#its bolo propaganda!
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beetle3000-1 · 10 months ago
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I made an addition to a post that I guess didn't pick up at all, but I wrote a lot so I feel compelled to make this its own Bolo propaganda post:
if you're looking for a good sci-fi series where the men and women are all treated equally (in the vein of the og post), then I'm gonna be extremely cliche and recommend
THE BOLO SERIES THATS RIGHT, GIANT SENTIENT SPACE TANKS
Oh and I guess there's human characters too - for the age of the series at times, the female characters are often treated well and are seen as equals to the men. Except for whatever goes on with the Mark III bolos sometimes but they hardly ever show up in stories. ...Weird shit. ANYWAYS if you like the idea of GIANT SENTIENT SPACE TANKS that have more chivalry and loyalty than their own human creators, and you also like a narrative that will:
• Make you violently patriotic for places and people that don't exist
• Make you cry over either some of the most gutwrenching shit ever, or the most uplifting shit ever
• Make you slam your fists on the table like an enraged chimp
then this is a very very good series to pick up ok.
ALSO THE COMBAT DESCRIPTIONS ARE TOP NOTCH IF YOU LIKE WAR STORIES
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do you see that magnificent bastard up there. he has a bigger heart and sense of righteousness than like 90% of the human race and I am NOT kidding. if you read this series you WILL fall in love with giant sentient space tanks.
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usafphantom2 · 3 years ago
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Martin B-10 during exercises over Oahu, Hawaii.
flickr
Ronnie Bell Following
Martin B-10 during exercises over Oahu, Hawaii.
The Martin B-10 was the first all-metal monoplane bomber to go into regular use by the United States Army Air Corps, entering service in June 1934. It was also the first mass-produced bomber whose performance was superior to that of the Army's pursuit aircraft of the time.
The B-10 served as the airframe for the B-12, B-13, B-14, A-15 and O-45 designations using Pratt & Whitney engines instead of Wright Cyclones.
In 1935, the Army ordered an additional 103 aircraft designated B-10B. These had only minor changes from the YB-10. Shipments began in 1935 July. B-10Bs served with the 2d Bomb Group at Langley Field, the 9th Bomb Group at Mitchel Field, the 19th Bomb Group at March Field, the 6th Composite Group in the Panama Canal Zone, and the 4th Composite Group in the Philippines. In addition to conventional duties in the bomber role, some modified YB-10s and B-12As were operated for a time on large twin floats for coastal patrol.
The Martin Model 139 was the export version of the Martin B-10. With an advanced performance, the Martin company fully expected that export orders for the B-10 would come flooding in.
The Army owned the rights to the Model 139 design. Once the Army's orders had been filled in 1936, Martin received permission to export Model 139s, and delivered versions to several air forces. For example, six Model 139Ws were sold to Siam in April 1937, powered by Wright R-1820-G3 Cyclone engines; 20 Model 139Ws were sold to Turkey in September 1937, powered by R-1820-G2 engines.
On 19 May 1938, during the Sino-Japanese War, two Chinese Nationalist Air Force B-10s successfully flew to Japan. However, rather than dropping bombs, the aircraft dropped propaganda leaflets.
At the time of its creation, the B-10B was so advanced that General Henry H. Arnold described it as the air power wonder of its day. It was half again as fast as any biplane bomber, and faster than any contemporary fighter. The B-10 began a revolution in bomber design; it made all existing bombers completely obsolete.
However, the rapid advances in bomber design in the 1930s meant that the B-10 was eclipsed by the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and Douglas B-18 Bolo before the United States entered World War II. The B-10's obsolescence was proved by the quick defeat of B-10B squadrons by Japanese Zeros during the invasions of the Dutch East Indies and China.
An abortive effort to modernize the design, the Martin Model 146, was entered into a USAAC long-distance bomber design competition 1934–1935, but lost out to the Douglas B-18 and revolutionary Boeing B-17. The sole prototype was so similar in profile and performance to the Martin B-10 series that the other more modern designs easily "ran away" with the competition.
The B-10 began a revolution in bomber design. Its all-metal monoplane build, along with its features of closed cockpits, rotating gun turrets, retractable landing gear, internal bomb bay, and full engine cowlings, would become the standard for bomber designs worldwide for decades. It made all existing bombers completely obsolete. In 1932, Martin received the Collier Trophy for designing the XB-10.
The B-10 began as the Martin Model 123, a private venture by the Glenn L. Martin Company of Baltimore, Maryland. It had a crew of four: pilot, copilot, nose gunner and fuselage gunner. As in previous bombers, the four crew compartments were open, but it had a number of design innovations as well.
These innovations included a deep belly for an internal bomb bay and retractable main landing gear. Its 600 hp (447 kW) Wright SR-1820-E Cyclone engines provided sufficient power. The Model 123 first flew on 16 February 1932 and was delivered for testing to the U.S. Army on 20 March as the XB-907. After testing it was sent back to Martin for redesigning and was rebuilt as the XB-10.
The XB-10 delivered to the Army had major differences from the original aircraft. Where the Model 123 had NACA cowling rings, the XB-10 had full engine cowlings to decrease drag.[2] It also sported a pair of 675 hp (503 kW) Wright R-1820-19 engines, and an 8 feet (2.4 m) increase in the wingspan, along with an enclosed nose turret. When the XB-10 flew during trials in June, it recorded a speed of 197 mph (317 km/h) at 6,000 ft (1,830 m). This was an impressive performance for 1932.
Following the success of the XB-10, a number of changes were made, including reduction to a three-man crew, addition of canopies for all crew positions, and an upgrade to 675 hp (503 kW) engines. The Army ordered 48 of these on 17 January 1933. The first 14 aircraft were designated YB-10 and delivered to Wright Field, starting in November 1933. The production model of the XB-10, the YB-10 was very similar to its prototype.
Via Flickr
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1baddmouthcrown · 6 years ago
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1918 August 17 Garvey on his birthday founds the Negro World weekly newspaper and begins holding UNIA meetings at Palace Casino Theater 135th Street Madison Avenue.
