List of surviving Boeing B-29 Superfortresses

B-29A 44-61669 49 Three Feathers at the March Field Air Museum, California

List of surviving Boeing B-29 Superfortresses highlights the history of many well known flying and static display B-29s in the United States. A list is also provided of other B-29s on display around the world; including location, model and serial numbers, brief history, nicknames/markings, and conditions.

Background

In September 1945, immediately after the surrender of Japan, all contracts for further production of the B-29 were terminated after 3,970 aircraft (2,766 by Boeing Aircraft, 668 by Bell Aircraft and 536 by Glenn L. Martin Co.) were accepted by the USAAF. Uncompleted airframes at the Boeing Plant in Wichita, Kansas plant were stripped of all government furnished equipment and scrapped on the flightline.[1]

A vast majority all of the B-29s were stored by a new process of cocooning. However, this process trapped heat and moisture, resulting in numerous airframes being damaged by this process (primarily the avionics and instruments). Between 1946 and 1949, many early and high-time combat veteran aircraft were sold or scrapped. None were released to civilian use.

B-50 was introduced

While the B-29 was still considered useful in the post World War II inventory, the numerous problems with development, (i.e. including the freezing of the design in 1942) and the fear that the postwar US Congress would not fund the purchase of a design that still had significant quantity in storage, led to the radically redeveloped B-29D being redesignated the B-50A. While the B-50A looked similar to the B-29, Boeing had redeveloped the airframe with a new stronger alloy skin, redesigned main spar, taller vertical stabilizer and improved engine cowlings. Additionally, the engines were changed to the R-4360, which produced higher power, had better cooling and were less prone to failure.

Korean War and super bomber designs

In 1947, with the advent of the USAF, the B-29 was redesignated as a medium bomber. With the new heavy bombers in production Convair B-36 Peacemaker and Northrop YB-49 and the planned production of both the Boeing B-47 Stratojet and the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress becoming a reality, the Superfortress was quickly starting to become eclipsed by technology. It was only the advent of the Korean War in 1950 which slowed down the retirement of the B-29. Once again, the Superfortress was pressed into combat; while for the first 6 months the B-29 was able to hold its own, the introduction of jet fighters such as the MiG-15 ended its usefulness; the B-29 was too slow and its defenses were inadequate against fast-moving jets. By 1953, except for some RB-29s, B-29s were withdrawn from combat. The remaining B-29s in service were then redesignated as Training (TB-29), Photo Recon (RB-29/F-13), Air-Sea Rescue (SB-29) and refueling/tanker (KB-29M) aircraft. The last USAF flight was in September 1960.

Loaned to the UK

As a stop-gap measure between the Lancaster and Lincoln propeller-driven heavy bombers and new jet V bombers, the Royal Air Force operated 88 leased B-29s in the early 1950s. These received the service name Washington Bomber Mark I. The Washingtons were largely replaced in service by English Electric Canberra bombers by 1955, the last leaving service in late 1958 when they were retired and returned to the United States. Several Washingtons were given to Australia, but within one year they were retired and scrapped.

NACA and the X-planes

The B-29 did enjoy limited success postwar as a flying testbed, being used with NACA to carry the early rocket aircraft (X-1, X-1A, D-558-2 and other test aircraft), prototype jet engine testing, electronic test ships and High Altitude Atmospheric tests..

The majority of the surviving B-29 came from airframes that had either been designated (with the US Navy at NAWS China Lake), initially, as target-tow aircraft, then unmanned target aircraft, finally as a ground target (the last B-29 destroyed was in 1981 more than six years after a ban had been placed on further using these aircraft as targets). Furthermore, B-29s were used at Aberdeen Proving Grounds as ground targets and survivability studies.

Museum acquisitions of B-29s

In 1966, the then fledgling Commemorative Air Force, in their quest to gather an example of all the remaining World War II bombers attempted to track down a B-29. At this time, except for two noted museum aircraft, the B-29 was considered an almost extinct aircraft. Rumors of B-29s existing at Aberdeen revealed several airframes, but due to the closeness of ocean air these aircraft were corroded close to the point of unrestorability. In 1970 came the discovery of the US Navy fleet of aircraft at NAS China Lake – these aircraft being used/stored in the desert air were in much better shape. After a year of negotiation, the CAF was able to obtain their B-29 (Fifi). These same negotiations also allowed the Imperial War Museum to obtain an example as well (It's Hawg Wild). During the early 1970s, NASA (the redesignated NACA) sold their P2B-1S (Fertile Myrtle) and for numerous years this aircraft flew under civil registration until it was grounded by spar corrosion.

