Hello,
Here is a long shot.
Perhaps someone within the faculty and staff at this university read
material in the topic of your interest and might still have it? Smile.
http://www.aviation.wmich.edu/home.html
Try "Faculty & Staff" on the left side of the entry page.
Then try "WMU Faculty Professors" - one of them might have something to
help?
Warm regards,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wayne Neighbors, Ph.D.
President, Vee Ring Ltd
[log in to unmask]
http://anthro.org/index.htm
http://anthro.org/fourstar.htm
http://homepages.msn.com/Terminus/asscinc/index.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-----Original Message-----
From: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of David
Babson
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 1999 9:28 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Aviation Question
I worked on the site of the 1910 Wright Aircraft Company hangar at Huffman
Prairie, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, several years ago. One of the first
hangars in the world. USACERL (Champaign, Illinois) should be able to
direct you to the report; I have yet to see it.
At 02:15 PM 8/20/99 -0400, you wrote:
>I have just run across a difficult problem that I thought, perhaps, someone
>out there might be able to help with. We are researching an early airplane
>hanger structure located on a small municipal airport runway. It is still
in
>use and was built in 1939. It is a stand alone wood frame, corregated
metal
>sided clearstory structure. All other buildings at the airport date from
at
>least the 1960s. There is no statewide context for civilian aircraft
>structures in Utah; there is barely a history of civilian aviation. There
>are good military aviation context documents here, but civilian is fairly
>invisible. Are there sources for civilian aviation architecture, runway
>development and related subjects that anyone knows of nationally for this
>time period, particularly in Western rural states?
>
>Mike Polk
>Sagebrush Consultants, L.L.C.
>Ogden, Utah
>
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