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World War Two Gliders-America's First Stealthy Aircraft 

Marking History Channel
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It was America’s first stealthy aircraft. Its nickname was “Silent Wings.”
The aviators who flew them during World War II had no weapons, no parachutes, and no second chances. They were called the flying coffins of World War Two.
The most widely used American military glider during World War Two was the Waco CG-4A. It was huge. It could carry 13 fully equipped soldiers -- or a jeep with a 4-man crew and equipment -- or a 75mm howitzer plus supplies and ammunition. These gliders were towed into the air primarily by Douglas C-47s. They were connected by a towrope that also carried basic communications between the glider and aircraft.
So why were military gliders used during WW2? Well, landing by parachute caused the troops to be spread over a large drop-zone and separated from other air-dropped equipment, such as vehicles and anti-tank guns. Gliders, on the other hand, could land troops and their support equipment in greater concentrations precisely at the target landing area.
Furthermore, the glider, once released at some distance from the actual target, was effectively silent and difficult for the enemy to identify.
Because the Waco CG-4A could carry heavy equipment like anti-tank guns, anti-aircraft guns, or small vehicles such as jeeps and light tanks, our lightly armed paratroopers became a much more capable and lethal force.
By the way, these gliders did not soar! Think of the glider like a brick with wings! If things were working well, the gliders would cut loose from their tow planes at about 500 feet over their land area. After the towline was disconnected, the pilots had about 20 seconds to decide where to land! It was basically a planned accident! Guess that’s why these gliders acquired the nickname, the Flying Coffins! In addition to crash landings, many glider casualties occurred from enemy anti-aircraft and machine gun fire.
During the war, 6,000 men volunteered and trained as glider pilots. The possibility of officer's pay and the chance to fly attracted a particular breed of risk-tolerant trainees, and the glider pilots' maverick reputation quickly spread.
Every landing was a genuine do-or-die situation for the glider pilots. It was their awesome responsibility to repeatedly risk their lives by landing heavily laden engineless aircraft containing combat soldiers and equipment
There were only a few instruments on these gliders.
All of these instruments had originally been manufactured for use in powered airplanes where engine vibrations would keep the indicator needles from sticking. The glider pilots, flying their vibrationless aircraft, frequently tapped all their indicators to be sure they were given correct readings. No wonder they didn’t trust their instruments!
One of the more interesting concepts taught at the base was the "snatch pick-up" which was used to retrieve undamaged gliders on the ground by C-47s flying over them. This technique was used to bring back wounded soldiers from an open field where a runway did not exist. The glider would be "snatched" and pulled into the air by the tow plane.
Military gliders were used in several important operations during World War Two. The most famous was Operation Overload, the invasion of Normandy.
Germany was well prepared for a glider invasion of Normandy. Beach-heads were guarded by anti-aircraft guns. And potential American landing zones were saturated with “Rommel’s asparagus” - a glider-smashing network of 10-foot poles wired together with explosives. Nasty stuff!
During the Normandy invasion it was incredibly important for radio silence. So to decrease the likelihood of friendly fire it was decided to apply a special marking to each glider and transport plane.
On June 6, 1944, 867 gliders crossed the English Channel and delivered almost 4,000 airborne troops and their equipment. Because the gliders were forced to land in small fields, sometimes less than 400 feet in length, many of them crashed on landing, but few of the occupants were injured and only a minimal amount of the cargo was damaged.
Overall, the Normandy glider missions were a complete success. Glider pilots who participated in the Normandy landings were awarded the Air Medal for their role. Theirs were special, with a capital "G" stamped in the center. Technically it stood for "glider," but they were quick to tell anyone who asked that it really stood for "Guts."
