Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Opened on 29 June 1942. Known as Blythe Field and Gary Field. Began training United States Army Air Corps flying cadets under contract to Morton Air Academy. Assigned to United States Army Air Forces West Coast Training Center (later Western Flying Training Command) as a primary (level 1) pilot training airfield.

  2. 21 de jul. de 2016 · We were looking for the Morton Air Academy, one of our checkpoints on the Rental Car Rally. We'd plugged all the addresses we could find into our GPS when we first departed LA close to midnight, but not everything was terribly accurate. Photo: Google Satellite View

  3. Morton Air Academy by Justin Ruhge The Morton Air Academy was one of many in California that trained men to fly on a Ryan or Stearman aircraft. Morton was located at Blythe Municipal Airport. In addition to the Academy, an Army Air Base was established at the Airfield.

  4. 2 de ago. de 2021 · Morton Air Academy; The Pilot Maker - YouTube. Mustang Adventure and Exploration. 29 subscribers. 6. 95 views 2 years ago. We travel to Blythe, CA to visit the long forgotten World War II era...

    • 40 min
    • 113
    • Mustang Adventure and Exploration
  5. 23 de ago. de 2023 · There was another airfield in Blythe, Gary Field, near the present-day golf course, which had a private pilot training school known as the Morton Air Academy. The school was contracted by the Army Air Corps early in the war to give primary training to Air Corps cadets.

  6. 5 de nov. de 2015 · Gary Field was the site of the Morton Air Academy, which provided contract primary flight training to the Army Air Corps during WW2. The date of construction of Gary Field is unknown. However, a 1944 class book from the Morton Air Academy (courtesy of Bob Alvis)

  7. 15 de dez. de 2018 · There was another airfield in Blythe, Gary Field, near the present-day golf course, which had a private pilot training school known as the Morton Air Academy. The school was contracted by the Army Air Corps early in the war to give primary training to Air Corps cadets. Gary Field had a total of three auxiliary airfields during World War II: