CAF Utah Wing Museum[1] is one of many local detachments of the national Commemorative Air Force (CAF) non-profit aviation association dedicated to Honoring American Military Aviation through Flight, Exhibit and Remembrance.
The Museum is located at Russ McDonald Field, Heber City Municipal Airport, Utah, and contains artifacts and exhibits from World War II, Korean, and Vietnam wars. In addition they operate a N2S Stearman aircraft and a T-6 Advanced Trainer aircraft - part of the CAF's fleet of over 170 vintage warbirds. Exhibits and displays preserve stories of local characters that participated in aviation.
The Museum is closed, except by special arrangement, from October 31 to May 1 each year.
Flying aircraft on display
N2S/PT-17 Stearman History
N1387V (s/n 75-8291), an N2S-5 Boeing-Stearman Model 75, was manufactured in 1943 at the Boeing plant in Wichita, Kansas. It was purchased by the U.S. Government to be operated as a trainer by the Navy at Corpus Christi, Texas. After World War II it was sold as surplus and was modified with a larger 450 hp engine for use in crop dusting. It was sold again in the early 1980s and flown as a sport and recreational aircraft. While en route to California the aircraft crashed in the Oquirrh Mountains. The Commemorative Air Force purchased the salvage rights. After significant restoration work at Twin Falls, Idaho, N1387V flew again August 17, 1988. Since then it has been part of the Utah Wing and appears at local airshows and provides rides to the public.
In December, 2015 N1387V underwent a wing restoration with old fabric removed, minor repairs performed, and completed new fabric and paint. N1387V flew during the 2016 season. Starting in 2017 an extensive restoration of the engine, fuselage and empennage was initiated and as of May 2024 that work is still underway.
SNJ/T-6 Texan
A Texan trainer is on display in the museum hangar. The Texan was the advanced training aircraft used for formation, gunnery and tactics training in WW II.