Though it wasn't the bomber that actually ended the Second World War (that distinction and honor belongs to another Boeing product, the B-29 Superfortress), the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress was to ...
As detailed by the National World War II Museum, “The first B-17 raid in Europe took place on August 17, 1942, when 12 planes attacked the railroad marshaling yards in Rouen, France.
This image taken from video provided by National Transportation Safety Board shows damage from a World War II-era B-17 bomber plane that crashed Wednesday at Bradley International Airport ...
Painted to look like another B-17 of WWII (Nine-o-Nine, variant B-17G-30-BO), this late-model B-17G-85-DL aircraft wasn’t finished in time to join World War II, but instead spent its 74 years ...
Bomber Mountain in Wyoming’s Big Horn Mountains paid dearly to earn its name when a B-17 Flying Fortress crashed into it in ...
The Avro Lancaster was definitely the most famous British bomber of WWII, but was it the best? When one thinks of the Royal ...
An F-15C Eagle is sporting a badass World War II-era paint job in honor ... David Kingsley’s B-17 was about to crash. The aircraft had been riddled by enemy flak and incoming fire from fighters ...
B-17 Flying Fortress: The Bloody 100th tasks us with operating the titular bomber during World War II, taking out targets and treating injured crew members. B-17 Flying Fortress: The Bloody 100th is ...