded him of the opening days of World War II in Manila, where he was in school.
“It reminds me of those days, you know, December the 8th, 1941. What I missed was the sound of the sirens and the bombs going off, you know, the sound of the bombs and the big fires, you know, all over the city. Manila was burning at that time. We didn’t have any of that [today],” he said. “It reminds me. It brought me back to 73 years ago.”
He thinks the younger generations are lucky that they didn’t have to live through the horrors of World War II.
“You watch the planes come, and they fly overhead, but you didn’t have the sound of the sirens and the sounds of the bombs going off and the big fires and the city, Manila were burning. You miss all that,” Baltazar said. “We didn’t have any anti-aircraft. We were fortunate that the Japanese only had the 50-pound bombs, you know, tiny compared to our thousand-pound bombs.”
Baltazar would later go on to join the US Air Force, doing intelligence, serving in both the Korean and Vietnam Wars before transitioning to the State Department, where he still works today. He is the oldest employee there, he said.
The demonstration began with training formations that included Boeing Stearman, Piper L-Bird, North American T-6/SNJ and Cessna/Beech Twin Bomber trainer aircraft.
The training planes were followed by the Pearl Harbor formation, featuring Curtis P-40 Warhawks.
Awesome show on the National Mall today. #ww2flyover#VEDay70pic.twitter.com/9SGgd87m58
— Curtis Kalin (@CurtisKalin) May 8, 2015
The flyover began at 12:10 p.m. local time and lasted for almost an hour. The demonstration began with training formations that included Boeing Stearman, Piper L-Bird, North American T-6/SNJ and Cessna/Beech Twin Bomber trainer aircraft.
From the back seat of a P-51 mustang heading to the National Mall!Posted by Arsenal Of Democracy on Friday, May 8, 2015
The training planes were followed by the Pearl Harbor formation, featuring Curtis P-40 Warhawks.
The Doolittle Raid came next, with B-25 Mitchells. The Guadalcanal Campaign formation featured Bell P-39 Airacobras and P-63 Kingcobras.
“It’s an opportunity of a lifetime,” Beth Jenkins, one of the pilots of Devil Dog, a B-25 bomber, told the Washington Post. “That’s what we live for. To really honor those who have honored us.”
.@airspacemag can help identify the aircraft you saw in today's #ww2flyover: http://t.co/RarU0nWTfd#planespottingpic.twitter.com/xrNFkUku9h
— Honeywell Aerospace (@Honeywell_Aero) May 8, 2015
This was followed by the Battle of Midway, with formations of Consolidated PBY Catalina, Grumman F4F/FM-2 Wildcat and Douglas SBD Dauntless aircraft.
Recreating the shooting down of Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the architect of the Japanese Navy who personally planned the Pearl Harbor attack, Lockheed P-38 Lightnings flew in formation. Yamamoto’s plane was shot down during a raid by 16 P-38s.
Vintage flyover fashion on the National Mall #ww2flyover#VEDay70pic.twitter.com/UFS1QESGek
— Alana Quinn (@aquinsta) May 8, 2015
The ceremony then turned to the European theater, beginning with the Ploesti Raid, featuring Consolidated B-24 Liberators. Next came the fighter escorts, P-51 Mustangs nicknamed “Little Friends” for their role in protecting larger planes during bombing raids.
The CAF'S B-24 Diamond Lil from the P-51 Red Nose, looking great Commemorative Air Forcr! # ww2flyover # ICAS # CAF warbirdsPosted by Arsenal Of Democracy on Friday, May 8, 2015
Formations were scheduled at 90-second intervals, although there was a slight delay between the P-51 Mustangs and the B-17 Flying Fortresses. During that time, the emcee regaled the audience with facts and stories about the famed B-17, a four-engine heavy bomber. Of the nearly 13,000 planes produced during World War II, maybe a dozen remain operational today.
D-Day was represented by the Douglas C-47/R4D Skytrain and B-26/A-26s.
Future #POTUS George H.W. Bush in his TBM Avenger http://t.co/0LKFZTIPet#WW2Flyover#WW2#VEDaypic.twitter.com/HvEtE4A3ZD
— Today's Document (@TodaysDocument) May 8, 2015
The ceremony then pivoted back to the Pacific theater for the Marianas Turkey Shoot, with formations of Grumman TBM Avengers, an F6F Hellcat, F8F Bearcats and the Curtiss SB2C Helldiver.
As the war intensified in both Europe and the Pacific, the formations took turns representing battles in each theater. The Battle of the Bulge saw Republic P-47 Thunderbolts, while Iwo Jima was portrayed by the Vought FG-1D Corsairs.
A special participant in the victory formation was “FiFi,” the last B-29 Superfortress still flying. The two planes that dropped atomic bombs on Japan in August 1945, the Enola Gay and Bockscar, were also B-29s.
Rep. Sam Graves (R-Missouri) flew the final “missing man” formation. Graves told The Hill he would be piloting the same type of torpedo bomber flown by former President George H.W. Bush during the war.
One of the planes has made an emergency landing at DCA. It has landed safely. #WW2FlyOverhttp://t.co/GTjtBAO4kfpic.twitter.com/QecqyCCknP
— NBCWashington (@nbcwashington) May 8, 2015
The same model, a Grumman TBF Avenger, was later seen making an emergency landing at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, due to a hydraulic problem. There has been no confirmation as to whether it was the plane piloted by Graves.
The airport, just across the Potomac River from the flyover location, was closed to commercial air traffic during the event.
The Arsenal of Democracy organizers worked closely with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Transportation Security Administration, the National Park Service, the US Capitol Police and the US Secret Service.
The FAA granted the necessary approvals for the flyover in March, noting “the educational and historic value of this single signature event in commemorating this significant milestone in history.”
C-53 The Duchess of Dakota operated by Texas Flying Legends Museum returns, to Culpeper welcome home! Mission accomplished! #cafwarbirds #icas #ww2flyoverPosted by Arsenal Of Democracy on Friday, May 8, 2015
The planes left from two Virginia airports, with the bombers taking off from Manassas and the fighters taking flight from Culpeper. They rendezvoused near Leesburg before heading down the Potomac to the National Mall.
The historic aircraft will be on display Saturday at the National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia.