The airplane's forward and aft fuselage sections, wings, landing gear, engines, propellers and vertical stabilizer were brought together for the first time since 1960 in an arduous operation this spring and summer in the Udvar-Hazy (pronounced OOD-var HAH-zee) Center's aviation hangar. Restoration work on the Enola Gay began in 1984 and involved a total of some 300,000 staff hours. Udvar-Hazy Center, the museum's new companion facility in Northern Virginia, which opens to the public Dec. The airplane, which received the most extensive restoration in the museum's history, will be on display at the Steven F.
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18) unveiled the newly reassembled Enola Gay, the Boeing B-29 Superfortress used to drop the first atomic bomb in combat. Visitors will see the restored B-29 maintenance hangar that housed the aircraft, along with other restored buildings and other training equipment displays.Monday, Aug| 12:00am Media Inquiries Claire Brown 20 Public InquiriesĢ0 More information The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum today (Aug. Situated less than a mile from Wendover, Utah along the Nevada border, the original Wendover Air Force Base was where the Enola Gay crew trained for their mission to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki to end the second World War. See the B-29 Enola Gay Aircraft Hangar on a Wendover Airfield Tour Soon, some of the most qualified airmen came to Wendover to begin training for combat missions during World War II, working with prototype bombs called Little Boy and Fat Man bombs-code names for nuclear bombs that would later detonate over Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August of 1945. During that same year, the Wendover Airfield began studying and operating atomic bombs-the B-29 aircraft was selected to deliver the weapon. By 1942, the Wendover Army Airfield became the Air Force’s largest bombing and gunnery range, and became an important location for the research and development of guided missiles, pilotless aircraft, and remotely controlled bombs.īy 1943, the tiny community of West Wendover that had mostly been employed by the railroad, but swelled to nearly 20,000 military personnel and their families. The tiny, extremely remote town of Wendover fit all the criteria the United States military was after: low population, uninhabited surrounding landscapes, excellent year-round flying weather and close proximity to the larger metro area of Salt Lake City. The Wendover Airfield and training site you can visit and tour today first operated from 1940 to 1969. See some of the most remarkable military history in Nevada at the Historic Wendover Air Field museum, where you can tour masterfully restored World War II-era buildings like the Enola Gay B-29 hangar, atomic bomb loading pits, and see uniforms, medals, propellers and more. Today, military history lovers will discover a nearly complete historic Wendover Air Force Base-turned-Historic Wendover Airfield Museum, detailing the active base training site that operated here from 1940 to 1969, including the fully restored B-29 maintenance hangar that housed this historic aircraft.
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This remote desert landscape was a specialized training base for B-17 and B-24 bomber crews, including the 509th Composite Group and B-29 Enola Gay unit who carried the atomic bombs dropped over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The desert oasis of West Wendover may be best known today for land speed records attempted on the nearby Bonneville Salt Flats, but this state straddling community first used this world-renowned, otherworldly landscape as a top secret military training site during World War II.