[Scan-DC] WWII aircraft to overfly DC (May 8)
Alan Henney
alan at henney.com
Sat Apr 25 01:15:56 EDT 2015
>From one of our milair colleagues:
-----Original Message-----
WWII aircraft to penetrate D.C. airspace next month to mark war’s end
By Michael E. Ruane April 22 at 7:40 PM
The sensitive airspace over Washington is about to be penetrated by a huge
flight of World War II-era airplanes brought together to honor veterans and
mark the 70th anniversary of the end of the war in Europe in 1945.
The Arsenal of Democracy Flyover is scheduled to begin at 12:10 p.m. May 8,
when more than 50 vintage bombers, fighters and trainers will fly south
along the Potomac River and over the Lincoln Memorial and the Capitol
building.
The route also will take the aircraft over the National World War II
Memorial, where special ceremonies will take place.
The flight, which is dependent on the weather, is scheduled to include
famous aircraft such as the B-17, B-24 and B-29 bombers. Also flying will be
P-51, P-40, P-39 and P-38 fighters, among others.
“This may be one of the last opportunities to honor these vets,” said Peter
Bunce, president of the General Aviation Manufacturers Association, a trade
association, and one of the chief organizers of the flyover.
[A D-Day vet believes a guardian angel shielded him from death]
He said the event also will serve to remember the industrial might that the
United States put into the global struggle of World War II.
The term, “arsenal of democracy,” was used in a 1940 address by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt when he urged that the United States provide Great
Britain material help in the fight against Nazi Germany. The United States
was not yet in the war then.
Bunce said that organizers chose May 8 because it is the day that the United
States celebrates the surrender of Germany in 1945 and because of the
usually mild spring weather for aged veterans.
The National Park Service and the Friends of the National World War II
Memorial are helping to organize the event on the ground, Bunce said.
He said he worried about the incident last Wednesday when a protester in a
gyrocopter slipped under the radar into Washington’s restricted airspace and
landed on the lawn of the Capitol building. But, he said, federal agencies
have been cooperative in giving the green light for the flyover.
[Florida mailman lands gyrocopter on Capitol lawn]
“Everybody’s just got the same objective in mind . . . to honor World War II
veterans with these aircraft,” he said.
Bunce said that the flyover needs to have clouds above 2,000 feet, and
visibility must be five miles. A rain date would be the next day, he said.
The planes will fly at 1,000 feet.
The busy airports in the region have set aside an early afternoon break in
landings and takeoffs for the flyover, Bunce said. “The airports gave us
this window between noon and one to be able to bring this parade through,”
he said.
The aircraft will be taking off from airports in Virginia. Most bombers will
fly from Manassas, and most fighters will fly from Culpeper.
The flyover will start at the American Legion Memorial Bridge, which
connects Fairfax and Montgomery counties. “They’ll come down the river from
the north. At the Lincoln Memorial, they’ll do a slight [left] turn, and
basically come down on the south side of Independence Avenue,” he said.
“As they approach the Capitol, they’ll start a slight right turn to back out
over the river and continue on down,” he said.
Many of the airplanes are scheduled to be on display May 9 at the National
Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, in Chantilly, Va.
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