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Photo ID: 2257583
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Views: 2149
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N334AA (cn 45106/738) Flagship Vermont at National Air and Space Museum (National Mall) |
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Photo ID: 2045931
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Views: 14190
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Photo ID: 1788507
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Views: 9385
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Photo ID: 1502300
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Views: 15307
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N334AA (cn 22332/169) Departing 32R two months before this aircraft was destroyed at WTC on 9/11/2001. [Pentax K1000] |
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Photo ID: 1403455
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Views: 34064
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N334AA (cn 45106/738) Was good to spend a few hours in the National Air and Space museum on a hot and humid summerday. Must have been the busiest aviation musuem I have ever been to, all tourists seem to flock to the nationa's capital in summer and almost everyone stops in this free museum. This DC-7 cockpit was a nice birthday present. |
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Photo ID: 1313741
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Views: 16669
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Photo ID: 1284876
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Views: 13705
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Photo ID: 0950994
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Views: 20490
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N334AA (cn 22332/169) The first plane (flight AA11), which crashed into World Trade Center Tower 1 in NYC, 8:45 local time, on Sept. 11, 2001, after being hijacked from Boston. |
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Photo ID: 0844868
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Views: 17994
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N334AA (cn 22332/169) The first plane (flight AA11), which crashed into World Trade Center Tower 1 in NYC, 8:45 local time, on Sept. 11, 2001, after being hijacked from Boston. |
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Photo ID: 0810436
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Views: 6532
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N334AA (cn 45106/738) The nose section of the old DC-7 preserved in National Air and Space Museum. The aircraft went in service in 1957 and retired six year later. Now, you can board the old aircraft and take a look at the cockpit and cabin configuration. |
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Photo ID: 0713371
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Views: 4637
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N334AA (cn 45106/738) The nose of "Flagship Vermont" survives in the NASM. This DC-7 was broken up in 1965 when it was only nine years old. It had only been in service for six years, from 1956 until 1962. |
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Photo ID: 0711176
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Views: 10849
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Photo ID: 0500236
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Views: 10098
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Photo ID: 0235496
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Views: 8586
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N334AA (cn 45106/738) In the National Air and Space Museum. Cockpit and nose section on display at the time |
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Photo ID: 0196148
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Views: 16844
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N334AA (cn 22332/169) The 1st plane to be hijacked and crashed on September 11, 2001 (an American 767-200) sits at Terminal B in Boston as a United 767 sits at Terminal C. |
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