Douglas DC-3

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The Douglas DC-3, designed in the mid-1930s, initially served as a highly successful domestic airliner, immediately gaining popularity.
  • It was mass-produced for World War II, with Douglas creating over 16,000 aircraft (known as the C-47, Gooney Bird, or Dakota), and thousands more built under license or cloned by other nations.
  • Renowned for its versatility, the DC-3 has been used as a passenger plane, freighter, agricultural sprayer, and military transport, with nearly 500 still in commercial use at the turn of the century.
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Photo by Acroterion, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

What in the world is this plane doing on this list? The DC-3, a radial-engine-toting, taildragging, mud-bellied, heavy-hauling twin designed in the mid-1930s surely doesn’t belong on a list alongside supersonics and space planes, does it? It does. Launched as a domestic airliner in the days when piston engines were a clearer choice than turboprops for the important reason that turboprops didn’t yet exist, the Douglas DC-3, with its seating for up to 32 passengers, immediately earned a lot of business from the fledgling U.S. airline industry. And when World War II started heating up, Douglas went into overdrive, producing around 10,000 DC-3s for the war effort—in all, the company cranked out more than 16,000 of the aircraft, which were known as the Gooney Bird, Dakota and C-47 (the latter among numerous other military designations). The Soviet Union built almost 5,000 of them under license, and even Imperial Japan cranked out nearly 500 DC-3 clones. In addition to its passenger-carrying pedigree, the DC-3 has been a parachute jump plane, an agricultural sprayer, a freighter and an executive transport. As of the turn of the century, there were nearly 500 DC-3s still in commercial use in dozens of countries around the world.

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