NYTimes.com Article: Museum Honors Runways in Land of the Expressway

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Museum Honors Runways in Land of the Expressway

May 20, 2002
By ELISSA GOOTMAN






EAST GARDEN CITY, N.Y., May 19 - Seventy-five years after
Charles A. Lindbergh set off from the Hempstead Plains for
his solo flight to Paris, Long Island is better known for
its busy highways than for its runways.

But there was a time when the name Roosevelt Field conjured
up images of Mr. Lindbergh's point of departure, not the
shopping mall right off the Meadowbrook Parkway. And today,
residents and politicians gathered to celebrate the opening
of a museum documenting that history.

The Cradle of Aviation Museum opens officially on Monday,
exactly 75 years after Mr. Lindbergh's take-off and more
than 30 years after politicians and aviation enthusiasts
started to talk about building it.

Over the years, Nassau County, now climbing its way back
from the brink of bankruptcy, poured about $40 million into
the museum, which will be run by a nonprofit corporation
called Nassau Heritage.

Thomas R. Suozzi, the Nassau County executive, described
the path leading to the museum as a "tremendously long
struggle," noting that he was a child when the plans were
first hatched. "Long Island is deserving of a world-class
facility like this," he said at today's ceremony.

Sure, there was Kitty Hawk, N.C. But shortly after the
Wright Brothers' flight, experimental pilots like Glenn
Curtiss and Harriet Quimby, the first American woman to get
a pilot's license, converged on Long Island's fields and
flight schools.

During World War I, Mitchel Field, where the Cradle of
Aviation now sits, became a major military air base.
Airplane manufacturers, including Grumman, set up plants
and headquarters here.

"Everybody, if they didn't work for Grumman, they knew
somebody who did," said Bill Kelly, 50, of Hicksville, who
spent 17 years with the company. "There was nothing like
working for Grumman. You really had a sense of pride."

Today, Mr. Kelly arrived at the ceremony marking the
museum's opening with his son, Billy, 18, one of hundreds
of volunteers who have spent what museum officials say is
some 650,000 hours restoring old airplanes and spacecraft.

Two refurbished airplane hangars and a building with a
sparkling glass facade make up the museum, where about 70
airplanes and spacecraft are on display. Some, like the
supersonic Grumman F-11 Tiger at the entrance, are
suspended in the air, while others rest on the ground.

The planes, which include restored originals as well as
replicas, were collected throughout the years; many are on
loan. A 1918 Curtiss JN-4 Jenny was retrieved from a farm
in Iowa where Mr. Lindbergh left it after a barnstorming
stint, and a Grumman Wildcat was salvaged from the bottom
of Lake Michigan, where it ended up after plummeting during
a training exercise in 1944.

Martha Lindemann, 75, marveled at a lunar module, wrapped
in gold and black foil, that Grumman manufactured on Long
Island; it was never sent to the moon because of cuts in
NASA's budget.

"Isn't that beautiful?" said Mrs. Lindemann, who arrived at
the opening wearing a rhinestone airplane pin. She was
accompanied by her husband, a retired carpenter who helped
restore the planes. "Fantastic," she said.

Courtney O'Shea, 3, whose father, Charles, is the Nassau
County tax assessor, was taken by one of the museum's
interactive exhibits - a small hot air balloon that glides
upward at the push of a button. "There it goes, there it
goes," she squealed.

For John Prete, 72, a former production planner at Grumman
who also helped with the restoration, the museum enshrined
memories of a time that his grandchildren will never
experience.

"A lot of these artifacts are part of my generation," Mr.
Prete said, resting on a shining TBM Avenger he helped
restore. "I was a little worried about the aviation history
going down the tubes."

At the ceremony, Gov. George E. Pataki announced plans to
market the Cradle of Aviation along with other air and
space attractions in New York - like the Intrepid
Sea-Air-Space Museum in Manhattan - under the "I Love New
York" tourism campaign. Together, he said, the museums
would be billed as the New York State Aviation Alliance.

Museum officials estimated that the museum, which also
features Long Island's only IMAX theater, will draw more
than 400,000 visitors a year.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/20/nyregion/20PLAN.html?ex=1022922403&ei=1&en=31c96f20390e5a4a



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