kgruber
Final Approach
I spent the night in Bellingham and came across this picture.....
Who is she?
Who is she?
Sure looks like the nose of the SoSL.
Sure looks like the nose of the SoSL.
It looks like a guy in drag to me.
Maybe it's the chick the pilot from Florida is hitting.
It could be an American Eagle biplane, they did engine turning on their cowlings, it's obviously an OX-5 engine though. The cabane struts match.
Cool!
Now, to find out whatever happened to her.
Is that a Hartzell label on the prop?
There's a Leona B Campbell in the Airman records. Her most recent certificate issued was a private pilot in 1949. If that was a renewal, maybe that was her.
Maybe it's the chick the pilot from Florida is hitting.
Hartzell started making props in 1917,
She's got some massive hands for a chick.
Does it have her birthdate around 1910?
I'm not sure how to find a birthdate in the online Airmen inquiry without manually entering every possible date and trying it as a search filter, one after the next. Knowing the approximate year would help reduce the task to maybe 15 minutes to cover a year or so, but still it requires more patience than I've got, or someone who knows how to write a script.
That's impressive.
I wonder if there's any other company with a 98-year history of making the same major part of a general aviation aircraft.
There's a Leona B Campbell in the Airman records. Her most recent certificate issued was a private pilot in 1949. If that was a renewal, maybe that was her.
http://interactive.ancestry.com/237...rpos=15&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=trueThere was a Campbell that owned a Dodge dealership in Bellingham during that time. There is a reference to a Jack Campbell that might be a husband or brother but that is all I've found so far.
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