
The "Ascher Collection"
Whatever Happened To…?
A Review by Susan Halteman
Longtime members and area residents may remember some unusual aircraft parked in our display area. Since 1946, there have been aircraft displayed here at Willow Grove. Naturally, outdoor display takes its toll. Over time, some of the rarest aircraft have been moved to other museums.
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The first aircraft placed on outdoor display at Willow Grove was a CurtissTP-40E “Kittyhawk” dual control airplane. Donated to a local high school from the Air Force following WWII, the school gave it back to WGNAS. In 1946, David Ascher, a maintenance officer at WGNAS, placed it outdoor display after repainting it as a Flying Tiger aircraft (in honor of the many Navy pilots who flew with the outfit.) Ascher’s men also covered over the aft cockpit with sheet metal. This aircraft is now on display at The Museum of Aviation at Warner Robins AFB in Georgia and is still in single-seat configuration.
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The P-40 proved to be such a hit with the public that Ascher obtained several more aircraft, especially Axis aircraft waiting to be scrapped at Pax River after testing. The Arado 196 (seaplane from German cruiser Prinz Eugen) was offloaded from the Eugen at Philadelphia. The Prinz Eugen subsequently sailed out to the Pacific, where it was destroyed during nuclear testing in the Bikini Atoll. The Ar 196 was restored in 1978-80. Subsequently, it was crated and moved to the National Museum of Naval Aviation in Pensacola, Florida. It remains there, but still in pieces.
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Willow Grove’s Mitsubishi A6M7 “Zero” was acquired by the Smithsonian’s National Air & Space Museum in 1962. It was lent to the Bradley Air Museum in Connecticut for restoration. The restoration was later completed at the San Diego Aero-Space Museum, where it remains today.
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The Nakajima B6N2 “Jill” was displayed here until 1981, at which time it was transferred to the Air & Space Museum in Washington D.C. Currently, it is not on public display.
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The Kawanishi N1K2-Ja “George” was transferred to the Smithsonian in 1983 and stored at the Paul Garber Facility until 1991. At that time, it was loaned to the Champlin Fighter Museum in Mesa, Arizona for restoration. The restoration was completed in November 1994 and the aircraft is now on display at the Udvar-Hazy Center of the National Air and Space Museum.
Image enhanced by John Benton |
The rarest aircraft to be displayed at Willow Grove was a Nakajima “Kikka”, a Japanese jet based loosely on the Me 262. Only two or three were produced in Japan just before the end of the war. The only remaining examples (two incomplete airframes) are in the Smithsonian, not on public display. It is believed that the Willow Grove aircraft was transferred to Norfolk NAS in the late 1940s and eventually wound up in the Smithsonian.
Photo by Don Linn |
After restoration at Willow Grove, February 1982 |
Other aircraft included a Kawanishi “Rex”, a seaplane variant of the “George”. The aircraft is now located at the National Museum of Naval Aviation, Pensacola, Fl.
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We are fortunate to have retained the Messerschmitt 262 for our museum. This is one of the world’s rarest aircraft; with only three 2-seat versions known to be in existence worldwide. This is the only two-seat trainer version to survive. One other two-seater is a night fighter version (Me 262-B1a/U1) and is held in a collection in South Africa. The third two-seater, designated Avia CS-92, is at the Czech Republic's Vojenské Muzeum, Kbely Air Base. It was built after the war.
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