Hey! I forgot that Robbie's did have "Whistling Death" painted on her! Thanks for the info.
Rob Mears wrote:
Most people don't know that Robbie Jones and Merle Gustafson flew virtually identical Corsairs, one named "Angel of Okinawa" and the other named "Whistling Death". "Angel of Okinawa" seems to have gotten the lion's share of the publicity during those early years with Merle Gustafson being as active on the circuit as he was.
As you mentioned, Robbie sold "Whistling Death" to Joe Arnold in 1977, after which it soon suffered the blown engine. Good ol' Terry Randall (aircraft dealer from Tulsa) picked it up a couple years later, threw on a new engine, and sold it on to John MacGuire in Ft. Hancock, Texas. MacGuire formed the War Eagles Air Museum a couple years later, and that's where the plane still sits today.
MacGuire passed away in 2001, and today the collection sits pretty much stagnant in the hangar. The Corsair had not flown for many years even before John's death. I hate to see a good privately owned warbird become a permanent static display by some default (ie: War Eagles Museum, Kalamazoo Air Zoo, Palm Springs Museum, etc.), but that's how the card fall sometimes. Hopefully one day the curators now in charge of MacGuire's collection will find a way to fly at least a couple of his planes at a time. There are LOTS of great birds in there including two or three Mustangs, a P-38, etc. Because of its remote location, it's a very obscure collection in the overall scheme of things. Well worth a visit if you're in the El Paso area.