raconnel wrote:
In the late 60's or early 70's there was an F2H in Asheville in the city park. In the late 70's / early 80's there was an F9F-8P airframe at the fire training center in Burlington. Does anyone know whether either was preserved, and where they might be now?
Actually, it occurs to me that I once heard that the Beech 18 I mentioned in my last post was traded to Burlington for a F-84 that ended up in Asheboro, in front of a National Guard armory. Might you be thinking of that F-84?
You're in Massachusetts now? Did you live in NC back then? (Just curious about why you're asking about these aircraft now....)
For the state that is supposed to be "First in Flight" and also one with so many military bases, North Carolina is not as active in the warbird scene as I'd like.
That being said and while I'm at it anyway, would anyone like to start one about NC (First in Flight) versus Ohio (Birthplace of Aviation)? When Congress "officially recognized" Ohio as the "Birthplace of Aviation" I actually wrote to my congressman (and an Ohio congressman or two) and asked him (them) if they didn't have something better to do with the time that we pay for.
If you want to be picky about it, neither slogan is really correct. NC is First in Powered Flight, but Ohio is nowhere close to the birthplace of Aviation. In fact, it is not even the birthplace of both of the Wright Bros. - Wilbur was born in Indiana! And then, consider the Montgolfier Brothers; flying hot air balloons in Paris in the 1780's - that qualifies as "aviation." And Otto Lilienthal was flying gliders in Germany in the 1890's. Also "aviation" long before the Wright Brothers.
Consider the gauntlet thrown....