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First Flight Society Celebrates National Aviation Day 2023 On Saturday, August 19th

PRESS RELEASE

The First Flight Society announced the 5th annual National Aviation Day at Dare County Regional Airport on August 19th, 2023. The event runs from 10AM-3PM and consists of Airplane Displays, Exhibitors, Speakers, and Food Trucks. The mission of the celebration is to provide a fun and educational experience promoting, honoring, and celebrating the accomplishments of the Wright Brothers and helping educate the world about aviation. NAD is a free event aimed at all ages.

Speakers at the event include historian Larry Tise, FFS Event chair Tony Bruno and FFS Board member Danny Couch. Mr. Tise’s lectures will focus on Orville and Katharine Wright. His morning talk will be “’Sterchens’: The Wright brothers and their sister Katharine” and “After Wilbur: Orville and Katharine”. Mr. Bruno will speak about Aviation history of the Outer Banks, while Mr. Couch will talk about “Billy Mitchell – father of the Air Force”.

Confirmed exhibitors include Kitty Hawk Kites, Civil Air Patrol, Military Aviation Museum, Elizabeth City State University, Dare County Radio Control Flyers, Dare County, PaperPie, and Beach Gypsy Designs.

NAD is also Orville Wright’s birthday. Former president Franklin D. Roosevelt was the creator of National Aviation Day, deciding for the first time in 1939 that the nation should celebrate the growth and advancements being made in aviation. Mr. Wright, born in 1871, was still alive when the proclamation was first issued. Katharine Wright, sister of Orville and Wilbur was also born on August 19th, but in 1874.

Dare County Regional airport (MQI) is located at 410 Airport Road, Manteo, NC 27954.

Additional information can be found at www.nationalaviationday.org.

Without the First Flight Society there would not be a Wright Brothers National Memorial in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. The Kill Devil Hills Memorial Association, later named First Flight Society, began as a group of local businessmen who successfully petitioned the US Congress to fund and build a monument to the Wright Brothers’ 1903 achievement.

The FFS plans an annual celebration at the Wright Brothers National Memorial on December 17th to celebrate and memorialize the work of the Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk, NC.

They created the Paul E Garber Shrine in 1966 to honor individuals and groups for achieving significant “firsts” in aviation development since 1903. Walter and Olive Ann Beech, the founders of Beechcraft, will be inducted this December 17th. (Charles Lindbergh, Tuskegee Airmen, Mary Feik, John Glenn, Katherine Johnson (Hidden Figures) and most recently astronaut Sally K Ride, among others.

The First Flight Society’s mission is: We tell the story of the Wright Brothers through community events, education, and the commemoration of the world’s very first powered flight, in Kitty Hawk, NC.

More information about the First Flight Society can be found at Home - First Flight Society - Aviation Society on the Outer Banks in Kill Devil Hills, NC

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F-4S Phantom II “Black Bunny” Arrives at Castle Air Museum

by Adam Estes

After a multi-year fundraising operation, and the cooperation of the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona, a unique example of the McDonnell-Douglas Phantom II arrived at the Castle Air Museum in Atwater, California. This being F-4S BuNo.155539, the last example of the breed to have flown with Air Test and Evaluation Squadron Four (VX-4), better known as “The Evaluators.”

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Manufactured in St. Louis, Missouri, as an F-4J-33-MD, construction number 2777, Bureau Number 155539 would make its first flight on February 22, 1968, before being assigned by the US Navy to VF-102 aboard USS America (CV-66). 155539 would also be operated by VF-102 on shore at NAS Oceana, Virginia. After serving aboard USS Independence (CV-62) and a brief assignment to NAS Fallon, Nevada, 155539 was transferred to VF-101 in May of 1975, flying out of Oceana and MCAS Cherry Point, North Carolina before being reassigned to VF-33 at NAS Oceana before taking another assignment onboard USS Independence. 155539 would also serve on USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69), Roosevelt Roads Naval Station in Puerto Rico, and once again on USS America. Its final assignment with VF-33 was at NAS Oceana before the aircraft was sent to NAS North Island, California, to be converted from an F-4J to an F-4S at the Naval aircraft Rework/Refit Facility, which saw the addition of smokeless engines, reinforcements to the airframe, and leading edge slats for maneuverability. In May of 1981, 155539 was transferred to VX-4 (Air Test and Evaluation Squadron Four, (AIRTEVRON FOUR)), known as the Evaluators, based at NAS Point Mugu, California.​

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McDonnell Douglas F-4J Phantom II fighter (BuNo 155539) from fighter squadron VF-33 Tarsiers aboard the aircraft carrier USS Independence (CV 62) during 1977. VF-33 was assigned to Carrier Air Wing 7 (CVW-7) aboard Independence for a deployment to the Mediterranean Sea from March 30th to October 21st, 1977. (image via Wikipedia)

In 1981, BuNo.155539 transferred to The Evaluators at VX-4 (AIRTEVRON FOUR) based at Naval Air Station (NAS) Point Mugu, California. That same year, the aircraft underwent conversion into an F-4S, which saw the addition of smokeless engines, reinforcements to the airframe, and leading edge slats for maneuverability. Its original modex XF-8, changed to XF-1 in 1982, giving it the now-famous callsign Vandy 1, along with a distinctive, all-black livery. To complement the all-black paint scheme, VX-4 personnel painted a Playboy Bunny on the tails of their Phantoms, albeit without asking permission from Hugh Hefner, who owned the trademarked symbol. The media mogul initially considered taking legal action for this breach, but gave way to common sense and granted permission to use his Bunny emblem.​

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F-4S Phantom II BuNo 155539 during its heyday with Test and Evaluation Squadron 4 (VX-4) at Naval Air Station Point Mugu, California during 1982. (image via Wikimedia)

VX-4 used BuNo.155539 to evaluate advanced systems for future use on aircraft deployed within the fleet. The Phantom also took part in several air shows, where its distinctive markings earned it a nickname with the public, Black Bunny.

As newer jets, such as the F-14 Tomcat and F/A-18 Hornet, joined the US Navy, the service began phasing out the venerable Phantom II, both from carrier-based squadrons and evaluation units as well. This eventually saw F-14 Tomcats taking on the Black Bunny moniker and Vandy 1 callsign with VX-4. On May 2nd, 1986, BuNo.155539 made its last flight, transiting from Point Mugu to the Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Center (AMARC, now the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group) at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, Arizona.​

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Vandy-1 aka Black Bunny during its time in storage at AMARG in February, 2007. (photo by David Broad via Wikimedia)

And there the iconic jet would remain under the hot desert sun for the next 36 years. As time passed, and so many of the Phantom IIs stored at AMARG fell to the scrapper’s bulldozer, BuNo.155539 became the sole intact example with a VX-4 pedigree, although the forward fuselage of another Black Bunny F-4S, BuNo.153783, is stored in Lancashire, England. [The latter artifact survived due to its post-US Navy service with Britain’s Royal Air Force as F-4J(UK) ZE352.]​

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An unusual formation of U.S. Navy McDonnell F-4 Phantom IIs from the Air Test and Evaluation Squadron (VX-4) and the Naval Missile Center in China Lake, California. Visible are QF-4B BuNo 148365 (written off at China Lake on January 31st, 1974), F-4B BuNo 150435, F-4J BuNo 153783 (sold to the RAF as ZE351 on August 30th, 1984), and F-4J BuNo 153795 (sold to the RAF as ZE354 on August 30th, 1984). The forward fuselage from the lead aircraft now survives in the UK, the only significant Phantom II relic from VX-4 to survive outside of Castle Air Museum’s complete Black Bunny. (image via Wikimedia)

Although the aircraft featured in the Boneyard’s Celebrity Row, the longer it remained at AMARG, the greater the chances that it too would be cut up for scrap. Fortunately, in 2016, the Castle Air Museum stepped in to save the Black Bunny. Little by little, donations from across the country came in, contributing to the effort to raise the necessary US$50,000 fee to move BuNo.155539 from the Boneyard to Atwater. While several subassemblies from the jet began were transported to Castle, the airframe itself still required a nearby facility for safe storage until it could finally make its way to the museum. Luckily, the Pima Air & Space Museum sits just across the street from the Boneyard, and had ample room to assist the Castle Air Museum in saving the iconic jet. In late January, 2022, Black Bunny moved to Pima’s outdoor storage lot, within sight of the museum’s display areas and adjacent to their restoration facilities. Pima has performed a similar service for other museums, temporarily storing aircraft on site after they leave the 309th AMARG for eventual preservation and display elsewhere.​

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Vandy-1 under tow across the road from AMARG for safekeeping at the Pima Air & Space Museum during January, 2022. (photo by Dan Rivera)

Having raised sufficient funds to facilitate BuNo.155539’s move, Castle Air Museum contracted Worldwide Aircraft Recovery to perform the task. With the exception of the aircraft’s foldable wingtips, the entire airframe was loaded onto Worldwide’s big rig for the long journey west. It left Tucson during the night of Monday, July 24th, arriving at its first stop, near the banks of the Colorado River, in Parker, Arizona.​

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Vandy-1 ready for transport from the Pima Air & Space Museum to the Castle Air Museum in Atwater, California. (photo By Dan Rivera)

They drove into California the next day, sailing speedily along from Parker, through Palm Springs, San Bernardino, and Victorville before closing the day outside Tehachapi. Wednesday would see the Black Bunny roll through Bakersfield to reach Interstate 5 and loop back to Modesto for the final stretch to the museum, where they arrived during the morning of July 28th. Now that BuNo.155539 has arrived, museum staff will move the jet into their restoration hangar to undergo preparation for static display. Once the airframe is ready, it will become one of the finest and most unusual Phantom IIs on display anywhere!​



A constant fundraising effort is required to maintain Castle Air Museum and its aircraft. Their important mission is only achievable due to the generosity of people like you – so please click HERE to give them support!