August 4 Randolph and Owen attend Social Party leader Walter Bronstrup's meeting in Cleveland. whilst copies of issue sold Randolph and Owen are apprehended and arrested by Bereau of investigation (present day Federal Bereau of Investigation), Department of Justice official to be trailed on the charge of violating the 1917 Espionage Act. “unlawfully, knowingly and feloniously, the United States being then and there at war with the Imperial German Government, willfully print and cause to be printed, publish and cause to be published, circulated, in a certain language intended to incite, provoke and incur resistance to the United States and to promote the cause of its enemies in a certain publication known as the Messenger.” Randolph and Owens authorship is disputed by the judge on account of their color and age who just simply refuses to accept or credit them with have written the material theirselves, but suggests that white socialists similarly in the cases of teenage poet Phyllis Wheatly's poems in 18th century and with Frederick Douglass's autobiography in the 19th century. Harrison and American Federation of Labor submit petition to the U. S. Congress for federal anti-lynching legislation, Harrison also serves as chairman for the Negro American Liberty Congress co-headed by Monroe Trotter.  June Du Bois publishes his “Close Ranks” pro war essay. Howell becomes cook on U.S. Marine transport. October 6 Ashwood travels from Panama to the U.S. October 28 Howell travels to New York aboard the S. S. Metapan. December The 20 year old Haitian Elizier Cadet at UNIA meeting is elected interpreter and main negotiator, ‘high commissioner’ to the Versailles Peace Conference to present the UNIA’s resolutions that Germanys confiscated African colonies to be governed by Negroes educated in America and Europe, directly to Clemenceau himself. Cadet had previously written in response to the article in the Negro World America Haiti.  Randolph and Wells are also elected as delegates to the conference but refused passports and visas. 1919 January 18 the Versailles Peace Conference is held in Paris, France on the anniversary of the proclamation of William I as Emperor of Germany in the Hall of Mirror at the palace of Versailles.  The ‘big four’ Prime Ministers of Britain David Lloyd George, Italy Prime Minster Vittorio Emmanuel Orlando, France Georges Clemenceau and U. S. President Woodrow Wilson take lead of the conference, decide on the matter of the creation of the League of Nations and the Treaty of Versailles.  Du Bois with the help of Blaise Diagne, Senegalese deputy to the National French Assembly arranges for the First Pan African Congress to be held in Paris. Cadet as reported by the presents the UNIAS resolutions directly to Clemenceau himself. Cadet also approaches the editor of the newspapers of the Liberal La Matin with and camps outside the offices of La Presse and L’Instansigeant newspapers approaching their editors with articles who only but promise to publish them.
June 28 The Treaty of Versailles is signed on the anniversary of the assassination of  the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles lays the responsibility of war on Germany, pay reparations, Germany to France, Hitler and to determine Germany. Articles 22 and 119 Germanys colonies in Africa Tanganika to Britain, Cameroon and Togoland to France, Urundi Burundi to Belgium, South Africa as the mandate for German South West Africa, Namibia, the colony of Northern Mozambique and Samoa to New Zealand. Article 156 of the Treaty of Versailles Jiaozhou Bay and Shandong, China to Japan, Pacific Islands north of the equator class C mandate administered by Japan, Pacific Islands Southe of the equator to Australia. Austria and New Guinea by the Treaty of Versailles are awarded as mandates for the German of. January 21 Seattle Shipyard Strike 35, 000 workers go on strike. Unions in Seattles shipbuilding industry demand pay increase for unskilled workers, the yard owners offer to give a pay increase to skilled workers, the union reject the offer and go on strike. February 3 Zionist movement present their draft resolutions for Palestine to the Versailles Peace Conference in Paris. February 4 United States Senate passes Senator Thomas J. Walsh's Senate Resolution 439 Lee Slater Overman Judiciary Subcommittee for more investigation into German spies and Bolshevik propaganda. February 6 to 11 Seattle, Washington General Strike. Head of Emergency Fleet Corporation sends telegram mistakenly to the Metal Trades Council union rather than Metal Trades Association issuing warning that in the case of the workers contracts will be withdrawn, the workers appeal to Seattle Central Labor Council for the strike. General Strike Committee is formed by to provide essential services throughout the city during the strike, Army Veterans also form the Labor War Veterans Guard to ensure order throughout the city although arrests where half the number and no one was arrested in regards to the strike.  “RUSSIA DID IT” pamphlet SHIPYARD WORKERS You let the shipyards to enforce your demands for higher wages. Without you your employers are helpless. Without you they cannot make one cent of profit  their whole system of robbery has collapsed.
The shipyards are idle; the toilers have withdrawn even tho the owners of the yards are still there. Are your masters building ships? No, Without your labor power it would take all the shipyard employers of Seattle and Tacoma working eight hours a day the next thousand years to turn out one ship. Of what use are they in the shipyards?
It is you and you alone who build the ships; you create all the wealth of society today; you make possible the $75, 000 sable, coats for millionaires’ wives. It is you alone who can build the ships.
They cant build the ships. You can. Why don’t you?
There are the shipyards; more ships are urgently needed; you alone can build them. If the masters continue their dog in the manger attitude, not able to build the ships themselves and not allowing the workers to, there is only one thing left for you to do.
Take over the management of the shipyards yourselves; make the shipyards you own; make the jobs your own; decide the working conditions yourselves; decide your wages yourselves.
In Russia the masters refused to give their slaves a living wage too, The Russian workers out aside the bosses and their tool, the Russian government and took over industry in their own interest.
There is only one way out; a nationwide general strike with its object the overthrow of the present rotten system which produces thousands of millionaires and millions of paupers each year.
The Russians have shown you the way out. What are you going to do about it? You are doomed to wage slavery till you die unless you wake up, realize that you and the boss have not one thing in common, that the employing class must be overthrown, and that you, the workers, must take over the control of your jobs, and thru them, the control over your lives instead of offering yourselves up to the masters as a sacrifice six days a week, so that they may coin profits out of your sweat and toil.
Mayor Hanson police and military ensure order federal troops,  Hanson stations 950 sailors and marines in the city.  February 7 Hanson 600 hires men to the police force and hires 2, 400 deputies. February 8 The American Federation of Labor who Harrison in the previous year had worked with, along with international labor organizations call on the General Strike Committee's executive committee to bring the strike to an end by midnight but are voted against.  February 9 Mayor Hanson “sympathetic strike was called in the exact manner as was the revolution in Petrograd”. February 10 The General Strike Committee vote agreeing to end the strike bringing it to an end the next day. February 11 Senate Overman Judiciary Subcommittee hold a month of hearings.  39 Industrial Workers of the World members arrested on suspicion of being ringleaders of anarchy. 
