From:
http://www.azjournal.com/pages/news/Aug ... 05dc3.html
DC-3 Aircraft Remains Unclaimed At Airport
By Tammy Gray-Searles
The DC-3 aircraft that made an emergency landing in Holbrook March 21 remains at the municipal airport, waiting to be claimed.
“It’s still just sitting there,” said Airport Manager Alan Roes. “We’ve tried to contact the owners to see what their intentions are. It’s racked up four and a half months of parking charges and we haven’t heard anything from them.”
The DC-3, commonly referred to during World War II as a Gooney Bird, was forced to land in Holbrook when one of its engines lost oil pressure. TMI Aircraft Incorporated had just purchased the plane in Alaska, and it was en route to its new home in Florida when the trouble began.
After making a safe landing at the Holbrook Municipal Airport, the crew discovered metal shavings in the engine. TMI representatives told Roes that they intended to replace the engine, and would be sending a repair crew when the new engine arrived. To date, neither the crew, nor the engine, has arrived at the airport.
“We’ve locked it up so if someone shows up to fix it we can discuss the charges with them,” Roes noted.
The large DC-3 aircraft isn’t the first military-type airplane to land at the Holbrook airport. In the early 1940s, during World War II, the Navy used the airport as a training ground.
“Right around 1942 to ’43, the Naval Cadets practiced there. I think they were getting ready for carrier service,” explained long time Holbrook resident Teen DeSpain.
Piper Cub airplanes were used for the training. The Piper Cub was a two-seat tandem light aircraft. It is estimated that during World War II, more than 80 percent of all military pilots had trained in a Piper Cub.
Like its larger cousin, the DC-3, the Piper Cub and the pilots it helped train played an important role in World War II.
City officials are proud of the airport’s military history, but are unsure what to do with the vintage DC-3 if it remains unclaimed