traku1 wrote:
I was never able to get any cooperation from anyone at PAX to escort me to the Arado burial site in recent years. It's so amazing how the USN simply forgot where they buried there stuff down there in the late 40's. While doing volunteer work at the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum in 1976 it was well known where everything had been buried. They'd looked at the Arados and the other planes at the end of the runway extension and deemed everything unsalvageable. Also seems the museum at PAX has no interest. As near as can figure, the Arados had been at Google Earth 38.30438,-76.416129 and are nowhere to be seen. Someone out there must have photos and and know whatever became of all the other aircraft around PAX.
OK, I know that area pretty good and it is accessible. There are picnics areas, a walking path and beach access back in there...which makes it all the more likely that any remains were scooped up and driven off to some scrap heap long ago. I'd guess anything remaining back there would be small unrecognizable pieces found only with a metal detector (which I don't have...).
As far as the Pax Museum goes, yeah, I'd agree that they wouldn't be much help or know anything. The focus there is the jet age and beyond. Good folks but they operate on a volunteer staff and little to no funding. They have been trying to build a new museum building going on 4 years now and it remains a fenced off area out front, a few mounds of dirt and a half poured foundation...seems the local yolkol county government gives and yanks funding back and forth so quick and frequently I'm surprised the stack of cash hasn't caught fire. I have a couple of models to build for a display in the new place that I keep putting off building in synch with the pace of the museum getting constructed.
Either way, I'll go take a hike back there and see what I come up with.