February 23 Third Irish Race Convention in Philadelphia. Pvt. Henry Johnson nicknamed “Black Death” because of due to, using his broken rifle as a club and Pvt. Needham Roberts with a 9 inch bolo knife defeat a 24 German patrol in France. February 12 the 369th infantry (old 15th National Guard) nicknamed the Harlem Hell fighters by the German parade, marching up Fifth Avenue at 61st Street from the Washington Square Park Arch uptown and west on 110th Street and then onto Lenox Avenue and march into Harlem. Soldiers of the 369th (15th N.Y.), awarded the Croix de Guerre for gallantry in action, 1919. Left to right. Front row: Pvt. Ed Williams, Herbert Taylor, Pvt. Leon Fraitor, Pvt. Ralph Hawkins. Back Row: Sgt. H. D. Prinas, Sgt. Dan Storms, Pvt. Joe Williams, Pvt. Alfred Hanley, and Cpl. T. W. Taylor. Garvey and the UNIA establish the first of the their Liberty Halls at the previous building of the Metropolitan Baptist Tabernacle on 114 West 138th Street, New York City.  Military Intelligence Division Officer the African American Major Walter Howard Loving lists the Negro World as being Probable Bolshevik Propaganda and Supported by German or Bolshevik money.  April anarchist bombings. Among the recipients of the bombs were BOI Department of Justice Rayme Weston Finch who led raid on the office of the Galleanist publication Crondall Sovversiva.  Seattle's Mayor Ole Hanson receives mailed packaged bomb opens at the wrong end by his office staff member who then takes the bomb to the police and notifies the Post Office. April 29 Senator George Thomas W. Hardwick anti radical immigration act of 1918 housekeeper hands blown off and Wife.  Businessman John D Rockefeller also.  Police officers turn up at the UNIA headquarters with a search warrant after an anonymous tip of that from the office of the Negro World.  Senator Clayton Riley Lusk committee/Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate Seditious Activities turn up at Garveys Carnegie Hall meeting with bomb squad. BOI Department of Justice J. Edgar Hoover notes the Harlem offices of the Negro World and the Messenger as being the Russian organ of Bolshevism in New York. Garvey papers II page 674. 642 of the Russian organ of Bolshevik from one memo J Edgar Hoover special assistant to Attorney General to Frank Burke Washington D.C. August 12 1919 Garvey papers I page 480. May Day in Boston, Police attempt to stop unpermitted march, fight for socialist Soviet Union Red Flags, one policeman is fatally stabbed and the socialist HQ attacked by mob with 114 arrested. At the Russian Peoples House social club, soldiers burn printed material and force emigrants to sing Star Spangled Banner. Cleveland, Ohio leftists protest the imprisonment of Debs and promoting the campaign of Charles Ruthenberg as the socialist candidate for Mayor March, Nationalist group Victory Loanworkers try to block march, Ruthenbergs HQ is attacked by a mob, police mount with trucks and tanks, one of which was driven into a crowd, 2 dead, 40 injured and 116 arrested. June Galleanist target Government officials in relation to anti-sedition laws imprisonment or deportation of immigrants associated with illegal movements.  Immigrant Chief W.W. Pittsburgh Federal Judge W.H.S. Thompson and Judge Charles C. Nott of New York.  June 2 Carlo William Valdinoa, follower of Italian Luigi Galleani, previously an editor of the Galleanist publication Cronaca Sovversiva whilst delivering a bomb to the Bereau of Investigation's Department Of Justice's Attorney A. Mitchell Palmers  Porch with his bomb detonating and leaving his body parts on Palmers lawn.    Politicians states Cleveland Massachusetts.  June 21 The Senator Lusk Committee raid office of Industrial Workers of the World and Rand school for radical propaganda and at Rand School sieze "Socialism Imperilled, or the Negro a Potential menace to American radicalism" article by Domingo the then editor of the Negro World who in 1910 served as second secretary assistant working alongside with Garvey as first secretary assistant back at the National Club in Kingston, Jamaica.  The Rand School is also prosecuted for alleged violation of the Espionage Act for publishing Scott Nearing's "The Great Madness," radical anti-militarist pamphlet.  June 27 Garvey and the UNIA incorporate The Black Star steam shipping line as a Deleware corporation.  July 20 Belize ex service men World War 1 riot Samuel Alfred Hayes The Negro World partly responsible for the strike erupting into a riot. July 28 Garvey is with criminal libel, incarcerated at Tombs prison and later bailed for $3, 000 for his article in the Negro World in which he set forth the accusation that District Attorney Kilroe in the case of Richard Warner and Edgar Grey had.  Davis recites Dunbars "Little Brown Baby with the Sparkling eyes" to parents and their children at UNIA meeting in the Palace Casino, 135th Street and Madison Avenue. Randolph President of National Brotherhood of Workers of America. A Red Summer. The Red Summer racial riots were a series of riots 38 which occurred between May and October 1919. May 10 Charleston, South Carolina May 10 Sylvester, Georgia May 29 Putnam County, Georgia May 31 Monticello, Mississippi June 13 New London, Connecticut June 13 Memphis, Tennessee June 27 Annapolis, Maryland June 27 Macon, Mississippi July 3 Bisbee, Arizona July 5 Scranton, Pennsylvania July 6 Dublin, Georgia July 7 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania July 8 Coatesville, Pennsylvania July 9 Tuscaloosa, Alabama July 10 Longview, Texas July 11 Baltimore, Maryland July 15 Port Arthur, Texas July 19 Washington, D.C. July 21 Norfolk, Virginia July 23 New Orleans, Louisiana July 23 Darby, Pennsylvania July 26 Hobson City, Alabama July 27 Chicago, Illinois July 28 Newberry, South Carolina July 31 Bloomington, Illinois July 31 Syracuse, New York July 31 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania August 4 Hattiesburg, Mississippi August 6 Texarkana, Texas August 21 New York City, New York August 30 Knoxville, Tennessee September 28 Omaha, Nebraska October 1 Elaine, Arkansaswo 200 African Americans murdered. arrested and tried for conspiracy in the Moore v. Dempsey case. Mc Kay as editor of Max Eastman’s The Liberator publishes his "If We Must Die" poem.  