The story of No.11 is better known ....
Ther serial of that bird is 97264 an it was delivered to the USN in Octobre 1945. From 1945 to 1948 the fighter was stored in a depot. Between 1948 and 1950 there is a gap. Nobody knows what happened in this time. In January 1950 the Corsair appeared at the VMF-223. The 97264 was used in this squad until July 1950, again a gap for 3 month, and then flying at the VMF-225. In January 1952 ferried to the VMF-211, used until April 1952, again ferried to VMA-332 and after 4 months general overhaul. After the overhaul the aircraft was delivered in July 1953 to NART St.Louis /Missouri. In July 1955 BueNo 97264 retired ..... only for a few months. In October 1955 BueNo97264 was reactivated and ferried to the NART Olathe. Here the fighter got the No.11 and the same paintsheme as No.5. The fighter was in service until June 1956 and retired after 11 years flying.
No.11 was also ferried to "Lichtfield Park NAS Arizona" and stands in the desert among hundreds other Corsairs. The same story as No.5 , No11 was not sold to Honduras and in the seventies Bob Bean sold the aircraft after glowing in the desert for about 17 years !
In the year 1973 the bird was sold to the "Pacific War Museum" , and after 4 years Eugene Akers bought the fighter in 1977. It was the second Corsair in the hands of Eugene Akers (the first was his raceplane Serial 97259, sold 1974). The Corsair No.11 was stored at the hangar belonging to William Barnes. At this time time Barnes was the owner of another Corsair, the Serial 97259. The deal was to restore the No.11 to airworthy conditions. But Barnes died 1984 by crashing his own P-51 fighter.
In the same year appeared Charles Hall. Hall made a deal with Akers. Hall wanted to restore the bird by getting a 50% partnership. After that deal No.11 was ferried to Charles Hall. In the year 1991 Akers sold his 50% to Cecil Harp and in February 1992 the bird took his second maiden flight ! Hall and harp flew the bird for about 4 years.
After this time, the aircraft was sold to Christophe Jaquard/France. Jaquard is a warbird enthusiast and in his collection there is a Flugwerk Fw190, a Griffon Spitfire and so on. The new Reg was F-AZVJ
As I know, No.11 was again sold to finance the FockeWulf project and the aircraft was ferried back to the USA.
So Folks, this was the story of two Corsairs, the last ones of so many.
I hope it was a bit interesting for you and of course "keep em flying" !
__________________ regards from Germany
Matthias
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