Hi, I've been busy with non-aviation stuff and just saw this post. As one of the ( former ) charter members ( 1992 ) of the museum from before it WAS a museum, I had a bit more "skin in the game" than most. Not long after getting the Miracle on the Hudson and moving into the fancy hangar, the paid staff stopped the volunteers who had recovered / restored the airplanes ( basically created the museum from scratch with their OWN money ) from doing any such work in the new place due to fears of damaging the pretty floor in the executive hangar / causing disruptions for visitors / and liability = $$ concerns ( what I was told at the time). The ( unpaid ) board of directors changed over this time too, from airplane history lovers / nuts to corporate executive types in an attempt to bring in "movers & shakers" with funding to build a new home ( didn't work ). Following along with the board changes, the unpaid, then minimal pay, then regular job, then all $$ executive VP staff also changed from plane nuts in the beginning, to nothing but Educational degree types whose only concerns were the STEM programs and the funding it brought in ( to pay themselves ). I'm all for a museum having these programs but the tail started wagging the dog, sorry. These professional museum staffers hired consultants for almost every thing including the current signage / display layout as well as the proposal for a new purpose built facility / master plan. They group they hired did a great job and I really do like the display hangar, but the staff completely ignored everything not on display and refused offers from the old volunteers to take care of the aircraft in storage ( crew doors left open by wandering construction workers for weeks on end, bird nests, doors ripped off / STILL broken windows in the old hangar, etc, etc ). Even some the planes in the display hangar had tires go flat due to neglect / never being checked & serviced. If you go to their website and pull up the last IRS tax form they posted ( outdated 2-3 years ) you will see that most years they are just breaking even ( look at the posted expenses and see what YOU think

). From what I heard through the grapevine, the airport / city staff had delayed deciding where ( on other city property ) the museum might move to ( kinda hindering their fundraising efforts, but they always knew the current location was temporary ). They have a really nice master plan for a shiny new facility ( done by the consultants & available on their website - check out the salaries ! WOW ) but unless Bill Gates feels REALLY generous ($30 million to start), I don't think they will ever reopen unless it changes from a for-profit of the paid staff "non-profit", back to an all volunteer based group like it was to start with ( and the airport / city lets it use the old hangar area as an outdoor museum ). I really hope I'm wrong and they have a "secret" funding plan, but I just don't see the current city council dumping millions into an aviation museum even though it is all about STEM ( if it's not a new pro athletics venue, it doesn't matter to anyone "Uptown" ).
Sorry for having to vent, but after putting twenty+ years, ALOT of my own money and almost all the vacation time I ever had into helping to building a nice AVIATION museum with hundreds of other volunteers / veterans / good friends, it hurts to watch it disappear. If you are in the area, please do visit while there is still time to enjoy what is on display and talk to the docents ( volunteers of course ) who love the planes.
I can't say where ( since I've not talked to their new owner myself yet ) but the following mentioned in a post above, have gone to a new and much better home: the A-26 "Rude Invader" from Tom's old place in Florida, the C-47 "Miss Piggy" ( was Saber Air cargo, damaged in gear collapse I think ) and the skeleton P-47 remains ( REALLY not much left ) pulled off Ocean Isle beach.
Hoping for billionaire miracle !
PS I plan on visiting soon to say "goodbye" and will post pictures after I do.
PSS Hickory does have a really nice collection and an excellent group of volunteers taking care of them, hopefully if things don't work out for the planned Taj Mahal in CLT, they will be able to get some of the planes that are on loan ( and prevent anything from being scrapped like at Chanute ).
D-Day 75 years
Hats off for all WWII Veterans, never forget !