Warbird Kid wrote:
Thanks for the shots! I just visited the SDASM too! You beat me to it! I was going to put my pictures up from my visit! I just got back from a two week bus tour through that entire part of the country. Of course being on a bus tour with 45 other people means you can't just pull off the road every time you see a plane and make detours. Glad somebody got the shots of the 2 and a half Harpoons in Buffalo. Our tour guide was from that town! Also saw a F-86 in Draper, Utah, just outside Salt Lake City.
Sounds like a good trip! Glad you got to stop at SDASM. Cool place and way more aircraft than I expected! Were you able to take the bus tour of the base? I thought about it, but I had already spent more time than I had expected at the museum and wanted to get back on the road. Sounds like your route went farther south than mine did - my final destination was Glacier National Park.
I was hoping the Harpoons would have been on airport property and that I'd be able to talk someone at the FBO into letting me out to see them. That was not the case. They are not on airport property. Given the condition of the buildings they were around, the tall grass, and the fact that they were behind a barbed-wire fence, I wasn't too interested in getting much closer to check them out.
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Thanks for posting these, especially since Fagen just dodged that tornado!
Looks like from the news coverage that they got very lucky. A direct hit would have been a real shame, and not just for the aircraft collection. The Fagen museum has an outstanding collection of vehicles, buildings, literature, aircraft parts and other displays. The control tower complete with period radio equipment was interesting to walk through. There are numerous other similar displays, including a WWII German boxcar, a mission-briefing hut, and a memorial to Ray Fagen's service during the D-Day landings.
One of the real poignant displays involved portraits of Holocaust survivors who are now Minnesota residents, complete with their story of how they were able to survive. If I remember correctly, this is a traveling exhibit that moves throughout Minnesota. Losing those displays to a storm would have been an absolute travesty.
I did also get a glimpse of the Helldiver project through an open door. Since it was in an area that was off-limits to the public, I didn't get a great look and didn't take any photos out of respect for the museum, but it appears work is moving pretty quickly. I didn't see wings anywhere, but the fuselage work seemed to be progressing well between the firewall and the tail surfaces.