Since the early 1970s, numerous aircraft have been removed from Aberdeen Proving Grounds as well as NAWS China Lake for museum displays – the last B-29 removed from China Lake is currently being restored to flying condition (Doc). There are still two partial airframes and one wreck at the NAWS China Lake site. Several other aircraft were noted as late as 1980 but these aircraft have disappeared – four having been used in the Disney Picture Last Flight of Noah’s Ark, in which two of the airframes were destroyed during production. Additional aircraft have been discovered at both post-war crash sites and near World War II Pacific airfields. There is a search for the first B-29 to bomb Japan, Dauntless Dotty[2] which crashed into the Pacific Ocean on take-off during her return flight to the United States. If the airplane is found there are plans to recover and restore it for display. In 1995 an attempt to recover the Kee Bird, which had crashed in 1947 in northern Greenland, resulted in the almost complete destruction of the plane's fuselage by fire, allegedly started by a malfunctioning Auxiliary power unit in the tail.[3]

Flyable aircraft

FIFI
B-29 44-62070 FIFI of the Commemorative Air Force

FIFI, AAF Serial Number 44-62070, belongs to the Commemorative Air Force and is the only airworthy B-29 in the world at present. FIFI was grounded in 2006 because of problems with all four engines. In 2008, the Commemorative Air Force and the Cavanaugh Flight Museum announced that FIFI would be re-engined,[4] and returned to flight status. On 15 July 2010, talks with the FAA to sign FIFI's Airworthiness Certificate were completed. FIFI took flight in early August 2010 with its new engines (composed of parts from several variants of Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone to achieve better reliability than the wartime R-3350s), and was flown in the CAF AIRSHO air show in October, 2010. FIFI is currently available for rides at select airshows, and tours the country along with other CAF aircraft as part of the CAF Air Power History Tour.[5][6][7][8]

Being restored for flight

Doc

AF Serial Number 44-69972 served in the Korean War as a radar trainer. It was later sent to the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake for use as a ballistic missile target. The airframe was acquired by the United States Aviation Museum for restoration to flight status. After a great deal of work at the Boeing plant in Wichita, Kansas where it was originally built, the aircraft was moved in March 2007 to the Kansas Aviation Museum. In February 2013, the aircraft was acquired by the non-profit organization "Doc's Friends," and the restoration to flight status is still underway. As of June 2014, all four overhauled engines and propellers had been reinstalled and the spokesperson of the group said the aircraft would be airborne by the end of 2014. After delay, rollout occurred on March 23, 2015.[9] First post-restoration flight is anticipated in 2016.[10] At 8am on September 18, 2015, Doc successfully completed its first engine start & testing of all four engines in Wichita.[11]

Other notable aircraft

B-29 44-27297 Bockscar at the USAF Museum
Bockscar

Bockscar, AAF Serial Number 44-27297, was a "Silverplate" (atomic bomb carrier) conversion with the 393d Bomb Squadron, 509th Composite Group. On 9 August 1945, it dropped the "Fat Man" plutonium atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan. Bocks Car was stored for many years and then was finally flown on 26 September 1961 to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio. It is the featured exhibit upon entry into the Museum's Air Power gallery.[12]

Enola Gay
B-29 44-86292 Enola Gay at the NASM

Enola Gay, AAF Serial Number 44-86292, was another "Silverplate" conversion for the 393rd Bomb Squadron, 509th Composite Group. On 6 August 1945 it dropped the "Little Boy" uranium atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. For many years it was in storage at Paul Garber facility at National Air and Space Museum (NASM), Washington, D.C. It was recently re-assembled after a lengthy restoration and is currently displayed at the Smithsonian's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center at Dulles International Airport.