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#worldwar2gliders #SilentWings #DDayGliders

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23 апр 2020

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Комментарии : 65   
@dethray1000
@dethray1000 Месяц назад
my dad was a ww2 glider pilot who got the air medal for d-day when he landed between the rows of a apple orchard ,he,his crew all walked away and he went on to germany across franche--his friend who i am named after died on d-day
@philipgrice1026
@philipgrice1026 Год назад
My British father was a glider pilot in WWII. He flew his squad into Sicily from North Africa successfully and then fought as an infantryman all the way to Naples before being shipped back to Britain for his next mission, D-day into Normandy. Following that he was shipped to India where he trained US glider pilots in readiness for a planned mission by Glider into China to attack the Japanese rear. They were based in the Himalayan foothills at very high elevation as the training involved preparing to fly over the Himalayas to get to China. Fortunately the War ended before that attack proved necessary. I notice that in the video all commentary is about the US WACO CG4A glider, called the Hadrian by the British, but a lot of the footage shows British Horsa and Hamilcar gliders. The Hamilcars are the ones that carried the tanks and the Horsas are what are shown in the video en mass with their stripes ready for take off on D-Day. The Horsa was a lot bigger than the WACO CG4A as it carried 20 - 25 armed infantrymen. My father said that in action the Horsa always flew well overloaded as the infantrymen always loaded up with extra ammunition and weapons so were all overweight. 25 guys could haul as much weight as a bare Jeep in their backpacks and pockets! Oh, and the Hamilcar carried 60 infantrymen, or 20lb field guns with ammunition trailers, the British MK IV light tank and later the US M22 light tank though I don't think the M22 Locust saw action. The Horsa was technically stealthier than the WACO gliders. They were made from steel tube covered with doped canvas. The Horsa was made from laminated wood veneers sandwiching end grain balsa wood. It's radar reflection would have been smaller but I doubt the German radar would pick up either given the absence of a big metal engine.This was much stronger than the steel and canvas air-frames. Explosive bolts were used after landing to remove the tail section for unloading the bigger equipment that it could carry. The training in India was done using WACO gliders that were used again and again, some surviving over a hundred landings. More aircraft were damaged by pilots showing off that by pilot error or aircraft failure. My father was one of several pilots reputed to have looped their gliders over the airfield. Realize, these guys were training at altitude. The base was near 8000' where the air is a lot thinner than down at sea level such as for invading Sicily and Normandy. I have a photograph taken by my father from one of two CG4s being towed behind a Dakota (C47) tug, He was in the left most aircraft and photographed the other one through the cockpit right side window. You can clearly see Mount Everest behind the other glider. It appears they were at or very close to the height of the peak of the mountain! I am in awe that the C47 could fly that high, let alone towing two gliders loaded with ballast to simulate a full passenger load. WWII glider pilots had a 25% survival rate. One of the lowest of any class of combatant in WWII. I'm glad my Dad was one of the few that survived or I wouldn't have been born in '46 to remember him.
@eddyweber3264
@eddyweber3264 Год назад
Wow, if this is true story I hope that one day you can find a time to write a blog with all the pictures. I wld love to see that because this is such a rare piece of history to hear. Thank you for your time to write this ❤️
@sh6683
@sh6683 8 месяцев назад
For D day if you know any more info, it’s probably possible to track down exactly which glider. Was he out of Harwell heading to DZ V by any chance? Or ever mention anything specific or unusual about the landing.
@Oligodendrocyte139
@Oligodendrocyte139 Месяц назад
Interesting. My father was in India with an RAF glider tug squadron. I have read a few ideas regarding what their role might have been but an Himalayas route is a new one on me 😊. The Locust tank was used in the Rhine crossing BTW.
@pamelamoore6239
@pamelamoore6239 Месяц назад
My dad was a glider pilot during WWII. He talked about flying troops at night and how a friend of his, also a pilot, was killed one night...something to do with the tow line.
@ralphgreenjr.2466
@ralphgreenjr.2466 20 дней назад
I have parachute jumps with the 82d, 101st, SF, Germans, and Brits, but the men who rode gliders down had "STONES!" At the 82 Airborne museum (1972) there was a Waco glider on display. I was amazed that anyone would willingly do that, and anyone survived that, and they initially did not want to pay them jump pay! Now those men were pure savages, AIRBORNE!
@nanabutner
@nanabutner Год назад
My Dad was a WWII GLIDER PILOT in Europe. He received the DISTINGUISH FLYING CROSS. He flew into Normandy on D-DAY and was 1 of 5 members of his squadron that survived.
@negofol5278
@negofol5278 18 дней назад
The needles sticking problem also existed on early jets, due to the lack of vibrations. The solution was adding a small electric motor with an unbalanced mass on the dashboard.
@eddiejones.redvees
@eddiejones.redvees 3 года назад
My farther was transported in to Burma in a glider to fight the Japanese he’s pilot was Jackie Coogan the actor he was in the Chindits The commander was general Wingate my dad passed away in 2006 aged 93
@michaeljoesmith3977
@michaeljoesmith3977 3 года назад
Jackie Coogan..aka Uncle Fester on old Adam's Family show. Was married to Betty Grable for awhile too.
@MyMy-zi7yv
@MyMy-zi7yv Год назад
God Bless Him!!
@casteel765
@casteel765 5 месяцев назад
He more likely served with my great great uncle jewel eaglebarger. He was all over the pacific and did a few glider missions as well.
@dfirth224
@dfirth224 8 дней назад
@@michaeljoesmith3977 He was also a child actor with Charlie Chaplin in silent movies.
