Close

Member Login

Logging In
Invalid username or password.
Incorrect Login. Please try again.

not a member? sign-up now!

Signing up could earn you gear and it helps to keep offensive content off of our site.

A Tale of Two Hangars

By Martha Lunken / Published: Oct 27, 2011
Rate it! 100% or 0%
Flying Magazine | The World’s Most Widely Read Aviation Magazine

Hangar 6 and an adjacent Army barracks
(no longer there) when occupied by “TV Tom”
Noonan and his “colorful” Aviation Center in
the ‘50s.

(October 2011) Signature Engines president Bill Schmidt and the company’s chief security officer, Boo Radley, strolled across the ramp to my hangar last week as I was debugging the 180. Boo is actually a spoiled but lovable mutt rescued by Bill and named for the lonely character in To Kill a Mockingbird. Summer flying in the Midwest involves the minor inconvenience of dodging thunderstorms and the major pain-in-the-ass job of cleaning bugs off the airplane ... unless you got close enough to heavy precipitation to scour them off in flight. But wiping the bugs off beats the heck out of whimpering because you got yourself into something you wish you hadn’t. I’m no neat freak, but I just can’t let 72B sit in the hangar without sponging down the wing’s leading edges and getting those gross, juicy splats off the windshield. (Pledge furniture polish spray is superb.)

Signature is pretty highly thought of in the engine overhaul business, and, since its inception in 1998, Bill’s done magic with the business as well as with the place it calls home: Hangars 6 and 7, the two oldest and most historic buildings on the ’drome, sit directly across the south line ramp from my hangar. Ebby Lunken concocted the tale that the hangars originated in Chadun, an Allied airfield in France, during World War I, to be shipped home and reassembled two or three times in the States after the war. They are, however, clearly visible in early photos of Dayton’s McCook Field. When that site was replaced by the Army Air Corps’ Wright-Patterson Field, the 359th Observation Squadron moved them to Cincinnati — first to Grisard Field (later Blue Ash Airport) and then to their permanent home at Lunken Field around 1925. The hangars remained military property through the end of World War II, when Cincinnati was headquarters of the Air Corps Ferrying Command.

Old-fashioned and kind of homely, they’re sound enough to stand another 100 years. “Seven” is especially close to my heart because it was base to Midwest Airways’ Lockheed 10s and 12s back in the ’60s when I first knew Ebby Lunken and he was creating his beloved Midwest Airways, one of the original commuter or third-level airlines. When the airline finally sank slowly in the west, Ebby kept the lease and rented — more likely gave — me space for a flying school I called Midwest Flight Center — mostly because “Midwest” was already painted over the hangar doors. Here’s how what came to be known as “Miss Martha’s Flying School” happened. ...

The summer I graduated from a small college in Cincinnati (which no longer exists — the college, I mean, not the city ... well, at least not yet), I went to my first and only corporate job interview downtown at a chemical company, which also no longer exists. Is it a coincidence that every school I attended or company I worked for has disappeared ... except the Federal Aviation Administration, which wreaks bureaucratic mayhem despite my 28 years of devoted efforts to screw it up?

Your Comment
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use