September 14 Garvey and the UNIA rechristen the tramp ship the S.S. Yarmouth the S.S. Frederick Douglass, the ship was previously used transport cotton and coal. September 22 and 23 The Black Star Line is going Over the Top STOCK WILL BE ON SALE AT THESE BIG MEETING The shares of the Black Star Line are sold at $5 and you can buy as many as you want and make money Hon. MARCUS GARVEY World Famed Negro Orator who has travelled the Work President of the Negro Universal Improvement Association and Managing Editor of the Negro World of New York will speak. ADMISSION FREE BE EARLY TO GET SEATS Beehive Printing Company, 2305 Seventh Avenue. N. Y. C. Grand Re Union AND RALLY OF THE Negro Peoples of the World OF AMERICA, AFRICAN, WEST INDIES CANADA CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA AT THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH Corner 15th and Christian Streets PHILADELPHIA Monday Night, September 22nd, Tuesday Night September 23rd, 1919 At 8:30 Sharp A RALLY FOR The Black Star Line Steamship CORPORATION STAGED BY THEE UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION. 28th September Garvey, Reverend Eason, Amy Ashwood and Henrietta Davis travels to South Side, Chicago, Illinos for meetings at the 8th Regiment Armoury the home of the all Negro infantry. Garvey approached by private detective from Keystone Detective Agency, hired by Robert Abbott editor of the Chicago Defender, arrested by detective George Friend of the Chicago Constabulary on violation of the Blue Sky Law and taken to Harrison police station. 11 October memorandum from J Edgar Hoover to special agent Ridgely, Washington, D.C. MEMORANDUM FOR MR. RIDGELY.  I am transmitting herewith a communication which has come to my attention from the Panama Canal, Washington office, relative to the activities of Marcus Garvey. Garvey is a West-Indian negro and in addition to his activities in endeavoring to establish the Black Star Line Steamship Corporation he has also been particularly active among the radical elements in New York City in agitating the negro movement. Unfortunately, however, he has not as yet violated any federal law whereby he could be proceeded against on the grounds of being an undesirable alien, from the point of view of deportation. It occurs to me, however, from the attached clipping that there might be some proceeding against him for fraud in connection with his Black Star Line propaganda and for this reason I am transmitting the communication to you for your appropriate attention.  The following is a brief statement of Marcus Gravey and his activities: Subject a native of the West Indies and one of the most prominent negro agitators in New York;  He is a founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League;  He is the promulgator of the Black Star Line and is the managing editor of the Negro World;  He is an exceptionally fine orator, creating much excitement among the negroes through his steamship proposition;  In his paper the “Negro World” the Soviet Russian Rule is upheld and there is open advocation of Bolshevism.  Respectfully, J. E. Hoover. 14 October Garvey shot by George Tyler, who commits suicide the next day, Tyler was also the only witness for the criminal libel charge against Garvey. October Garvey speaks at Philadelphia Peoples Church for the third time in the year. October The Saint Vincent Gazette anyone bringing the Negro World into the colony will serve six months prison sentence, possibly with hard labor.
October 30 Madison Square Gardens, Lusk Committee Intelligence reports 6, 000 in attendance. September Davis records 7, 500 members of the UNIA in New York alone and branches in 25 states of Union. November Palmer along with the police from the local forces in 12 cities raid anarchist group Union of Russian Workers, in order that they might arrest and deport. Louis Freeland Post at Labour Department refuses to deport Garvey due to lack of sufficient grounds on which to do so.  November 19 The BOI employs its first full time African American agent James Wormley Jones, agent 800 to infiltrate the U.N.I.A.  Jones previously served in the 268th infantry of the 42nd division in Philippines. Dr. Arthur Lysses Craig Special Agent CC.  December Du Bois in the Crisis covers lynching in Omana, Nebraska. December Guianse Edward Green Secretary and accountant shot during robbery and his pregnant wife dies from shock. BSL principal negotiator. Green was 1 of the 13 founding members of Garveys UNIA branch in the U. S. at Harlem and before being employed by worked in an ammunition factory in Trenton, New Jersey.  December immigrants deported on the USSS Buford the Soviet Ark.  December 25 Xmas day Garvey marries Ashwood.  Marcus and Amy putting business before pleasure travel to Canada spending their two week honeymoon there hold three UNIA meetings in Toronto and two in Montreal.  1920 Vivian Seay establishes the Belize branch of the Universal African Black Cross Nurses.  Seay conducts survey infant and maternal mortality and recruits nurse trainees. The only white crew members on the Yarmouth, the Chief engineer and Chief Officer steer the ship to Lay Sal bank, send out SOS and give order to abandon ship whilst Cockburn is asleep with life belts and life boats also issued.  The crew of the Yarmouth at Saguala La Grange, Cuba sell £250 shares. Garvey and Green without Cockburn charter the Yarmouth at the rate of $11, 000 as opposed to $100, 000 with repairs amounting to $11, 000 and also fail to include limited indemnity clause in their contract with the Green River Distillery making their liability to the company unlimited.  January 16 Prohibition deadline.  Cockburn receives $2, 000 commission from Green River Distillery to ensure the sail of the Yarmouth and to load it.  1920 January 15 The Yarmouth just in the nick of time sail from the U. S. to Havana, Cuba with 20, 000 cases of whiskey, 500 cases of champagne and 350 barrels of wine 500 cases of whisky, the Yarmouth is caught in a storm off the coast of Cape May, with the cargo having shifted in its Hull making its starboard list heavy, Cockburn orders 500 cases of whisky to be thrown aboard in order to prevent the ship from capsizing and towed back to New York.  The Yarmouth arrives in Cuba during shoremans strike without a demurrage clause to pay a fine of thousands of dollars for ever single day after 32 days when the cargo is unloaded.  Chief Officer Hugh Mulzac and UNIA delgation meet President Menocal who gives them a banquet at his palace.  The Yarmouth in Colon, Panama carries 500 Caribbean laborers to Cuba. The Yarmouth makes a ceremonial stop at Bocas del Toro in Costa Rica. In Kingston, Jamaica the Yarmouth pick up cargo of 700 tons of coconuts which rot on ceremonial detour to Boston. Du Bois publishes the first of his three autobiographies Darkwater: Voices From Within the Veil containing his “The Damnation of Women” and also publishes The Brownies Book monthly children’s magazine co founded by Augustus Granvil Dill and Jesse Redmon Fauset. January Harrison becomes editor of the Negro World and also contributes to the Declaration of Rights of Negro People’s of the World. The Black Star Line place $10, 000 down payment on the $35, 000 steam paddle ship SS Shadyside.