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EAA AirVenture 2023 Facts and Figures Released [Press Release]

Once again, EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2023 proved to be the world’s greatest aviation event. Better known simply as “Oshkosh” to those who love aviation, the event in Oshkosh, Wisconsin showcases many incredible aircraft for one week each summer to the several hundred thousand enthusiasts who fly in from across the globe to witness or participate in the spectacle.

“There was so much going on during the week that encompassed the entire world of flight, from the presence of the U.S. Air Force Training Command and NASA, to magnificent aircraft restorations and exciting new flying technology. Oshkosh was again the place that brought the aviation world together.” Said EAA CEO and Chairman Jack Pelton.

Pelton added “There was so much going on during the week that encompassed the entire world of flight, from the presence of the U.S. Air Force Training Command and NASA, to magnificent aircraft restorations and exciting new flying technology. Oshkosh was again the place that brought the aviation world together.”

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FACTS AND FIGURES FOR A RECORD-SETTING YEAR


Attendance: Approximately 677,000 – A record total (previous mark: 650,000 in 2022). “We had record-setting totals of campers, exhibitors, volunteers, and more. It was also a challenging year at times with weather, logistics, and other factors, which makes me even more proud of the efforts by our volunteers and staff to organize an outstanding event.” Commented Pelton.

Total aircraft: More than 10,000 aircraft arrived at Wittman Regional Airport in Oshkosh and other airports in east-central Wisconsin. At Wittman alone, there were 21,883 aircraft operations in the 11-day period from July 20-30, which is an average of approximately 148 takeoffs/landings per hour when the airport is open.

Total showplanes: 3,365 including a record 1,497 registered in vintage aircraft parking, plus 1,067 homebuilt aircraft, 380 warbirds (up 3 percent from ’22), 194 ultralights, 134 seaplanes and amphibians, 52 aerobatic aircraft, and 41 rotorcraft.

Camping: More than 13,000 sites in aircraft and drive-in camping accounted for an estimated 40,000 visitors.

Volunteers: More than 5,500 contributing in excess of 250,000 hours.

Commercial exhibitors: 848 (record number).

Forums, Workshops, and Presentations: More than 1,400 sessions hosted throughout the week.

Social Media, Internet and Mobile: More than 18.3 million people were reached by EAA’s social media channels during AirVenture (up 78 percent over 2022), with engagement of 1.9 million; More than 189,000 hours of viewing EAA video clips online also occurred during the event (more than double the 2022 total).

International guests: International visitors returned in a big way in 2023, with 2,372 attendees registering the International Visitors Tent from a record-tying 93 countries outside the U.S. Adding a significant number of international visitors who do not register at the tent when they arrive, the actual total is much higher.

The Gathering shines: The EAA Aviation Foundation’s annual event to support its aviation education programs attracted more than 1,000 people and raised more than $2 million dollars that will be focused on EAA’s mission of growing participation in aviation.​


















Media: 863 media representatives on-site, from six continents.

Economic impact*: $170 million for the five counties in the Oshkosh region (Winnebago, Outagamie, Fond du Lac, Calumet, and Brown). * – based on 2017 University of Wisconsin Oshkosh economic impact study

What’s ahead for EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2024 (July 22-28, 2024)?

Pelton siad “We’ll start planning for EAA AirVenture 2024 a little later in August, but we are already looking at a number of big activities, including the 100th anniversary of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Plenty of ideas have also been forwarded to us from EAA members and others that will be part of the planning for 2024.”

Information updates posted at www.eaa.org/airventure

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Photo via EAA



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Spanish Civil War Veteran Messerschmitt Bf 109 for Sale

Platinum Fighter Sales has facilitated the trade of many unique warbirds and vintage aircraft around the world, from interwar biplanes to Cold War-era jets and from airshow-ready aircraft to projects-in-waiting. However, the unique Messerschmitt Bf 109 E-1 which the company presently has on offer must be amongst the most historically significant airframes they have ever listed. Restored in Germany by world-renowned MeierMotors GmbH, this fighter is one of just a handful of Spanish Civil War combat veteran aircraft extant. It also holds the distinction of being one of the first two Emils (as E-model Bf 109s were known colloquially) sent to Spain, one of the first of the entire breed to see operational service!​

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A line up of Condor Legion Bf 109s during the Spanish Civil War; 6*88 is in the foreground. (image via Platinum Fighters)

While the Emil’s factory construction number, or Werknummer, is currently unknown, it is known to have served in the Luftwaffe’s Condor Legion in Spain bearing the fuselage code 6*88. The Condor Legion, as many will remember, was a German expeditionary air force operating in the Spanish Civil War on behalf of the fascistic Spanish Nationalists under Generalissimo Francisco Franco. 6*88 and its sistership, 6*87, were the first two Emils to arrive in Spain, serving with 1 Staffel of Jagdgruppe 88 (1./JG88), alongside earlier the earlier Doras (Bf 109Ds) then in service with the Legion. Unlike the Doras, which used a Junkers Jumo 210 powerplant, the Emils came equipped with a Daimler-Benz DB-601 engine and four 7.92mm MG 17 machine guns. Naturally, being a brand new and state of the art fighter, 6*88 soon became the personal mount for 1./JG88’s Staffelkapitan (squadron commander), and officer named Hauptmann (Captain) Siebelt Reents. By March 1939, however, the Spanish Republican Air Force was a spent force, granting air supremacy to both Germany’s Condor Legion and the Italian Aviazione Legionaria (Legionary Air Force). Even so, the Jagdgruppe still went on patrol.

On March 27, 1939, Bf 109s from 1./JG88 escorted bombers from Kampfgruppe 88 against Republican holdouts; it was the squadron’s final mission in Spain. Just five days later, following the surrender of all Republican forces, Generalissimo Franco announced the end of the Spanish Civil War. While most of the German and Italian aircraft in Spain would soon return to their home nations, a number of them remained behind for service with Spanish pilots in the Francoist regime, this included 20 Bf 109E-1s and E-3s, with 6*88 being amongst them. 6*88 moved to León, joining Grupo 25 Logroño (known as the Pyrenean Fighter Group). With Teniente (Lieutenant) José Vincente Muntadas at the controls, 6*88 made a wheels-up forced landing at Larraga after running out of fuel on August 24th, 1939. Photographs of the incident reveal that, much like many of its Luftwaffe contemporaries, 6*88 had received modifications to bring it up to an E-3 standard 6*88 had received modifications to bring it up to an E-3 standard, which featured additional armament from two MG FF cannon. Repaired by 1940, the aircraft returned to service in Reus, Catalonia. Spain remained essentially neutral during WWII, with the exception of some volunteer regiments which fought alongside Germany on the Eastern Front. By the end of that conflict, the nation’s remaining Bf 109Es were flying alongside Hispano Aviación HA-1109 Tripala, a licensed variant of the Bf 109 built in Spain but powered by a Hispano-Suiza 12Y engine. Later still would be the perhaps more familiar HA-1112 Buchón, powered by the Rolls-Royce Merlin. Around this time, 6*88 received a Spanish Air Force serial number, C.4E-88.​




On May 16, 1950, 6*88 suffered another fuel exhaustion-related forced landing, this time near Valderrobres, Teurel with test pilot Capitan Vinicio Gil de Gomez at the controls. On September 19, 1950, an official application to withdraw 6*88 from service was made, the aircraft going into storage at a Spanish Air Force maintenance facility in León by October that year. Interestingly, it seems that a technical officer with prior Bf 109E experience returned the aircraft to airworthy condition. According to several eyewitnesses, 6*88 made flights in both 1957 and 1958, making it not only one of the very first Bf 109Es to arrive in Spain, but also the very last one to fly in the nation as well! Sadly, the aircraft eventually ended up as a training aide for the base firefighting team, and was thus reduced to a wreck, unloved and disregarded for the next several decades.

One of the few who did notice 6*88, however, was Spanish aviation journalist Luis-Ignacio Azaola, known affectionately as Canary Azaola. One day he spotted the aircraft in the base dump after landing at León in a Cessna 172 on June 3, 1965. However, the ‘109 would remain in León until 1981 when Jan Luetjens, a Swiss ex-pat living in Spain, bought its remains. Luetjens soon sold the wreck to Robs Lamplough, a now very well known British pilot, race car driver, and aircraft collector who became renowned for the many warbird recoveries he organized around the world. Lamplough shipped the battered Emil to the UK, initially placing it in storage. During the mid-80s, 6*88 went on loan to the Tangmere Military Aviation Museum (on the site of the former RAF Tangmere) in West Sussex. But in 2012, Robs Lamplough commissioned MeierMotors to restore 6*88 to airworthy condition, as we reported HERE. In the interim, MeierMotors has gained a well-earned reputation for being one of the finest aircraft restoration workshops in Germany. In the past decade, MeierMotors has lavished enormous effort on the aircraft, taking great pains to get the details correct. It is a magnificent achievement, with 6*88 now looking much the same way she would have appeared during the Spanish Civil War. Vintage V12s has overhauled the fighter’s Daimler-Benz DB-601 at their base in Tehachapi, California, while Skycraft Propellers has refurbished the Emil’s VDM (Vereinigte Deutsche Metallwerke; United German Metal Works) propeller in the UK. Almost ready for its first flight, registered as D-FCON in Germany, the fighter remains with MeierMotors in Bremgarten awaiting a buyer to effect the finishing touches. When it flies, it will be unique in the world, as the only airworthy combatant from the Spanish Civil War!​




Only one other Condor Legion Bf 109 is known to survive, this being construction number 790 produced at the Erla-Maschinenwerke factory in Leipzig. That aircraft flew with the Legion as 6*106, and it too received a conversion to E-3 configuration. Following its operational service, the airframe survived scrapping as an instructional airframe. The Spanish Air Force donated it to the Deutsches Museum in Munich during 1959. Although it wears a Luftwaffe paint scheme, the team from MeierMotors were granted permission to sample some of its remaining original paint to determine the authentic hues of its Condor Legion paint scheme, serving as a reference for the restoration of 6*88. No matter where it goes from here, or when it will return to the skies, 6*88 is without any doubt one of the finest and most meticulous restorations of a Bf 109 of any variant to date.​

To inquire about this rare aircraft, visit www.platinumfighters.com

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6*88 much as she appears today in the workshop at MeierMotors. (image via Platinum Fighter Sales)

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Iconic Catalina Flying Boat To Be Resurrected as New Production Transport Category Turboprop

Catalina Aircraft, holder of the Type Certificates for the 28-5ACF Catalina, during AirVenture announced the rebirth of the iconic and legendary Catalina as the Catalina II Amphibious Turboprop. A production re-start program has been formalized for the Next Generation Amphibious Aircraft (NGAA) Catalina II twin turboprop amphibious flying boat, and the company is preparing to take pre-orders as part of the turboprop production re-start program.​

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A company rendering of a fire bomber PBY.