Fertile Myrtle
P2B-1S, Bureau Number 84029, Fertile Myrtle's forward fuselage now on display at Fantasy of Flight

Bureau Number 84029 (Navy P2B-1S), formerly a USAF B-29, AF Serial Number 45-21787, was later used to carry the US Navy's Douglas D-558-II Skyrocket research aircraft. It was donated to an aviation museum in Oakland, California in 1969, and then later sold to Kermit Weeks in 1984. It is on the US Civil register as N29KW. It was used in the flying sequences of the 1980 Walt Disney film The Last Flight of Noah's Ark. The forward fuselage has been restored and was on static display at Weeks' Fantasy of Flight in Polk City, Florida, along with the remainder of the unrestored fuselage, until the attraction closed to the general public on April 6, 2014. Fantasy of Flight remains operational as a venue for private events and as a classic aircraft restoration facility, with the restored and unrestored portions of Fertile Myrtle still on static display.[13]

Kee Bird

Kee Bird, AF Serial Number 45-21768 was assigned to the 46th Reconnaissance Squadron based out of Ladd Army Airfield in Fairbanks, Alaska as part of Project Nanook in early 1946. After crashing on a frozen lake in northwest Greenland in February 1947 during a secret mission, it was abandoned almost intact in the arctic. In 1994, retired Lockheed test pilot Darryl Greenamyer led an expedition to recover the aircraft via repairing it on site and flying it out. The project was abandoned however after the B-29 caught fire and was severely damaged just prior to takeoff. It is currently sitting on a frozen ice shelf in far northwest Greenland. The attempt to rescue Kee Bird was featured in a PBS Nova program with footage shown of the rehabilitation of the aircraft and subsequent fire that prevented its near takeoff.[14]

Miss Marilyn Gay

AAF Serial Number 44-70113 flew with the 883rd Bomb Squadron of the 500th Bomb Group in the 73rd Bomb Wing of the 20th Air Force, and flew 27 bombing missions before the end of World War II. This B-29 is credited with shooting down a confirmed 3 Japanese fighter planes, with 3 more probable fighter kills. After the end of the war, this B-29 was renamed Hoof Hearted, and served over in Great Britain before it was decommissioned in 1956 and sent to the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. In 1973, the B-29 was recovered by the now defunct Florence Air & Missile Museum in Florence, South Carolina for restoration. In 1994, the Marietta B-29 Association sponsored restoration and put it on display at Dobbins ARB, Georgia as Sweet Eloise.

Peachy
B-29A 44-62022 Peachy at the Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum

AAF Serial Number 44-62022 is currently on display inside the Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum and is named in honor of all the crews who fought in the Pacific Theater. A B-29 by that name was piloted by a native of Pueblo, Lt. Robert T. Haver, who gave it his pet name for a younger sister. The original Peachy flew 35 combat missions into enemy territory from Tinian Island in the Marianas islands chain in the central Pacific. This aircraft was donated to the museum in 1976 by the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, California and in 2005 it was moved indoors.

Sentimental Journey

AAF Serial Number 44-70016 originally flew with the 330th Bomb Group, 20th Air Force from Guam, now displayed inside Hangar 4 at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona. It featured in the 1982 William A. Graham TV movie Deadly Encounter, starring Larry Hagman.

T-Square-54

AF Serial Number 44-69729 (No. 54) was assigned to the 875th Bomb Squadron, 498th Bomb Group, 73d Bomb Wing and completed 37 bombing missions before it was converted to a KB-29 aerial refueling tanker in June 1949. In 1986 it was removed from the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, California and transported to the Lowry Heritage Museum at the then-Lowry Air Force Base, Colorado;[15] now the Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum. No. 54 went through its initial level of restoration in 1987 with museum volunteers and was readied for Lowry AFB's 50th anniversary and the 40th anniversary of the USAF on 2 October 1987. It was restored to its 1944 markings with the "T Square 54" on its vertical stabilizer. In 1995, the USAF Museum transferred T-Sq-54 to the Museum of Flight in Seattle, Washington. After another level of restoration and change in its markings, it was displayed again in 1996.

B-29A AAF Ser. No. 44-61671, a former "Super Dumbo", painted as The Great Artiste for static display at Whiteman Air Force Base

B-29 survivors

Greenland

Wrecks
B-29

Puerto Rico

Wrecks
B-29

South Korea

On display
B-29

United Kingdom

On display
B-29A

United States

Airworthy
B-29A
On display (complete airframes)
B-29
B-29A
B-29A 44-70064 Raz'n Hell at the Castle Air Museum, California
B-29B
On display (partial airframes)
B-29
B-29A
Under restoration or in storage (complete airframes)
B-29
Under restoration or in storage (partial airframes)
B-29
B-29A
Wrecks
B-29
WB-29A
Wikimedia Commons has media related to B-29 Superfortress.

