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Home Base:
Waukegan, IL
Operation: Central USA
Model: 305A
Wing Span: 36' 0"
Length: 25' 9"
Height: 7' 4"
Max Speed: 151 mph
Gross Weight: 2,400 lbs
Power Plant: Continental O-470-11
flat-six piston
Horsepower: 213
Fuel Capacity: 48 gallons
Armament: 4 under wing pylons for White
Phosphorous "Willie Pete" target marking
rockets. |
WHF's
Cessna L-19A Bird Dog

The Warbird Heritage Foundation (WHF) is the owner and
operator of this 1952 Cessna L-19A Bird Dog (S/N:
022677) which is available for airshows, flybys and
film.
The Cessna L-19/O-1 Bird Dog is a liaison and
observation aircraft. It was the first all metal fixed
wing aircraft ordered for and by the United States Army
since the U.S. Army Air Forces separated from the Army
in 1947, becoming its own branch of service, the U.S.
Air Force. The Bird Dog had a lengthy career in the U.S.
military as well as in other countries.
The U.S. Army was searching for an aircraft that
could adjust artillery fire, as well as perform liaison
duties, and preferably be constructed of all metal, as
the canvas covered Liaison aircraft used during World
War II (primarily Stinson and Piper products) had a
short service life. The US Army issued the specification
for a two-seat liaison and observation monoplane and the
Cessna Aircraft Company submitted the Cessna Model 305A
a development of the Cessna 170. The Cessna 305A was a
single-engined, light-weight, strut-braced high-wing
monoplane with a tailwheel landing gear. The greatest
difference from the Cessna 170 was that the 305A only
had two seats, in tandem configuration (the largest
tandem-seat aircraft that Cessna ever produced), with
angled side windows to improve ground observation. Other
differences included a re-designed rear fuselage,
providing a view directly to the rear (a feature later
dubbed "Omni-View" and carried to Cessna single-engine
aircraft after 1964), and transparent panels in the
wings' center-section (similar to those found on the
Cessna 140 and the later Cessna 150 Aerobat model),
which allowed the pilot to look directly overhead. A
wider door was fitted to allow a stretcher to be loaded.
The U.S. Army awarded a contract to Cessna for 418
aircraft which was designated the L-19A Bird Dog. The
prototype Cessna 305 (registration N41694) first flew on
14 December 1949. Deliveries began in December 1950 and
the aircraft was soon in use fighting its first war in
Korea from 1950 through 1953. An instrument trainer
variant was developed in 1953, later versions had
constant-speed propellers and the final version the
L-19E had a larger gross weight. Cessna produced 3,431
aircraft which was also built under license by Fuji in
Japan.
The L-19 received the name Bird Dog as a result of a
contest held with Cessna employees to name the aircraft.
The winning entry, submitted by Jack A. Swayze, an
industrial photographer, was selected by a U.S. Army
board. The name was chosen because the role of the
army's new aircraft was to find the enemy and orbit
overhead until artillery (or attack aircraft) could be
brought to bear on the enemy. While flying low and close
to the battlefield, the pilot would observe the
exploding shells and adjust the fire via his radios, in
the manner of a bird dog (Gun dog) used by game hunters.
The Defense Department ordered 3,200 L-19s that were
built between 1950 and 1959. The aircraft were used in
various utility roles such as artillery spotting, front
line communications, medevac and training. In 1962 the
Army L-19 was redesignated the O-1 (Observation) Bird
Dog and entered its second war in Vietnam. During the
early 1960s the Bird Dog was flown by South Vietnamese
airmen (ARVN-Army Republic Vietnam/SVAF South Vietnamese
Air Force), US Army aviators, and clandestine (Ravens)
aircrews. In 1964 the Department of Defense (DOD) issued
a memorandum directing that the U.S. Army turn over its
"Fixed Wing" O-1 Bird Dogs to the US Air Force, while
the army began its transition to a "rotor-wing" force
(helicopters).
The U.S. Army was allowed to retain some O-1 Bird
Dogs for artillery observation (spotting/forward air
control) until the new army helicopters entered service.
All previous operators mentioned above, including the US
Army, continued using the O-1 Bird Dog throughout the
war, however the bulk of the O-1s were operated by the
U.S. Air Force from 1964 until the end of the war in
1975 (flown primarily by South Vietnamese airmen in
1975). During the Vietnam War, the aircraft were used
for reconnaissance and forward air control (FAC).
Supplementing the O-1, then gradually replacing it, was
the USAF O-2 Skymaster, a faster, twin-engine aircraft
which entered Vietnam in the mid 1960s. The last U.S.
Army O-1 Bird Dog was officially retired in 1974.
During the course of the Vietnam War, 469 O-1 Bird
Dogs were lost to all causes. The USAF lost 178, the
USMC lost seven, and 284 were lost from the US Army,
South Vietnamese Forces, and clandestine operators.
Three Bird Dogs were lost to enemy surface-to-air
missiles (SAMs).[1]
As the USAF phased out the O-1 in favor of the O-2,
many O-1s in the United States were sold as surplus.
During the 1970s and 1980s, Ector Aircraft
remanufactured many as the Ector Mountaineer with their
original powerplants, and as the Ector Super Mountaineer
with the Lycoming O-540-A4B5.
Many O-1s were turned over to the Civil Air Patrol
for such duties as aerial search. Many of these were
damaged in groundloops and other accidents, and
eventually all were replaced by tricycle-gear Cessnas.
The only O-1 remaining in CAP inventory is a static
display on a post in front of CAP headquarters at
Maxwell Air Force Base. Many of these aircraft were sold
to private pilots as recreational aircraft. Others went
to museums where they are usually displayed in their
military combat markings.
Photo
Gallery
Contact
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Warplane Heritage Foundation
3000 Corporate Drive
Waukegan, IL 60087
Phone: (847) 244-8701
Fax: (847) 244-8703 |
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the operator, or agent,
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