Based on the design fundamentals of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) & Transport Canada (TC) Large, Transport Category certificated 28-5ACF Catalina amphibious flying boat, Catalina Aircraft is offering two new production variants, a NGAA Civilian Variant and a NGAA Special Use Variant, both of which represent the quintessential standard in airborne amphibious operations for the private, commercial, government and military sectors.

“Interest in the rebirth of this legendary amphibian has been extraordinary. The capabilities this modernized iconic platform offers, being capable of performing so many unique missions, and in a variety of market segments, speaks to the heritage of the Catalina product line. The NGAA Catalina II is a modern amphibian with advanced engines and avionics and will offer capabilities no other amphibian can provide today.” said Lawrence Reece, President Catalina Aircraft. “We are looking forward to moving this program forward rapidly.”

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The NGAA Catalina II targets two major aircraft client groups, the civilian/commercial operator and the Government / Military customer. The NGAA Catalina II will be the largest, fastest, longest range, highest payload, and most capable amphibious aircraft available worldwide with Western Certifications. Capable of operating from runways, grass, dirt, lakes, rivers, bays, and open water. Utilizing green energy power initiatives, the NGAA Catalina II provides civilian, commercial, government, and military operators a significant capabilities expansion over many current platforms employed in amphibious operations today. The NGAA Catalina II provides unmatched precision, speed, and flexibility from land to air to sea.

The NGAA Catalina II Civilian Variant is a new production 32,000-pound Maximum Take-Off Weight (MTOW) unpressurized, twin-turboprop, sea state 2 capable, amphibious flying boat designed to accommodate up to 34 passengers or 12,000 pounds of cargo operating in the private and commercial market segments.

The NGAA Catalina II Special Use Variant is a new production 40,000-pound Maximum Take-Off Weight (MTOW) unpressurized, twin-turboprop, sea state 3 capable, amphibious flying boat geared to support government and military type CONcepts of OPerations (CONOPs).

Both the Civilian and Special Use Variants are constructed using modern corrosion-resistant materials, assembly practices, and supportability initiatives to ensure the Material Availability and Operational Availability (Ao) remain at the highest rates possible. Many existing and proven in-service systems are employed to minimize logistics footprint growth and provide for commonality of components between the NGAA Catalina II and existing/emerging in-service aerial platforms. With an almost limitless multi-CONOPs potential from a single platform, the NGAA Catalina II offers a single asset solution capable of replacing several existing platform types, thus reducing overall Acquisition, Operational, and Sustainment costs.

Pricing has not been announced yet, while deliveries are anticipated to begin in 2029. For new production twin turboprop NGAA Catalina II inquiries please visit www.catalinaaircrafttrust.com or contact Catalina Aircraft at [email protected].



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American Heritage Museum Honors Tuskegee Airmen Legacy

PRESS RELEASE

July 26, 2023 – The American Heritage Museum takes immense pride in commemorating the remarkable achievements and indomitable spirit of the Tuskegee Airmen by officially transferring its iconic Boeing PT-17 “Stearman” s/n 41-25454 primary trainer aircraft that has documented history with the group to join the incredible collection of the National Museum of the United States Air Force (NMUSAF) in Dayton, OH. The transfer ceremony was held on the 75th Anniversary of the Integration of the US Air Force on July 26th, 2023 at Joint Base Andrews outside of Washington, DC and marks a significant milestone in preserving the legacy of these trailblazing aviators whose courage and dedication shattered racial barriers and forged a path of excellence for future generations.​

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The PT-17 Stearman holds a special place in the hearts of aviation enthusiasts and historians alike. Among its many roles in WWII, it trained Tuskegee Airmen at Mouton Field in Tuskegee, AL. Not only did graduates from the program fly and fight in combat, but they did so while simultaneously defying prejudice and discrimination as they served their country with valor and honor. These individuals served in numerous theaters throughout the conflict, most notably in Europe with the 332nd Fighter Group, best known as the “Red Tails.”

“Let us remember that those who flew and supported this plane, those who started their journey to conquer the skies ultimately changed our air force, our armed forces and the nation for the better.” Said General C.Q. Brown, the 22nd chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force in remarks during the ceremony. General Brown is the first African American to lead any branch of the United States Armed Forces.

The ceremony held at Joint Base Andrews, gathered distinguished guests, government leaders, veterans, uniformed personnel, members of the media, and American Heritage Museum supporters, all eager to witness the historic moment as the PT-17 Stearman commenced its new chapter with the NMUSAF. Among the esteemed attendees were Col. Carl Johnson, Lt. Col. Shelton Ivan Ware, and William Thomas Fauntroy, Jr., three surviving members of the Tuskegee Airmen and their families, adding a deeply emotional touch to the event.​

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Rob Collings, President of the American Heritage Museum, spoke passionately about the significance of this transfer, stating, “The PT-17 Stearman represents not only the aircraft that trained these valiant pilots but serves as a symbol of unity, perseverance, and the fight against adversity. It is an honor for the American Heritage Museum to be a part of this momentous occasion, as we pay tribute to the incredible accomplishments of the Tuskegee Airmen.”

The National Museum of the United States Air Force, renowned for its commitment to preserving the legacy of the United States Air Force, now embraces the PT-17 Stearman as a treasured addition to its collection. The aircraft will be prominently displayed, allowing visitors from around the world to immerse themselves in the inspiring story of the Tuskegee Airmen and their remarkable contributions to the nation’s history.

As we look back on this momentous event, the American Heritage Museum remains steadfast in its mission to preserve and share the inspiring stories of those who have bravely served our country. The conveyance of the PT-17 Stearman further reinforces our mission of honoring the valiant individuals who have shaped America’s history and their immeasurable impact on our society. The American Heritage Museum furthers its commitment to the heritage of the Tuskegee Airmen as it now embarks on the restoration of the sole remaining Fairchild PT-19 Recruit trainer with documented operational history with the group during WWII. Once complete, the PT-19 will become a featured exhibit within the American Heritage Museum in Hudson, MA in honor of the Tuskegee Airmen.

For more information about the American Heritage Museum and its dedication to preserving our nation’s military heritage, please visit https://www.AmericanHeritageMuseum.org . For more information on the Tuskegee Airmen PT-19A project, please visit Fairchild PT-19A "Tuskegee Airmen" - The American Heritage Museum .​

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Germany’s Hangar 10 Changes Hands

By James Kightly

A pre-eminent European warbird collection, Hangar 10 in Germany, is entering new ownership after the tragic loss of founder Volker Schülke, in an aviation accident. While the collection has been understandably quiet since his death in 2020, his widow Arite Schülke looked to the collection being taken on as a going, complete concern, rather than being broken up.

Swiss-based Brokers Boschung Global arranged the sale of the collection, and base facility, to Munich entrepreneur Karl F. Grimminger, who is already the owner of Luftraum Süd, where he has an impressive collection of aircraft, some of which are on display in his new hangar in Aalen, Baden-Württemberg. The significant expansion of his collection by the acquisition of Hangar 10 was covered by Grimminger, saying: “It is very important to me to keep the German collection together as a whole…” and he foresees positive benefits to come from operating both collections at the two locations.​

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Messerschmitt Bf 109G D-FMGS. [photo by Nigel Hitchman]

Hangar 10 will remain at the current location, on the island of Usedom, Pomerania, although Grimminger is considering changing the name to Air Traum Nord. In his view, positive benefits can be expected between the collection in Usedom and his existing museum in Aalen, both of which are now open to the public. Grimminger’s current collection has been noted to attend away events as well as flying ‘at home’.

The Hangar 10 collection includes (among other aircraft, wrecks, and vehicles) a remarkable variety of 1930s and W.W.II single-engine types, including Bückers Bu 131 Jungmann D-EJTR and Bu 133 Jungmeister D-EPAX, Fieseler Fi 156 D2 Storch, D-EVAS, Messerschmitt Bf 108 D-ERTT ‘D-IMTT’, Polikarpov Po 2, D-EPOO and fighters Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-6 D-FMGS and Bf 109 G-14 D-FMGV, as well as Flug Werk FW 190 A-8/N, D-FWAA. Not included in the sale is the two-seat Buchón conversion, Messerschmitt Bf 109G-12 D-FMGZ owned by the EADS Messerschmitt Stiftung (EADS Messerschmitt Foundation) since 2019.​

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The rare two-seat, RR Merlin powered ‘109’ was sold to the Messerschmitt Stiftung, but continued operation with Hangar 10. [Photo by Nigel Hitchman]

Arite Schülke said: “Hangar 10 is a project that is close to my heart. It has played a very important role for me and in the life of my entire family for many years. “ She went on: “For me, however, it is now time to end this chapter in order to break new ground after my husband Volker Schülke’s accident.”

