Picture of the day

During WW1, Henry Ford was a very vocal pacifist, going as far as hiring a ship in 1916 and travelling with a gang of fellow pacifists to Norway with the stated intention of stopping the war.

Didn't work, of course, and once the States came late to the party in 1917 (as they are wont to do) he threw himself and his company wholeheartedly into the cause. One of the big projects were the "Eagle boats".

12043502.jpg


Lovely, aren't they? Sub chasers, made quickly and inexpensively at Rouge River to "sweep the oceans of the submarine threat". None saw wartime service in WW1, but several served on through WW2. Eagle PE-53 was sunk by a Uboat, but the other 59 exampels met their fate via scrapping, use as targets, or capsizing.

uss_pe56.jpg


They weren't missed.
 
During WW1, Henry Ford was a very vocal pacifist, going as far as hiring a ship in 1916 and travelling with a gang of fellow pacifists to Norway with the stated intention of stopping the war.

Didn't work, of course, and once the States came late to the party in 1917 (as they are wont to do) he threw himself and his company wholeheartedly into the cause. One of the big projects were the "Eagle boats".

12043502.jpg


Lovely, aren't they? Sub chasers, made quickly and inexpensively at Rouge River to "sweep the oceans of the submarine threat". None saw wartime service in WW1, but several served on through WW2. Eagle PE-53 was sunk by a Uboat, but the other 59 exampels met their fate via scrapping, use as targets, or capsizing.

uss_pe56.jpg


They weren't missed.

Henry Ford was also cozy with Hitler. :) It was all about making money, no more, no less


https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/daily/nov98/nazicars30.htm


Grizz
 
The last few times I was over for a visit there was a dagger on display in the WWII section. It looked like something a custom maker built in the 1980's. The 'information card' claimed it was carried by a Cdn. soldier in WWII. An exhibit like that just raises more questions than anything. The dagger in question resembled a 2/3 scale replica of a 17th century plug bayonet. It looked like something that got mixed in by accident from the Halifax Police Department museum. I also noticed a lot of the information cards looked like they were churned out by a disinterested student on a summer job with a cheap printer on the cheapest paper they could find.

Please do not touch seems obvious enough. :)

Grizz
 
1920px-N-20.10_Aiguillon_frontal_view.jpg

The sole prototype of the Swiss N-20.10 Aiguillon ("Sting") fighter-bomber aircraft developed in 1951 by Flug- und Fahrzeugwerke Altenrhein.
 
The Ford CMP , powered by a Ford 95 horsepower 239 cu in 8 cylinder flat head engine

The Chev CMP , powered by a 85 horsepower , 216 cu in 6 cylinder engine

I learned to drive in the Ford version. Think it came surplus from Princess Auto. Shift gears with your left hand and no syncromesh. :)

Grizz
 
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