Chris Brame wrote:
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?
Yes, it was Ernie Simmons:
http://www.spitcrazy.com/Simmons-2.htmNot only did you nail the name, but also even managed to find the page I remember reading! Thank you!
If you can think of anyone else that fits this category, don't hesitate to mention them.
EDIT: Somehow I managed to miss the fact that there were more posts on page 4 since I last commented. Anyway, I just wanted to make sure that I addressed everyone's comments and thanked you guys as well.
kalamazookid wrote:
Another museum for your list- the Northern Indiana Aviation Museum in Goshen, IN. It didn't exist very long in the late-90s and early-00s. They had a really nice airworthy C-45, a T-6 and Skyhawk and T-33 projects. I think the ex-Steven Hay TBM Avenger was also associated with that group. Never found out what happened to this museum or any of the aircraft, other than the TBM.
I found a
WIX thread from 2007 asking whether it had closed.
According to the Registry, you're correct about the Avenger.
According to a non-profit tracking website, Mr. Hay was not only associated with the museum, but actually
ran it.
As an aside, while looking for information on the museum, I also found an
article on the closing of the
previously mentioned Indiana Aviation Museum. Furthermore, I came across a
whole long list of aviation museums. Apparently it's somewhat old, so I need to go through it and see what no longer exists.
XL446 wrote:
Another one to add: the Combat Jets Flying Museum, formerly located at (going by the address on aero-web.org) William P. Hobby Airport, Houston, TX. I stumbled across this when reading about the history of the MiG-15 on display in Oshkosh, WI.
A note on
http://www.aero-web.org/museums/tx/cjfm.htm says the museum has closed and all the aircraft were moved to Oshkosh.
I found a
couple pages from a book that provide some more detail on the museum. According to the book, it was founded in the mid-to-late 1980s, "was intended to be [focused on] the first generation of jet fighters" and would "eventually include no less than 9 jet fighters". Apparently, it was also the featured story in the
March 1991 issue of
Air Classics Magazine. My search also turned up an article on warbirds in the June 1990 issue of
Popular Mechanics that
includes a list of aviation museums.
jspott wrote:
The Bristol Heritage Collection was in Tennessee I don't know if it was ever open as a museum. They had a beaufort, Swordfish, Bolingbroke and Lysander projects. I cant find any info on what happened to these aircraft.
Strangely enough, I found a
bit of information on this collection - in of all places - a book on British folk music. Apparently, a man named Graham Kilsby donated the Bolingbroke from that museum to the Bristol Aero Collection in England. If anyone wants to updated the
Registry entry on this aircraft, I found some more information on it in a
blog post.
Once again, thanks for the information. I've simply used this post to create quick reference for any information I've found on the museums, so that's why my responses are written the way they are. I also hope my answers were able to provide a little bit of help in return.
One quick final note: If anyone wants to try and look up information on these museums on their own, it really helps to put your search terms in quotation marks since that makes the search engine treat them as a single phrase. Given the frequency with which a lot of the words in aviation museum names are reused, it outputs a lot less extraneous results that way.