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Two of the (then) Hangar 10 Messerschmitt Bf 109s at the 2018 flying day. [photo by Nigel Hitchman]

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B-29 Doc and C-47 That’s All..Brother Announce Joint Tour Stops in Utah and California

PRESS RELEASE

The B-29 Doc History Restored Tour will travel west in September with tour stops in St. George, UT, and Chino, CA, September 7-18, 2023. The C-47 known as That’s All…Brother, the lead aircraft that delivered the first Allied troops to France on D-Day in 1944, will join B-29 Doc for both History Restored Tour stops.​

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“B-29 Doc is one of only two B-29 Superfortress aircraft still airworthy and flying, and the Commemorative Air Force (CAF) Central Texas Wing’s C-47 That’s All…Brother place in history about its service to liberate France during World War II is a remarkable story,” said Josh Wells, B-29 Doc executive director. “Having both of these historic aircraft on the same ramp to showcase their stories, as well as to give people an up-close and personal experience with history, will be a unique opportunity.”

Ride flight tickets for B-29 Doc and C-47 That’s All…Brother are on sale now for the tour events at St. George, UT, and Chino, CA. Information about rides and flight ticket purchasing can be found here: www.b29doc.com/rides and Tour.

“Connecting the C-47 and its mission of delivering the first troops on D-Day, which led to Victory in Europe, with the mission of the B-29, which ultimately delivered victory over Japan, provides a one-of-a-kind experience for warbird and aviation enthusiasts,” said Deena Clausen, CAF Central Texas Wing leader. “Partnering with B-29 Doc to honor the Greatest Generation, while preserving our shared mission of keeping these warbirds flying, broadens our reach to allow even more people to see these historic aircraft.”

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Photo by Kevin Hong

Event Details for the B-29 Doc History Restored Tour and C-47 That’s All…Brother in St. George, UT

B-29 Doc will arrive at St. George Regional Airport (SGU) Thursday, Sept. 7, while C-47That’s All…Brother will arrive at SGU Friday, Sept. 8. The two aircraft will be hosted by the Western Sky Aviation Warbird Museum for the three-day event, Friday, Sept. 8 through Sunday, Sept. 10. Both will be available for ground and cockpit tours when they are not operating ride flights. The ramp will be open for public access Friday, Sept. 8 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The hours on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 9 and 10, for ground and cockpit tours will be from 12:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. both days, and will be subject to the aircraft ride schedules. Admission for the ground and cockpit tour event will be $10 per person and $20 per family with tickets available at the gate. Visitors can enter the St. George event through the Western Sky Aviation Warbird Museum, 4196 S. Airport Parkway, St. George, UT, 84790. Ride flight tickets are on sale now for both aircraft:

B-29 Doc: www.b29doc.com/rides
C-47 That’s All…Brother: Tour

Event Details for the B-29 Doc History Restored Tour and C-47 That’s All…Brother in Chino, CA at Yanks Air Museum

B-29 Doc and That’s All…Brother will arrive at Chino Airport, Monday, Sept. 11 and will be hosted by Yanks Air Museum. Both aircraft will be available for ground and cockpit tours beginning Wednesday, Sept. 13, Through Friday, Sept. 15, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., when they are not operating ride flights. The hours on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 16 and 17 will be from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m., both days, and will be subject to the aircraft ride schedules. Admission for the static display event and flight deck tours will be $5 per person with the purchase of a Yanks Air Museum General Admission Ticket. For information about Yanks Air Museum, visit www.yanksair.com. Visitors can enter the Chino event through Yanks Air Museum, 15121 Stearman Drive, Chino, CA, 91710. Tickets for static ground and flight deck tours can be purchased at the event. Ride flight tickets are on sale now for both aircraft:

B-29 Doc: www.b29doc.com/rides
C-47 That’s All…Brother: Tour



About Doc’s Friends and B-29 Doc
Doc’s Friends, Inc., is a 501c3 non-profit board that owns and manages the operation of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress known as Doc. Doc is a B-29 Superfortress and one of 1,644 manufactured in Wichita during World War II. It is one of only two remaining B-29s that are still airworthy and flying today. The mission of Doc’s Friends is to HONOR the men and women who sacrificed so much for the freedom of others, including those who designed, built, maintained and flew the B-29 during and after WWII. CONNECT people with the rich heritage of the B-29 and allow aviation enthusiasts to experience the thrill of a B-29 up close. EDUCATE today’s and future generations on the contributions of the Greatest Generation during wartime.​

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About the B-29 Doc History Restored Tour and B-29 Doc Flight Experience
Each year, B-29 Doc travels to cities across the United States to allow aviation enthusiasts a chance to B-29 Doc up-close and personal. Doc’s annual tour mission includes an average of 100 flight hours, beginning in early April and spanning through the summer until late October. Tour stops include ground and flight deck tours, as well as B-29 Doc Flight Experiences. The B-29 Doc Flight Experience will last approximately 90 minutes and includes a 30-minute ride. Prior to takeoff, passengers will experience a crew briefing and learn more about the history of the B-29 and the role it played in U.S. history. Passengers will also get to hear and see the sights and sounds of engine starts and run-ups prior to takeoff.​



About Commemorative Air Force (CAF)
The CAF was founded to acquire, restore, and preserve in flying condition a complete collection of combat aircraft flown by all military services of the United States, as well as selected aircraft of other nations, for the education and enjoyment of present and future generations of Americans. More than just a collection of airworthy warplanes from the past, the CAF’s fleet of 180 historic aircraft, known as the CAF Ghost Squadron, recreates, reminds, and reinforces the lessons learned from the defining moments in American military aviation history. More information at www.commemorativeairforce.org.​



About the C-47A That’s All, Brother
That’s All…Brother was the C-47A troop carrier aircraft that led the Airborne Invasion on D-Day, June 6, 1944, carrying 101st Airborne Division paratroopers into France during the D-Day invasion. During the remainder of WWII, That’s All… Brother served in Operation Dragoon, Market Garden, the Relief of Bastogne, and Operation Varsity. After the war, the aircraft was sold as surplus and its contribution to history was almost forgotten. In 2015, the CAF rescued the aircraft from a boneyard and completed restoration to its WWII configuration in 2018. In June 2019, it returned to England and France for the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of D-Day (flying over Omaha Beach on June 6, 2019) and plans to return to Europe for the 80th-anniversary commemorations in June 2024. More information at www.thatsallbrother.org.​

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That’s All … Brother cruising alongside the chalk cliffs near Dover, England. (photo by Rich Cooper/COAP)

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Shackleton Refurbishment At Newark Air Museum

By James Kighlty

On 25 July, 2023 installation work started on a bespoke scaffolding system around the nose and forward fuselage of Avro Shackleton WR977 at Newark Air Museum (NAM). This will allow teams of museum volunteers to work on this significant restoration and repainting project in safe conditions.

In 2023 NAM successfully installed jacking pads underneath the aircraft, which allowed refurbished jacks to be installed under both wings of the aircraft. This allowed NAM to make the aircraft safe; helped to mitigate issues with the main undercarriage structures; and allowed the visiting public to once again have some access inside the aircraft.​

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Seen on 25 July, Shackleton WR977’s scaffolding is added by Inspired Scaffolding Services. [photo via NAM]

The installation of the new scaffolding (by Inspired Scaffolding Services from Bilsthorpe near Newark) will allow for restoration work to be undertaken on the front section of WR977 in a safe and secure manner. This work will include sealing the main cockpit glazing; in-depth cleaning; conservation of, and painting, of this area of the aircraft.

For most of the work period, WR977 will remain as part of the museum’s open cockpit offer. The modest contributions for accessing this iconic aircraft (when possible) will contribute towards the ongoing fundraising campaign to cover the scaffolding hire costs and the cost of the weekly safety inspections. The current anticipated time frame for the work is ten weeks; from the end of July through to the first week of October.

In these challenging times, NAM is seeking support to help fund the costs associated with the hire and regular safety inspections of the scaffolding. This NAM fundraising campaign can be accessed via the following Just Giving page, HERE.​

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B-17 update

As many readers will be well aware, there are a number of Boeing B-17s under restoration to fly right now. Perhaps the boldest of these projects is Mike Kellner’s effort in Marengo, Illinois. He and his team are working to resurrect Boeing B-17E 41-2595, a combat veteran Flying Fortress which once bore the nicknames Desert Rat and Tangerine. As we have reported previously, Kellner found the aircraft in a farmer’s field near Bangor, Maine as a collection of chopped-apart components back in the mid-1980s. Somehow, he had the vision to see this jumble of battered parts one day going back together again as an airworthy B-17. The project got underway in earnest during the mid-1990s. While Kellner and his intrepid volunteers work on a shoestring budget, they have engineered miracles with their efforts; the Fort’ is well on her way to becoming whole again. Interestingly, the aircraft did not serve as a bomber during her combat life (in the China Burma India theatre), but rather as a converted cargo plane prototype for the breed known as the XC-108A. Despite this unique aspect to the airframe, Kellner is restoring the aircraft back to its original B-17E configuration, to the way the airframe would have looked when it rolled off Boeing’s production line in Seattle, Washington during April 1942. Desert Rat, as Kellner and his team have re-dubbed her, will be the oldest Flying Fortress in the skies when she finally flies, although this record may eventually be surpassed by a B-17C which the team also has on the books. Desert Rat could use our help though, but before we provide a link for contributions, we thought our readers would enjoy a recent visit by Scott Thompson of Aero Vintage, we have permission to relay his latest article on the project, reproduced (with gentle editing) below.​
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The restoration crew at Marengo, Illinois, working to restore B-17E 41-2595 (otherwise known as Desert Rat) continues to make steady, if slow, progress on the challenging effort. For those not familiar, this rare B-17E was recovered from a remote farm in Maine way back in 1985 by current owner and team leader Mike Kellner. It was in terrible shape, having been subjected to an unsuccessful but damaging attempt to scrap the bomber. Now, jump forward through four decades and the airplane is slowly coming back together in airworthy condition in a purpose-built building in rural Illinois.

