One year ago the majority of SNJ-2 BuNo 2549 was scrapped by the NHHC.
This was not the end but rather the beginning of the return of BuNo 2549.
A replacement tubular frame, manufactured three months after BuNo 2549 was located and purchased. Another aft tailcone was also acquired that is the present focus of our attention.
Despite these troubled times, we look forward to continuing the restoration efforts ahead in 2020. The goal ahead is to soon have BuNo 2549 sitting on its landing gear for the first time in 78 years.
As a long time WIX member, I would like to contribute this build thread. As many of you remember, I was formally involved with building a P-35 replica from scratch. I endeavored for 10 year on that project and just couldn’t make it happen.
Fortunately some of the CAD skills I acquired through the P-35 project paid off. I was able to trade my labor drawing B-17 parts in Solidworks for a T-6 project. My original intent was to build a NA-50 or Boomerang replica so I started searching for “early” T-6 series parts to compliment what I had available.
. I placed an inquiry on social media and soon received a reply regarding the availability of various SNJ-2 airframe parts which the seller stated were very similar to the NA-50. I requested pictures, started investigating, and soon realized the magnitude of what I had found. I made a deal with the seller and purchased all the remaining parts of BuNo 2549.
Upon receipt of the parts later in 2015 and knowing its history, I couldn't bare to modify this aircraft into a NA-50. I abandoned that project and intended to restore SNJ-2 BuNo 2549 back to its original glory. I also sought to learn as much as possible about the brave men associated with it. Fortunately author Pat Macha had just published a book, Historic Aircraft Wrecks of San Diego County, which recounted the events of February 14, 1942 in good detail and contained an illustrated picture of BuNo 2549’s wreckage.
Searching for SNJ-2 parts, I discovered how rare and unique this variant truly was. Of the 61 total SNJ-2s produced, only 9 survived on the US civil register. Hoping to make BuNo 2549 the tenth, I sought to procure an FAA registration. Thinking the FAA would be the most difficult federal agency to deal with, I wanted to establish clear ownership for BuNo 2549. I believed the branch tasked with preserving Naval history, the Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC), would be supportive of my efforts.
Upon first contact with the NHHC in July 2017, I relayed the story of BuNo 2549 and was straightforward in my intentions of restoring the airframe to airworthiness. I naively thought what remained of BuNo 2549 would be insignificant to them. I was complimented for my research and they requested I forward my documentation. Thinking this would assist my effort, I eagerly provided what I had. I was informed that transferring ownership of parts was not something the Navy usually allowed, but that it was a possible option.
During the next year I patiently answered every question and furnished numerous technical drawings, pictures and a full inventory of BuNo 2549 remaining parts. I was informed the NHHC conservator team and legal council were reviewing my request to see if any potential liability issues existed.
As time progressed, it became clear I was not considered the owner or even would be compensated for the original purchase price by the NHHC. In 2018, I finally gave in and insisted upon a formal letter of release for the specific parts to ensure any future SNJ effort I undertook would not meet a similar fate. Astoundingly, the Navy informed me I was the first person to have ever made this type of request. For BuNo 2549, given all its esteemed history as a prominent flag officer’s assigned aircraft, I thought the Navy would put it on display at the Pensacola Museum or one of the local Naval air bases. I felt reassured in returning it back that if I would not be allowed to restore BuNo 2549, that it would at least be preserved.
I informed friends in the warbird industry of what happened. Amazingly, Roger Edwards offered a complete “early” T-6 fuselage for sale. It turned out to be a Harvard Mark II, that had been built near the same time as BuNo 2549. Through other deals and trades, I ended up with replacement parts for everything I would be surrendering back to the Navy. Combined with other T-6 parts acquired for the original restoration, I now had a viable project to build a “replica” BuNo 2549.
While I was making progress putting together a duplicate BuNo 2549, unfortunately no party within the NHHC system wanted the original. I was informed a Navy team would be picking up everything. Even with a letter of release, I chose to transfer all the parts to a neutral location to avoid any confusion with my second SNJ project.
When the Navy contractor arrived in April 2019, to my astonishment, they started cutting up the tubular frame on site and informed me the remaining parts being taken away, would be shredded. BuNo 2549 had survived 78 years through many twists and turns in its history but was now gone. In the past, many warbirds did not survive because their historical value had not been recognized. It is hard to believe such events would still occur in 2019.
Bureaucracy might have prevailed over preservation, but the story of SNJ-2 BuNo 2549 will not be forgotten. I will continue on with the restoration of the second SNJ. Someday the white tail of a second BuNo 2549 will fly over North Island, dip its yellow wing towards the ocean, and honor all the brave men that never gave up.
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