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Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
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Re: Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
DF thanks for this. When I was at Speed Week in 2003 (unfortunately the only time I've been there.) we stopped by the airfield and visited the museum. Although small, it was quite an experience. While there an older guy stopped me and asked what I thought of the place. I told him I was rather awed by it. Come to find out he was stationed at Wendover during WWII. As a 19 year old he helped load practice bombs, and later one of the A bombs on the B-29s there. He had just come from the funeral of one of the flight crew members of one of the two planes that bombed Japan. He had lots of cool stories about life at Wendover at that time. I am so glad to hear that some level of historic restortation is taking place at the air field.
We wandered around and looked at the old buildings. It was sort of spooky, but in its own way filled me with a sense of pride.
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Re: Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
Once arriving in Australia I picked up a Book at the Local Borders that was called, "The Legend of Burt Munroe". Supposedly Bert spent many days here in the Wendover Airfield Machine Shop rebuilding the Indian Scout engine. He had made many trips to the US to run the Indian and became friends with a few Chair Force servicemen that allowed him access to their machine shop to repair engine parts that did not withstand the abuses of nitro, that Mickey Thompson had conviced Bert to tun in the Ol' Indian. Could it be a historic Hot Rodding site? I am sure that there are many stories of the servicemen assisting some of Bonneville's finest. I would have likely been the most well equipped machine shop within 200 miles of Bonneville.
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Re: Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
Dave;
FYI, Wendover Airfield was recently awarded $450,000 in Grant money for some much needed repair to the Enola Gay Hangar. Thanks for the topic!
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Re: Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
Originally posted by JRobertsDF thanks for this. When I was at Speed Week in 2003 (unfortunately the only time I've been there.) we stopped by the airfield and visited the museum. Although small, it was quite an experience. While there an older guy stopped me and asked what I thought of the place. I told him I was rather awed by it. Come to find out he was stationed at Wendover during WWII. As a 19 year old he helped load practice bombs, and later one of the A bombs on the B-29s there. He had just come from the funeral of one of the flight crew members of one of the two planes that bombed Japan. He had lots of cool stories about life at Wendover at that time. I am so glad to hear that some level of historic restortation is taking place at the air field.
We wandered around and looked at the old buildings. It was sort of spooky, but in its own way filled me with a sense of pride.
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Re: Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
Originally posted by BangShift Forum Admin
Check it out on amazon.com and read the review for more information. Sounds like another could yet be written. Also, what a wonderful setting Wendover would be for a series of historical novels!
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Re: Freiburger's Pic of the Week: Wendover Airfield
That explains a lot more on the 'haunting' feeling I got the night I rolled in...I'll have to stop by and see the airfield next time. It's funny, I don't get that feeling when I go to Fort Worden or to the OLD fencepost line of Fort Lewis (which is buried in shalal and blackberry bushes...)Editor-at-Large at...well, here, of course!
"Remy-Z, you've outdone yourself again, I thought a Mirada was the icing on the cake of rodding, but this Imperial is the spread of little 99-cent candy letters spelling out "EAT ME" on top of that cake."
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