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Mormon Mustang back in the air...

Mon Oct 26, 2009 8:00 am

The "Mormon Mustang" rides again


A small air show Friday had a dual purpose -- reintroducing a rebuilt "Mormon Mustang" P-51 fighter and paying tribute to the man who flew the original P-51s that carried the name.

Retired Gen. Roland Wright was flown up from his home in Utah to take a ride in Legacy Flight Museum's "Mormon Mustang."

The P-51 was piloted by local pilot John Bagley, with Wright riding in the back seat of the restored fighter.

The plane had to be brought back to life after a crash on Dec. 21, 2006, on U.S. Highway 20 just north of Main Street.

Bagley walked away from the crash, but the plane was in several pieces.

Now, with a fresh coat of paint and markings just like the original, the plane has rejoined the other historic flyable aircraft at the museum.

Gard Flint, a guide at the Legacy Flight Museum, said Friday's events were held because of gratitude for veterans of World War II.

"The objective of the museum is that people remember what went on in World War II," he said. "We're trying to honor Gen. Wright and the part he played in it and all those who gave their all -- especially those who didn't come back."

Three P-51s and a P-63 King Cobra covered the upper valley and made several high speed passes at the Rexburg Airport.

Pilot Shawn Bagley, who flew the King Cobra, said it's important to remember the magnitude of what young pilots did back then at the controls of such powerful fighters.

"They were just kids," he said. "He's a retired general now, but they were just 18 to 19 years old."

After his ride, Wright said: "That was great --flying in formation! ... It's just exciting for me -- you never think you'll have the chance to do something like this again."

Wright said during the war he was stationed at a base about 85 miles northeast of London and escorted bombers over Germany every day.

"It's like I'm back home again -- I not only flew them there, but later I was one of the first to fly them in the Utah Air National Guard," he said.

Wright said the P-51 was decisive in liberating Europe.

"The problem was when we had to quit daylight bombing because the Germans developed the 20mm cannon," he said. "They could stay outside the range of the B-17 guns and shoot them down. ... The P-51 really made it possible to liberate Europe because they could escort the bombers."

He said it's important for later generations to know about what happened back then.

"I think the thing I'd like them to know is that freedom is the most precious thing we have," he said. "It takes a great sacrifice and effort and that was demonstrated daily. Churchill became one of my heroes. He said, 'If we do not prevail, we will revert to the dark ages, so we will prevail -- we'll never give up,' --that's what liberty and freedom are all about."

A pilot from a later generation added his observation.

"We owe a lot to them," said John Bagley. "They made it possible so we don't have to speak German."




Found it here:
http://www.rexburgstandardjournal.com/a ... ews/15.txt

Mon Oct 26, 2009 8:07 am

Any photos?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:27 pm

Here are some pics of what it looked like after the crash:

Image

Image

Image

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Aviation Rule #1: Airplanes need fuel to fly.

And yes, John did walk away from this one with only a scratch on his thumb.

That guy has used up about 7 of his 9.

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:32 pm

glad they were able to get this cavailer back together. Pretty quick to it seems.

Tom P.

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:37 pm

What happened?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:54 pm

The official NTSB report is "engine failure for unknown reasons"...unknown because the plane was in such poor shape nothing conclusive could be determined. The scuttlebutt around the neighborhood though, is that the tanks were dry. Nothing confirmed, but that's coming from some sources pretty close to those involved...as in direct relatives.

Wed Oct 28, 2009 9:23 pm

Is this the same Mustang (N8677E ex-RCAF 9258) that used to be owned and flown by Don Novas in Idaho? I recall that it ended up with the name "Mormon Mustang" also, but since that was a period Mustang name as per the article, were there two restorations with that name?

S.

Wed Oct 28, 2009 10:09 pm

That is amazing to walk away from that one! WOW! Well, if no fuel was left, that would help explain why there was no fire, but still! :shock:

I'm glad to see that its back in the air

Wed Oct 28, 2009 10:37 pm

..it was pretty torn up when it crashed and nothing short of a miracle that the pilot survived!

Wed Oct 28, 2009 11:37 pm

Steve T wrote:Is this the same Mustang (N8677E ex-RCAF 9258) that used to be owned and flown by Don Novas in Idaho? I recall that it ended up with the name "Mormon Mustang" also, but since that was a period Mustang name as per the article, were there two restorations with that name?

S.


Your thinking of this one.

http://www.warbirdregistry.org/p51regis ... 74865.html

Thu Oct 29, 2009 12:38 pm

yeah - John was REALLY lucky not to be killed in this. It was a beauty before the crash - Russ McDonald took really good care of the plane until his passing so I am glad to see her back in the air.

Tom P.

yep....

Thu Oct 29, 2009 6:49 pm

wendovertom wrote:yeah - John was REALLY lucky not to be killed in this. It was a beauty before the crash - Russ McDonald took really good care of the plane until his passing so I am glad to see her back in the air.

Tom P.


I was skiing at deer valley one day and heard the merlin melody....Looked up and there he was just out flying....what could be better....

Wed Nov 11, 2009 11:00 pm

Here's a pretty nice video of the flight...

Richard

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gc5e4AjsuU

Thu Nov 12, 2009 6:02 am

Any shots of the new paint scheme?

Thu Nov 12, 2009 11:50 am

Randy Haskin wrote:Any shots of the new paint scheme?


Hi Randy, if you look at the video, you'll see it. Looks like they put a short vertical tail on her this time too.

Cheers,
Richard
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