Image of the Air Force wings with the museum name underneath

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Machine Gun Fired from an Airplane

During the 1912 flying season at College Park, additional volunteers were accepted for flight instruction, more airplanes were purchased, and new experiments were conducted. One of the most notable tests was the first firing of a machine gun from an airplane by Capt. Chandler on June 7, 1912. He scored five hits on a 6-foot-by-7-foot cheesecloth target from an altitude of 250 feet. The next day he fired on a 6-foot-by-54-foot cloth target from an altitude of 550 feet and obtained 14 hits from 44 bullets fired, for a remarkable 32 percent score.

The General Staff of the U.S. Army was unimpressed, however, and one staff officer made it clear that "airplanes were suitable only for reconnaissance and that thoughts of air battles were purely the product of the young fliers' fertile imaginations."


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