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In "Ye Olde Pub," each section of the plane had different seats. Behind the wing was red netting as seats.
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The tail of the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress "Ye Olde Pub," where a tail gunner would be stationed.
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Beneath the body of the B-17 is where the ball turret gunner would have been stationed. Pilot Dave Lyon explained that the gunner would curled in the ball for hours at a time and manned the gun with their feet.
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The righthand side of the 1945 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress "Ye Old Pub." A waist gunner would be stationed at the window.
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The nose of the plane, just below and in front of the cockpit. Inside is the radio room and gunner stations.
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The crawlspace beneath the cockpit, which leads to the radio room at the nose of the "Ye Olde Pub."
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The lefthand side of "Ye Olde Pub," where its name is painted on the side.
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Where a waist gunner would have been stationed aboard a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress during World War II.
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From the radio room of "Ye Olde Pub," the flight ahead can be seen through the round, glass encasement at the nose of the plane.
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An angled shot of the bomb bay of "Ye Olde Pub" from a passenger seat in the cockpit.