Mark Allen M wrote:
What hostility?!!! a bit of concern perhaps. Can't blame most of the folks here. A young wealthy guy purchases a large collection of "historic artifacts" (not just warbirds) with no known history of being interested in rare historic artifacts.
Just reading between the lines and looking at the posted photos of company trucks with humorous captions, it's pretty obvious that there is a bit more mistrust or concern given his last name than there would be if he were named Smith or Jones. Anyone paying attention knows his family business has been a lightning rod for criticism for the last couple decades.
As you note, he does have warbirds, presumably worth a few million dollars. Other members of his family own rare race cars which are exercised at historic race events.
If that doesn't qualify him as having an interest in "historic artifacts" I don't know what would.
Yes, some of the rarer types transcend the "warbird" market, but by your logic, no one could buy a original copy of the Constitution (which recently sold for more than $40 million) unless he had an original copy of the Declaration of Independence.
A guy has to start a collection somewhere.
This guy has the resources to start at the top.
Don't fault (or blame) him for that.
If anything, fault the Allen organization which seems to have made everything one lot, meaning the person with the biggest checkbook wins.
As previously I said, the aircraft and vehicles aren't likely to be abused and as another poster points out, they will likely won't end up in a storage container like some aircraft in another well regarded collection.
To that I would add they likely won't be locked away awaiting restoration
for decades, like some of the equally rare examples held by the Smithsonian.
Finally, perhaps the new owner won't hide items away (has anyone seen the one of a kind B-17E lately) like the previous owner.
Also, I would hope people would hold criticism/cynicism/hostility until they hear his plans.
Too much to ask?
Probably.