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ONJR23SS125

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Original U.S. WWII Grumman TBM Avenger Identity Number Skin Section With Original Photo Of Sailor and Aircraft - Removed by Tail Gunner Jack Moses

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Item Description

Original Item: One-Of-A-Kind. Now this is a fantastic memento of WWII. This piece of aircraft skin bears the identification number of TBM - 3 and is from a Grumman Avenger. Before 1962, the Navy designation system was quite different from what is used now. The first letter was for the class of aircraft, the third letter is the manufacturer and the number is the design. “TBM” would be for Torpedo Bomber and the M is the manufacturer code for General Motors.

The Grumman TBF Avenger (designated TBM for aircraft manufactured by General Motors) is an American World War II-era torpedo bomber developed initially for the United States Navy and Marine Corps, and eventually used by several air and naval aviation services around the world.

The Avenger entered U.S. service in 1942, and first saw action during the Battle of Midway. Despite the loss of five of the six Avengers on its combat debut, it survived in service to become the most effective and widely-used torpedo bomber of World War II, sharing credit for sinking the super-battleships Yamato and Musashi (the only ships of that type sunk exclusively by American aircraft while under way) and being credited for sinking 30 submarines. Greatly modified after the war, it remained in use until the 1960s.

This display panel, which appears to have once been framed, measures approximately 14” x 11”. The display features (3) black and white photographs. Two of the images are of Jack with the aircraft and the third is of just the aircraft with the tail section of the aircraft where the number was removed circled. The description at the top and bottom, which was written by Jack, is as follows:

Grumman TBM “Avenger”
(Built by General Motors)
N.A.S. Coco Solo, Panama Canal Zone

This aircraft manufactures identity number
was taken from the rudder fabric of
this U.S. Navy torpedo bomber in early 1946.

After the war was over many planes were
stored in large fields to be destroyed to save
the expense of shipping them back to U.S.

It is all in wonderful condition and comes more than ready for further research and display.

Jack Moses
Jack, the eldest of three, was born December 3, 1925 in Oklahoma City to Samuel J. Moses and Blanche Garten Moses. Jack attended Lincoln Grade School, Webster Jr. High, (where he won the Letsizer Art Award in the ninth grade), and graduated Central High School midterm '44. His father Sam was a WWI Vet & a Sergeant in Company A, 179th Infantry, 45th Infantry Division, Oklahoma National Guard. Some of Jack's happiest days as a boy were spent accompanying Sam to National Guard drills and events. One of the highlights of these trips was serving as Camp Orderly for Company A at a National Guard State-wide encampment in Fort Sill. At Central, he was a member of the Blackshirt Pep Club, was staff artist for the Sooner Spirit, the school's weekly paper and co-art editor of the school yearbook, The Cardinal. Jack was awarded the Silver Medal for art. Upon HS graduation, he and 7 close friends joined the U.S. Navy to serve in WWII. Jack became a tail gunner on a PBM Martin Mariner, and for part of the war was stationed in the Galapagos Islands. He also served aboard the Battleship New Jersey. Later as a Naval Reserve, he served as an instructor in gunnery and aircraft recognition. He was re-called to duty for the Korean Conflict and was stationed in Whidbey Island, Washington where the Navy utilized his artistic abilities on the base newspaper and to make drawings of proposed new hangar buildings for the base's planned enlargement. He received a Navy Letter of Commendation upon discharge.

Grumman TBF Avenger
The Douglas TBD Devastator, the U.S. Navy's main torpedo bomber introduced in 1935, was obsolete by 1939. Bids were accepted from several companies, but Grumman's TBF design was selected as the replacement for the TBD and in April 1940 two prototypes were ordered by the Navy. Designed by Leroy Grumman, the first prototype was called the XTBF-1. It was first flown on 7 August 1941. Although one of the first two prototypes crashed near Brentwood, New York, rapid production continued.

The Avenger was the heaviest single-engined aircraft of World War II, and only the USAAF's P-47 Thunderbolt came close to equalling it in maximum loaded weight among all single-engined fighters, being only some 400 pounds (180 kg) lighter than the TBF, by the end of World War II. To ease carrier storage concerns, simultaneously with the F4F-4 model of its Wildcat carrier fighter, Grumman designed the Avenger to also use the new Sto-Wing patented "compound angle" wing-folding mechanism, intended to maximize storage space on an aircraft carrier; the Wildcat's replacement, the F6F Hellcat, also employed this mechanism. The engine used was the twin-row Wright R-2600-20 Twin Cyclone fourteen-cylinder radial engine, which produced 1,900 horsepower (1,420 kW).

There were three crew members: pilot, turret gunner and radioman/bombardier/ventral gunner. A single synchronized .30 caliber (7.62 mm) machine gun was mounted in the nose, a .50 caliber (12.7 mm) gun was mounted right next to the turret gunner's head in a rear-facing electrically powered turret, and a single 0.30 caliber (7.62 mm) hand-fired machine gun flexibly-mounted ventrally (under the tail), which was used to defend against enemy fighters attacking from below and to the rear. This gun was fired by the radioman/bombardier while standing up and bending over in the belly of the tail section, though he usually sat on a folding bench facing forward to operate the radio and to sight in bombing runs. Later models of the TBF/TBM omitted the cowl-mount synchronized 0.30 caliber (7.62 mm) gun, and replaced it with twin Browning AN/M2 0.50 caliber (12.7 mm) light-barrel guns, one in each wing outboard of the propeller arc, per pilots' requests for better forward firepower and increased strafing ability. There was only one set of controls on the aircraft, and no direct access to the pilot's position existed from the rest of the aircraft's interior. The radio equipment was massive, especially by today's standards, and filled the length of the well-framed "greenhouse" canopy to the rear of the pilot. The radios were accessible for repair through a "tunnel" along the right hand side. Any Avengers that are still flying today usually have an additional rear-mounted seat in place of the radios, allowing for a fourth passenger.

The Avenger had a large bomb bay, allowing for one Bliss-Leavitt Mark 13 torpedo, a single 2,000-pound (907 kg) bomb, or up to four 500-pound (227 kg) bombs. The aircraft had overall ruggedness and stability, and pilots say it flew like a truck, for better or worse. With its good radio facilities, docile handling, and long range, the Grumman Avenger also made an ideal command aircraft for Commanders, Air Group (CAGs). With a 30,000 ft (9,000 m) ceiling and a fully loaded range of 1,000 miles (1,600 km), it was better than any previous American torpedo bomber, and better than its Japanese counterpart, the obsolete Nakajima B5N "Kate". Later Avenger models carried radar equipment for the ASW and AEW roles.

Escort carrier sailors referred to the TBF as the "turkey" because of its size and maneuverability in comparison to the F4F Wildcat fighters in the same airgroups.

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