Rob W wrote:
It's really interesting...and sad...to see these artifacts.
I really, really, really hope that the Naval Aviation Museum can construct a hangar or two within the next decade and get these beauties moved indoors. There is so much valuable history here to simply be left outside among the elements.
Of course this is simply my $.02.
Cheers,
Rob
Fundraising is underway to construct a new display hangar for many of these aircraft:
Museum Phase V Expansion
The National Naval Aviation Museum has been built in phases over several decades, enlarging it from its original 8,500 square foot home to its current 350,000 square foot facility. Phase IV construction, completed in 2011, added the Hangar Bay One annex, current home to such famous aircraft as the Que Sera Sera (first aircraft to land at the South Pole), the record-setting Truculent Turtle, and the last F-14D Tomcat to fly in combat. Phase V aims to add another annex to the Museum, so that we may provide a proper home to many more
aircraft currently exposed to the elements on the Museum’s Flightline, including the newly acquired JRM Mars.
Goal: $10,000,000