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Restored Tuskegee Airmen PT-19 returns to the skies

By General Aviation News Staff · January 30, 2024 ·

PEACHTREE CITY, Georgia — After two years of restoration work, a Fairchild PT-19A, serial number 42-83511, took to the skies again at Atlanta Regional Airport – Falcon Field (KFFC) on Jan. 18, 2024.

“This historic aircraft, originally used to train Tuskegee Airmen in World War II, had flown for Commemorative Air Force (CAF) Airbase Georgia for many years, but the leadership team decided it was time to take it apart and inspect, restore, and repaint it,” said Airbase Leader Joel Perkins. “Re-skinning the aircraft with fabric and applying an authentic paint scheme took a lot of time, but our members were committed to recreating a piece of aviation history.”

The aircraft was completely disassembled and inspected. The horizontal stabilizer was replaced, some supporting wood structures were replaced, and all canopy glass was replaced. The aircraft was re-covered with polyester fabric, primed with a UV protectant and painted with Ranthane silver polyurethane, officials reported.

After new weight-and-balance calculations and final inspections, Air Force Major Gen. (Ret.) George Harrison, an Airbase Georgia pilot, was cleared to conduct a ground engine test and then takeoff.

This PT-19A was built Nov. 1, 1943, and CAF Airbase Georgia acquired it in 2006.

It had been modified with a closed cockpit like the later model PT-26 to allow flying in inclement weather. It flew throughout the Southeast at air shows and fly-ins, offering rides to the public, until it was brought back to the shop for its restoration in 2022.

On the ramp after its restoration.

The PT-19 series was developed for the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1940 as part of its expansion program. It was a more advanced type of aircraft: “Inexpensive, simple to maintain, and virtually viceless,” CAF Airbase Georgia officials said.

The cantilever, low-wing monoplane with fixed landing gear and a tailwheel featured two-place, tandem seating and an open cockpit. The simple but rugged construction included a fabric-covered, welded steel tube fuselage. The remainder of the aircraft used plywood construction, with a plywood-sheathed center section, outer wing panels and tail assembly, officials added.

CAF Airbase Georgia, founded in 1987, is one of the largest units of the Commemorative Air Force (CAF). The group maintains and flies six vintage military aircraft, including a P-51 Mustang, an FG-1D Corsair, an SBD Dauntless, a P-63A Kingcobra, a PT-19 Cornell, and a T-34 Mentor. The Airbase, composed of more than 500 volunteer members, is a founding partner of the Georgia WWII Heritage Trail launched in 2021.

For more information: AirbaseGeorgia.org

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Comments

  1. Joel J Williams says

    January 31, 2024 at 10:22 am

    The Tuskegee Pilots of WW11 also trained in the PT 13 and PT 17. The PT 19 aircraft trained many other pilots other than Black Tuskegee pilots. No mention of anyone else.

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