April $60, 000 SS Kanawha. May 28 The American Civil Liberties Union publish report upon the illegal practices of the United States Department of Justice.  August the first UNIA International Convention Of Negroes Of The World was held for the whole duration of the month of August in Madison Square Gardens, New York City. It was at this convention that the Bill of Rights the Declaration of Rights of the Negro Peoples of the World was drafted and adopted. https://tmblr.co/Z9elId2ORVqcw Signatories of the Declarations of the Rights of Negro Peoples of the World capture the moment during the 1st International Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World. It was at this event where he was duly elected Provisional President of Africa at the convention Garvey reportedly read two telegrams one from Irish Republic leader Eamon de Valera Provisional President of Ireland and the other from Zionist in Califonia Louis Michael. Are ye not as children of the Ethiopians unto me, O children of Israel? saith the LORD. Have not I brought up Israel out of the land of Egypt? and the Philistines from Caphtor, and the Syrians from Kir? Amos 9:7 William Ferris editor of the Negro World spots Du Bois at the convention. January 18 The Black Star Line place advert in the Negro World SS Kanawah Antonio Maceo to sail for Bermuda, Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, Panama.  Sir Willocks governor general of Bermuda British Secretary of State for the Colonies Winston Churchill asking him to prohibit their landing. The Black Star Line places advert for Architects and Contracting Builders to sail to Liberia between January 25 February 20. 1921 Garvey sends Hatian Elie Garcia audita general to Liberia to produce a confidential report as well one for public interest and also sends the son of Liberian President Hilary Johnson, Gabriel Johnson, Mayor of the Liberian capital, Monrovia, ‘Potentate Leader of the Negro Peoples of the World’ as well as George O Marke, Supreme Deputy Potentate in charge of the Sierra Leone division of the UNIA and Cyril A Crichlow Resident Commissar, accountant and stenographer there to acquire 1, 000 acres of land and property.  Johnson land on farm owned by Mrs. Moort between 30 and 40 miles away from Monrovia however. Johnson was previously a Brigader, his brother was Attorney General and his married to the President D. B. King.
Imperial Potentate Ancient Egyptian Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine Prince Hall 1735 John E Bruce Lodge #38.
Liberia Secretary of State Edwin Barclay informs the UNIA delegation about the express for concern of their actives in the nieghbouring colonies of British Sierra Leone and French Ivory Coast. February Garvey tours the West Indies and Central America also with the initiative of raising funds. Hoover unsuccessfully approaches immigration for Labour Department to refuse Garvey reentry into the U. S. at its ports in Florida.  28th February Garvey, Amy Jacques and her younger brother Cleveland take the train to Key West where they board the USS Governor Cobb to Havana, Cuba. March 7 Liberia President Charles D. B. King arrives in New York harbour on on the USS Panhandle and is met by UNIA delegation at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. In Jamaica the American consul Charles Latham refuses Garvey a visa to Panama as well as a reentry visa into America. Garvey is meet by 10, 000 people in Limon, Costa Rica.  According to G. P. Chattenden the United Fruit company manager, at one meeting two scrap baskets and one suitcase full of United States gold notes were collected and at another he stood beside a pile of gold notes which reached above his knees possibly as much as $50, 000. Garvey is introduced to Julio Acosta Costa Rica's President.  Garvey is granted visa by Panama and visits the cities of Bocas Del Toro and Almirante although the response he received there was not so much one of such enthusiasm or one that he might have hoped for.  Garvey travels to the city of Colon by submarine where he is greeting by the biggest crowd he has ever seen, they brake the windows of his train carriage and carry him out into a car but there are so many people on top of the car that the tyres puncture and the car has to be pushed. May 25 the SS Antonio Maceo sails for Panama and after three days at sea has to be towed to Kingston for its boilers to be repaired.  May 31 Memorial Day June 1 Tulsa, Oklahoma riot Shoeshiner Dick Rowland assault Sarah Page white elevator operator in Drexel building, 319 South Main Street. Rowland flees to his Mothers house in Greenwood the Black Wall Street, taken to Tulsa city jail at First and Main then relocated to Tulsa County.  The Tulsa Tribune reports story  Courthouse where lynching mob of hundreds of whites assemble, Sheriff Willard M. McCullough deputies armed with rifles and shotguns protect Rowland from mob, seal off building, group of black men offer to assist Sheriff, in response 1, 000 whites assemble outside the courthouse. Major James Bell of the 180th infantry  three National Guard units turn away 300-400 men at the National Guard Armoury on Sixth Street and Norfolk Avenue.  1, 000 more white men assemble outside courthouse most of who are armed, 75 black men armed with rifles and shotguns, the first shot is fired, 10 whites and 2 blacks dead, whites chase blacks to Greenwood, little Africa. Oklahoma National Guard unit blacks held in detention at Convention Hall on Brady Street. June 1 Wednesday Fisco 
Train.  White men light and throw oil rags into buildings Archer Street, southern edge of Greenwood, Fire Department turned away at gunpoint, thousands of blacks flee the city and held in detention centres. Airplanes fire rifles, drop fire/incendiary/Terpentine bombs on buildings, homes and fleeing families, blacks employed by whites as house servants siezed at properties and held in detention with 4, 000 detained. Oklahoma Department of Vital Statistics reports 26 blacks and 10 whites dead, Oklahoma 2001 commission reports 100 to 300 dead, Red Cross register 8624, 1256 burned houses , 191 businesses. Red Cross 10, 000 blacks homeless.  6, 000 detained at Convention Hall, Fairgrounds and McNulty Park.  Tulsa Real Estate Exchange estimate property loss of 1.5 million in real estate and $750, 000 in personal property. The reconstruction of Greenwood and rehabilitation of its residents is delayed for months, in tents winter in the two following years.  Governor James B. A. Robertson launch inquiry of City and Sheriff office.  Robertson calls for Grand Jury to be empanelled.  June 3 1000 businessmen and civic leaders form committee chaired by Judge J. Martin, a former mayor of Tulsa to raise funds for the reconstruction of Greenwood. June 8 Judge Valjean Biddison and State Attorney General S.P. Freeling investigation witnesses 12 hearing no one convicted of any crimes.  