Rauhbatz,
A summation of the previous information... (my family has lived there since the 1880's!)
No major warbirds stationed there. The airport is historically significant as it was/is the home of Phillips 66 corporate aviation, which was run by Billy Parker (a legendary early Oklahoma aviator). They sponsored Art Goebel and his victory in the Dole Race to Hawaii, with him flying the TravelAir "Woolaroc" (named after Frank Phillips' local ranch.) The original Woolaroc is out at the ranch, in the museum there (which is way cool if you are into western art/artifacts). The airport was also the site of Wiley Post's high-altitude research flights. He took off from that airport in the Winnie Mae in his high-altitude suit, the predecessor of modern space suits. The hangars there do have a few older aircraft in them, but you'd have to go sniff it out to see what they still have. There is a little hangar museum there that has a couple of biplanes, and it might be open.
On the way to Woolaroc Ranch, and just south of the airport, is Murphy's. Home of the hot hamburger. Great, original 1950's era fast food joint, and a great place to fill up. Just don't insult me and visit the Sonic that is literally next door.
The A4 is nicely displayed for a pole-mounted aircraft, and is very well maintained. It's behind Washington Park shopping mall, which is on the east side of highway 75 as you come through Bartlesville.
There are a bunch of warbirds in Tulsa, 45 minutes south. The Tulsa Air and Space Museum has an F-14 and the only intact Spartan NP-1 WWII trainer. Just down the road from the museum is the Air National Guard, which has pole mounted F-16, F-100, F-4 and F-86 aircraft that are getting a little tired. Out at the Jones-Riverside Airport, there is a pole mounted T-33. In the hangars there are at least one P-51, a bunch of T-6s, a bunch of Stearmans, at least one N3N, at least one BT-13, some Chipmunks and one of the only flyable Spartan C-3 biplanes (not strictly a warbird, but used in that manner by the Mexican Army in the 1930's).
Hope that helps. Give me a shout if you need help finding anything.
kevin
_________________ FOUND the elusive DT-built B-24! Woo-hoo!!!
|