I'm trying to confirm something that was said in the paperwork that was submitted to get the old Curtiss-Wright plant in St Louis (later McDonnell-Douglas and finally Boeing) onto the National Register of Historic Places, about P-40 production, that directly contradicts what various other sources say. Here's what the application says: "On April 27, 1939, the United States War Department announced a $12,872,898 contract awarded to C-W for 524 Curtiss P-40 planes—the largest single contract since the end of World War I. Of the 84 American plants making planes, only 23 (including Curtiss-Wright) produced military models. In order to expedite production, the Allies advanced funds to a handful of companies including Curtiss, Douglas, Bell, Lockheed, Martin, Boeing, and others. At this time C-W managed two other factories in Buffalo, New York, and Columbus, Ohio (Louisville, Kentucky would open in 1942); the work was split among the three. Then in May of 1940, at the original St. Louis factory, the first P-40s left the production line with 200 delivered to the United States Army by September; the remaining 324 were deferred so that C-W could complete 140 H81As (export P-40s) for Allied Forces in France. With the subsequent German invasion of France during the summer of 1940, those planes were sent to England to help the Allied cause."
Other sources say that all P-40s were made in Buffalo. Photos of the St Louis plant during WW2 show AT-9s and A-25s and CW-22s and the XP-55 but no P-40s. Does anybody know for sure whether the statement in that application is accurate or not?
Other sources say that all P-40s were made in Buffalo. Photos of the St Louis plant during WW2 show AT-9s and A-25s and CW-22s and the XP-55 but no P-40s. Does anybody know for sure whether the statement in that application is accurate or not?
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