White developers suggest fire ordinance banning wooden frame, ruled unconstitutional in its appeal to Oklahoma Supreme Court, the developers inconsiderate with their selfish motive of redeveloping Greenwood as a business and industrial use or build labor station pushing out. Wooden dwellings  Tulsa Union rail Depot.  The riots not spoken to about in magazine journal tribune history 1936 1946. 1971 Commemorated by the chamber of conference Ed Wheelers account and photographs published in Impact Magazine.  Mozella Franklin Jones Tulsa Historical Society exhibition creates Tulsa Historical Society photographs.  Oklahoma 2001 commission reparations to the survivors of the riots and their descendent and scholarship fund and memorial.  June 2001, the Oklahoma state legislature pass the "1921 Tulsa Race Riot Reconciliation Act" 200 college scholarships, memorial park dedicated in 2010. Garvey denied reentry visa, his generals vote to send counsellor general William Matthews to Washington to lobby the state department. staff visa control. Garvey adviced by lawyer that the American consul send a cable to state department requesting a visa in which event the visa was granted. August at the UNIA convention editor Ferris and journalist John E Bruce knighted with order of the Nile, George Tobias with the order of Ethiopia and  Davis with Lady Commander of the Sublime order of the Nile. December 1921 Garvey makes his “Christmas message to the Negro Peoples of the World” speech. January 1 Garvey makes his Emancipation day speech at Liberty Hall New York city quote Psalm 68:31 in both speeches. https://tmblr.co/Z9elId2OPQ-fq 1922 January Garvey is arrested for mail fraud and bailed for $2, 500.  Garvey was brought to charge with mail fraud on the basis that the Black Star Line had advertised the ship the Orion as the SS Phyllis Wheatley, which they did not yet actually own but were still in the process of negotiation for.  Thompson, Garcia and Tobias were also investigated, however, only Garvey was prosecuted. May 22 UNIA Commissioner Robert Moseley speaks at Baptist churches in, Jacksonville, Texas is arrested and fined for vagrancy in Jacksonville, Texas and separately also taken to the woods and horsewhipped. Garvey arranges parade and march in Los Angeles with local division and others parade, visits Oakland, California and Frisco. Commander J.J. Hannigan registers 400 new UNIA memberships in San Francisco. May 27 Garvey marries Jaques in Baltimore. June 25 Garvey travels to Atlanta for a meeting with the Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. Garvey makes his first visit to Belize, meets with and is interviewed by Governor Eyre Hutson.  5 July Hutson sends transcript of the recorded interview to Secretary of the Colonies British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. July issue of the Messenger Randolph and Owen ‘Garvey, Black Eagle, Becomes Messenger Boy of Clarke, Ku Klux Kleagle.’
are joined by William Pickens and Detroit preacher Robert Bagnall in their "Garvey Must Go" campaign, Bagnall also launches personal attack on Garvey. on the floor above the UNIA Publishing and Printing House.  August 6 Prof. William Pickens, Field Secretary of N. A. A. C. P. Subject: WHAT TO DO WHEN NEGRO LEADERS LEAGUE WITH NEGRO LYNCHERS. August 13: A. PHILIP RANDOLPH, Candidate for N. Y. Secretary of State Subject: THE ONLY WAY TO REDEEM AFRICA  August 20th: ROBERT W. BAGNALL, Director of Branches for N. A. A. C. P. Subject: THE MADNESS OF MARCUS GARVEY. August 27: CHANDLER OWEN, Co-Editor of the MESSENGER. Subject: A PRACTICAL PROGRAM FOR NEGROES EVERYWHERE.  GARVEY’S STATEMENT AT NEW ORLEANS “This is a white man’s country. He found it, he conquered it, and we can’t blame him if he wants to keep it. I am not vexed with the white man of the south for Jim-Crowing me, because I am Black. “I never built any street cars or railroads. The white man built them for his own convenience. And if I don’t want to ride where he’s willing to let me ride then I’d better walk. All invited White and Colored, Men and Women Native and Foreigner. Admission Free” Exactly One Thousand Seats MEETINGS UNDER AUSPICES OF THE FRIENDS OF NEGRO FREEDOM. August Trinidadian pilot Hubert Fauntleroy Julian dubbed the Black Eagle of Harlem by H. Allen Smith because of his parachute jumps, flys biplane over UNIA parade and becomes head of the organization’s new Aeronautical Department. September 5 Randolph at 2305 7th Avenue receives package calls the police bomb squad open package containing a severed human hand from the Ku Klux Klan. November 9th Esau Ramus previously janitor at UNIA Philadelphia branch travels to New Orleans meets the branches secretary William Phillips and moves into the home of Jamaican longshore man and Chief of UNIA police Dyer Fred Constantine.  Reverend Eason visits Baptist Church, St John 1st Street, New Orleans where after the is shot in the back and forehead.  1923 January Eason dies from wounds. William Shakespeare and Fred Dyer charged with Easons murder. Ramus. Garvey.  Earnest Alfred Wallace Budge sometime scholar at Christ College and Keeper of Egyptian and Assyrian antiquities in the British Museum publishes his first edition of the Book of the Glory of Kings/Kebra Negast. Claude McKay travels to Kremlin, Russia. November Mckay and Max Eastman editor of the Liberator attend the 4th Congress of the Communist International in Petrograd, Mc Kay along with his fellow early leading member of the Communist International (Comintern) Otto Huiswould address its Cominter.  Mckay also meets communist Leon Trotsky. Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey by Amy Jaques Garvey 1923 Chapter 3 The Image of God If the white man has the idea of a white God, let him worship his God as he desires. If the yellow man’s God is of his race let him worship his God as he sees fit. We, as Negroes, have found a new ideal. Whilst our God has no color, yet it is human to see everything through one’s own spectacles, and since the white people have seen their God through white spectacles, we have only now started out (late though it be) to see our God through our own spectacles. The God of Isaac and the God of Jacob let Him exist for the race that believes in the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob. We Negroes believe in the God of Ethiopia, the everlasting God — God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost, the One God of all ages. That is the God in whom we believe, but we shall worship Him through the spectacles of Ethiopia. Johnson son Hilary Johnson clerk office, placed above Crichlow authority, Johnsons not pulling their weight. March 24 Johnson sends cable to Garvey requesting £5, 000 for sawmill equipment earliest ship by steamer. 