The restoration started in earnest around 1993 or so, and the first and most ambitious challenge was to structurally rebuild the fuselage after it was cut into pieces earlier by those seeking to turn it into scrap. Also, there was a large, non-standard fuselage cargo door added when this particular B-17E was modified by the AAF to become the sole XC-108A, and that cargo door had to be removed and the structure replaced. This structural work required manufacturing many new and specialized longerons and formers to replace those cut, and jigging the fuselage so things would line up properly. All that work on the fuselage structure was completed several years ago.​

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The all-important carry-through structure that holds the wing attach fittings and girdles the bomb-bay is the last major structure of the fuselage that awaits completion. Most of the custom-made parts are now on hand so it is a matter of carefully assembling the structure back into the fuselage.

For those who have watched the effort in recent years, progress is not readily apparent but, in fact, much work has actually been accomplished. In particular, the complex airframe structure around the ball turret is completed, as is most of the restoration of the camera bay located forward of the ball turret and aft of the bomb bay. The work effort by Kellner and his all-volunteer crew is now focused on the important carry-through structure in the bomb bay which consists of, among other parts, the wing attach points. New steel tubes had to be extruded to exact Boeing specifications and carefully installed in place of the old, unairworthy tubes. This is exacting work because the tubes hold the terminal fittings that will mate to the B-17 inner wing sections. Being off an eighth of an inch just won’t fly later when trying to attach the wings. As the photos show, new terminal fittings on the fuselage side are being installed. Most of the components to complete the bomb bay section are now available, and the parts are being fitted and riveted back into position. After the carry-through structure is completed, the bomb bay catwalk is built and ready for installation. After that, it will be bomb racks and bomb bay doors plus the actuating mechanisms…the list, it turns out, is pretty much endless.​

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The right forward fuselage side wing attach fittings are in position and will soon be permanently riveted back into the assembly.

After the fuselage structure is completed, the cockpit area will need to be reinstalled. At some point in the future, the electrical and other systems will need to be recreated and installed as per the original Boeing specifications. The wings recovered from the field in Maine are eventually going back into this airplane. They have received some work, but attention has primarily been on the fuselage over the past few years. One of the wing’s inner sections has been stripped out for cleaning and evaluation. The two outer wing panels have had the skin removed in jigs and will be reskinned as time allows. There are four engines present, but all four will need overhauls, as will the propellers.​

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Interior view looking forward from station 4 into the cockpit. Though mostly gutted now, the components for reassembly are on hand, some in need of restoration and some ready to go in. A beautiful instrument panel complete with all the instruments is in storage and ready to be installed at the appropriate time. Components for the operable top turret are being assembled offsite. The top turret dome rests in place on the fuselage.

As can be seen, this restoration effort remains a monumental task. Mike Kellner and his small volunteer crew are devoted and spend many days each week working on the small pieces that gradually become the big pieces. As in any such restoration project, finances and labor are the challenges. If you live in the area around Marengo, Illinois, which includes the greater Chicago and Rockford areas, and have some talent, experience, or just enthusiasm, Mike would like to talk to you. Perhaps contact Mike via email. Many parts have to be created from drawings or pattern pieces, so someone with that skill set would be ideal.​

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The three dedicated workers on the morning I showed up were, from left, Bill Stanczak, Chris Gibson, and project manager Mike Kellner.

Desert Rat also has its own dedicated Facebook page HERE which some of our readers may enjoy viewing too. If you wish to contribute to the restoration of this important aircraft, whether it be with parts, labor or cash, please contact the Desert Rat team HERE. Monetary donations can be placed HERE.


Many thanks indeed to Scott A. Thompson (and Connor Bond) for allowing us to reproduce this article describing Thunderbird’s present condition… his book, Final Cut: The Post-War B-17 Flying Fortress and Survivors as well as other titles are the gold standard when it comes to the airframe history it describes!



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Shoo Shoo Baby: The Remarkable Odyssey of Survival for a Combat Veteran B-17

vby Adam Estes

As some readers may be aware, the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio has begun the process of transferring one of the most significant B-17s extant to the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum (NASM). The historic, combat-veteran bomber will eventually go on display at NASM’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia. For those unaware of the historical significance of the subject of this article, it is certainly one of the most incredible stories of an individual B-17 Flying Fortress, one which certainly earns the term odyssey to describe its journey.​

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B-17 expert Scott Thompson in one of his recent updates wrote “The B-17G previously displayed at the NMUSAF in Dayton, B-17G 42-32076, better known as Shoo Shoo Baby, has been slowly moving to the National Air and Space Museum as part of trade many years ago (the NMUSAF got the Swoose). It did see the fuselage and inner wing sections at the NMUSAF restoration packed up and ready for transport. Rumor at the museum is that the NASM is coming very soon to get it. Eventually, the B-17G will be reassembled and placed on display at the NASM, most likely at the Udvar-Hazy Center at Dulles.”

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Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in 2005

The story of the Shoo Shoo Baby begins like many other B-17s, at Boeing Plant No.2 in Seattle, Washington, where it was built as construction number 7190. Accepted into the US Army Air Force as serial 42-32076 on January 17, 1944, it was subsequently fitted with all necessary armaments and other combat-related equipment at the Continental Airlines Modification Center #13 at Denver Municipal Airport (currently Denver International), and the United Air Lines Modification Center #10 at Cheyenne Municipal Airport (currently Cheyenne Regional Airport). After being processed at Grand Island Army Airfield, Nebraska, its last stop in the US before going to England was Presque Isle Army Airfield, Maine. Arriving at RAF Burtonwood, Lancashire on March 2, it would ultimately be assigned to the 401st Bomb Squadron of the 91st Bomb Group, 8th Air Force at RAF Bassingbourn on March 23. The aircraft’s allotted code was LL*E, and the crew named the aircraft Shoo Shoo Baby, after a popular song by the Andrews Sisters that was the favorite of crew chief T/Sgt Hank Cordes and his wife back home. The nose art, inspired by Alberto Vargas’ Hawaii pin up girl for Esquire, was applied by line mechanic Cpl. Tony Starcer, one of four nose artists in the 91st. Just one day after arriving, Shoo Shoo Baby flew on the first of what turned out to be 23 missions during its operational life with the 91st. Unlike other B-17s in the group, 42-32076 did not have a permanently-assigned crew, but Lt. Paul G. McDuffie, who ferried the aircraft from Burtonwood to Bassingbourn, would fly the ship on several occasions.​

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The nose art of B-17G serial 42-32076 “Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby” (coded LL-E) of the 401st Bomb Squadron, 91st Bomb Group. Handwritten caption on reverse: ’29/5/44.’ Photo credit: American Air Museum in Britain

One of the most interesting anecdotes in the Shoo Shoo Baby’s history was when her crew flew her on a one-ship mission for the 91st Bomb Group. On April 9, 1944, the 91st flew up to bomb the port city of Gdynia in occupied Poland. However, the mission was soon called off, but the crew of the Shoo Shoo Baby, under the command of Lt. McDuffie, could not be reached due to a faulty radio. They climbed through heavy clouds to 30,000 feet, encountering a formation of B-24s. Realizing it was clearly the wrong group, they searched but found no sign of the 91st, though they found another formation of B-17s. They followed the formation to a Focke Wulf plant in Marienburg (now Malbork), Poland. They dropped their bombs when the others did, and followed them back to England, then diverted to return to Bassingbourn, where all four engines quit on the runway due to fuel exhaustion. Despite expecting to be chewed-out, they were instead congratulated for having single-handedly given the 91st Bomb Group a victory. When McDuffie completed his tour of duty and was rotated out, an extra “Shoo” was added to the aircraft on May 25. Just four days later, Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby would fly her last mission with the 401st.​

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Shoo Shoo Baby is on the left in this photo.

Mission #23 was to be another long one. The 401st was to bomb a Focke-Wulf aircraft component factory in Poznań, Poland. On route to the target, while crossing the German border, the No.3 engine lost oil pressure and quit. The pilot in command, 2nd Lt. Robert Guenther, tried to feather the propeller on this engine, but it would not rotate. Instead, the No.3 propeller continued to windmill, and Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby began to lag behind the formation, but stayed on course. Releasing its deadly payload over Poznań, pilots Guenther and 2nd Lt. George Havrisik turned westward. What surprised them most, however, was that the German fighters that responded to the American bombers were focused on the distant formations, but no attention was paid to them despite the fact that they were straggling outside the formation. Though fortunate for the crew aboard Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby, it was uncharacteristic of German fighters that actively looked out for stragglers to make easier kills.

