GALVESTON - Volunteer pilots from around Texas flew nine vintage
aircraft out of harm's way Wednesday, but 31 other planes had to be left at
the Lone Star Flight Museum as Hurricane Rita continued its approach to
the Texas coast.
Some of the planes that were left are unflyable and others would have
taken too much time to make airworthy, museum President Ralph Royce
said.
At least four more planes could have been flown to safety if he had had
a few more hours, Royce said, but museum employees had to comply with
Wednesday's 6 p.m. deadline for mandatory evacuation.
The museum, founded in 1985, houses more than 40 historically
significant aircraft and 1,500 artifacts, and has some of the few World War II
aircraft still flying.
Eleven volunteer pilots converged on the museum at Scholes
International Airport and flew six planes out late in the morning, including a
World War II-era Boeing/Vega B-17G bomber, Royce said. They returned for a
Grumman F6F Hellcat fighter, a Republic P-47D Thunderbolt fighter and a
1954 Douglas DC-3.
Seven of the planes were flown to New Iberia, La., and two to Karnes
County in South Texas, Royce said.
He said his greatest disappointment was leaving behind a 1943 Grumman
F8F Bearcat fighter that the museum has spent four years restoring.
Also left behind was the airframe of the first U.S. supersonic jet
bomber, a Convair B-58A(TB) Hustler on loan from the Air Force.
The museum's 100,000 square feet of hangar space is on the highest part
of the airport, but still is only 7 to 8 feet above sea level, Royce
said. The hangars are reinforced to withstand 125 mph winds, and a 2 1/2
-foot concrete wall is built around the hangar perimeter to help
withstand a storm surge, he said.
"If a Category 3 (storm) goes in where they are predicting, we'll be
OK," Royce said, referring to predictions that Hurricane Rita would
strike the coast south of Galveston.
_________________ Live to fly, Fly to live.....
|