BHawthorne wrote:
Enemy Ace wrote:
The Mercer "airfield" borders right beside the I-75 highway and is very valuable commercial property. The owner had the bright idea years ago to turn the little grass strip into a "museum" and has saved a fortune in taxes over the years with this strategy.
Most of the USAF airplanes came from the Georgia ANG at Dobbins, the F-8 was a former NAS Atlanta airplane too.
Crying shame the F-8 wasn't just sold, I am sure there would have been plenty of people interested. The fuselage was actually in pretty good shape. In my opinion it could have been made into a decent static display airplane.
Ah, so he's sitting on the aircraft wasting away so he can get a tax break on prime real estate? Cute...
Not the case, as I understand it. The elder Mr. Mercer was the aviation buff in the family. Eventually, he ran out of flying years, sold the privately owned (flying) aircraft, and stopped being active at the field. His son is less interested in aviation, but arranged for the (public use) field to be mowed and kept in usable condition. Over the years, vandals damaged many of the govt owned aircraft, and spares (canopies and the like) are not forthcoming.
As you can see from pictures taken over time, several of the aircraft on display at Mercer have moved on to better locations, while others (the F-8 and some heli's) were scrapped. So I look at it from the perspective that without the Mercers, the F-86D, F-84, Matador (or was it a Mace), T-33, and several others would have gone for scrap a long time ago.
As to whether the land has commercial viability, it certainly didn't when the field was built. It was just a grass strip alongside the interstate in a backwater location. Today, it is being taken over by the state to build an interstate exit ramp, so the Mercers probably will make some money off of it, but I don't think that was their plan when the field was built.