References

Notes

  1. Willis, David. "Boeing B-29 and B-50 Superfortress". International Air Power Review, Volume 22, 2007, pp. 136–169.
  2. ,"B-29 'Dauntless Dottie' Story". memphis-belle.com. REtrieved: 13 July 2013.
  3. "Transcript: B-29 Frozen in Time." NOVA PBS Airdate: 29 July 1997. Retrieved: 28 July 2010.
  4. "B-29 Press Release." Cavanagh Flight Museum, 21 January 2008. Retrieved: 14 July 2013.
  5. "Fifi status." CAF Home Page. Retrieved: 14 July 2013.
  6. ""Fifi" to Fly Soon." Permian Basin 360. Retrieved: 13 July 2013.
  7. Sanders, Peter. "Owners of the Last B-29 Hope It Doesn't Bomb in Its New Mission." Wall Street Journal, 18 October 2010. Retrieved: 27 February 2012.
  8. Air Power History Tour Home Page. Retrieved: 8 December 2014.
  9. http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/B-29-Doc-Rolls-Out-In-Wichita-223734-1.html
  10. http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/B-29-Doc-Inches-Closer-To-Flight-224745-1.html
  11. http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/First-Engine-Start-Completed-For-B-29-Doc-224876-1.html
  12. United States Air Force Museum 1975, p. 47.
  13. http://www.orlandosentinel.com/travel/attractions/theme-park-rangers-blog/os-fantasy-of-flight-attraction-closing-20140304-post.html
  14. B-29 Frozen in Time, PBS Nova, WGBH Boston originally broadcast January 30, 1996 Retrieved May 14, 2015
  15. Mathewson, T. "Retrieved from China Lakes Naval Weapons Range." T-Square. Retrieved: 13 July 2013.
  16. Leeuw, Ruud. "Abandoned Plane Wrecks of the North". Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  17. "Current status of the "Kee Bird" B-29 Superfortress". Key Publishing, Ltd. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  18. "Recent Kee Bird Picture". Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  19. "An Old Bird on the Greenland Ice". Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  20. "Superfortress/42-65287." divebuddy.com Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  21. "Superfortress/45-21739." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  22. "Superfortress/44-61748." American Air Museum Duxford Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  23. "Superfortress/44-62070." CAF B-24 B-29 Squadron. Retrieved: 23 February 2014.
  24. "FAA Registry: N529B." FAA.gov Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  25. "Fifi." Commemorative Air Force. Retrieved: 13 July 2013.
  26. "Superfortress/42-65281." Jimmy Doolittle Air & Space Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  27. "Superfortress/44-27297." National Museum of the USAF. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  28. "Superfortress/44-27343." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  29. "Superfortress/44-70016." Pima Air & Space Museum Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  30. "Superfortress/44-70113." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  31. "Superfortress/44-84076." Strategic Air & Space Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  32. "Superfortress/44-86292." Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  33. "Superfortress/44-86408." Hill Aerospace Museum Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  34. "Superfortress/44-87627." Barksdale Global Power Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  35. "Superfortress/44-87779." South Dakota Air & Space Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  36. "Superfortress/45-21748." National Atomic Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  37. "Superfortress/42-93967." Georgia Veterans Memorial State Park. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  38. "Superfortress/44-70064." Castle Air Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  39. "Superfortress/44-61669." March Field Air Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  40. "Superfortress/44-61671." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  41. "Superfortress/44-61975." New England Air Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  42. "Superfortress/44-62022." Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  43. "Superfortress/44-62220." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 25 March 2015.
  44. "Superfortress/44-84053." Museum of Aviation. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  45. "Superfortress/42-65401." Stockton Field Aviation Museum Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  46. "Superfortress/44-61739." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  47. "Superfortress/44-87657." National Museum of the USAF. Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  48. "Superfortress/44-69729." Museum of Flight Retrieved: 7 April 2012.
  49. "Superfortress/44-69972." Doc's Friends Retrieved: 14 March 2013.
  50. "FAA Registry: N69972" FAA.gov Retrieved: 26 August 2014.
  51. "Superfortress/44-70049." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  52. "FAA Registry: N29KW" FAA.gov Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  53. "Superfortress/45-21787." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  54. "Superfortress/42-24791 A." Quest Masters Online Museum Collection. Retrieved: 29 May 2014.
  55. "Superfortress/44-69957." China Lake Alumni Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  56. "Superfortress/44-70102." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  57. "Superfortress/44-84084." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  58. "Superfortress/44-62134." China Lake Alumni Retrieved: 6 June 2012.
  59. "Superfortress/45-21847." aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.
  60. "Superfortress/44-62214" aerialvisuals.ca Retrieved: 24 March 2015.

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External links

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