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1947 in aviation

This is a list of aviation-related events from 1947:

Events

  • The United States inventory of atomic bombs reaches a total of 13 weapons during the year.

January

February

  • February 25 – The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff recommend that the United States use atomic bombs early in any war with the Soviet Union and call for an increase in the American inventory of atomic weapons.
  • February 28 – In a single flight, U.S. Army Air Forces Captain Robert E. Thacker (pilot) and Lieutenant John M. Ard (co-pilot) in the North American P-82B Twin Mustang fighter Betty Jo make both the longest nonstop flight without aerial refueling by a fighter aircraft, about 4,968 statute miles (7,994 km) from Hickam Field in the Territory of Hawaii to La Guardia Field in New York City, and the fastest flight between Hawaii and New York City up to that time, 14 hours 31 minutes 50 seconds at an average speed of . It remains both the longest non-stop flight by a piston-engined fighter and the fastest Hawaii-to-New York City flight by a piston-engined aircraft in history.

March

April

May

June

  • June 4 – Orient Airways, the first and only Muslim-owned airline in the British Raj, begins flight operations.
  • June 17 – Pan American World Airways inaugurates what are considered the world's first scheduled commercial round-the-world flights, although the service actually operates between New York City and San Francisco without crossing the continental United States. Flight One, operated by a Douglas DC-4, departs San Francisco and stops at Honolulu, Hawaii; Midway Atoll; Wake Island; Guam; Manila, the Philippines; Bangkok; and Calcutta, where it meets Flight Two, a Lockheed Constellation that had flown from LaGuardia Airport in New York City. In Calcutta, the two aircraft swap flight designations; the DC-4 then turns back and continues as Flight Two to San Francisco, while the Constellation turns back and continues as Flight One, stopping at Karachi; Istanbul; London; Shannon, Ireland; and Gander, Newfoundland before arriving at LaGuardia Airport.
  • June 19
  • Pan American Airways Flight 121, the Lockheed L-049 Constellation Clipper Eclipse (registration NC88845) carrying 36 people on a flight from Karachi Airport in Karachi, British India, to Istanbul-Yesilköy Airport in Istanbul, Turkey, feathers its number one propeller due to engine problems, then suffers overheating in its other three engines. As it descends, the number two engine nacelle catches fire and the engine detaches from the airliner, which makes a belly landing near Mayadin, Syria. Fourteen of the people on board die; it is the worst aviation accident in Syrian history at the time. Future ' creator Gene Roddenberry is among the survivors.
  • United States Army Air Forces Colonel Albert Boyd sets a new official world airspeed record of in a Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star. (This is still marginally slower than unofficial German speed records in rocket-powered aircraft during World War II).
  • June 22 – At the Wilson-King Sky Show in St. George, Utah, a light plane involved in the air show experiences brake failure on landing and crashes into cars parked at the edge of the airfield, killing a teenaged girl. The pilot and the dead girls mother and infant sister are injured.
  • June 24 – Kenneth Arnold UFO sighting: American businessman and aviator Kenneth Arnold is piloting a CallAir A-2 at about near Mineral, Washington (near Mount Rainier) when he sights what he reports to be a group of disc-like unidentified flying objects flying in a chain which he clocks at a minimum of . He refers to them as looking like saucers, leading the press to coin the term "flying saucer", which soon enters everyday speech.
  • June 30 – The Evaluation Board for Operation Crossroads submits its final report on the July 1946 atomic bomb tests at Bikini Atoll. It finds that an atomic attack could go beyond stopping a countrys military effort and in addition wreck its economic and social structure for lengthy periods, and could even depopulate large portions of the earths surface, threaten the existence of civilization, and cause the extinction of mankind. It recommends that the United States develop a large inventory of atomic weapons and the means to deliver them promptly and be prepared to strike first, with legal authority to launch a massive atomic strike to preempt a foreign strike if there are indications that an adversary is preparing one.

July

August

September

October

November

December

First flights

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

  • October 1
: North American XP-86, prototype of the F-86 Sabre, by George Welch
: Beechcraft Model 34 Twin-Quad

November

December

Entered service

March

April

July

August

October

November

Retired

March

See also

References

  • Bridgman, Leonard. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1948. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Ltd, 1948.
  • Bridgman, Leonard. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1951–52. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Ltd, 1951.