I find the last line interesting...
A WWII relic flies local skies
By JACOB RESNECK, Enterprise Staff Writer
LAKE CLEAR — Crowds gathered at the Adirondack Regional Airport Monday for a glimpse of the “Liberty Belle,” a World War II-era B-17B bomber, one of 13 known to exist in the world.
Restored and owned by the Liberty Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to education of World War II aviation history, the four-engine “Flying Fortress” arrived in the morning from Albany on its way to Bangor, Maine before embarking on a tour of eastern Canada.
The Liberty Belle stopped off in the Adirondacks and flew three 20-minute excursion flights over Tupper Lake, in gratitude to a generous donation to the foundation from Tom and Susan Lawson, part-time residents of Tupper Lake.
Friends and family of the Lawsons were taken up in the B-17B, which buzzed over the Lawsons’ Lake Simond summer residence. Tom Lawson Jr., a private pilot, was able to fly the heavy bomber, a unique opportunity.
“It was very docile and very stable,” he said of the aircraft. “But you have to manhandle it a little bit — you have it force it through maneuvers, as it’s all cables; there’s no hydraulics.”
The goodwill tour through Canada, which will include eight stops over 10 days, is to satisfy a settlement for salvaging another B-17B discovered on Labrador, said salvage diver Bob Mester of Underwater Admiralty Service Inc.
Based in Kirkland, Wash., Mester’s company salvaged the aircraft in 1998. In negotiations with the Canadian government, the company agreed to co-sponsor educational tours of B-17s in Canada. The Liberty Belle’s tour of Labrador and Newfoundland is part of that agreement, Mester said.
One of more than 12,700 produced between 1938 and 1945, the Liberty Belle never saw combat — which is one of the reasons it is still intact. About a third of B-17s produced were lost in combat, mostly in daylight bombing raids over occupied Europe from bases in England and, later, Italy.
“About 40,000 men were lost on these,” said the Liberty Belle’s chief pilot, Ray Fowler. “She was restored in the mid-’90s and only has about 400 hours, making her almost brand-new.”
Manufactured by Boeing in Burbank, Calif., the Liberty Belle was originally used as an experimental plane and at one time had a fifth engine — a turboprop fitted on the nose. She was restored in the 1960s for a museum but then destroyed by a tornado that struck the hangar, Fowler said. Thirty years later, about $3.5 million was invested into the Liberty Belle by the Liberty Foundation. The plane was trucked in pieces to Kissimmee, Fla., where it was completely rebuilt.
Completing its third flight for the afternoon — 21 passengers were taken in all — the Liberty Belle logged a flight plan to Bangor, Maine and flew east.
The flights — which cost the Liberty Foundation about $3,500 per flight hour — have been donor-financed. Once the money runs out, the Liberty Belle will be retired from service and donated to an air museum, Fowler said.
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http://www.adirondackdailyenterprise.co ... cleID=3453