But before they even reached the Baltic coast, the No.2 engine also failed. Realizing they could not return to England, Guenther asked the navigator, 2nd Lt. John M. Lowdermilk, to plot a course for Sweden. The crew knew what this meant: internment by Swedish officials and the confiscation of the aircraft, but it was much more preferable to be interned in Sweden than become prisoners of war in Germany. All loose equipment was ordered to be thrown overboard to lighten the aircraft, including guns and ammo, radio equipment, and spare clothing not in use. The crew even attempted, after ball turret gunner S/Sgt. Nick Premenki exited the turret, to jettison the turret altogether, as was standard procedure in the event of a wheels-up landing, but the turret would not budge. Lowdermilk plotted a course for a coastal town on the southernmost tip of Sweden, Ystad. As they reached the Swedish coast, however, the crew of the Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby encountered flak fired on them from anti-aircraft batteries. It was clear to the crew that the Swedes were trying to warn them not to do anything foolish. Just before reaching land, a third engine went out. It was at this point when a Seversky J 9, an export version of the prewar P-35 design, flew up and escorted the stricken bomber to Malmö, about 58 kilometers northwest of Ystad. There, a B-24 Liberator had just landed ahead of them, and Guenther and Havrisik had to swing the Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby wide to avoid the Liberator on landing.

Upon landing, the crew and the plane were interned by the Swedish government. The Swedes treated Allied pilots fairly, but they were still far from home, and it was the intention of the US State Department to bring home the American airmen. Handling the negotiations in Sweden was American air attaché, Colonel Felix M. Hardison, who had been stationed in Stockholm since February 1944. Hardison had previously served as a B-17 pilot with the 19th Bomb Group of the 5th Air Force, stationed in the South Pacific, flying the famed B-17E 41-2489, known as Suzy-Q, which had returned to the US after extensive combat in the early phases of the Pacific War. Hardison finally struck a deal with the Swedes. In exchange for 300 American airmen being returned to the United States on the guarantee that the airmen would be prohibited from further combat, the nine B-17s were transferred to the Swedish government on July 10. 1945. Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby was among the nine B-17s, and this would turn out to be a boon for the airlines in Sweden.​





Before the war, they had been interested in acquiring Douglas DC-4 airliners, but when war broke out, the orders dried up as the DC-4 was adapted by the USAAF as the C-54 Skymaster. In addition to this, the Swedes had been flying airliners throughout Europe, usually filled with diplomats trying to negotiate during the war. Though the war was not over, by late 1944, it was clear that sooner or later, the Allies would win, and Sweden would still need long-range airliners for the immediate postwar years for routes that the venerable DC-3 simply didn’t have the range to achieve. And so, after the American airmen were sent on their way home in October 1944, the Swedish government ordered Svenska Aeroplan AktieBolag (Swedish Aeroplane Company Limited (SAAB)), to convert seven of the bombers into airliners while the remaining two examples would be cannibalized for spare parts. All military equipment was removed, the nose section was lengthened by three feet, and interior settings in the former waist gunners and radio operator compartments would provide the aircraft with the ability to carry 14 passengers. In addition to this, the bomb bay was converted to carry cargo, with the left hand bay door sealed shut and reinforced to be part of the floor, while the right hand door would still open so that a lift could be lowered from the bomb bay to bring cargo and luggage up into the compartment. They were also referred to as “Felixes” in honor of the American air attaché.

Registered on the Swedish civil registry as SE-BAP for flight testing with Swedish Intercontinental Airlines (Svensk Interkontinental Lufttrafik AB, SILA), which operated through the publicly-backed AB Aerotransport, Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby flew again on November 2, 1945, and was soon sold to Danish Air Lines (Det Danske Luftfartselskab, DDL) and registered as OY-DFA, and was given a new name; Stig (Wanderer) Viking. DDL received another converted B-17G that had landed in Sweden during the war, USAAF serial 42-107067, registered as OY-DFE, which was named Trym (a figure from Norse mythology) Viking. As an airliner, Stig Viking would travel the world, starting out with a Copenhagen-England route, but eventually flying as far as Khartoum, Sudan, Nairobi, Kenya, and Johannesburg, South Africa. With the introduction of the long-awaited DC-4 to the international market, the Swedish-operated Felixes were soon retired, and they were scrapped.​




They were not without incident, however, as on November 28, 1945, when Stig Viking was on approach to Blackbushe Airport in Yateley, Hampshire, the left landing gear failed to extend, so the pilot made an emergency landing that resulted in no injuries to any occupants, and the aircraft was soon repaired and returned to service. However, Danish Air Lines’ other B-17 “Felix” was not so lucky. Trym Viking was written off on January 30, 1946, when it overshot the runway on arrival from England to Copenhagen Airport and collided with a parked RAF Douglas Dakota III, serial number KG427. Though no one was seriously hurt, both aircraft were beyond economic repair and were eventually scrapped. Meanwhile, Stig Viking, the former Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby, continued in service with DDL until March 31, 1948, when it was assigned to the Danish Army Air Corps. There, it was assigned the serial 67-672, and would carry yet another name, “Store Bjørn” (Great Bear). During its military use in Denmark, it was converted into an aerial survey aircraft for use in Greenland, with the addition of cameras, mapping radar, and a 1,400-liter fuel tank in the bomb bay. On December 1, 1949, it was transferred to the Royal Danish Navy but continued its work in Greenland, and when the Danish Army Air Corps and Naval Air Service were merged to become the Danish Air Force, Store Bjørn continued its survey work in Greenland, often working alongside US Air Force survey aircraft. It would continue its work in Greenland until October 1, 1953, when it was retired from flight duty and placed in storage.​

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67-672 in Greenland

On February 6, 1955, it was purchased by the Babb Company Inc. of New York, an aircraft brokerage firm. It did not return to the U.S. at that point, however, as the firm sold the old bomber off to the Institut Geographique National in France for continued use as a survey plane, this time over France and her overseas territories and colonies. Registered as F-BGSH, the bomber previously known as Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby would continue to fly for the IGN, being based out of Creil Airport near Paris, along with other B-17s modified for such purposes. One such aircraft was the B-17G 44-85718 (registered as F-BEEC), which later flew for the Lone Star Flight Museum as Thunderbird, and is now undergoing maintenance at the Erickson Aircraft Collection in Madras, Oregon on behalf of the Mid America Flight Museum in Mount Pleasant, Texas. Another aircraft flown with the former Shoo Shoo Shoo baby at this time was the B-17G 44-8846, which later flew in the movie Memphis Belle (1990) and is displayed at La Ferte Alais, France as The Pink Lady. F-BGSH surveyed the Middle East, Africa, and South America before being retired from flying for IGN on June 15, 1961. Its engines and other parts were removed, and it was kept on a corner of Creil, receiving damage to its nose section from an accident at one point, but otherwise quietly sitting on display at Creil. Were it not for a chance discovery, Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby was likely destined for the scrapyard.​

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Shoo Shoo Baby as F-BGSH at Creil

This rediscovery of Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby’s combat record was made by Australian aviation historian Steve Birdsell, who had by this point recently left Vietnam after serving as a war correspondent. He tracked down the service record of 42-32076 and brought the attention of its existence to the 91st Bomb Group Memorial Association and the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. The museum already had a B-17 in its ranks, B-17G 44-83624, but this one had never seen combat, being accepted into the USAAF on April 26, 1945, and serving in the postwar years as a missile launcher (MB-17G) and a drone director (DB-17G) before being donated to the museum in 1957. Needless to say, the chance to snag a combat-veteran B-17 was too good to pass up. The museum appealed to the US and French governments, and on April 22, 1971, the Shoo Shoo Baby was transferred to the NMUSAF. But that was the easy part. There was still the problem of shipping it back to America. This was achieved by dismantling the old aircraft at Creil and trucking it in pieces to Rhein-Main Air Force Base near Frankfurt, West Germany, where it was loaded aboard a Lockheed C-5A Galaxy and flown to Wright-Patterson AFB on June 17, 1972 to be restored by volunteers on the base.​

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Arrival at Dover AFB

The years had not been kind to Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby. The museum, having only moved to its present-day location from the Patterson Field portion of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base just two years prior and with other aircraft in need of restoration, chose to store Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby for another six years. It was then that the 512th Military Airlift Wing at Dover AFB, Delaware agreed to take on the project in 1978. But rather than simply restoring it to static display condition, Shoo Shoo Baby would be restored to fully-flyable condition. The work lasted 10 years, and although the aircraft served in combat in bare aluminum, the sheer amount of work to bring the old Baby back to its wartime configuration would mean that leaving it in bare aluminum would show differences between the old panels of aluminum and the new. This combined with the need for long-term corrosion protection led to the decision, rather than apply a silver lacquer to the aircraft, to apply an olive-drab and neutral gray camouflage that was modeled off a unique variation developed for B-17s manufactured at Boeing plants in Seattle where the olive drab looped around the engine cowlings. The change to olive drab also resulted in the bomb row turning white rather than being a different color after every fifth bomb, the aircraft identification codes turning yellow from black, and where the original block numbers on the nose were all on olive-drab against the natural metal finish, a small portion incorporating the aircraft’s serial and subvariant distinction was left unpainted. In 1981, all completed portions of the aircraft were painted, and since the nose section was among the completed portions, Tony Starcer was called out of retirement to recreate his nose art for the aircraft back in 1944. Unfortunately, Starcer would not live to see the aircraft completed, passing away in 1986, but his recreation of the nose art remains today.​






On September 10, 1988, Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby rolled out of the restoration hangar at Dover Air Force Base to a public ceremony celebrating the completion of her restoration. She would return to Dayton, but this time she would fly under her own wings. After several shakedown flights, flying as a US government aircraft with her wartime serial number standing in for an N-number, Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby arrived at Dayton on October 12 for a final ceremony on October 15 with an escort of two P-51 Mustangs, with the landing at 11:00 being accompanied by two Beechcraft T-34 Mentors. Once the public ceremonies were over, Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby was brought into the museum’s hangars, while the museum’s previous B-17G, 44-83624, would go on to be displayed at the Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover AFB under the name “Sleepy Time Gal”. This is the point, until recent years, where the story ended, but as it so happens, it seems the Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby has somewhat of a restless spirit if one were to be poetic.

