I thought it would take two planes to have a rally?
Ken, don't you want to weigh in on this?
From the encyclopedia;
The Beechcraft Bonanza is one of the most important civil aircraft in aviation history. Introduced in 1947 by The Beech Aircraft Corporation, as of 2006 it is still being produced by the Beechcraft Division of Raytheon Aircraft.
Designed by a team led by Ralph Harmon, the original model 35 Bonanza was the first truly modern high-performance personal airplane: a very fast, all-metal, low-wing monoplane at a time when most light aircraft were still made of wood and fabric. The model 35 featured retractable landing gear and its signature V-tail, which made it both highly efficient and the most distinctive private airplane in the sky. The prototype 35 Bonanza made its first flight on December 22, 1945, with the first production airplanes debuting as 1947 models.
At the end of World War II two all-metal aircraft emerged, the 35 Bonanza and the Cessna 195, that represented very different approaches to the premium-end of the postwar civil aviation market. With its high wing, seven cylinder radial engine and fixed undercarriage, the Cessna 195 was little more than a continuation of prewar technology; the 35 Bonanza, however, was more like the great fighters developed during the war. Featuring a more powerful and easier to manage horizontally-opposed six cylinder engine, a rakishly streamlined shape, retractable undercarriage and low-wing configuration, the Bonanza captured the public's imagination, as well as the premium light plane market. The Cessna was unable to compete with the more advanced Bonanza.