Thu Sep 24, 2015 3:12 pm
Jerry O'Neill wrote:As far as the Shannon Museum goes, it is NOT part of Jerry Yagen's Military Aviation Museum (name's are close!). The Virginia Aviation Museum is based in Richmond, VA and apparently Shannon's collection was the base that started it.Noha307 wrote:Jerry O'Neill wrote:In Fredricksburg, VA there was the Shannon Museum that I believe was later moved and became the Virginia Aviation Museum in Richmond. http://www.vam.smv.org/
What exactly was the VAM's relationship to the Shannon Museum? Did it change when Yagen bought it? (I have no idea how long he's been involved with that.)
Chris Brame wrote:Page 3 of this thread has images of a Victory Air Museum flyer and of Earl Reinert that I posted (scroll way down), plus fellow WIXer Garbs posted a bunch of VAM photos:
http://www.warbirdinformationexchange.o ... er#p235001
4RG.I.'S wrote:For a while we had the Kenosha Military Museum in southeast Wisconsin. The moved just across the border to Zion Illinois in 2008 and are renamed the Russell Military Museum. A nice collection of aircraft along with wheeled and tracked vehicles and a few water craft.
http://www.russellmilitarymuseum.com/
Rob W wrote:Would like to have made it to the Indiana Aviation Museum in Valparaiso before it closed up shop in 2010. One of the museum's more well-known warbirds was the P-51 "Excalibur" (which I think now lives in Europe somewhere).
Lon Moer wrote:From the late '70s to the mid-'90s there was a museum called "Wagons to Wings" at the Hill Country complex in Morgan Hill CA. They had a grass runway down the middle of their golf course and a great restaurant called "The Flying Lady" that had hundreds of airplane models that rotated around the dining room on a giant dry cleaning conveyor track.
When the facility closed, some of the airplanes and a lot of the models went to the "The Wings of History Air Museum" at the nearby San Martin airport and some of the planes went to "Hiller Aviation Museum" in San Carlos, CA.
Mike Coutches had a tall tail Mustang and a Hellcat displayed there. the Mustang went back to Coutches at Hayward CA and the Hellcat went Lone Star Flight Museum.
There was also a Ford Tri-Motor that went to Kermit Weeks.
Thu Sep 24, 2015 6:04 pm
Thu Sep 24, 2015 10:01 pm
Thu Sep 24, 2015 10:24 pm
Fri Sep 25, 2015 6:49 pm
Rauhbatz wrote:Hey noah...am headed over to the storage unit tomorrow...will get the Florence flyer and scan it
gale_dono wrote:the Ohio History of Flight Museum in Columbus, OH (located at Port Columbus International Airport.) I don't have a defunct date, nor am I 100% certain of the disposition of all the items it had (mainly because I still haven't determined what all they had.) Most notably is one of the few Sud Aviation Caravelles preserved in the US (and with the demise of the CVG Caravelle, possibly the only survivor in the US aside from N1001U at Pima), which is now with the CMH airport fire department, in reasonably good condition.
Spectre_I wrote:This is a very long thread, so my apologies if I am mentioning something someone else already did, or if this even qualifies:
The Western Museum of Flight. It was part of Northrop Grumman, before divesting itself. It was located at Hawthorne, Ca. airport. It has moved to Zamperini Field, formerly known as Torrance Municipal Airport, formerly known as Lomita Flight Strip. ::: Whew :::
Very small, but has a YF-23 and a YF-17 amongst its collection.
Sat Sep 26, 2015 5:37 am
Sat Sep 26, 2015 9:34 am
Sat Sep 26, 2015 4:08 pm
jdvoss wrote:Beale AFB, CA used to have an air museum and I believe that it was closed about 25-30 years ago. It was a rather small display (possibly a dozen max A/C). Included in the collection was a B-17F "Homesick Angel" which was relocated somewhere in the mid-west ...??
Sat Sep 26, 2015 8:37 pm
Spectre_I wrote:This is a very long thread, so my apologies if I am mentioning something someone else already did, or if this even qualifies:
The Western Museum of Flight. It was part of Northrop Grumman, before divesting itself. It was located at Hawthorne, Ca. airport. It has moved to Zamperini Field, formerly known as Torrance Municipal Airport, formerly known as Lomita Flight Strip. ::: Whew :::
Very small, but has a YF-23 and a YF-17 amongst its collection.
Other than what I wrote, I don't have much info on the history of the place. I grew up near there, and had been to the museum (many moons ago). A participant in the Castle Air Museum FB group recently visited the "new" museum. He wrote:Nope, hasn't been mentioned in this thread before and it qualifies. Good call. I knew the other (i.e. non-NMUSAF) YF-23 ended up in a museum somewhere out west and thought it had something to do with its manufacturer, but never realized that it was an aviation museum that actually used to be part of Northrop Grumman. I have to ask, how much of an actual "museum" was it when it was part of the company? I always figured it was nothing more than a bunch of planes sitting outside on pedestals.
By all means, keep 'em coming!
Sat Oct 03, 2015 8:54 am
Sat Oct 03, 2015 9:19 am
Chris Brame wrote:jdvoss wrote:Beale AFB, CA used to have an air museum and I believe that it was closed about 25-30 years ago. It was a rather small display (possibly a dozen max A/C). Included in the collection was a B-17F "Homesick Angel" which was relocated somewhere in the mid-west ...??
That's 42-3374, now on display at Offutt AFB in Omaha.
gale_dono wrote:the Ohio History of Flight Museum in Columbus, OH (located at Port Columbus International Airport.)
Sat Oct 03, 2015 10:32 pm
Sun Oct 04, 2015 8:38 pm
Fri Oct 09, 2015 10:26 pm
Fri Oct 09, 2015 11:02 pm
Noha307 wrote:I do remember the story of one that, IIRC, was in Canada and had a large collection of trainers and engines for them. I think he eventually got into trouble for shooting someone on his property and his collection was auctioned off after he died. Does anyone know who I am talking about and remember his name?