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Robbie Roberts wrote:What a HORRIBLE thing to do to an airplane! Haven't they ever heard of FIBERGLASS? Frikin mo-rons.
Robbie
Sun Sep 21, 2008 12:03 pm
Robbie Roberts wrote:What a HORRIBLE thing to do to an airplane! Haven't they ever heard of FIBERGLASS? Frikin mo-rons.
Robbie
Robbie Roberts wrote:Matt Gunsch wrote:I think you should be asking why the AF took a FLYABLE P-38 and mounted it on a pole in NJ ?
Because the base McGuire AFB is named for a P-38 ace- second highest scoring ace form the Pacific. It is the only 2nd WW aircraft on the base as far as I can tell. They have one of the later C-54s- (I think it is a C-128 or something, rumored to be the one Elvis came home on) an F-4, an F-100 and one of the few surviving C-141s.
Not all birds will fly again- so leave the USAF P-38(known as "Pudgy") at McGuire alone- at least it is still around, and not blown up! It is actually a pretty nice gateway, and the aircraft is maintained in polished condition- at least it isn't overcoated with fifteen layers of paint and corrosion, as some aircraft I see on display are.
Robbie
Wed Apr 01, 2009 11:51 am
Douglas DC-3 Monument Park Opens
More photos here: http://www.ecfboeingca.org/DC3Monument/ ... /index.htm
More than 1,000 active and retired Douglas heritage employees and their families convened at the Santa Monica Airport on Saturday, March 23, to participate in the unveiling of a new monument park honoring Donald W. Douglas, the company he founded, and his famed DC-3 airplane.
The public site, located at Airport Ave. and Donald Douglas Loop Road, offers a restored DC-3 elevated on pedestals, a life-sized statue of Donald W. Douglas and his favorite dog “Bar,” a Founders’ Wall listing more than 1,000 contributors to the project, and kiosks with information on the history of the Douglas Aircraft Company. A new Museum of Flying is slated to open adjacent to the monument in 2010.
At the opening day celebration, Victoria Douglas Thoreson unveiled the statue of her grandfather, along with the aid of its creator, famed sculptor Yossi Govrin. Also in attendance were such former Douglas and McDonnell Douglas senior executives as Bob Johnson, Jim Worsham, Jim Dorrenbacher, Jim McMillan, Jack Crosthwait, Gene Dubil, Roger
Schaufele, and Jim Phillips.
Donald W. Douglas founded his aircraft manufacturing empire in Santa Monica just 17 years after the Wright brothers’ initial flight in 1903. In 1924, his Douglas World Cruisers became the first aircraft to circumnavigate the globe. In 1933, he introduced the famed DC (Douglas Commercial) series of passenger airplanes that revolutionized air travel. During the World War II, Douglas manufacturing plants in Santa Monica, El Segundo, Long Beach, Chicago, Tulsa, and Oklahoma City produced more than 30,000 military planes and employed more than 160,000 workers. By the time of its merger with McDonnell Aircraft in 1967, the Douglas Company had delivered more than 43,000 commercial and military aircraft.
The Douglas DC-3 Monument Park is open and free to the public during daylight hours. Funding for the project came from the Douglas White Oaks Ranch Trust, which is administered by the Employees Community Fund of Boeing California; the City of Santa Monica; David Price, chairman of the Santa Monica Museum of Flying and donor of the restored
DC-3; and active and retired employees of the Douglas Aircraft Company, McDonnell Douglas and Boeing.
Wed Apr 01, 2009 2:44 pm