@KeithHays-ek4vr
@KeithHays-ek4vr 5 месяцев назад
I'm a modern glider pilot. - This is a very good account of wartime glider ops. I'm not any kind of expert on the use of gliders during WW2, however there is one inconsistency stated during the video. The narrator states: 'The gliders were released at 500 feet, giving the pilots 20 seconds to decide where to land.' This type of glider - with all it's weight - and poor glide ratio - would be on the ground in twenty seconds. - They could only land safely if they had already chosen a safe paddock BEFORE releasing from the tow plane. - I suspect that they actually released from a greater height - possibly a much greater height. These men were incredibly brave, and one of the ways I try to honour them is to learn about what they went through. - I toured the Normandy beaches last year, and walked the paddock at Pegasus Bridge, where the British Commandos landed, and immediately took the bridge from the Germans emplaced there. The general public knows little about gliders, and I'd like them to understand more about the courage and sheer audacity of the men who flew in these machines.
@MarkingHistoryChannel
@MarkingHistoryChannel 4 месяца назад
Thanks for watching our channel.
@MyMy-zi7yv
@MyMy-zi7yv 3 года назад
I'm absolutely surprised these pilots are not more well known for their absolute fearless contribution to the war. I'm blown away by these courageous men, thank you all for your extraordinary bravery!!!!! You're unbelievable ... and let's not forget the incredibly brave souls who were being carried, damn. I'm still surprised why there is no talk about these individuals, talk about bravery!!!!
@nickplumridge9365
@nickplumridge9365 Год назад
I learnt today, the pilots of the gliders were also army…. Not RAF.
@MyMy-zi7yv
@MyMy-zi7yv Год назад
@@nickplumridge9365 You mean like, British Army?
@danielsee1
@danielsee1 9 месяцев назад
No. U.S. Army Air corp.@@MyMy-zi7yv
@Universal_exports87
@Universal_exports87 5 месяцев назад
I saw one of these in St. Mere Eglise! The engineering on these are something else, you could fit a Jeep into one.
@MarkingHistoryChannel
@MarkingHistoryChannel 4 месяца назад
Thanks for watching our channel.
@kensummers7757
@kensummers7757 Год назад
1:49 British Hamilcar (tank carrying glider) and Handley Page Halifax tow aeroplane.1:53 British Short Stirling Bomber/glider tug. 2:11 British Horsa Gliders 2:33 British Bren Gun Carrier existing Hamilcar glider. 5:19 British Horsa gliders 5:52 Hamilcar again with Bren gun carrier again....
@Patrick-rc2df
@Patrick-rc2df 4 года назад
I've just found your channel and I was amazed
@eddyweber3264
@eddyweber3264 Год назад
Great video. First time I ve seen gliders in the movie and I thought that was a joke. Those pilots really had balls of titanium
@dfirth224
@dfirth224 8 дней назад
But notice that they were never used after WWII. 25% survival rate for pilots is not good. They were replaced by helicopters.
@michaeljoesmith3977
@michaeljoesmith3977 3 года назад
The D Day "special markings " the gliders and all allied aircraft used on D Day were called "invasion stripes".
@dfirth224
@dfirth224 8 дней назад
During invasion of Sicily many allied planes were shot down by friendly fire, they were mistaken for German.
@dcheetham8603
@dcheetham8603 2 года назад
This was amazing! Badasss
@jacklow8590
@jacklow8590 4 года назад
My grandfather glider pilot warren G Hill flight officer 316th troop carrier group.
@Dansk55
@Dansk55 2 года назад
Watching The Forgotten Battle on Netflix and had no idea such aircraft existed. Very interesting stuff
@cameronclasper3824
@cameronclasper3824 2 года назад
Exactly how I ended up coming across this video! Wanting to learn more after watching the great film.
@RustyShavlefordlll
@RustyShavlefordlll 4 дня назад
These things are crazy.
@tomarmstrong1281
@tomarmstrong1281 5 месяцев назад
As a lifetime pilot I cannot imagine what it must have been like flying over territory where everyone on the ground was trying to kill you.
@billspeer1213
@billspeer1213 4 года назад
Amother great story!
@MichaelDCarlton
@MichaelDCarlton 2 года назад
Great video, thanks. I was looking for more info on gliders in WWII. G for Guts is right!
@Tcrim354
@Tcrim354 2 года назад
Senator J. Strom Thurmond landed in a glider on D-Day. He volunteered at the age of 40 to serve.
@nadiklopez1768
@nadiklopez1768 3 года назад
Buena información no sabía de esos aviones y su usos
@hamlishmantonio2685
@hamlishmantonio2685 5 месяцев назад
Absolute insanity. Thankyou to those brave warriors.