May 18 Garvey mail fraud case trail, New York Southern district court Judge Julian Mack.
June 18 Maxwell Mattuck. June 23 Garvey is sentenced to five years in prison for mail fraud at Tombs Jail Manhattan detention center.  September Garvey bailed for the sum of $15, 000 raised in campaign by Amy Jacques.  Bishop Alexander McGuire the first black archdeacon of the Protestant Episcopal Church ‘We have reasons to believe that his enforced solitude has clarified his vision’ ‘Moses came back to Israel with new Revelation’ ‘Negro everywhere will be the beneficiaries of the new ideas he has gained during his vacation’. Davis seated at the front was the leader for the UNIA 1923 delegation to Liberia of which also included Princeton educated Sir Robert Poston and the UNIA new attorney Milton Van Lowe. 11 December UNIA delegation departs for Liberia via Lisbon, Portugal on the Cunard vessel S. S. Britannia. December Mc Kay meets German novelist Arthur Holitscher and German communist Clara Zetkin,  International Group China, Russian, Jew, Negro, Russian Gentile, Bulgarian, Hindu, American Mulatto, Algerian, Japanese, Armenian, Korean, and white American as well as Grigory Zinoviev and Nikolai Bukharin and writes and publishes his Negry v Amerike in Russian which isn't published until the year.  1924 February 11th UNIA delegation meets with President of Liberia who agrees to have 3, 000 immigrants settle on land in Cavalla, Sin, Grand Bassa and Cape Mount.  16 March Poston fever lobar pneumonia dies on board SS President Grant. April 19 UNIA to send material and artisan, technicians, carpenter, builder and mechanical engineer to Liberia.  Seay 24 trained nurses to Belize Town as volunteers parenting teaching, sanitation, midwifery services. May 1 H.H. Ras Tafari visits Cairo, received by H. M. King Fuad palace and Alexandria, Egypt.  May 17 H.H. Ras Tafari visits Paris, received by President of the Republic and Prime Minister. May 19 Du Bois and Professor Wendell Phillips Dabney finally come face to face with Garvey for the first time at the elevator in Sheraton Hotel, Cincinnati. May 22 H.H. Ras Tafari visits Brussels, Belgium, received by King Albert, his ministers and army officers. June 4 UNIA meeting mining engineer Wallace Strange. June 8 H.H. Ras Tafari visits Stockholm, Sweden, Grand Hotel Royal Archbishop of Uppsala, Nathan Soderblom and King Gustaf Adolph.  June 18 H.H. Ras Tafari visits Rome, received by King Victor Emmanuel and Mussolini. July 4 Julian to make transatlantic flight from New York to Liberia via Atlantic city, New Jersey and the West Indies. Purchases seaplane christened Ethiopia I, crashes into Flushing Bay after one of the planes pontoons comes off. July 8 H. H. Ras Tafari visit to England meets Archbishop of Canterbury, King George, who returns to him a crown of Emperor Tewodros II and honorary degree of Doctor of Law by the Vice Chancellor of Cambridge University. July 10 Liberia Consul General in US press release stated that anyone from the UNIA in the US would not be allowed to land in the republic of Liberia the Liberian Consuls in the US instructed not to permit them visas. Wallace Strange Monrovia arrested and deported equipment auctioned Chief Justice J. J. Dossen of Liberia President ports refuse entry. Liberia give preference to the Firestone Rubber Plantation Company, 1 million acres of land 5 to 10 cents per acre. The 4th International Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World.  Garvey is accompanied in the rear seat of his shiny 1920 Pierce Arrow Limousine by the Rev. R Van Richards at convention Opening Parade in Harlem, NY. His Secret Service (aka Knights of the Roundtable) run alongside the President-General’s parade vehicle. Mr. Garvey is also flanked in the rear by a banner reading Parent Body Division. (Negro World August 16, 1924, p.10) Uniformed Universal African Motor Corp March up 7th Ave in Harlem, NY during the opening parade of the UNIA sponsored 4th International Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World. Executive Council Reviews parade From observation deck and Universal African Royal Guard Parade Drill in Harlem, NY. President Joseph A Craigen Contingent of the Detroit Division #125 in the opening day parade of the convention leads the march with his Red, Black and Green Flag draped over his shoulder. Dinner at Third Royal Court Reception of the UNIA at Liberty Hall, NY (Negro World August 30,1924, p.10) James VanDerZee photographs the convention.  VanDerZee photographs Garvey with Marke and Prince KojoTovalou-Houénou of Dahomey.  The Dahomean proto nationalist KojoTovalou-Houénou declared at the same convention that “your association, Mr. President … is the Zionism of the Black Race.”^ Les Continents, 15 October 1924. Garvey Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company.  October 20 Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company purchase the 5, 000 ton 'General G.W. Goethals’ which they rechristen as the S.S Booker Washington. December Du Bois given the rank of Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, to Charles King inauguration as President by President Coolidge and attends the 3rd Pan African Congress. 1925 January 3 The Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company place Big Negro Excursion advertisement in the Negro World announcing the sailing of the S.S. Booker T. Washington to Central America, the West Indies, Panama, and the South of the United States. February 8 Garvey leaves court with handcuffed to a deputy, Marshal Hecht and taken into custody to begin serving his sentence at the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary. May 19 Malcolm Little is born in Omaha, Nebraska to Grenada born Louise Helen Little and Earl Little a Baptist Lay preacher, both members of Garveys UNIA, Malcolms mother was the secretary and branch reporter.  African Fundamentalism From the editorial by Marcus Garvey printed in the Negro World, 6 June 1925, as a front-page editorial; written in Atlanta Federal Penitentiary. Original headlines omitted. Creed reprinted in slightly revised form, under the title “African Fundamentalism,” as a UNIA poster, sold by mail order through the Negro World by Amy Jacques Garvey, 1925. Fellow Men of the Negro Race, Greeting: The time has come for the Negro to forget and cast behind him his hero worship and adoration of other races, and to start out immediately, to create and emulate heroes of his own. We must canonize our own saints, create our own martyrs, and elevate to positions of fame and honor black men and women who have made their distinct contributions to our racial history. Sojourner Truth is worthy of the place of sainthood alongside of Joan of Arc; Crispus Attucks and George William Gordon are entitled to the halo of martyrdom with no less glory than that of the martyrs of any other race. Toussaint L'Ouverture’s brilliancy as a soldier and statesman outshone that of a Cromwell, Napoleon and Washington; hence, he is entitled to the highest place as a hero among men. Africa has produced countless numbers of men and women, in war and in peace, whose lustre and bravery outshine that of any other people. Then why not see good and perfection in ourselves? June 15 and 18 The Star of Ethiopia performed at Hollywood Bowl.  Randolph becomes President of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters labor union for workers of the Pullman Company.  1926 Du Bois visits the Soviet Union in Russia.  The Littles move to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  1927 November Garvey released and boards in New Orleans to be deported to Jamaica where he arrives at Orrett’s Wharf in Kingston.
