wanttaja
En-Route
I had traveled to a nearby city to give a couple of presentations. As I usually do on these trips, I ran through the local antique stores to look for aviation/space items of interest.
REALLY scored this time. The Martin Mars was the biggest airplane produced by the Allies during WWII. It was a long-range seaplane made for the US Navy. Only five were constructed, and all were delivered to the Navy in 1945-1946.
However, Martin had apparently been trying to sell the Mars to civilian airlines for post-war travel. The book I found was a massive blue-leather-bound hard copy book, with gold lettering on the cover.
It's 18 inches wide and 12 high, and inside are a bunch of artist conceptions of the Mars flying passengers, cargo, etc. It's copyright 1944, which is after the prototype flew, but about a year prior to the first production plane coming off the assembly line. NONE of the illustrations show the Mars in Navy livery. The picture below gives it an NX registration number (which is currently assigned to a Stearman).
OK, great find. But here's where things get interesting. Included was a SEALED manila envelope. Here's a shot of the seal:
Note, again, the seal is unbroken.
Now...what the heck do I do with this? Are there illustrations of Martin bombers inside, like the seal says? Or had someone else slipped them out years ago.
I'd LOVE to open it. But I hate the thought of doing so. I could steam the seal off (probably protecting it), I could slice open the opposite end of the envelope, saving the seal.
This was sealed up almost 80 years ago. I kinda hate opening it, and wonder if a more-formal process should be used. Should I contact Geraldo Rivera?
Ron Wanttaja
REALLY scored this time. The Martin Mars was the biggest airplane produced by the Allies during WWII. It was a long-range seaplane made for the US Navy. Only five were constructed, and all were delivered to the Navy in 1945-1946.
However, Martin had apparently been trying to sell the Mars to civilian airlines for post-war travel. The book I found was a massive blue-leather-bound hard copy book, with gold lettering on the cover.
It's 18 inches wide and 12 high, and inside are a bunch of artist conceptions of the Mars flying passengers, cargo, etc. It's copyright 1944, which is after the prototype flew, but about a year prior to the first production plane coming off the assembly line. NONE of the illustrations show the Mars in Navy livery. The picture below gives it an NX registration number (which is currently assigned to a Stearman).
OK, great find. But here's where things get interesting. Included was a SEALED manila envelope. Here's a shot of the seal:
Note, again, the seal is unbroken.
Now...what the heck do I do with this? Are there illustrations of Martin bombers inside, like the seal says? Or had someone else slipped them out years ago.
I'd LOVE to open it. But I hate the thought of doing so. I could steam the seal off (probably protecting it), I could slice open the opposite end of the envelope, saving the seal.
This was sealed up almost 80 years ago. I kinda hate opening it, and wonder if a more-formal process should be used. Should I contact Geraldo Rivera?
Ron Wanttaja