In 2005, after over 50 years of being on display in the city of Memphis, Tennessee, the B-17F 41-24485 known to history as the Memphis Belle was brought to Dayton for restoration and eventual display. Two years later, in 2007, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s collections committee voted to transfer the oldest existent B-17, B-17D 40-3097 “The Swoose” to the National Museum of the USAF as well, and The Swoose would arrive the following year in 2008. The latter trade resulted in a deal between the National Museum of the USAF and the National Air and Space Museum that would see the Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby transferred to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum upon completion of either the Memphis Belle or The Swoose. In May 2018, the Belle was completed, and yet another ceremony followed, where a changing of the guard if it were commenced by placing the Memphis Belle and the Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby face to face before the former took the latter’s place and the latter was sent to the storage hangars to be disassembled for the journey to the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center at Dulles International Airport, Chantilly, Virginia. As of this article, the engines and some other components have already arrived at Udvar-Hazy, while the rest of the aircraft, especially the wings and fuselage remain, for the time being, at Dayton. The reason for this delay has been because of the ongoing renovations at the National Mall, which should take another two years to complete.​

As we await the complete transfer of the Shoo Shoo Baby to the Smithsonian, we have a story of what it was like to fly overseas on the Shoo Shoo Baby as an airliner.

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Memphis Belle nose to nose with Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby. (photo by Ken LaRock for USAF)

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B-29 Doc Adds a Tour Stop in Knoxville in August

The B-29 Doc History Restored Tour will land in Knoxville, TN, for a three-day event, August 25-27, 2023. B-29 Doc is one of only two B-29 Superfortress aircraft still airworthy and flying today and will be available for ground and flight deck tours, as well as B-29 Doc Flight Experience rides while in Knoxville.​

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B-29 Doc will arrive at Knoxville’s McGhee Tyson Airport, Thursday, August 24, and will be hosted by Signature Aviation and ACES Systems for the three-day event, Friday, August 25 through Sunday, August 27. Doc will be available for ground and cockpit tours Friday, August 25 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and on Saturday and Sunday, August 26 and 27, from 12:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. both days following morning ride flights.

Admission for the ground and cockpit tour event will be $10 per person and $20 per family with tickets available at the gate. Visitors can enter the Knoxville event through a gate near Signature Aviation, 2343 W. General Aviation Drive, Alcoa, TN, 37701.

Tickets for B-29 Doc Flight Experience rides in Knoxville are on sale now via www.b29doc.com/rides

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Intrepid’s Concorde Heads to Restoration

On Wednesday, August 9th, The Concorde was removed from the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum to undergo a few months of restorations at the Brooklin Navy Yard. The Concorde experience is temporarily closed while Concorde is relocated offsite for necessary maintenance. The experience and exhibit will re-open to the public in Spring 2024. The Concorde was lifted off Pier 86 and onto a barge, which took about two hours to reach the Brooklyn Navy Yard, just about 52 minutes less than the Concorde’s record-setting flight from New York to London in 1996.​

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Screecap via Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum

The Concorde is a product of Anglo-French cooperation. When the Concorde entered Air France and British Airways transatlantic service in 1976, it was the only operational supersonic passenger transport in the world. With a crew of nine, the Concorde could fly at 1,350 mph (2,150 kph) at an altitude of 60,000 ft (18,181 m), high enough for its 100 passengers to see the curvature of the earth.

The British Airways jet has been at the museum since 2003, and this was the first time it left for restoration work. This aircraft, serial no. 100-010 (G-BOAD), first flew on August 25, 1976. Concordes crossed the Atlantic Ocean in under three hours, or less than half the time of any other jetliner flying that route even today. Protests from environmentalists prevented its supersonic use over the United States and limited airport operation. A crash upon takeoff in July 2000 grounded the fleet until 2001. The Concorde flew VIP passengers until 2003, when both airlines retired their fleets from service. This airplane is on loan from British Airways.​

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On August 25, 1976, the Concorde 210 (G-BOAD), made its first flight. The G-BOAD spent more time in the air than any other Concorde at 23,397 hours. Photo via Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum


The Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum is dedicated to the exhibition and interpretation of history, science and service as related to its home aboard the aircraft carrier Intrepid, a National Historic Landmark. As you explore the Museum you will be able to examine original artifacts, view historic video footage and explore interactive exhibits. For more information, visit www.intrepidmuseum.org.

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National Museum of The USAF Welcomes PT-17 to Its Collection

PRESS RELEASE

DAYTON, Ohio – The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force welcomed the arrival of a PT-17 to its collection following a ceremonial transfer at Joint Base Andrews that coincided with the 75th anniversary of the integration of the armed forces. The aircraft is only one of two existing PT-17s that were used as Tuskegee Airmen trainers during WWII.

The Tuskegee Airmen were the first black pilots to fly in the U.S. military. In March 1941 the U.S. Army Air Corps announced the formation of the first-ever black combat unit, the 99th Pursuit (later Fighter) Squadron, with the pilots training on Moton Field and Tuskegee Army Air Field in Tuskegee, Alabama. Before closing in 1946, nearly 1,000 Tuskegee Airmen received their primary flight training at Moton Field.​

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This aircraft was acquired through an aircraft exchange with the Collings Foundation’s American Heritage Museum in Hudson, Massachusetts. Transferring it to the National Museum of the USAF was bittersweet said Rob Collings, the executive director of The Collings Foundation.

“It is a little emotional to leave it behind,” said Collings. “The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force is such a spectacular museum, and this aircraft deserves to be on the national stage. Going through the museum and seeing the crowds that are here, I hope this aircraft will inspire everybody who comes through. It’s in the right location. It needs to be here.”

Among those who flew this aircraft were instructor James J. Hyett and then cadet Kermit G. Bailer. Hyett was a notable flight instructor who trained both fighter and bomber pilots. Following his service, Bailer went on to become a civil rights activist, lawyer, and public servant in state and national government.​

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(L-R) David Tillotson, III, director of the National Museum of the USAF and Rob Collings, executive director of the Collings Foundation, review historical photos of the PT-17 Stearman. (U.S. Air Force photo by Lisa M. Riley)

“This aircraft is a valuable piece of our American aviation and military history,” said David Tillotson, III, the director of the National Museum of the United States Air Force. “Adding this to our collection gives us the ability to tell the broader story of the impact and bravery that Tuskegee Airmen had during World War II, and the precedent they set for future generations.”

The PT-17 is expected to be placed in the museum’s WWII Gallery in the spring of 2024​

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GHOSTS – Phil Makanna’s Legendary Warbird Calendars Are Ready for 2024

by Richard Mallory Allnutt

It is doubtful that anyone with even the vaguest interest in vintage military aircraft could fail to have seen or been moved by the work of the legendary aerial photographer Philip Makanna. His images have appeared in countless magazines and books over the past forty-plus years, but Makanna is perhaps most well known for his famous line of GHOSTS calendars, which have graced the walls of many a home and aircraft hangar across the world since 1981. Personally speaking, I received my first GHOSTS calendar as a Christmas gift when I was a college student in the mid-80s, and I have owned succeeding editions for almost every year since. Printed on thick, glossy paper, these full-sized calendars are renowned for both their premium quality and, of course, for their magnificent images. In fact they are so good that, unlike with most calendars, people tend to save them beyond their intended period of use – and whom among us hasn’t clipped a favorite image from the binding to frame or pin up somewhere we enjoy spending time (I know I have!). With a keen sense for lighting and composition, Makanna’s images also have a timeless quality to them which captures the spirit of both the machine and the era from which they came. And for 2024, as in recent years, there are two different calendars available – one featuring aircraft from WWII and the other from WWI.​

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The FORTY-FOURTH edition of the Ultimate Aviation Calendar.

  • 12 magnificent air-to-air color photographs of the combat aircraft World War II by Master Aviation Photographer Philip Makanna
  • Each month is suitable for framing
  • Plus our unique chronological history of the aviation events of the war
  • Plus specifications and silhouettes
  • Each page 20″ x 14″ – Opens to 20″ x 28″

Aircraft Included:

North American P-51D “Mustang”
Curtiss P-40C “Tomahawk”
Lockheed P-38L “Lightning”
Republic P-47D “Thunderbolt”
North American (AT-6) “Harvard”
Supermarine “Spitfire” PR Mk. XI
Hawker “Nimrod” Mk. II
Douglas SBD-5 “Dauntless”
Hawker “Hurricane” Mk. I
Fiesler Fi 156 “Storch”
Grumman (General Motors) TBM “Avenger”
Naval Aircraft Factory N3N-3 “Canary”

The WWI Edition is described below.

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GHOSTS, THE GREAT WAR 2024 – The Ultimate WWI Aviation Calendar

  • 12 magnificent air-to-air color photographs of the combat aircraft of World War I by
    Master Aviation Photographer Philip Makanna
  • Each month is suitable for framing
  • Plus our unique chronological history of the aviation events of WWI
  • Plus specifications and silhouettes
  • Each page 20″ x 14″ – Opens to 20″ x 28″

Aircraft Included:
Fokker D.VIII
Nieuport 17
LVG C.VI
Royal Aircraft Factory BE.2c
Albatros D.Va
Nieuport 11
Sopwith Camel
Fokker D.VII
Fokker F.I Dreidecker
Pfalz D.III
Bristol F.2B Fighter
SPAD XIII

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The twelve images which will appear in the 2024 edition of the WWII GHOSTS calendar. (images by Philip Makanna)

And for those who wish to have something a little weightier, Phil Makanna also has some truly spectacular hard-cover books featuring many of his images too. As with his calendars, these books are beautifully designed and of the highest quality. Makanna has such lyrical prose as well, placing you in the scene almost as effectively as his images. We featured a write up of his most recent effort last November, but there are other wonderful books available too… be sure to check them out HERE!​

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Philip Makanna’s fascination with aviation began as a young boy growing up on Long Island, miles from the Grumman factory. The Wildcats and Hellcats that passed overhead during his youth left an indelible impression, and even after moving to California to pursue a career as a fine arts painter, sculptor, professor, and filmmaker, Makanna found himself reliving childhood dreams as he was sent to cover the Reno Air Races in 1974. It was his photographs of the classic WWII aircraft flying overhead during the mid-race displays that landed a book deal, and would later bring him to South Texas to the vast collection of the CAF and Colonel Lloyd P. Nolen.

