("W P Dixon" wrote)
[snip]
 About The Plane
 The PT-26 is a "canopied version" of the open-cockpit PT-19 Cornell
 developed by Fairchild in 1938, according to the Web site of the U.S. Air
 Force Museum.
 "Designed as a rugged monoplane primary trainer, the PT-19 went into
 quantity production for the Army Air Corps in 1940," the Web site stated.
 "In 1942, the Army Air Forces (AAF) ordered the PT-26 into production for
 the Royal Canadian Air Force under the Lend-Lease Program. A total of more
 than 1,700 PT-26s were produced in the U.S. by Fairchild and in Canada by
 Fleet Aircraft, Ltd." The airplane has seats for two occupants located one
 behind the other.
(Photos and history)
http://www.goldenwingsmuseum.com/Aircraft.html
Center box:
Fairchild PT-19   -  1943
Fairchild PT-23A  - 1943 (Radial engine)
Fairchild PT-26   -  1942 (Yes, found in a barn!!)
Fairchild PT-26   -  1944
All are basically the same plane. The museum's PT-26 (like the one that
crashed) was 'found' in a barn. I'd driven past that barn many times over
the years. Hmm!! Who knew?
Montblack