Garvey 76 Kings Street Kingston and speaks at Ward Theatre as well as Edelweiss Park. 1928 April Marcus and Amy sail to England, spends two days at Cecil hotel and then rents a private house at 57 Castletown Road, West Kensington for four months.
June 6 Garvey speaks at the Royal Albert Hall introduced by
October 6 Garvey Paris speaks at Club du Faubourg 1, 5000 70 Negroes, Prix Goncourt winner Rene Maran and visits Louvre and Notre Dame.
October 7 The Ras Tafari Makonnen Crown Prince, hier to the throne and Regent Plenipotentiary is crowned King/Negus by Empress Zawditu.
September Garvey Geneva, Switzerland writes to the Secretary General of the League of Nations Eric Drummond.
November 23 Garvey returns to Jamaica.
Seay along with four other Black Cross Nurses complete midwife training at Belize hospital. Howell opens tea room in Harlem.
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Martin B-12A
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Ronnie Bell Following
Martin B-12A
Martin B-12A. (U.S. Air Force photo)The Martin B-10 was the first all-metal monoplane bomber to go into regular use by the United States Army Air Corps, entering service in June 1934. It was also the first mass-produced bomber whose performance was superior to that of the Army's pursuit aircraft of the time.
The B-10 served as the airframe for the B-12, B-13, B-14, A-15 and O-45 designations using Pratt & Whitney engines instead of Wright Cyclones.
In 1935, the Army ordered an additional 103 aircraft designated B-10B. These had only minor changes from the YB-10. Shipments began in 1935 July. B-10Bs served with the 2d Bomb Group at Langley Field, the 9th Bomb Group at Mitchel Field, the 19th Bomb Group at March Field, the 6th Composite Group in the Panama Canal Zone, and the 4th Composite Group in the Philippines. In addition to conventional duties in the bomber role, some modified YB-10s and B-12As were operated for a time on large twin floats for coastal patrol.
The Martin Model 139 was the export version of the Martin B-10. With an advanced performance, the Martin company fully expected that export orders for the B-10 would come flooding in.
The Army owned the rights to the Model 139 design. Once the Army's orders had been filled in 1936, Martin received permission to export Model 139s, and delivered versions to several air forces. For example, six Model 139Ws were sold to Siam in April 1937, powered by Wright R-1820-G3 Cyclone engines; 20 Model 139Ws were sold to Turkey in September 1937, powered by R-1820-G2 engines.
On 19 May 1938, during the Sino-Japanese War, two Chinese Nationalist Air Force B-10s successfully flew to Japan. However, rather than dropping bombs, the aircraft dropped propaganda leaflets.
At the time of its creation, the B-10B was so advanced that General Henry H. Arnold described it as the air power wonder of its day. It was half again as fast as any biplane bomber, and faster than any contemporary fighter. The B-10 began a revolution in bomber design; it made all existing bombers completely obsolete.
However, the rapid advances in bomber design in the 1930s meant that the B-10 was eclipsed by the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and Douglas B-18 Bolo before the United States entered World War II. The B-10's obsolescence was proved by the quick defeat of B-10B squadrons by Japanese Zeros during the invasions of the Dutch East Indies and China.
An abortive effort to modernize the design, the Martin Model 146, was entered into a USAAC long-distance bomber design competition 1934–1935, but lost out to the Douglas B-18 and revolutionary Boeing B-17. The sole prototype was so similar in profile and performance to the Martin B-10 series that the other more modern designs easily "ran away" with the competition.
The B-10 began a revolution in bomber design. Its all-metal monoplane build, along with its features of closed cockpits, rotating gun turrets, retractable landing gear, internal bomb bay, and full engine cowlings, would become the standard for bomber designs worldwide for decades. It made all existing bombers completely obsolete. In 1932, Martin received the Collier Trophy for designing the XB-10.
The B-10 began as the Martin Model 123, a private venture by the Glenn L. Martin Company of Baltimore, Maryland. It had a crew of four: pilot, copilot, nose gunner and fuselage gunner. As in previous bombers, the four crew compartments were open, but it had a number of design innovations as well.
These innovations included a deep belly for an internal bomb bay and retractable main landing gear. Its 600 hp (447 kW) Wright SR-1820-E Cyclone engines provided sufficient power. The Model 123 first flew on 16 February 1932 and was delivered for testing to the U.S. Army on 20 March as the XB-907. After testing it was sent back to Martin for redesigning and was rebuilt as the XB-10.
The XB-10 delivered to the Army had major differences from the original aircraft. Where the Model 123 had NACA cowling rings, the XB-10 had full engine cowlings to decrease drag.[2] It also sported a pair of 675 hp (503 kW) Wright R-1820-19 engines, and an 8 feet (2.4 m) increase in the wingspan, along with an enclosed nose turret. When the XB-10 flew during trials in June, it recorded a speed of 197 mph (317 km/h) at 6,000 ft (1,830 m). This was an impressive performance for 1932.
Following the success of the XB-10, a number of changes were made, including reduction to a three-man crew, addition of canopies for all crew positions, and an upgrade to 675 hp (503 kW) engines. The Army ordered 48 of these on 17 January 1933. The first 14 aircraft were designated YB-10 and delivered to Wright Field, starting in November 1933. The production model of the XB-10, the YB-10 was very similar to its prototype.
Via Flickr
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