The first GHOSTS calendar comprised of Makanna’s genre-defining aerial photography was published by Philip and his wife Jeanie in 1980, and the pair have kept the tradition alive with the 2023 calendar marking the 44th edition of the now world-renowned GHOSTS calendar. The hunt for aircraft to photograph has brought Makanna to all reaches of the United States and abroad, regularly making trips to document the great collections of airplanes in the UK, New Zealand, and Australia. A recent increase in aircraft from the First World War have taken to the air once more due to the untiring restoration efforts of a small group of collectors, opening Makanna to an entirely new range of subjects to photograph.

With each year comes a stronger GHOSTS calendar, as the world’s greatest aviation photographer continues to hone what has truly become his life’s work.


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Museum of Flight Hosts Sustainable Aviation in Washington Symposium



PRESS RELEASE

On Aug. 17 the Museum hosts the Washington State Academy of Sciences 2023 Symposium, Sustainable Aviation in Washington, from noon to 7 p.m. The symposium will look at how to reach the emission reduction goals of Washington State, how the aviation industry can adopt new technologies, and consider innovations in public policy, infrastructure and workforce development.

The WSAS brings together the people and ideas needed to map Washington State’s path to leadership in this rapidly developing sector. Elected officials, staff of federal, state or local government, and members of WSAS, the aviation community, or academia are encouraged to attend. Registration $125 general/$50 WSAS Members, limited student registration through Aug. 15.

Symposium Schedule

Keynote 1: A Vision for Sustainable Aviation

Moderator, Dr. Richard Wahls, Mission Integration Manager, Sustainable Flight National Partnership, NASA Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate

Panel 1: Sustainable Aircraft Propulsion Technologies and Fuels

Moderator: Dr. Anna Oldani, Sustainable Aviation Fuel Program Manager, Federal Aviation Administration

Panel 2: Infrastructure Changes in Sustainable Aviation

Moderator: Melinda Pagliarello, Managing Director, Environmental Affairs Airports Council International — North America

Keynote 2: Workforce Development for the Sustainable Aviation Ecosystem

Howard E. McKenzie, Chief Engineer and Executive Vice President, Engineering, Test & Technology, The Boeing Company

Panel 3: Workforce Development Needs to Support the Sustainable Aviation Ecosystem

Moderator: Dr. Kristi Morgansen, Chair, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, University of Washington

Reception and Networking

For the full list of speakers and panelists, please visit washacad.org.

Co-organizers include: Washington State Academy of Sciences, The Joint Center for Aerospace Technology Innovation, Washington State Department of Commerce, The Museum of Flight, and Aerospace Futures Alliance (AFA).​


Museum Press Releases and Photos

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About The Museum of Flight

Founded in 1965, the independent, nonprofit Museum of Flight is one of the largest air and space museums in the world, serving 600,000 visitors. The Museum’s collection includes more than 160 historically significant airplanes and spacecraft, from the first fighter plane (1914) to today’s 787 Dreamliner. Attractions at the 23-acre, 5-building Seattle campus include the original Boeing Company factory, the NASA Space Shuttle Trainer, Air Force One, Concorde, Lockheed Blackbird and Apollo Moon rockets. In addition to the Seattle campus adjacent to King County International Airport, the Museum also has its 3-acre Restoration Center and Reserve Collection at Paine Field in Everett (not currently open to the public).

With a foundation of aviation history, the Museum is also a hub of news and dialogue with leaders in the emerging field of private spaceflight ventures. The Museum’s aviation and space library and archives are the largest on the West Coast. More than 150,000 individuals are served annually by the Museum’s onsite and outreach educational programs. The Museum of Flight is accredited by the American Association of Museums, and is an Affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution.

The Museum of Flight is located at 9404 E. Marginal Way S., Seattle, Exit 158 off Interstate 5 on Boeing Field halfway between downtown Seattle and Sea-Tac Airport. The Museum is open every day from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Museum admission for adults is $26. Youth 5 through 17 are $18, youth 4 and under are free. Seniors 65 and over $22. Groups of ten or more: $20 per adult, $13 per youth, $18 per senior. Admission is free from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. on the first Thursday of every month. Parking is always free. There is a full lunch menu café operated by McCormick & Schmick’s. For general Museum information, please call 206-764-5720 or visit www.museumofflight.org

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National WWI Museum and Memorial to Host Annual Great Balloon and Puppet Glow

Marking National Aviation Day on August 19, the National WWI Museum and Memorial and StoneLion Puppet Theater will host the annual Kansas City’s Great Balloon and Puppet Glow 2023. The free event will feature a vibrant display of tethered hot-air balloons that will light up the Kansas City sky.

Beginning at 4 p.m. the public is invited to gather on the Museum and Memorial grounds to listen to live music, grab a bite to eat from dozens of local food trucks, and picnic.​

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As the sun sets, the night sky will shine bright with magnificent and vibrant displays on the North Lawn and on the South side of the Museum and Memorial, where rows of tethered hot-air balloons will fire up their burners to create a canvas of color against the skyline. New this year on the south side, illuminated puppets, aerialists, and glow performers will take guests on a magnificent walk-through journey “around the world in 80 days” from 5– 10 p.m.

While the balloons on display for National Aviation Day will be of the modern variety, hot-air balloons actually have a long history and played a crucial role during World War I. Free balloons, untethered as the name implies, moved freely with the wind and could not be easily controlled. Unreliable for surveillance, free balloons functioned better as vehicles for propaganda, used by the Allies to scatter leaflets like confetti over enemy lines in Verdun and along the St. Mihiel Salient.​

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Warring nations on all sides used captive balloons to gather information on their enemies’ positions and activities. Captive balloons performed much like kites – they were tethered to a winch, a vehicle with a large spool of cable attached to the back. They flowed steadily with the wind but in the preferred direction of a ground operator. Their average range of visibility from the air was nine miles, though when using the most advanced binoculars of the time, it could increase to a little over 11 miles. Ideally, the aim was to maneuver balloons at least six miles up the front line, but in reality, distances depended on the proximity of friendly and enemy artillery. In late September 1918, a captive balloon of the 8th Balloon Company of the American Expeditionary Forces flew 20 miles forward – considered a world record in its time – during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive.​

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The sequence of ascent for a free balloon: after rising in the air, the balloon observer parachutes from the basket. Photograph from the U.S. Air Service in World War I: Volume 1.

Large dirigibles, powered by engines and steered with propellers, looked and operated differently from traditional balloons. Their envelopes stretched between 600-700 feet long over varying types of frames: non-rigid, semi-rigid or rigid. Given their gargantuan size, they moved slowly. This meant they could hover in one place for a long period of time – over both land and sea – and thoroughly document the landscape during reconnaissance. Their large size also made them easy targets for airplanes. The large dirigibles could carry a larger crew of balloon observers and their equipment, machine guns and at least two tons of bombs. And so, dirigibles, particularly Zeppelins, became weapons.

In total, there were 35 American balloon companies in France during World War I; they ascended 5,866 times, adding up to 6,832 hours in the air. Their balloons were attacked 89 times; 35 burned, 12 were shot down by enemy fire and one floated into enemy lines. Of all 116 parachute jumps from balloons, the parachutes – made of silk – never failed to open, though one observer lost his life when pieces of a burning balloon fell on his descending parachute. The reconnaissance of these balloon observers was invaluable, sighting thousands of instances of enemy planes, infantry and artillery fire.

About The National WWI Museum and Memorial

The National WWI Museum and Memorial is America’s leading institution dedicated to remembering, interpreting, and understanding the Great War and its enduring impact on the global community. For more information, visit www.theworldwar.org.

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Shuttleworth Apprentice Scheme

By James Kightly, Commissioning Editor

Enabling the next generation of restorers in vintage aviation is a perennial challenge. The preeminent Shuttleworth Collection, of Old Warden Aerodrome, Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, UK, have partnered with local organization The Connolly Foundation to award grants to five engineering apprentices currently under training at the Collection.​

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The Shuttleworth Collection’s Discovery Hub with its Southern Martlet outside.

Chief Operating Officer at the The Connolly Foundation, David Oldham, recently presented the grants and meet the apprentices to see and hear about the fantastic work they do to keep this remarkable collection flying. Mr Oldham said “It was a privilege to be able to award these bursaries to help maintain the knowledge needed to keep the historic planes at Shuttleworth flying. The Connolly Foundation is keen to reward those who seek to develop their knowledge and their careers.”

Tim Routsis , the Chair of Trustees at the Shuttleworth Collection said, “We are hugely grateful to the Connolly Foundation for their generous support of our engineering apprentices and trainees, enabling us to develop a pipeline of skills necessary to keep this wonderful collection in the air.”

The Shuttleworth Collection is a historic, working aeronautical and automotive collection on a 1930s grass airfield, with more than 50 internationally significant historic aircraft, most of which are flown and displayed regularly, many powered by rare or sometimes unique engines, as well as equally rare cars, motorcycles, agricultural vehicles, and steam engines. The collection is situated at the Shuttleworth Old Warden Aerodrome, one of the few all-grass traditional aerodromes left in regular use in the UK. For more information about the Connolly Foundation visit www.connollyfoundation.org.uk.​

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