Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Apollo 11 astronaut, old planes coming to AirVenture

50th anniversar­y to be free for locals Monday

- Meg Jones Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

The organizers of EAA AirVenture — the huge aviation convention and daily airshow that transforms the skies and terra firma of Oshkosh for one week each July — have much to be thankful for.

Like the patience and fortitude of the city of Oshkosh for hosting the massive gathering for the last 50 years.

Which is why all Oshkosh residents, for the first time, can go to AirVenture for free on Monday in celebratio­n of the golden anniversar­y.

“We’re offering free admission for Oshkosh residents for those who haven’t run out of town or rented their homes,” said EAA CEO Jack Pelton. “We’re very thankful of the city’s support to let us grow this the way we have.”

The weeklong convention opens Monday.

Also in commemorat­ion of the convention’s 50th anniversar­y in Oshkosh, volunteers who have come to the event for 50 consecutiv­e years will be honored. And organizers found 50 people who currently own planes that appeared at the first Oshkosh convention or are the children of the plane owners who flew to EAA that first year. Their planes will be parked in a designated area on the sprawling grounds.

AirVenture is hosting Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins on Friday, a week after the 50th anniversar­y of the first manned moon landing. Collins,

command module pilot for Apollo 11, has appeared at AirVenture in the past for Apollo reunions.

“He has just been really supportive of us. It was ‘Michael, would you like to come to Oshkosh for the anniversar­y of Apollo 11?’ and there was no hesitation on his part,” said Pelton.

Famous aircraft designer Burt Rutan, who dreamed up Voyager, the first plane to circle the globe nonstop on one tank of gas, as well as the spaceplane SpaceShipO­ne, is returning to AirVenture for the first time in a few years. He’ll speak at several forums.

Pelton noted that EAA began as a club for people building their own planes and Rutan, the creator of numerous memorable aircraft designs, is the “epitome of the home-building movement.”

AirVenture organizers redevelope­d the homebuilt area, consolidat­ing all of the owner-made planes in one spot, expanded parking on the south end of the grounds to accommodat­e 300 additional planes plus another 100 parking spots for people not camping next to their aircraft, and cut daily admission prices for students ages 6 to 18.

Other AirVenture highlights:

❚ Three U.S. Air Force Air Combat Command demonstrat­ion teams will perform during the daily airshows. F-35 Lightning II, A-10 Thunderbol­t II and F-22 Raptor teams will perform abbreviate­d demos and some will fly in the Wednesday and Saturday night air shows.

❚ To commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the D-Day invasion, planes that recently took part in anniversar­y flights in Europe will come to Oshkosh. The D-Day Squadron of 15 C-47 and DC-3 aircraft flew from the U.S. to England and other European countries to recreate the Normandy landings and also participat­e in the 70th anniversar­y of the Berlin Airlift, dropping 5,000 pounds of Jelly Belly candy in tiny parachutes. Among the 10 D-Day Squadron planes scheduled to appear in Oshkosh is “That’s All Brother,” a C-47 that led the D-Day parachute drops.

❚ Aerial firefighti­ng planes, including some used by the U.S. Forest Service, will be on display and demonstrat­e water drops during air shows. Normally, firefighti­ng planes work in restricted areas because of wildfires but AirVenture visitors will get a chance to see some of the aircraft up close

 ??  ?? Pilots perform at EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh. The weeklong aviation convention and fly-in starts Monday.
Pilots perform at EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh. The weeklong aviation convention and fly-in starts Monday.

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