@MarkingHistoryChannel
@MarkingHistoryChannel 4 месяца назад
Thanks for watching our channel.
@juliobernimezacorado1223
@juliobernimezacorado1223 10 месяцев назад
Wow..
@comicmania2008
@comicmania2008 3 года назад
What a great informative video, I always wondered about these gliders. I'm a Brit, and I understand a lot of US guys took off from my county of Lincolnshire for various raids, including Market Garden and D-Day. The British had the Horsa glider, which I believe was used to take troops to Pegasus Bridge, not sure if that glider was better or worse, but it looked very different to the Waco!
@thomashenshallhydraxis
@thomashenshallhydraxis Год назад
Interesting
@mochabear88
@mochabear88 2 месяца назад
wild
@grolfe3210
@grolfe3210 Год назад
Very good and lots of things I did not know. Slightly spoilt by using the term "American" instead of the correct term "Allied". The Waco was one of the smaller gliders used in WW2 so odd to describe it huge. First use of gliders was by Germany against Belgium in 1940. Britain developed their own fleet of gliders immediately and so the US development of the Waco in 1942 was rather second generation. Britain was using all its factory capacity (which was also being bombed) for fighter planes and other war use and so the British gliders were mostly made at furniture and piano factories and then assembled at the nearest airbase.
@timtyler5883
@timtyler5883 Год назад
my uncle was a glider pilot wwii
@deltasierra4206
@deltasierra4206 3 года назад
Nice video. However.. The air medal is not the Same as the glider pilot wings as shown at the end. Look it up😅
@MarkingHistoryChannel
@MarkingHistoryChannel 3 года назад
Thanks for the correction. I try to be as accurate as possible but I don’t always succeed.
@JamesCrouchX
@JamesCrouchX 17 дней назад
Hello, my GGrandfater V.V.Crouch was in Verdun in WWII part of a Railroad Battalion. There was an incident where 60 glider pilots showed up and needed to get back to get more gliders. This was problematic due to sabotage of tracks, equipment and communication. Supply drops not getting through until a night glider mission was put together. Parts flow in. Train assembled, track cleared. Locomotive was fired and dawn and they got through without any authorization from HQ. Has anyone heard this? Can anyone add to this? I do have some documents, photos that confirm some of this.
@Jimserac
@Jimserac 3 года назад
What did the glider pilots do after landing in the drop zone ? Put on combat gear and join the troops ?
@nahmastay3300
@nahmastay3300 3 года назад
Yup. They were the only pilots to become ground infantry as soon as they landed from what I've heard in documentaries. My great grandpa was a glider pilot. In Holland, he safely landed the aircraft, met up with the guys from another glider to attach their trailer of supplies to the jeep brought by the other carrier. From there, they would've moved to transport and fight.
@Jimserac
@Jimserac 3 года назад
@@nahmastay3300 Wow !! Multi-talented and multi-courageoius !! Thanks !
@donlove3741
@donlove3741 2 года назад
Well Silent wings or flying coffins ?
@richardclarke3924
@richardclarke3924 3 года назад
Sorry but some massive holes in your film, most of the images shown in the first 2 mins were the British horsa gliders and operation market garden. The final bit about the tank?? That was a Hamilcar glider, also British.
@teabagmcpick889
@teabagmcpick889 3 года назад
Well said, Sir.
@robbykeene5068
@robbykeene5068 2 года назад
This is what my great grandpa did in normandy and bastogne i believe
@robbykeene5068
@robbykeene5068 2 года назад
1st battalion, HQ company, of the 325th glider infantry regiment assigned to the 82nd airborne.
@justinmazzoni1794
@justinmazzoni1794 2 года назад
What’s franks opinion on this
@justinmazzoni1794
@justinmazzoni1794 2 года назад
This is obviously a Russian bot account
@MarkingHistoryChannel
@MarkingHistoryChannel 2 года назад
Nope. This is a real history channel.
@bigbang7897
@bigbang7897 26 дней назад
The Horsa glider is a British design not American .
@MarkingHistoryChannel
@MarkingHistoryChannel 4 года назад
This version has one spelling error, which I corrected on the updated version. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-d20qtq8IPkw.html
@StarlightEater
@StarlightEater 2 года назад
Gay intro too long otherwise great vid bud keep er up
@robertemery5267
@robertemery5267 16 дней назад
UNSUNG HEROES THOSE PILOTS!!! CRASH LANDING WITH AN ARMY TANK IN BACK OF YOUR SEAT (NOT FUN)!!!!!!
@JM-dy4ty
@JM-dy4ty Год назад
Every landing is a crash landing
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